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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50167 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50167)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Charles Sumner; His Complete Works; Volume
-16 (of 20), by Charles Sumner
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Charles Sumner; His Complete Works; Volume 16 (of 20)
-
-Author: Charles Sumner
-
-Editor: George Frisbie Hoar
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2015 [EBook #50167]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHARLES SUMNER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: Engd. by A. H. Ritchie: EDWIN M. STANTON]
-
- _Statesman Edition_ _VOL. XVI_
-
- Charles Sumner
-
- HIS COMPLETE WORKS
-
- With Introduction
- BY
- HON. GEORGE FRISBIE HOAR
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BOSTON
- LEE AND SHEPARD
- MCM
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1877,
- BY
- FRANCIS V. BALCH, EXECUTOR.
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1900,
- BY
- LEE AND SHEPARD.
-
- Statesman Edition.
- LIMITED TO ONE THOUSAND COPIES.
- OF WHICH THIS IS
- No. 320.
-
- Norwood Press:
- NORWOOD, MASS., U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS OF VOLUME XVI.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- EQUAL RIGHTS, WHETHER POLITICAL OR CIVIL, BY ACT OF CONGRESS.
- Letter to the Border State Convention at Baltimore, September
- 8, 1867 1
-
- ARE WE A NATION? Address before the New York Young Men’s
- Republican Union, at the Cooper Institute, Tuesday Evening,
- November 19, 1867 3
-
- CONSTANT DISTRUST OF THE PRESIDENT. Remarks in the Senate, on
- the Final Adjournment, November 26, 1867 66
-
- THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT: WITHDRAWAL OF ASSENT BY A STATE.
- Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolutions of the Legislature of
- Ohio rescinding its former Resolution in Ratification of the
- Fourteenth Amendment, January 31, 1868 69
-
- LOYALTY IN THE SENATE: ADMISSION OF A SENATOR. Remarks in the
- Senate, on the Resolution to admit Philip F. Thomas as Senator
- from Maryland, February 13, 1868 73
-
- INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT. Letter to a Committee in New York, on
- this Subject, February 17, 1868 86
-
- THE IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT. THE RIGHT OF THE PRESIDENT
- OF THE SENATE PRO TEM. TO VOTE. Remarks in the Senate, on the
- Question of the Competency of Mr. Wade, Senator from Ohio, then
- President of the Senate pro Tem., to vote on the Impeachment of
- President Johnson, March 5, 1868 88
-
- THE CHIEF JUSTICE, PRESIDING IN THE SENATE, CANNOT RULE OR
- VOTE. Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson,
- President of the United States, March 31, 1868 98
-
- EXPULSION OF THE PRESIDENT. Opinion in the Case of the
- Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, President of the United States,
- May 26, 1868 134
-
- CONSTITUTIONAL RESPONSIBILITY OF SENATORS FOR THEIR VOTES IN
- CASES OF IMPEACHMENT. Resolutions in the Senate, June 3, 1868 227
-
- VALIDITY AND NECESSITY OF FUNDAMENTAL CONDITIONS ON STATES.
- Speech in the Senate, June 10, 1868 230
-
- ELIGIBILITY OF A COLORED CITIZEN TO CONGRESS. Letter to an
- Inquirer at Norfolk, Va., June 22, 1868 255
-
- INDEPENDENCE, AND THOSE WHO SAVED THE ORIGINAL WORK. Letter on
- the Soldiers’ Monument at North Weymouth, Mass., July 2, 1868 256
-
- COLORED SENATORS,--THEIR IMPORTANCE IN SETTLING THE QUESTION OF
- EQUAL RIGHTS. Letter to an Inquirer in South Carolina, July
- 3, 1868 257
-
- FINANCIAL RECONSTRUCTION THROUGH PUBLIC FAITH AND SPECIE
- PAYMENTS. Speech in the Senate, on the Bill to fund the
- National Debt, July 11, 1868 259
-
- NO REPRISALS ON INNOCENT PERSONS. Speech in the Senate, on the
- Bill concerning the Rights of American Citizens, July 18, 1868 297
-
- THE CHINESE EMBASSY, AND OUR RELATIONS WITH CHINA. Speech at
- the Banquet by the City of Boston to the Chinese Embassy,
- August 21, 1868 318
-
- THE REBEL PARTY. Speech at the Flag-Raising of the Grant and
- Colfax Club, in Ward Six, Boston, on the Evening of September
- 14, 1868 326
-
- ENFRANCHISEMENT IN MISSOURI: WHY WAIT? Letter to a Citizen of
- St. Louis, October 3, 1868 331
-
- ISSUES AT THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. Speech at the City Hall,
- Cambridge, October 29, 1868 333
-
-
-
-
-EQUAL RIGHTS, WHETHER POLITICAL OR CIVIL, BY ACT OF CONGRESS.
-
-LETTER TO THE BORDER STATE CONVENTION AT BALTIMORE, SEPTEMBER 8, 1867.
-
-
- September 12, 1867, Tennessee, Delaware, Maryland, Missouri,
- Kentucky, and the District of Columbia were fully represented
- in what was called “the Border State Convention,” which
- assembled in the Front Street Theatre, Baltimore. The object,
- in the language of the call, was “to advance the cause of
- manhood suffrage, and to demand of Congress the passage of the
- Sumner-Wilson bill.” The following letter from Mr. Sumner was
- read to the Convention.
-
- BOSTON, September 8, 1867.
-
- DEAR SIR,--I shall not be able to be with you at your Convention
- in Baltimore, according to the invitation with which you have
- honored me. I ask you to accept my best wishes.
-
- Congress will leave undone what it ought to do, if it fails to
- provide promptly for the establishment of Equal Rights, whether
- political or civil, everywhere throughout the Union. This is a
- solemn duty, not to be shirked or postponed.
-
- The idea is intolerable, that any State, under any pretension
- of State Rights, can set up _a political oligarchy_ within its
- borders, and then call itself a republican government. I insist
- with all my soul that such a government must be rejected,
- as inconsistent with the requirements of the Declaration of
- Independence.
-
- Faithfully yours,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
- A letter from Hon. Henry Wilson stated: “At the last session
- I offered an amendment, on the 17th of July, allowing all,
- without distinction of color, to vote and hold office, making
- no distinction in rights or privileges.”
-
-
-
-
-ARE WE A NATION?
-
-ADDRESS BEFORE THE NEW YORK YOUNG MEN’S REPUBLICAN UNION, AT THE COOPER
-INSTITUTE, TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 19, 1867.
-
-
- And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains
- of Israel, … and they shall be no more two nations.… Neither
- shall they defile themselves any more with their idols,
- nor with their detestable things, nor with any of their
- transgressions.--EZEKIEL, xxxvii. 22, 23.
-
- * * * * *
-
- In these days their union is so entire and perfect that they
- are not only joined together in bonds of friendship and
- alliance, but even make use of the same laws, the same weights,
- coins, and measures, the same magistrates, counsellors, and
- judges: so that the inhabitants of this whole tract of Greece
- seem in all respects to form but one single city, except only
- that they are not enclosed within the circuit of the same
- walls; in every other point, both through the whole republic
- and in every separate state, we find the most exact resemblance
- and conformity.--POLYBIUS, _General History_, tr. Hampton,
- (London, 1756,) Vol. I. pp. 147, 148.
-
- * * * * *
-
- We represent the people,--we are a Nation. To vote by States
- will keep up colonial distinctions.… The more a man aims at
- serving America, the more he serves his colony. I am not
- pleading the cause of Pennsylvania; I consider myself a
- citizen of America.--BENJAMIN RUSH, _Speech in the Continental
- Congress, July, 1776_: Bancroft, History of the United States,
- Vol. IX. p. 54.
-
- * * * * *
-
- It is my first wish to see the United States assume and merit
- the character of _one great Nation_, whose territory is divided
- into different States merely for more convenient government
- and the more easy and prompt administration of justice,--just
- as our several States are divided into counties and townships
- for the like purposes. Until this be done, the chain which
- holds us together will be too feeble to bear much opposition
- or exertion, and we shall be daily mortified by seeing the
- links of it giving way and calling for repair, one after
- another.--JOHN JAY, _Letter to John Lowell, May 10, 1785_:
- Life, by William Jay, Vol. I. p. 190.
-
- * * * * *
-
- He took this occasion to repeat, that, notwithstanding his
- solicitude to establish a National Government, he never
- would agree to abolish the State Governments or render them
- absolutely insignificant. They were as necessary as the General
- Government, and he would be equally careful to preserve
- them.--GEORGE MASON, _Speech in the Constitutional Convention,
- June 20, 1787_: Debates, Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 914, 915.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Whether the Constitution be good or bad, the present clause
- clearly discovers that it is a National Government, and
- no longer a Confederation: I mean that clause which gives
- the first hint of the General Government laying direct
- taxes.--GEORGE MASON, _Speech in the Virginia Convention to
- ratify the Constitution, June 4, 1788_: Elliot’s Debates, (2d
- edit.,) Vol. III. p. 29.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Declaration of Independence having provided for the
- _national_ character and the _national_ powers, it remained
- in some mode to provide for the character and powers of the
- States individually, as a consequence of the dissolution of
- the colonial system. Accordingly the people of each State set
- themselves to work, under a recommendation from Congress, to
- erect a local government for themselves; but in no instance did
- the people of any State attempt to incorporate into their local
- system any of those attributes of national authority which the
- Declaration of Independence had asserted in favor of the United
- States.--ALEXANDER JAMES DALLAS, _Argument in the Case of
- Michael Bright and others, in the Circuit Court of the United
- States, April 28, 1809_: Life and Writings, p. 104.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Hence, while the sovereignty resides inherently and inalienably
- in the people, it is a perversion of language to denominate
- the State, as a body politic or government, sovereign and
- independent.--_Ibid._, p. 100.
-
- * * * * *
-
- America has chosen to be, in many respects and to many
- purposes, a Nation; and for all these purposes her government
- is complete, to all these objects it is competent. The people
- have declared, that, in the exercise of all powers given for
- these objects, it is supreme. It can, then, in effecting these
- objects, legitimately control all individuals or governments
- within the American territory. The Constitution and laws of a
- State, so far as they are repugnant to the Constitution and
- laws of the United States, are absolutely void. These States
- are constituent parts of the United States; they are members
- of one great empire.--CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL, _Cohens_ v.
- _Virginia_, Wheaton, Rep., Vol. VI. p. 414.
-
- * * * * *
-
- This Address was prepared as a lecture, and was delivered on
- a lecture-tour reaching as far as Milwaukee, Dubuque, and St.
- Louis. On its delivery in New York, Dr. Francis Lieber was in
- the chair. It became the subject of various local notice and
- discussion.
-
- The idea of Nationality had prevailed with Mr. Sumner from the
- beginning of his public life. In his appeal to Mr. Webster
- before the Whig State Convention, as early as September 23,
- 1846, while calling on the eminent Senator and orator to become
- _Defender of Humanity_, he recognized his received title,
- _Defender of the Constitution_, as justly earned by the vigor,
- argumentation, and eloquence with which he had “upheld the
- Union and that interpretation of the Constitution which makes
- us a Nation.”[1] And from that time he had always insisted that
- we were a Nation,--believing, that, while many things were
- justly left to local government, for which the States are the
- natural organs, yet the great principles of Unity and Human
- Rights should be placed under central guardianship, so as to
- be everywhere the same; and this he considered the essence of
- the Nation.--The word “Federal” Mr. Sumner habitually rejected
- for “National.” Courts and officers under the United States
- Government he called “National.”
-
-
-ADDRESS.
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--At the close of a bloody Rebellion, instigated by
-hostility to the sacred principles of the Declaration of Independence,
-and inaugurated in the name of State Rights, it becomes us now to do
-our best that these sacred principles shall not again be called in
-question, and that State Rights shall not again disturb the national
-repose. One terrible war is more than enough; and since, after
-struggle, peril, and sacrifice, where every household has been a
-sufferer, we are at last victorious, it is not too much to insist on
-all possible safeguards for the future. The whole case must be settled
-now. The constant duel between the Nation and the States must cease.
-The National Unity must be assured,--in the only way which is practical
-and honest,--through the principles declared by our fathers and inwoven
-into the national life.
-
-In one word, the Declaration of Independence must be recognized as
-a fundamental law, and State Rights, in all their denationalizing
-pretensions, must be trampled out forever, to the end that we may be,
-in reality as in name, a Nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Are we a Nation? Such is the question I now propose, believing that
-the whole case is involved in the answer. Are we a Nation? Then must
-we have that essential, indestructible unity belonging to a Nation,
-with all those central, pervasive, impartial powers which minister to
-the national life; then must we have that central, necessary authority
-inherent in just government, to protect the citizen in all the rights
-of citizenship; and then must we have that other central, inalienable
-prerogative of providing for all the promises solemnly made when we
-first claimed our place as a Nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Words are sometimes things; and I cannot doubt that our country would
-gain in strength and our people in comprehensive patriotism, if we
-discarded language which in itself implies certain weakness and
-possible disunion. Pardon me, if I confess that I have never reconciled
-myself to the use of the word “Federal” instead of “National.” To my
-mind, our government is not Federal, but National; our Constitution is
-not Federal, but National; our courts under the Constitution are not
-Federal, but National; our army is not Federal, but National. There
-is one instance where this misnomer does not occur. The debt of our
-country is always _National_,--perhaps because this term promises in
-advance additional security to the anxious creditor. “Liberty” and
-“Equality” are more than dollars and cents; they should be National
-also, and enjoy the same security.
-
-During the imbecility of the Confederation, which was nothing but
-a league or _fœdus_, the government was naturally called Federal.
-This was its proper designation. Any other would have been out of
-place, although even then Washington liked to speak of the Nation. In
-summoning the Convention which framed the National Constitution, the
-States all spoke of the existing government as “Federal.” But after
-the adoption of the National Constitution, completing our organization
-as one people, the designation was inappropriate. It should have been
-changed. If not then, it must be now. New capacities require a new
-name. The word Saviour did not originally exist in the Latin; but St.
-Augustine, who wrote in this language, boldly used it, saying there was
-no occasion for it until after the Saviour was born.[2] If among us in
-the earlier day there was no occasion for the word Nation, there is
-now. A Nation is born.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The word Nation is suggestive beyond any definition of the dictionary.
-It awakens an echo second only to that of Country. It is a word of
-unity and power. It brings to mind intelligent masses enjoying the
-advantage of organization, for whom there is a Law of Nations,--as
-there is a Law of Nature,--each nation being a unit. Sometimes uttered
-vaguely, it is simply an intensive, as in the familiar exaggeration,
-“only a _nation_ louder”; but even here the word furnishes a measure of
-vastness. In ordinary usage, it implies an aggregation of human beings
-who have reached such advanced stage of political development that
-they are no longer a tribe of Nomads, like our Indians,--no longer a
-mere colony, city, principality, or state,--but they are one people,
-throbbing with a common life, occupying a common territory, rejoicing
-in a common history, sharing in common trials, and securing to each the
-protection of the common power. We have heard, also, that a Nation is
-a people with the consciousness of Human Rights. Well spoke Louis the
-Fifteenth of France, when this word first resounded in his ears: “What
-means it? I am king; is there any king but me?” The monarch did not
-know that the Nation was more than king, all of which his successor
-learned among the earliest lessons of the Revolution, as this word
-became the inspiration and voice of France.
-
-The ancients had but one word for State and City; nor did they use the
-word Nation as it is latterly used. Derived from the Latin _nascor_ and
-_natus_, signifying “to be born” and “being born,” it was originally
-applied to a race or people of common descent and language, but seems
-to have had no reference to a common government. In the latter sense
-it is modern. Originally ethnological, it is now political. The French
-Communists have popularized the kindred word “Solidarity,” denoting a
-community of interests, which is an element of nationality. There is
-the solidarity of nations together, and also the solidarity of a people
-constituting one nation, being those who, according to a familiar
-phrase, are “all in one bottom.”
-
-England early became a Nation; and this word seems to have assumed
-there a corresponding meaning. Sir Walter Raleigh, courtier of Queen
-Elizabeth, and victim of James the First, who was a master of our
-language, in speaking of the people of England, calls them “our
-Nation.”[3] John Milton was filled with the same sentiment, when,
-addressing England and Scotland, he says: “Go on, both hand in hand,
-_O Nations_, never to be disunited! be the praise and the heroic song
-of all posterity!”[4] In the time of Charles the Second, Sir William
-Temple furnished a precise definition, which foreshadows the definition
-of our day. According to this accomplished writer and diplomatist, a
-Nation was “a great number of families, derived from the same blood,
-born in the same country, and _living under the same government and
-civil constitutions_.”[5] Here is the political element. Johnson, in
-his Dictionary, follows Temple substantially, calling it “a people
-distinguished from another people, generally by their language,
-original, _or government_.” Our own Webster, the lexicographer, calls
-it “the body of inhabitants of a country _united under the same
-government_”; Worcester, “a people born in the same country and _living
-under the same government_”; the French Dictionary of the Academy, “the
-totality of persons born or naturalized in a country and _living under
-the same government_.”[6] Of these definitions, those of Webster and
-the French Academy are the best; and of the two, that of Webster the
-most compact.
-
-These definitions all end in the idea of unity under one government.
-They contemplate political unity, rather than unity of blood or
-language. Undoubted nations exist without the latter. Various accents
-of speech and various types of manhood, with the great distinction of
-color, which we encounter daily, show that there is no such unity here.
-But this is not required. If the inhabitants are of one blood and one
-language, the unity is more complete; but the essential condition is
-one sovereignty, involving, of course, one citizenship. In this sense
-Gibbon employs the word, when, describing the people of Italy,--all of
-whom were recognized as Roman citizens,--he says: “From the foot of
-the Alps to the extremity of Calabria, all the natives of Italy were
-born citizens of Rome. Their partial distinctions were obliterated, and
-they insensibly _coalesced into one great Nation_, united by language,
-manners, and _civil institutions_, and equal to the weight of a
-powerful empire.”[7] Here dominion proceeding originally from conquest
-is consecrated by concession of citizenship, and the great historian
-hails the coalesced people as Nation.
-
-One of our ablest writers of History and Constitutional Law, Professor
-Lieber, of Columbia College, New York, has discussed this question with
-learning and power.[8] According to this eminent authority, Nation is
-something more than a word. It denotes that polity which is the normal
-type of government at the present advanced stage of civilization,
-and to which all people tend just in proportion to enlightenment and
-enfranchisement. The learned Professor does not hesitate to say that
-such a polity is naturally dedicated to the maintenance of all the
-rights of the citizen as its practical end and object. It is easy to
-see that the Nation, thus defined, must possess elements of perpetuity.
-It is not a quicksand, or mere agglomeration of particles, liable to
-disappear, but a solid, infrangible crystallization, against which
-winds and rains beat in vain.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Opposed to this prevailing tendency is the earlier propensity to local
-sovereignty, which is so gratifying to petty pride and ambition. This
-propensity, assuming various forms in different ages and countries,
-according to the degree of development, has always been a species
-of egotism. When the barbarous islanders of the Pacific imagined
-themselves the whole world, they furnished an illustration of this
-egotism in its primitive form. Its latest manifestation has been
-in State pretensions. But here a distinction must be observed. For
-purposes of local self-government, and to secure its educational
-and political blessings, the States are of unquestioned value. This
-is their true function, to be praised and vindicated always. But
-_local sovereignty_, whether in the name of State or prince, is out
-of place and incongruous under a government truly national. It is
-entirely inconsistent with the idea of Nation. Perhaps its essential
-absurdity in such a government was never better illustrated than by
-the homely apologue of the ancient Roman,[9] which so wrought upon
-the secessionists of his day that they at once returned to their
-allegiance. According to this successful orator, the different members
-of the human body once murmured against the “belly,” which was pictured
-very much as our National Government has been, and they severally
-refused all further coöperation. The hands would not carry food to
-the mouth; nor would the mouth receive it, if carried; nor would the
-teeth perform their office. The rebellion began; but each member soon
-found that its own welfare was bound up inseparably with the rest, and
-especially that in weakening the “belly” it weakened every part. Such
-is the discord of State pretensions. How unlike that unity of which
-the human form, with heaven-directed countenance, is the perfect type,
-where every part has its function, and all are in obedience to the
-divine mandate which created man in the image of God! And such is the
-Nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Would you know the incalculable mischief of State pretensions? The
-American continent furnishes three different examples, each worthy
-of extended contemplation. There are, first, our Indians, aborigines
-of the soil, split into tribes, possessing a barbarous independence,
-but through this perverse influence kept in constant strife, with
-small chance of improvement. Each chief is a representative of State
-pretensions. Turning the back upon union, they turn the back upon
-civilization itself. There is, next, our neighbor republic, Mexico,
-where Nature is bountiful in vain, and climate lends an unavailing
-charm, while twenty-three States, unwilling to recognize the national
-power, set up their disorganizing pretensions, and chaos becomes
-chronic. The story is full of darkness and tragedy. The other instance
-is our own, where sacrifices of all kinds, public and private, rise
-up in blood before us. Civil war, wasted treasure, debt, wounds, and
-death are the witnesses. With wailing voice all these cry out against
-the deadly enemy lurking in State pretensions. But this wail is heard
-from the beginning of history, saddening its pages from generation to
-generation.
-
-In ancient times the City-State was the highest type, as in Greece,
-where every city was a State, proud of its miniature sovereignty. The
-natural consequences ensued. Alliances, leagues, and confederations
-were ineffectual against State pretensions. The parts failed to
-recognize the whole and its natural supremacy. Amidst all the triumphs
-of genius and the splendors of art, there was no national life, and
-Greece died. From her venerable sepulchre, with ever-burning funeral
-lamps, where was buried so much of mortal beauty, there is a constant
-voice of warning, which sounds across continent and ocean, echoing
-“Beware!”
-
-Rome also was a City-State. If it assumed at any time the national
-form, it was only because the conquering republic took to itself all
-other communities and melted them in its fiery crucible. But this
-dominion was of force, ending in universal empire, where the consent
-of the governed was of little account. How incalculably different from
-a well-ordered Nation, where all is natural, and the people are knit
-together in self-imposed bonds!
-
-Then came the colossal power of Charlemagne, under whom peoples and
-provinces were accumulated into one incongruous mass. Here again was
-universal empire, but there was no Nation.
-
-Legend and song have depicted the paladins that surrounded Charlemagne,
-fighting his battles and constituting his court. They were the
-beginning of that Feudal System which was the next form that Europe
-assumed. The whole country was parcelled among chieftains under the
-various names of Duke, Count, and Baron, each of whom held a district,
-great or small, where, asserting a local sovereignty, he revelled in
-State pretensions; and yet they all professed a common allegiance.
-Guizot was the first to remark that Feudalism, taken as a whole, was
-a confederation, which he boldly likens to what he calls the federal
-system of the United States. It is true that Feudalism was essentially
-federal, where each principality exercised a disturbing influence,
-and unity was impossible; but I utterly deny that our country can
-fall into any such category, unless it succumbs at last to the dogma
-of State pretensions, which was the essential element of the feudal
-confederation.
-
-Feudalism was not a government; it was only a system. During its
-prevalence, the Nation was unknown. Wherever its influence subsided,
-the Nation began to appear; and now, wherever its influence still
-lingers on earth, there the yearnings for national life, instinctive in
-the popular heart, are for the time suppressed.
-
-Curiously enough, Sweden and Hungary were not brought within the sphere
-of Feudalism, and these two outlying lands, left free to natural
-impulses, revealed themselves at an early day as Nations. When the
-European continent was weakened by anarchy, they were already strong in
-national life, with an influence beyond their population or means.
-
-Feudalism has left its traces in England; but it was never sufficiently
-strong in that sea-girt land to resist the natural tendencies to unity,
-partly from its insular position, and partly from the character of
-its people. At an early day the seven-headed Heptarchy was changed
-into one kingdom; but a transformation not less important occurred
-when the feudal lords were absorbed into the government, of which they
-became a component part, and the people were represented in a central
-Parliament, which legislated for the whole country, with Magna Charta
-as the supreme law. Then was England a Nation; and just in proportion
-as the national life increased has her sway been felt in the world.
-
-France was less prompt to undergo this change, for Feudalism found
-here its favorite home. That compact country, so formed for unity, was
-the victim of State pretensions. It was divided and subdivided. North
-and South, speaking the same language, were separated by a difference
-of dialect. Then came the great provinces, Normandy, Brittany,
-Burgundy, Provence, Languedoc, and Gascony, with constant menace of
-resistance and nullification, while smaller fiefs shared the prevailing
-turbulence. A French barony was an “autonomic government,” with a
-moated town, in contrast with an English barony, which was merged in
-the Kingdom. Slowly these denationalizing pretensions were subdued; but
-at last the flag of the French monarchy,--the most beautiful invention
-of heraldry,--with lilies of gold on a field of azure, and angelic
-supporters, waved over a united people. From that time France has been
-a Nation, filled with a common life, burning with a common patriotism,
-and quickened by a common glory. To an Arab chieftain, who, in barbaric
-simplicity, asked the number of tribes there, a Frenchman promptly
-replied, “We are all one tribe.”
-
-Spain also triumphed over State pretensions. The Moors were driven from
-Granada. Castile and Aragon were united under Ferdinand and Isabella.
-Feudalism was overcome. Strong in the national unity, her kings became
-lords of the earth. The name of Spain was exalted, and her language was
-carried to the uttermost parts of the sea. For her Columbus sailed;
-for her Cortes and Pizarro conquered. But these adventurous spirits
-could have done little, had they not been filled with the exuberance of
-her national life.
-
-Italy has been less happy. The pretensions of Feudalism here commingled
-with the pretensions of City-States. Petty princes and petty republics,
-restless with local sovereignty, constituted together a perpetual
-discord. That beauty which one of her poets calls a “fatal gift”
-tempted the foreigner. Disunited Italy became an easy prey. Genius
-strove in the bitterness of despair, while this exquisite land, where
-History adds to the charms of Nature and gilds anew the golden fields,
-sank at last to become, in the audacious phrase of Napoleon, simply a
-geographical name. A checker-board of separate States, it was little
-else. It had a place on the map, as in the memory, but no place in the
-present. It performed no national part. It did nothing for imitation
-or remembrance. Thus it continued, a fearful example to mankind.
-Meanwhile the sentiment of Nationality began to stir. At last it broke
-forth like the pent-up lava from its own Vesuvius, and Garibaldi was
-its conductor. Separate States, renouncing local pretensions, became
-greater still as parts of the great whole, and Italy stood forth a
-Nation, to testify against the intolerable jargon of State pretensions.
-All hail to this heroic revival, where dissevered parts have been
-brought together, as were those of the ancient Deity, and shaped anew
-into a form of beauty and power!
-
-But Germany is the most instructive example. Here, from generation to
-generation, have State pretensions triumphed, perversely postponing
-that National Unity which is the longing of the German heart.
-Stretching from the Baltic to the Adriatic and the Alps, penetrated by
-great rivers, possessing an harmonious expanse of territory, speaking
-one language, filled with the same intellectual life, and enjoying
-a common name, which has been historic from the days of Tacitus,
-Germany, like France, seems formed for unity. Martin Luther addressed
-one of his grand letters _An die Deutsche Nation_ (To the German
-Nation); and these words are always touching to Germans as the image
-of what they desire so much. Thus far the great longing has failed.
-Even the Empire, where all were gathered under one imperial head,
-was only a variegated patchwork of States. Feudalism, in its most
-extravagant pretensions, still prevails. Confederation takes the place
-of Nationality, and this vast country, with all its elements of unity,
-is only a discordant conglomerate. North and South are inharmonious,
-Prussia and Austria representing two opposite sections. Other divisions
-have been more perplexing. Not to speak of Circles, or groups, each
-with a diet of its own, which once existed, I mention simply the later
-division into thirty-nine States, differing in government and in
-extent, being monarchies, principalities, dukedoms, and free cities,
-all proportionately represented in a general council or diet, and
-proportionately bound to the common defence, but every one filled
-with State egotism. So complete was this disjunction, and such its
-intolerable pretensions, that internal commerce, the life-blood of the
-Nation, was strangled. Down to a recent day, each diminutive state had
-its own custom-house, where the traveller was compelled to exhibit his
-passport and submit to local levies. This universal obstruction slowly
-yielded to a Zollverein, or Customs-Union, under which these barriers
-were obliterated and customs were collected on the external frontiers.
-Here was the first triumph of Unity. Meanwhile the perpetual strife
-between Prussia and Austria broke out in terrible battle. Prussia has
-succeeded in absorbing several of the smaller states. But the darling
-passion of the German heart is still unsatisfied. Not in fact, but in
-aspiration only, is Germany one nation. Patriot Poetry takes up the
-voice, and, scorning the claims of individual states, principalities,
-and cities, scorning also the larger claims of Prussia and Austria
-alike, exclaims, in the spirit of a true Nationality:--
-
- “That is the German’s fatherland
- Where Germans all as brothers glow;
- That is the land;
- All Germany’s thy fatherland.”
-
-God grant that the day may soon dawn when all Germany shall be one!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Confessing the necessity of a true national life, we have considered
-what is a Nation, and how the word itself implies indestructible unity
-under one government with common rights of citizenship; and then we
-have seen how this idea has grown with the growth of civilization,
-slowly conquering the adverse pretensions of States, until at last even
-Italy became one nation, while Germany was left still struggling for
-the same victory. And now I come again to the question with which I
-began.
-
-Are we a Nation? Surely we are not a City-State, like Athens and early
-Rome in antiquity, or like Florence and Frankfort in modern times;
-nor, whatever the extent of our territory, are we an Empire cemented
-by conquest, like that of later Rome, or like that of Charlemagne; nor
-are we a Feudal Confederation, with territory parcelled among local
-pretenders; nor are we a Confederation in any just sense. From the
-first settlement of the country down to the present time, whether in
-the long annals of the Colonies or since the Colonies were changed into
-States, there has been but one authentic voice: now breaking forth in
-organized effort for Union; now swelling in that majestic utterance of
-a united people, the Declaration of Independence; now sounding in the
-scarcely less majestic utterance of the same united people, the opening
-words of the National Constitution; and then again leaping from the
-hearts of patriots. All these, at different times and in various tones,
-testify that we are one people, under one sovereignty, vitalized and
-elevated by a dedication to Human Rights.
-
-There is a distinction for a long time recognized by German writers,
-and denoted by the opposite terms _Staatenbund_ and _Bundesstaat_,--the
-former being “a league of states,” and the latter “a state formed by a
-league.” In the former the separate states are visibly distinct; in the
-latter they are lost in unity. And such is the plain condition of our
-republic.
-
-Of the present thirty-seven States only thirteen were originally
-Colonies; three are offsets from some of these; all the rest have been
-founded on territory which was the common property of the people of
-the United States, and at their own request they have been received
-into the fellowship of government and citizenship. If on any ground
-one of the original Thirteen might renounce its obligations to the
-Union, it would not follow that one of the new States, occupying the
-common territory, could do likewise. It is little short of madness to
-attribute such a denationalizing prerogative to any State, whether
-new or old. For better or worse, we are all bound together in one
-indissoluble bond. The National Union is a knot which in an evil hour
-the sword may cut, but which no mortal power can unloose without the
-common consent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From the earliest landing, this knot has been tying tighter and
-tighter. Two ways it promptly showed itself: first, in the common claim
-of the rights of British subjects; and, secondly, in the common rights
-of citizenship coextensive with the Colonies, and the consequent rights
-of every Colony in every other Colony.
-
-The Colonies were settled separately, under different names, and
-each had its own local government. But no local government in any
-Colony was allowed to restrict the rights, liberties, and immunities
-of British subjects. This was often declared. Above all charters or
-local laws were the imprescriptible safeguards of Magna Charta, which
-were common to all the inhabitants. On one occasion, the Legislature
-of Massachusetts reminded the king’s governor of these safeguards in
-memorable words: “We hope we may without offence put your Excellency
-in mind of that most grievous sentence of excommunication solemnly
-denounced by the Church in the name of the sacred Trinity, in the
-presence of King Henry the Third and the estates of the realm, _against
-all those who should make statutes, or observe them, being made,
-contrary to the liberties of Magna Charta_.”[10] Massachusetts spoke
-for all the Colonies. Enjoyment of common rights was a common bond,
-constituting an element of nationality. As these rights grew more
-important, the common bond grew stronger.
-
-The rights of citizenship in the Colonies were derived from common
-relations to the mother country. No Colonist could be an alien in any
-other Colony. As British subject he had the freedom of every Colony,
-with the right of making his home there, and of inheriting lands. Among
-all the Colonies there was a common and interchangeable citizenship,
-or _inter-citizenship_. The very rule of the Constitution then began,
-that “the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all privileges
-and immunities of citizens in the several States.” Here was another
-element of nationality. If not at that time fellow-citizens, all were
-at least fellow-subjects. Fellowship had begun. Thus in the earliest
-days, even before Independence, were the Colonists one people, with one
-sovereignty, afterwards renounced.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Efforts for a common government on this side of the ocean soon showed
-themselves. The Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in 1620. As early as 1643,
-only twenty-three years later, there was a confederation under the
-name of “The United Colonies of New England,” formed primarily for the
-common defence; and here is the first stage of nationality on this
-continent. In the preamble to the Articles the parties declare: “We,
-therefore, do conceive it our bounden duty without delay to enter into
-a present consociation amongst ourselves for mutual help and strength
-in all our future concernments, that, as in nation and religion, so
-in other respects, _we be and continue One_.”[11] Better words could
-not mark the beginning of a nation. A distinguished character of the
-time, recording the difficulties encountered by the Articles, says:
-“But, being all desirous of union and studious of peace, they readily
-yielded each to other in such things as tended to common utility, etc.,
-so as in some two or three meetings _they lovingly accorded_.”[12]
-Encouraged by “loving accord,” another proposition was brought forward
-in Massachusetts, “for all the English within the United Colonies
-_to enter into a civil agreement for the maintenance of religion and
-our civil liberties_.”[13] More than a century elapsed before this
-aspiration was fulfilled.
-
-Meanwhile the Colonies grew in population and power. No longer merely
-scattered settlements, they began to act a part in history. Anxious
-especially against French domination, already existing in Canada and
-extending along the Lakes to the Mississippi, they came together
-in Congress at Albany, in 1754, to take measures for the common
-defence. Delegates were present from seven Colonies, being all north
-of the Potomac. Here the genius of Benjamin Franklin prevailed. A
-plan from this master mind provided for what was called a “General
-Government,” administered by a “President-General and Grand Council,”
-where each Colony should have representatives in proportion to its
-contributions,--Massachusetts and Virginia having seven each, while New
-York had only four; and the first meeting of the “General Government”
-was to be at Philadelphia.[14] Local jealousy and pretension were then
-too strong for such a Union: and it found no greater favor in England;
-for there Union was “dreaded as the keystone of Independence.”[15]
-In defending this plan, Franklin, who had not yet entered into the
-idea of Independence, did not hesitate to say that he looked upon the
-Colonies “as so many counties gained to Great Britain,”[16]--employing
-an illustration which most forcibly suggested actual Unity. Though
-this experiment failed, it revealed the longing for one Cisatlantic
-government, and showed how under other auspices it might be
-accomplished.
-
-Little more than ten years elapsed before the same yearning for common
-life appeared again in the Colonial Congress at New York, convened in
-1765, on the recommendation of Massachusetts, to arrest the tyranny of
-the Stamp Act and assaults upon the common liberties. Nine Colonies,
-after deliberation, united in a Declaration of Rights common to all.
-Here was the inspiration of James Otis, the youthful orator of Freedom,
-whose tongue of flame had already flashed the cry, “Taxation without
-representation is tyranny,” and that other cry, worthy of perpetual
-memory, “Equality and the power of the whole, without distinction of
-color.” These were voices that heralded our Nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The mother country persisted; and in the same proportion the Colonies
-were aroused to the necessity of union. Meanwhile that inflexible
-Republican, Samuel Adams, of Massachusetts, brooding on the perils
-to Liberty, conceived the idea of what he called “a Congress of
-American States,” out of whose deliberations should come what he boldly
-proclaimed “an American Commonwealth,”[17]--not several commonwealths,
-not Thirteen, but One. Here, in a single brilliant flash, was revealed
-the image of National Unity, while the word “Commonwealth” denoted
-the common weal which all should share. The declared object of this
-burning patriot was “to answer the great purpose of preserving our
-liberties,”[18]--meaning, of course, the liberties of all. Better words
-could not be chosen to describe a republican government. This was in
-1773. Every Colony, catching the echo, stirred with national life.
-Delegates were appointed, and in 1774 a Congress called “Continental,”
-with a representation from twelve Colonies, was organized at
-Philadelphia, and undertook to speak in the name of “the good people”
-of the Colonies. Here was a national act. In the Declaration of
-Rights which it put forth,--fit precursor of the Declaration of
-Independence,--it grandly claims, that, by the immutable laws of
-Nature, the principles of the English Constitution, and the several
-Charters, all the inhabitants are “entitled to life, liberty, and
-property,” and then announces “that the foundation of English liberty
-and of all free government is _a right in the people to participate in
-their legislative council_.”[19] Here was a claim of popular rights as
-a first principle of government. Proceeding from a Congress of all,
-such a claim marks yet another stage of national life.
-
-The next year witnessed a second Continental Congress, also at
-Philadelphia, which entered upon a mightier career. Proceeding at once
-to exercise national powers, this great Congress undertook to put
-the Colonies in a state of defence, authorized the raising of troops,
-framed rules for the government of the army, commenced the equipment
-of armed vessels, and commissioned George Washington as “general and
-commander-in-chief of the army of the United Colonies, and of all the
-forces now raised or to be raised by them, and of all others who shall
-voluntarily offer their service and join the said army, for the defence
-of American liberty.” Here were national acts, which history cannot
-forget, and their object was nothing less than American liberty. It was
-American liberty which Washington was commissioned to defend. Under
-these inspirations was our Nation born. The time had now come.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Independence was declared. Here was an act which, from beginning to
-end, in every particular and all its inspirations, was National,
-stamping upon the whole people Unity in the support of Human Rights.
-It was done “in the name and by authority of the good people of these
-Colonies,” called at the beginning “one people,” and it was entitled
-“Declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America
-in Congress assembled,” without a word of separate sovereignty. As
-a National act it has two distinct features: first, a severance of
-the relations between the “United Colonies” and the mother country;
-and, secondly, a declaration of self-evident truths on which the
-severance was justified and the new Nation founded. It is the “United
-Colonies” that are declared free and independent States; and this
-act is justified by the sublime declaration that all men are created
-equal, with certain inalienable rights, and that to secure these rights
-governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from
-the consent of the governed. Here was that “American Commonwealth,”
-the image of National Unity, dedicated to Human Rights, which had
-enchanted the vision of the early patriot seeking new safeguards for
-Liberty. Here was a new Nation, with new promises and covenants, never
-before made. The constituent authority was “the People.” The rights it
-promised and covenanted were the Equal Rights of All; not the rights of
-Englishmen, but the rights of Man. On this account our Declaration has
-its great meaning in history; on this account our nation became at once
-a source of light to the world. Well might the sun have stood still on
-that day to witness a kindred luminary ascending into the sky!
-
-In this sudden transformation where was the sovereignty? It was
-declared that the _United_ Colonies are and _of right_ ought to be
-free and independent States. It was never declared that the _separate_
-Colonies were so _of right_. Plainly they never were so _in fact_.
-Therefore there was no separate sovereignty either of right or in fact.
-The sovereignty anterior to Independence was in the mother country;
-afterwards it was in the people of the United States, who took the
-place of the mother country. As the original sovereignty was undivided,
-so also was that sovereignty of the people which became its substitute.
-If authority were needed for this irresistible conclusion, I might
-find it in the work of the great commentator, Mr. Justice Story, and
-in that powerful discourse of John Quincy Adams entitled “The Jubilee
-of the Constitution,” in both of which the sovereignty is accorded to
-the People, and not to the States. Nor should I forget that rarest
-political genius, Alexander Hamilton, who, regarding these things as a
-contemporary, declared most triumphantly that “the Union had complete
-sovereignty”; that “the Declaration of Independence was the fundamental
-constitution of every State”; and, finally, that “the union and
-independence of these States are blended and incorporated in one and
-the same act.”[20] Such was the great beginning of national life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A beautiful meditative poet, whose words are often most instructive,
-confesses that we may reach heights we cannot hold:--
-
- “And the most difficult of tasks to keep
- Heights which the soul is competent to gain.”[21]
-
-Our nation found it so. Only a few days after the great Declaration
-in the name of “the People,” Articles of Confederation were brought
-forward in the name of “the States.” Evidently these were drawn before
-the Declaration, and they were in the handwriting of John Dickinson,
-then a delegate from Pennsylvania, whom the eldest Adams calls “the
-bell-wether of the aristocratical flock,”[22] and who had been the
-orator against the Declaration. Not unnaturally, an opponent of the
-Declaration favored a system which forgot the constituent sovereignty
-of the people, and made haste to establish the pretensions of States.
-These Articles were not readily adopted. There was hesitation in
-Congress, and then hesitation among the States. At last, on the 1st
-of March, 1781, Maryland gave a tardy adhesion, and this shadow of
-a government began. It was a pitiful sight. The Declaration was
-sacrificed. Instead of “one people,” we were nothing but “a league” of
-States; and our nation, instead of drawing its quickening life from
-“the good people,” drew it from a combination of “artificial bodies”;
-instead of recognizing the constituent sovereignty of the people, by
-whose voice Independence was declared, it recognized only the pretended
-sovereignty of States; and, to complete the humiliating transformation,
-the national name was called “the style,” being a term which denotes
-sometimes title and sometimes copartnership, instead of unchangeable
-unity. Such an apostasy could not succeed.
-
-Even before the adoption of this denationalizing framework, its failure
-had begun. The Confederation became at once a byword and a sorrow.
-It was not fit for war or peace. It accomplished nothing national.
-It arrested all the national activities. Each State played the part
-of the feudal chieftain, selfishly absorbing power and denying it to
-the Nation. Money could not be collected even for national purposes.
-Commerce could not be regulated. Justice could not be administered.
-Rights could not be assured. Congress was without coercive power,
-and could act only through the local sovereignty. National unity was
-impossible, and in its stead was a many-headed pretension. The country
-was lapsing into chaos.
-
-From Boston, which was the early home of the Revolution, had already
-proceeded a cry for Nationality. A convention of delegates from
-Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire, with Thomas Cushing as
-President, assembled at Boston in August, 1780, where, among other
-things, it was recommended “that the Union of these States be fixed
-in a more solid and permanent manner, that the powers of Congress be
-more clearly ascertained and defined, and that the important _national_
-concerns of the United States be _under the superintendency and
-direction of one supreme head_,” and the word _Nation_ is adopted as
-the natural expression for our unity.[23] But the time had not yet come
-for this fulfilment.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the prevailing darkness, two voices made themselves heard, both
-speaking for National Unity on the foundation of Human Rights. The
-singular accord between the two, not only in sentiment, but also in
-language, and in date of utterance, attests concert. One voice was
-that of Congress, in an Address and Recommendations to the States
-on the close of the war, bearing date 18th April, 1783, where,
-urging “effectual provision” for the war debts, as demanded alike by
-national honor, and the honor of the cause in which they had been
-contracted, it was said, in words worthy of companionship with the
-immortal Declaration: “Let it be remembered that it has ever been the
-pride and boast of America that _the rights for which she contended
-were the rights of Human Nature_.”[24] The other voice was that of
-Washington, in a general order, also bearing date 18th April, 1783,
-announcing the close of the war, where, after declaring his “rapture”
-in the prospect before the country, he says: “Happy, thrice happy,
-shall they be pronounced hereafter who have contributed anything, who
-have performed the meanest office, in erecting this stupendous fabric
-of Freedom and Empire on the broad basis of Independency, _who have
-assisted in protecting the rights of Human Nature_.”[25] This appeal
-was followed by a circular letter to the Governors, where, after
-announcing that it is for the United States to determine “whether they
-will be respectable and prosperous or contemptible and miserable _as a
-Nation_,” Washington proceeds to name first among the things essential
-to national well-being, if not even to national existence, what he
-calls “an indissoluble union of the States under one federal head”; and
-he adds, that there must be a forgetfulness of “local prejudices and
-policies,” and that “Liberty” must be at the foundation of the whole
-structure.[26] Soon afterwards appearing before Congress to surrender
-the trust committed to him as commander-in-chief, he hailed the United
-States as a “Nation,” and “our dearest country,”[27]--thus embracing
-the whole in his heart, as for seven years he had defended the whole by
-his prudence and valor.
-
-An incident of a different character attested the consciousness of
-National Unity. The vast outlying territory, unsettled at the beginning
-of the war, and wrested from the British crown by the common blood and
-treasure, was claimed as a common property, subject to the disposition
-of Congress for the general good. One by one, the States yielded their
-individual claims. The cession of Virginia comprehended all that grand
-region northwest of the Ohio, fertile and rich beyond imagination,
-where are now prosperous States rejoicing in the Union. All these
-cessions were on the condition that the lands should “be disposed of
-for the common benefit of the United States, and be settled and formed
-into distinct _republican States_.”[28] Here was a National act, with
-the promise of republican government, which was the forerunner of the
-guaranty of a republican government in the National Constitution.
-
-The best men, in their longing for national unity, all concurred in
-the necessity of immediate action to save the country. Foremost in
-time, as in genius, was Alexander Hamilton, who was prompt to insist
-that Congress should have “complete sovereignty, except as to that
-part of internal police which relates to the rights of property and
-life among individuals and to raising money by internal taxes”; and
-still further, in words which harmonized with the Declaration of
-Independence, that “the fabric of the American empire ought to rest on
-the solid basis of the consent of the people.”[29] In kindred spirit,
-Schuyler announced “the necessity of _a supreme and coercive power_
-in the government of these States.”[30] Hamilton and Schuyler were
-both of New York, which, with such representatives, took the lead in
-solemn resolutions, which, after declaring that “the situation of
-these States is in a peculiar manner critical,” and that “the present
-system exposes the common cause to a precarious issue,” concluded with
-a call for “a general convention of the States, specially authorized
-to revise and amend the Confederation.”[31] The movement ended in the
-National Convention. Other States followed, and Congress recommended
-it as “the most probable means of establishing in these States a firm
-National Government.”[32] Meantime, Noah Webster, whom you know so well
-as author of the popular Dictionary, in an essay on the situation,
-published at the time, proposed a new system of government, which
-should act directly on the individual citizens, and by which Congress
-should be invested with full powers of legislation within its sphere,
-and for carrying its laws into effect.[33] But this proposition
-involved nothing less than a National Government with supreme powers,
-to which the States should be subordinate.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here I mention three illustrious characters, who at this time lent the
-weight of their great names to the national cause,--Jay, Madison, and
-Washington,--each in his way without a peer. I content myself with
-a few words from each. John Jay, writing to John Adams, at the time
-our minister in London, under date of 4th May, 1786, says: “One of
-the first wishes of my heart” is “to see the people of America become
-_One Nation in every respect_; for, as to the separate Legislatures,
-I would have them considered, with relation to the Confederacy, _in
-the same light in which counties stand_ to the State of which they are
-parts, viz., merely as districts to facilitate the purposes of domestic
-order and good government.”[34] Even in this strong view Jay was not
-alone. Franklin had already led in likening the colonies to “so many
-counties.”[35] Madison’s desires were differently expressed. After
-declaring against “an individual independence of the States,” on the
-one side, and “a consolidation of the States into one simple republic,”
-on the other side, he sought what he called a “middle ground,” which,
-if varying from that of Jay, was essentially national. He would have
-“_a due supremacy of the National authority_, and leave in force the
-local authorities so far as they can be subordinately useful.”[36]
-Here is the definition of a Nation. Washington, in a letter to Jay,
-dated 1st August, 1786, stated the whole case with his accustomed
-authority. Insisting upon the importance of “a coercive power,” he
-pleads for national life: “I do not conceive we can exist long as _a
-Nation_ without having lodged somewhere a power which will pervade the
-whole Union in _as energetic a manner as the authority of the State
-governments extends over the several States_.” He then adds: “To be
-fearful of investing Congress, constituted as that body is, with _ample
-authorities for National purposes_, appears to me the very climax of
-popular absurdity and madness.”[37] Such were the longings of patriots,
-all filled with a passion for country. But Washington went still
-further, when, on another occasion, he denounced State sovereignty as
-“bantling,” and even “monster.”[38]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Constituent Convention, often called Federal, better called
-National, assembled at Philadelphia in May, 1787. It was a memorable
-body, whose deliberations have made an epoch in the history of
-government. Jefferson and John Adams were at the time abroad in the
-foreign service of the country, Samuel Adams was in service at home
-in Massachusetts, and Jay in New York; but Washington, Franklin,
-Hamilton, Madison, Gouverneur Morris, George Mason, Wilson, Ellsworth,
-and Sherman appeared among its members. Washington, by their unanimous
-voice, became President; and, according to the rules of the Convention,
-on adjournment, every member stood in his place until the President had
-passed him. Here is a glimpse of that august body which Art may yet
-picture. Who would not be glad to look upon Franklin, Hamilton, and
-Madison standing in their places while Washington passed?
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the first day after the adoption of the rules, Edmund Randolph, of
-Virginia, opened the great business. He began by announcing that the
-“Confederation” produced no security against foreign invasion; that the
-“Federal Government” could not suppress quarrels or rebellion; that
-the “Federal Government” could not defend itself against encroachments
-from the States; and then, insisting that the remedy must be found in
-“the republican principle,” concluded with a series of propositions for
-a National Government, with a “National” Legislature in two branches,
-a “National” Executive, and a “National” Judiciary, the whole crowned
-by the guaranty of a republican government in each State. This series
-of propositions was followed the next day by a simple statement in the
-form of a resolution, where, after setting forth the insufficiency
-of “a union of the States merely Federal,” or of “treaties among
-the States as individual sovereignties,” it was declared “that _a
-National Government ought to be established_, consisting of a supreme
-legislative, executive, and judiciary.” Better words could not have
-been chosen to express the prevailing aspiration for national life.
-After ample debate, the resolution in this form was adopted. At a
-later stage, in seeming deference to mistaken sensibilities, the
-word “National” gave place to the term “the government of the United
-States”; but this term equally denoted National Unity, although it did
-not use the words. The whole clause afterwards found a noble substitute
-in the Preamble to the Constitution, which is the annunciation of a
-National Government proceeding directly from the People, like the
-Declaration of Independence itself.
-
-From the beginning to the end of its debates, the Convention breathed
-the same patriotic fervor. Amidst all difference in details, and above
-the persistent and sinister contest for the equal representation of
-the States, great and small, the sentiment of Unity found constant
-utterance. I have already mentioned Madison and Hamilton, who wished
-a National Government; but others were not less decided. Gouverneur
-Morris began early by explaining the difference between “Federal”
-and “National.” The former implied “a mere compact, resting on the
-good faith of the parties”; the latter had “a complete and compulsive
-operation.”[39] Constantly this impassioned statesman protested against
-State pretensions, insisting that the States were originally “nothing
-more than colonial corporations,”[40] and exclaiming, “We cannot
-annihilate, but we may perhaps take out the teeth of the serpents.”[41]
-Wilson was a different character,--gentle by nature, but informed
-by studies in jurisprudence and by the education brought from his
-Scottish home. He was for a National Government, and did not think it
-inconsistent with the “lesser jurisdictions” of States, which he would
-preserve;[42] he would not “extinguish these planets,” but keep them
-“within their proper orbits for subordinate purposes.”[43] He was too
-much of a jurist to admit, “that, when the Colonies became independent
-of Great Britain, they became independent also of each other,” and
-he insisted that they became independent, “not individually, but
-unitedly.”[44] Elbridge Gerry, of Massachusetts, was as strong on this
-point as Gouverneur Morris, insisting that “we never were independent
-States, were not such now, and never could be, even on the principles
-of the Confederation.”[45] Rufus King, also of Massachusetts, touched
-a higher key, when he wished that “every man in America” should be
-“secured in all his rights,” and that these should not be “sacrificed
-to the phantom of State sovereignty.”[46] Good words, worthy of him
-who in the Continental Congress moved the prohibition of Slavery in
-the national territories.[47] And Charles Pinckney, of South Carolina,
-said, in other words of precious significance, that “every freeman has
-a right to _the same protection and security_,” and then again, that
-“equality is the leading feature of the United States.”[48] Under such
-influences the Constitution was adopted by the Convention.
-
-It is needless to dwell on its features, all so well known; but there
-are certain points not to be disregarded now. There is especially
-the beginning. Next after the opening words of the Declaration of
-Independence, the opening words of the Constitution are the grandest
-in history. They sound like a majestic overture, fit prelude to the
-transcendent harmonies of National life on a theatre of unexampled
-proportions. Though familiar, they cannot be too often repeated; for
-they are in themselves an assurance of popular rights and an epitome
-of National duties: “_We, the people of the United States_, in order
-to form a more perfect Union, establish justice, insure domestic
-tranquillity, provide for the common defence, promote the general
-welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our
-posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United
-States of America.” Thus by the people of the United States was the
-Constitution ordained and established; not by the States, nor even by
-the people of the several States, but by _the people of the United
-States_ in aggregate individuality. Nor is it a league, alliance,
-agreement, compact, or confederation; but it is a Constitution, which
-in itself denotes an indivisible unity under one supreme law, permanent
-in character; and this Constitution, thus ordained and established,
-has for its declared purposes nothing less than liberty, justice,
-domestic tranquillity, the common defence, the general welfare, and a
-more perfect union, all essentially National, and to be maintained by
-the National arm. The work thus begun was completed by three further
-provisions: first, the lofty requirement that “the United States
-shall guaranty to every State in this Union a republican form of
-government,”--thus subjecting the States to the presiding judgment of
-the Nation, which is left to determine the definition of a republican
-government; secondly, the practical investiture of Congress with
-authority “to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for
-carrying into execution all the powers vested by this Constitution in
-the Government of the United States, or in any department or officer
-thereof,”--thus assuring the maintenance of the National Government,
-and the execution of its powers through a faithful Congress chosen
-by the people; and, thirdly, the imperial declaration, that “this
-Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made
-in pursuance thereof, and all treaties made or which shall be made
-under the authority of the United States, shall be _the supreme law
-of the land_, and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby,
-_anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
-notwithstanding_,”--thus forever fixing the supremacy of the National
-Government on a pinnacle above all local laws and constitutions. And
-thus did our country again assume the character and obligations of a
-Nation. Its first awakening was in the Declaration of Independence; its
-second was in the National Constitution.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On its adoption, the Constitution was transmitted to Congress with a
-letter from Washington, where, among other things, it is said that “in
-all our deliberations we kept steadily in our view that which appears
-to us the greatest interest of every true American, _the consolidation
-of our Union_, in which is involved our prosperity, felicity, safety,
-perhaps our National existence.”[49] Enough that this letter is signed
-“George Washington”; but it was not merely the expression of his
-individual sentiments. It was unanimously adopted by the Convention,
-on the report of the committee that made the final draught of the
-Constitution itself, so that it must be considered as belonging to
-this great transaction. By its light the Constitution must be read.
-If anybody is disposed to set up the denationalizing pretensions of
-States under the National Constitution, let him bear in mind this
-explicit declaration, that, throughout all the deliberations of the
-Convention, the one object kept steadily in view was _the consolidation
-of our Union_. Such is the unanimous testimony of the Convention,
-authenticated by George Washington.
-
-The Constitution was discussed next in the States. It was vindicated
-as creating a National Government, and it was opposed also on this
-very ground. Thus from opposite quarters comes the concurring
-testimony. In Connecticut, Mr. Johnson, who had been chairman of
-the committee that reported the final draught, said, in reply to
-inquiries of his constituents, that the Convention had “gone upon
-entirely new ground: they have formed _one new Nation_ out of the
-individual States.”[50] George Mason, of Virginia, proclaimed at home
-that “the Confederation of the States was entirely changed into _one
-consolidated government_,”--that it was “a _National_ government,
-and no longer a Confederation.”[51] Patrick Henry, in his vigorous
-opposition, testified to the completeness with which the work had been
-accomplished. Inquiring by what authority the Convention assumed to
-make such a government, he exclaimed: “That this is a consolidated
-government is demonstrably clear.… Give me leave to demand, What right
-had they to say, _We, the people_?… Who authorized them to speak
-the language of _We, the people_, instead of _We, the States_?… If
-the States be not the agents of this compact, it must be one great
-consolidated National government of the people of all the States.”[52]
-Then again the same fervid orator declared, with infinite point, “The
-question turns, Sir, on that poor little thing, the expression, _We,
-the people_, instead of _the States_.”[53] Patrick Henry was right.
-The question did turn on that grand expression, _We, the people_, in
-the very frontispiece of the Constitution, filling the whole with
-life-giving power; and so long as it stands there, the denationalizing
-pretensions of States must shrink into littleness. Originally “one
-people” during colonial days, we have been unalterably fixed in this
-condition by two National acts: first, the Declaration of Independence,
-and then again, the National Constitution. Thus is doubly assured the
-original unity in which we were born.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Other tokens of Nationality, like the air we breathe, are so common
-that they hardly attract attention; but each has a character of its
-own. They belong to the “unities” of our nation.
-
-1. There is the National Flag. He must be cold indeed, who can look
-upon its folds rippling in the breeze without pride of country. If in
-a foreign land the flag is companionship, and country itself, with all
-its endearments, who, as he sees it, can think of a State merely? Whose
-eyes, once fastened upon its radiant trophies, can fail to recognize
-the image of the whole Nation? It has been called “a floating piece of
-poetry”; and yet I know not if it have an intrinsic beauty beyond other
-ensigns. Its highest beauty is in what it symbolizes. It is because
-it represents all, that all gaze at it with delight and reverence. It
-is a piece of bunting lifted in the air; but it speaks sublimely, and
-every part has a voice. Its stripes of alternate red and white proclaim
-the original _union_ of thirteen States to maintain the Declaration
-of Independence. Its stars of white on a field of blue proclaim that
-_union_ of States constituting our national constellation, which
-receives a new star with every new State. The two together signify
-Union, past and present. The very colors have a language, officially
-recognized by our fathers. White is for purity; red, for valor; blue,
-for justice. And all together, bunting, stripes, stars, and colors,
-blazing in the sky, make the flag of our country, to be cherished by
-all our hearts, to be upheld by all our hands.
-
-Not at once did this ensign come into being. Its first beginning was
-in the camp before Boston, and it was announced by Washington in these
-words: “The day which gave being to the new army, we hoisted the _Union
-flag_, in compliment to the United Colonies.”[54] The National forces
-and the National flag began together. Shortly afterwards, amidst the
-acclamations of the people, a fleet of five sail left Philadelphia,
-according to the language of the time, “under the display of a _Union
-flag_ with thirteen stripes.”[55] This was probably the same flag, not
-yet matured into its present form. In its corner, where are now the
-stars, were the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew, red and white,
-originally representing England and Scotland, and when conjoined, after
-the union of those two countries, known as “the Union.” To these were
-added thirteen stripes, alternate red and white, and the whole was
-hailed at the time as the Great Union Flag. The States, represented by
-the stripes, were in subordination to the National Unity, represented
-by the two crosses. But this form did not continue long. By a
-resolution adopted 14th June, 1777, and made public 3d September, 1777,
-Congress determined “that the flag of the thirteen United States be
-thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that _the union_ be thirteen
-stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.”[56]
-Here the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew gave place to white
-stars in a blue field; the familiar symbol of British union gave place
-to another symbol of union peculiar to ourselves; and this completed
-the national flag, which a little later floated at the surrender of
-Burgoyne. Long afterward, in 1818, it was provided by Congress that a
-star be added on the admission of a new State, “to take effect on the
-fourth day of July next succeeding such admission.”[57] Thus, in every
-respect, and at each stage of its history, the National Flag testifies
-to the National Unity. The whole outstretched, indivisible country is
-seated in its folds.
-
-There is a curious episode of the national flag, which is not without
-value. As far back as 1754, Franklin, while attempting a union of the
-Colonies, pictured the principal ones in a wood-cut under the device of
-a snake divided into eight parts marked with their initials, and under
-the disjointed whole the admonitory motto, “_Join or die_,”--thus
-indicating the paramount necessity of Union. In the heats of the
-Revolutionary discussion, a similar representation of all the Thirteen
-Colonies was adopted as the head-piece of newspapers, and was painted
-on banners; but when the Union was accomplished, the divisions and
-initials were dropped, and the snake was exhibited whole, coiled
-in conscious power, with thirteen rattles, and under it another
-admonitory motto, “_Don’t tread on me_,”--being a warning to the mother
-country.[58] This flag was yellow, and it became the early standard of
-the Revolutionary navy, being for the first time hoisted by Paul Jones
-with his own hands. It had a further lesson. A half-formed additional
-rattle was said by Franklin “to represent the province of Canada,”
-and the wise man added, that “the rattles are united together so as
-never to be separated but by breaking them to pieces.” Thus the snake
-at one time pictured the necessity of Union, and at another time its
-indissoluble bond.[59] But these symbols were all in harmony with the
-national flag, which, from its first appearance, in all its forms,
-pictured the common cause.
-
-2. There is next the National Motto, as it appears on the national
-seal and on the national money. A common seal and common money are
-signs of National Unity. In each the supreme sovereignty of the Nation
-is manifest. The first is like the national flag, and stands for
-the Nation, especially in treaties with foreign powers. The second
-is a national convenience, if not necessity, taking its distinctive
-character from the Nation, so that everywhere it is a representative
-of the Nation. Each has the same familiar motto, _E pluribus
-unum_,--“From many one.” Its history attests its significance.
-
-On the 4th of July, 1776, the very day of Independence, Benjamin
-Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson were appointed a committee
-to prepare a device for a great seal. They were of the identical
-committee that had reported the Declaration of Independence itself.
-Their report on the seal was made 20th August, 1776; and here we first
-meet the national motto, in such entire harmony with the Declaration,
-making us “one people.” Questions of detail intervened, and no
-conclusion was reached until 20th June, 1782, when the present seal was
-adopted, being the American bald eagle, with the olive-branch in one
-talon and a bundle of thirteen arrows in the other, and in his beak a
-scroll, bearing the inscription, _E pluribus unum_. Familiar as these
-Latin words have become,--so that they haunt the memory of manhood,
-youth, and childhood alike,--it is not always considered how completely
-and simply they tell the story of our national life. Out of Many
-Colonies was formed One Nation. Former differences were merged in this
-unity. No longer Many, they were One. The Nation by its chosen motto
-repeats perpetually, “We are One”; and the Constitution echoes back,
-“We, the people of the United States.”
-
-3. There is next the National Name, which of itself implies National
-Unity. The States are not merely allied, associated, coalesced,
-confederated, but they are _United_, and the Constitution, formed to
-secure a more perfect union, is “for the _United_ States of America,”
-which term was used as the common name of the Nation.
-
-A regret has been sometimes expressed by patriots and by poets, that
-some single term was not originally adopted, which of itself should
-exclude every denationalizing pretension, and be a talisman for the
-heart to cherish and for the tongue to utter,--as when Nelson gave his
-great watchword at Trafalgar, “_England_ expects every man to do his
-duty.” Occasionally it is proposed to call the country _Columbia_, and
-thus restore to the great discoverer at least part of the honor taken
-from him when the continent was misnamed _America_. _Alleghania_ has
-also been proposed; but this word is too obviously a mere invention,
-besides its unwelcome suggestion of Alligator. Another proposition
-has been _Vinland_, being the name originally given by the Northmen,
-four centuries before Christopher Columbus. Professor Lieber, on one
-occasion, called the nation _Freeland_, a name to which it will soon
-be entitled. Even as a bond of union, such a name would not be without
-value. As long ago as Herodotus, it was said of a certain people,[60]
-that they would have been the most powerful in the world, if they had
-been united; but this was impossible, from the want among themselves of
-a common name.
-
-Forgetting that the actual name implies Unity, and, when we consider
-its place in the preamble of the National Constitution, that it
-implies Nationality also, the partisans of State pretensions argue
-from it against even the idea of country; and here I have a curious
-and authentic illustration. In reply to an inquirer,[61] who wished
-a single name, Mr. Calhoun exclaimed: “Not at all; we have no name
-because we ought to have none; we are only States united, and have
-no country.” Alas, if it be so!--if this well-loved land, for which
-so many have lived, for which so many have died, is not our country!
-But this strange utterance shows how completely the poison of these
-pretensions had destroyed the common sense, as well as the patriotism,
-of this much-mistaken man.
-
-Names may be given by sovereign power to new discoveries or
-settlements; but, as a general rule, they grow out of the soil,
-they are autochthonous. Even Augustus, when ruling the Roman world,
-confessed that he could not make a new word,[62] and Plato tells
-us that “a creator of names is the rarest of human creatures.”[63]
-Reflecting on these things, we may appreciate something of the
-difficulty in the way of a new name at the formation of the National
-Constitution. As this was little more than a transcript of prevailing
-ideas and institutions, it was natural to take the name used in the
-Declaration of Independence.
-
-And yet it must not be forgotten that there was a name of
-different character which was much employed. Congress was called
-“Continental,” the army “Continental,” the money “Continental,”--a
-term certainly of unity, as well as vastness. But there was still
-another national designation, accepted at home and abroad. Our
-country was called “America,” and we were called “Americans.” Here
-was a natural, unsought, and instinctive name,--a growth, and not
-a creation,--implying national unity and predominance, if not
-exclusive power, on the continent. It was used not occasionally or
-casually, but constantly,--not merely in newspapers, but in official
-documents. Not an address of Congress, not a military order, not a
-speech, which does not contain this term, at once so expansive and so
-unifying. At the opening of the first Continental Congress, Patrick
-Henry, in a different mood from that of a later day, announced the
-national unity under this very name. Declaring the boundaries of the
-several Colonies effaced, and the distinctions between Virginians,
-Pennsylvanians, New-Yorkers, and New-Englanders as no more, he
-exclaimed, in words of comprehensive patriotism, “I am not a Virginian,
-but an _American_.”[64] Congress took up the strain, and commissioned
-Washington as commander-in-chief of the armies “for the defence
-of _American_ liberty”;[65] and Washington himself, in his first
-general order at Cambridge, assuming his great command, announced
-that the armies were “for the support and defence of the liberties of
-_America_;[66] and in a letter to Congress, just before the Battle
-of Trenton, he declared that he had labored “to discourage all kinds
-of local attachments and distinctions of country, _denominating the
-whole by the greater name of American_.”[67] Then at the close of the
-war, in its immortal Address, fit supplement to the Declaration of
-Independence, Congress said: “Let it be remembered that it has ever
-been the pride and boast of _America_ that the rights for which she
-contended were the rights of Human Nature.”[68] Washington again,
-in his letter to Congress communicating the National Constitution,
-says, in other words, which, like those of Congress, cannot be too
-often quoted, that “the _consolidation of our Union_” is “the greatest
-interest of _every true American_.”[69] Afterwards, in his Farewell
-Address, which from beginning to end is one persuasive appeal for
-nationality, after enjoining upon his fellow-citizens that “_unity of
-government_ which constitutes them _one people_,” he gives to them a
-national name, and this was his legacy: “_The name of American, which
-belongs to you in your national capacity_, must always exalt the just
-pride of patriotism more than any appellation derived from local
-discriminations.”[70] Thus did Washington put aside those baneful
-pretensions under which the country has suffered, even to the extent of
-adopting a National Name, which, like the Union itself, should have a
-solid coercive power.
-
-It is not impossible that in the lapse of time history will vindicate
-the name adopted by Washington, which may grow with the Republic, until
-it becomes the natural designation of one country. Our fathers used
-this term more wisely than they knew; but they acted under Providential
-guidance. Is it not said of the stars, that God “calleth them all by
-names, by the greatness of His might”?[71] Is it not declared also that
-He will make him who overcometh a pillar in the temple, and give to him
-a “new name”?[72] So, as our stars multiply, and the nation overcometh
-its adversaries, persuading all to its declared principles, everywhere
-on the continent, it will become a pillar in the temple, and the name
-of the continent itself will be needed to declare alike its unity and
-its power.
-
-4. To these “unities,” derived from history and the heart of the
-people, may be added another, where Nature is the great teacher. I
-refer to the geographical position and configuration of our country,
-if not of the whole continent, marking it for one nation. Unity is
-written upon it by the Almighty hand. In this respect it differs much
-from Europe, where, for generations, seas, rivers, and mountains kept
-people apart, who had else, “like kindred drops, been mingled into
-one.” There is no reason why they should not commingle here. Nature in
-every form is propitious. Facility of intercourse, not less than common
-advantage, leads to unity: both these are ours. Here are navigable
-rivers, numerous and famous, being so many highways of travel, and a
-chain of lakes, each an inland sea. Then there is an unexampled extent
-of country adapted to railways; and do not forget that with the railway
-is the telegraph, using the lightning as its messenger, so that the
-interrogatory to Job is answered, “Canst thou send lightnings that they
-may go?”[73] The country is one open expanse, from the frozen Arctic
-to the warm waters of the Gulf, and from the Atlantic to the Rocky
-Mountains,--and there already science supplies the means of overcoming
-this barrier, which in other days would have marked international
-boundaries. The Pacific Railway will neutralize these mountains, and
-complete the geographical unity of the continent. The slender wire of
-the telegraph, when once extended, is an indissoluble tie; the railway
-is an iron band. But these depend upon opportunities which Nature
-supplies, so that Nature herself is one of the guardians of our nation.
-
-He has studied history poorly, and human nature no better, who
-imagines that this broad compacted country can be parcelled into
-different nationalities. Where will you run the thread of partition? By
-what river? Along what mountain? On what line of latitude or longitude?
-Impossible. No line of longitude or latitude, no mountain, no river,
-can become the demarcation. Every State has rights in every other
-State. The whole country has a title, which it will never renounce, in
-every part, whether the voluminous Mississippi as it pours to the sea,
-or that same sea as it chafes upon our coast. As well might we of the
-East attempt to shut you of the West from the ocean as you attempt to
-shut us from the Mississippi. The ocean will always be yours as it is
-ours, and the Mississippi will always be ours as it is yours.
-
-Our country was planned by Providence for a united and homogeneous
-people. Apparent differences harmonize. Even climate, passing through
-all gradations from North to South, is so tempered as to present an
-easy uniformity from the Atlantic to the Rocky Mountains. Unmeasured
-supplies of all kinds, mineral and agricultural, are at hand,--the
-richest ores and the most golden crops, with the largest coal-fields of
-the world below and the largest corn-fields of the world above. Strabo
-said of ancient Gaul, that, by its structure, with its vast plains and
-considerable rivers, it was destined to become the theatre of a great
-civilization.[74] But the structure of our country is more auspicious.
-Our plains are vaster and our rivers more considerable, furnishing a
-theatre grander than any imagined by the Greek geographer. It is this
-theatre, thus appointed by Nature, which is now open for the good of
-mankind.
-
-Here I stop, to review the field over which we have passed, and to
-gather its harvest into one sheaf. Beginning with the infancy of the
-Colonies, we have seen how, with different names and governments, they
-were all under _one sovereignty_, with common and interchangeable
-rights of citizenship, so that no British subject in one Colony could
-be made an alien in any other Colony; how, even at the beginning,
-longings for a common life began, showing themselves in “loving
-accord”; how Franklin regarded the Colonies “as so many counties”;
-how the longings increased, until, under the pressure of the mother
-country, they broke forth in aspiration for “an American Commonwealth”;
-how they were at last organized in a Congress, called, from its
-comprehensive character, “Continental”; how, in the exercise of powers
-derived from “the good people,” and in their name, the Continental
-Congress put forth the Declaration of Independence, by which the
-sovereignty of the mother country was forever renounced, and we were
-made “one people,” solemnly dedicated to Human Rights, and thus became
-a Nation; how the undivided sovereignty of all was substituted for
-the undivided sovereignty of the mother country, embracing all the
-States as the other sovereignty had embraced all the Colonies; how,
-according to Franklin, the States were locked together, “so as never to
-be separated, but by breaking them to pieces”; how in an evil hour the
-Confederation was formed in deference to denationalizing pretensions
-of the States; how the longings for national life continued, and
-found utterance in Congress, in Washington, and in patriot compeers;
-how Jay wished the States should be like “counties”; how “Washington
-denounced State sovereignty as “bantling” and “monster”; how at last
-a National Convention assembled, with Washington as President, where
-it was voted that “a National Government ought to be established”;
-how in this spirit, after ample debate, the National Constitution was
-formed, with its preamble beginning “We, the people,” with its guaranty
-of a republican government to all the States, with its investiture of
-Congress with all needful powers for the maintenance of the Government,
-and with its assertion of supremacy over State constitutions and laws;
-how this Constitution was commended by Washington in the name of the
-Convention as “the consolidation of our Union”; how it was vindicated
-and opposed as creating a National Government; how on its adoption we
-again became a Nation; then how our nationality has been symbolized
-in the National Flag, the National Motto, and the National Name; and,
-lastly, how Nature, in the geographical position and configuration of
-the country, has supplied the means of National Unity, and written her
-everlasting guaranty. And thus do I bind the whole together into one
-conclusion, saying to all, We are a Nation.
-
-Nor is this all. Side by side with the growth of National Unity was
-a constant dedication to Human Rights, which showed itself not only
-in the Declaration of Independence, with its promises and covenants,
-but in the constant claim of the rights of Magna Charta, the earlier
-cries of Otis, the assertion by the first Continental Congress of the
-right of the people “to participate in their legislative council,” the
-commission of Washington as commander-in-chief “for the defence of
-American liberty,” and the first general order of Washington, on taking
-command of his forces, where he rallies them to this cause; also in
-the later proclamation of Congress, at the close of the Revolution,
-that the rights contended for had been “the rights of Human Nature,”
-and the farewell general order of Washington, on the same occasion,
-where the contest is characterized in the same way: so that Human
-Rights were the beginning and end of the war, while the nation, as it
-grew into being, was quickened by these everlasting principles, and its
-faith was plighted to their support.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As a Nation, with a place in the family of nations, we have the powers
-of a nation, with corresponding responsibilities. Whether we regard
-these powers as naturally inhering in the nation, or as conferred upon
-it by those two title-deeds, the Declaration of Independence and the
-National Constitution, the conclusion is the same. From Nature, and
-also from its title-deeds, our nation must have all needful powers:
-first, for the national defence, foremost among which is the power to
-uphold and defend the national unity; secondly, for the safeguard of
-the citizen in all his rights of citizenship, foremost among which is
-equality, the first of rights, so that, as all owe equal allegiance,
-all shall enjoy equal protection; and, thirdly, for the support
-and maintenance of all the promises made by the nation, especially
-at its birth, being baptismal vows which cannot be disowned. These
-three powers are essentially national. They belong to our nation by
-the very law of its being and the terms of its creation. They cannot
-be neglected or abandoned. Every person, no matter what his birth,
-condition, or color, who can raise the cry, “I am an American citizen,”
-has a right to require at the hands of the nation, that it shall do
-its utmost, by all its central powers, to uphold the national unity,
-to protect the citizen in the rights of citizenship, and to perform
-the original promises of the nation. Failure here is apostasy and
-bankruptcy combined.
-
-It is vain to say that these requirements are not expressly set
-down in the National Constitution. By a law existing before this
-title-deed, they belong to the essential conditions of national life.
-If not positively nominated in the Constitution, they are there in
-substance; and this is enough. Every word, from “We, the people,” to
-the signature, “George Washington,” is instinct with national life, and
-there is not a single expression taking from the National Government
-any inherent power. From this “nothing” in the Constitution there can
-come nothing adverse. But there has always been a positive injunction
-on the nation to guaranty “a republican form of government” to all the
-States; and who can doubt, that, in the execution of this guaranty,
-the nation may exercise all these powers, and provide especially for
-the protection of the citizen in all the rights of citizenship? There
-are also recent Amendments, abolishing slavery, and expressly securing
-“the privileges and immunities of citizens” against the pretensions of
-States. Then there is the Declaration of Independence itself, which is
-the earlier title-deed. By that sacred instrument we were declared “one
-people,” with liberty and equality for all, and then, fixing forever
-the rights of citizenship, it was announced that all just government
-was derived only from “the consent of the governed.” Come weal or woe,
-that great Declaration must stand forever. Other things may fail, but
-this cannot fail. It is immortal as the nation itself. It is part of
-the nation, and the part most worthy of immortality. By it the National
-Constitution must be interpreted; or rather, the two together are the
-Constitution,--as Magna Charta and the Bill of Rights together are
-the British Constitution. By the Declaration our nation was born and
-its vital principles were announced; by the Constitution the nation
-was born again and supplied with the machinery of government. The two
-together are our National Scriptures, each being a Testament.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Against this conclusion there has been from the beginning one perpetual
-pretension in the name of States. The same spirit which has been so
-hostile to national unity in other countries, which made each feudal
-chief a petty sovereign, which for a long time convulsed France, which
-for centuries divided Italy, and which, unhappily, still divides
-Germany, has appeared among us. Assuming that communities never
-“sovereign” while colonies, and independent only by the national
-power, had in some way, by some sudden hocus-pocus, leaped into local
-sovereignty, and forgetting also that two sovereignties cannot coexist
-in the same place, as, according to the early dramatist,
-
- “Two kings in England cannot reign at once,”[75]
-
-the States insisted upon sovereign powers justly belonging to the
-Nation. Long ago the duel began. The partisans of State pretensions,
-plausibly professing to _decentralize_ the Government, have
-done everything possible to _denationalize_ it. In the name of
-self-government, they have organized local lordships hostile to Human
-Rights; in the name of the States, they have sacrificed the Nation.
-
-This pretension, constantly showing itself, has broken out on three
-principal occasions. The first was in the effort of Nullification,
-which occurred in 1832, where, under the lead of Mr. Calhoun, South
-Carolina attempted to nullify the Revenue Acts of Congress, or, in
-other words, to declare them void within her limits. After encountering
-the matchless argument of Daniel Webster, enforced by his best
-eloquence, Nullification was blasted by the thunderbolt of Andrew
-Jackson, who, in his Proclamation, as President, thus exposed it, even
-in the form of Secession, which it assumed at a later day: “Each State,
-having expressly parted with so many powers as to constitute jointly
-with the other States _a single nation_, cannot from that period
-possess any right to secede, because such secession does not break a
-league, but destroys the unity of a nation.”[76] The pretension next
-showed itself in the Rebellion; and now that the Rebellion is crushed,
-it reappears in still another form, by insisting that each State at
-its own will may disregard the universal rights of the citizen, and
-apply a discrimination according to its own local prejudices,--thus
-within its borders nullifying the primal truths of the Declaration of
-Independence. Here again do State pretensions, in their anarchical
-egotism, interfere with the National Unity.
-
-The pretensions of States have found their ablest and frankest upholder
-in John C. Calhoun. I take a single instance, on account of its
-explicitness. In reply to a Northern Senator, the defender of Slavery
-said:--
-
- “Now let me tell the Senator that the doctrines which we
- advocate are the result of the fullest and most careful
- examination of our system of government, and that our
- conviction that we constitute _an Union, and not a Nation_, is
- as strong and as sincere as that of the Senator or any other in
- the opposite opinion.”
-
- “We are as devoted to the Union as any portion of the American
- people (I use the phrase as meaning the people of the Union);
- but we see in a national consolidated government evils
- innumerable to us. Admit us to be a Nation and not an Union,
- and where would we stand? _We are in the minority._”[77]
-
-Evidently, in that minority he saw the doom of Slavery.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Local self-government, whether in the town, county, or State, is of
-incalculable advantage, supplying the opportunities of political
-education, and also a local administration adapted precisely to local
-wants. On this account the system has been admired by travellers
-from abroad, who have found in our “town meetings” the nurseries of
-the Republic, and have delighted in local exemption from central
-supervisorship. De Tocqueville, who journeyed here, has recorded his
-authoritative praise,--and Laboulaye, who has visited us only in his
-remarkable studies, unites with De Tocqueville. Against that exacting
-centralization, absorbing everything, of which Paris is the example, I
-oppose the American system of self-government, which leaves the people
-to themselves, subject only to the paramount conditions of national
-life. But these conditions cannot be sacrificed. No local claim of
-self-government can for a moment interfere with the supremacy of the
-Nation, in the maintenance of Human Rights.
-
-According to the wisdom of Plutarch, we must shun those pestilent
-persons who would “carry trifles to the highest magistrate,” and, in
-the same spirit, reject that pestilent supervisorship which asserts
-a regulating power over local affairs, and thus becomes a giant
-intermeddler. Let these be decided at home, in the States, counties,
-and towns to which they belong. Such is the genius of our institutions.
-This is the precious principle of self-government, which is at once
-educator and agency. In the former character, it is an omnipresent
-schoolmaster; in the latter, it is a suit of chain-armor, which, from
-flexibility, is adapted to the body of the nation, so that the limbs
-are free. Each locality has its own way in matters peculiar to itself.
-But the rights of all must be placed under the protection of all; nor
-can there be any difference in different parts of the country. Here the
-rule must be uniform, and it must be sustained by the central power
-radiating to every part of the various empire. This is according to the
-divine Cosmos, which in all its spaces is pervaded by one universal
-law. It is the rule of Almighty Beneficence, which, while leaving
-human beings to the activities of daily life and the consciousness
-of free-will, subjects all to the same commanding principles. Such
-centralization is the highest civilization, for it approaches the
-nearest to the heavenly example. Call it imperialism, if you please: it
-is simply the imperialism of the Declaration of Independence, with all
-its promises fulfilled. It is rendering unto Cæsar the things that are
-Cæsar’s. Already by central power Slavery has been abolished. Already
-by central power all have been assured in the equality of _civil_
-rights.
-
- “Two truths are told,
- As happy prologues to the swelling act
- Of the imperial theme.”
-
-It remains now that by central power all should be assured in the
-equality of _political_ rights. This does not involve necessarily
-what is sometimes called the “regulation” of the suffrage by the
-National Government, although this would be best. It simply requires
-the abolition of any discrimination among citizens, inconsistent with
-Equal Rights. If not by Act of Congress, let it be by a new Amendment
-of the Constitution; but it must be at once. Until this is done, we
-leave undone what ought to be done, and, in pitiable failure to perform
-a national duty, justify the saying that “there is no health in us.”
-The preposterous pretension, that color, whether of the hair or of the
-skin, or that any other unchangeable circumstance of natural condition
-may be made the “qualification” of a voter, cannot be tolerated. It is
-shocking to the moral sense, and degrading to the understanding.
-
-As in the Nation there can be but one sovereignty, so there can be
-but one citizenship. The unity of sovereignty finds its counterpart
-and complement in the unity of citizenship, and the two together are
-the tokens of a united people. Thus are the essential conditions
-of national life all resolved into three,--_one sovereignty, one
-citizenship, one people_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I conclude as I began. The late Rebellion against the nation was in the
-name of State Rights; therefore State Rights in their denationalizing
-pretensions must be overthrown. It proceeded from hostility to the
-sacred principles of the Declaration of Independence; therefore must
-these sacred principles be vindicated in spirit and in letter, so that
-hereafter they shall be a supreme law, coëqual with the Constitution,
-in whose illumination the Constitution must be read, and they shall
-supply the final definition of a Republic for guidance at home and for
-example to mankind.
-
-In this great change we follow Nature and obey her mandate. By
-irresistible law, water everywhere seeks its level, and finds it; and
-so, by law as irresistible, man seeks the level of every other man
-in rights, and will find it. Human passions and human institutions
-are unavailing to arrest it, as Nature is stronger than man, and the
-Creator is mightier than the creature. The recognition of this law
-is essential to the national cause; for so you will work with Nature
-rather than against it, and at the same time in harmony with the
-Declaration of Independence. Here I borrow a word from Locke, who, in
-his Essay “Of the Conduct of the Understanding,” says, that, in dealing
-with propositions, we must always examine upon what they “bottom.”[78]
-Now, in dealing with the Rebellion, we find, that, though in the name
-of State Rights, it “bottomed” on opposition to National Law and open
-denial of the self-evident truths declared by our fathers, especially
-of that central truth which Abraham Lincoln, at Gettysburg, in the
-most touching speech of all history, thus announces: “Four-score and
-seven years ago, our fathers brought forth upon this continent a new
-Nation, conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that
-_all men are created Equal_.”[79] Slavery was “bottomed” on the direct
-opposite; and so was the Rebellion, from beginning to end. Therefore
-we must encounter this denial. We do not extinguish Slavery, we do
-not trample out the Rebellion, until the vital truth declared by our
-fathers is established, and Nature in her law is obeyed. To complete
-the good work, this is necessary. Liberty is won: Equality must be won
-also. In England there is Liberty without Equality; in France, Equality
-without Liberty. The two together must be ours. This final victory
-will be the greatest of the war; it will be the consummation of all
-other victories. Here must we plant the national standard. To this
-championship I summon you. Go forth, victors in so many fields, and
-gather now the highest palm of all. The victory of ideas is grander far
-than any victory of blood. What battle ever did so much for humanity
-as the Sermon on Mars Hill? What battle ever did so much as the
-Declaration of Independence? But Sermon and Declaration are one, and it
-is your glorious part to assure the National Unity on this adamantine
-base.
-
-All hail to the Republic, redeemed and regenerated, One and
-Indivisible! Nullification and Secession are already, like the extinct
-monsters of a former geological period, to be seen only in the museum
-of History. With their extinction must disappear the captious,
-litigious, and disturbing spirit engendered by State pretensions. The
-whole face of the country will be transformed. There will be concord
-for discord, smiles for frowns. There will be a new consciousness
-of national life, with a corresponding glow. The soul will dilate
-with the assured unity of the Republic, and all will feel the glory
-of its citizenship. Since that of Rome, nothing so commanding.
-Local jealousies and geographical distinctions will be lost in the
-attractions of a common country. Then, indeed, there will be no North,
-no South, no East, no West; but there will be One Nation. No single
-point of the compass, but the whole horizon, will receive our regard.
-Not the Southern Cross flaming with beauty, not even the North Star,
-long time guide of the mariner and refuge to the flying bondman, but
-the whole star-spread firmament, will be our worship and delight.
-
-As the Nation stands confessed in undivided sovereignty, the States
-will not cease their appropriate functions. Interlocked, interlaced,
-and harmonized, they will be congenial parts of the mighty whole, with
-Liberty and Equality the recognized birthright of all, and no local
-pretension to interfere against the universal law. There will be a
-sphere alike for the States and Nation. Local self-government, which
-is the pride of our institutions, will be reconciled with the national
-supremacy in maintenance of human rights, and the two together will
-constitute the elemental principles of the Republic. The States will
-exercise a minute jurisdiction required for the convenience of all; the
-Nation will exercise that other paramount jurisdiction required for
-the protection of all. The reconciliation--God bless the word!--thus
-begun will embrace the people, who, forgetting past differences, will
-feel more than ever that they are One, and it will invigorate the still
-growing Republic, whose original root was little more than an acorn, so
-that it will find new strength to resist the shock of tempest or time,
-while it overarches the continent with its generous shade. Such, at
-least, is the aspiration in which all may unite.
-
- “Firm like the oak may our blest nation rise,
- No less distinguished for its strength than size;
- The unequal branches emulous unite
- To shield and grace the trunk’s majestic height;
- Through long succeeding years and centuries live,
- No vigor losing from the aid they give!”[80]
-
-
-
-
-CONSTANT DISTRUST OF THE PRESIDENT.
-
-REMARKS IN THE SENATE, ON THE FINAL ADJOURNMENT, NOVEMBER 26, 1867.
-
-
- Thursday, November 21st, Congress reassembled, pursuant to the
- resolution adopted July 20th. According to existing law, the
- regular session would commence on the first Monday of December.
-
- November 26th, Mr. Grimes, of Iowa, moved the adjournment
- of the two Houses on Monday, December 2d, at half past
- eleven o’clock, A. M. Mr. Sumner suggested “twelve o’clock,”
- remarking,--
-
-I question whether we should leave even the break of half an hour
-between the two sessions. The point is just this: Will you leave to
-the President one half-hour within which he may take advantage of the
-absence of Congress, and issue commissions which would perhaps run--I
-do not decide the point now, but which, I say, might run to the last
-day of the next session?--that may be midsummer or autumn. I take it
-that an appointment during that interim of half an hour might possibly
-be valid to the last day of the next session of Congress.
-
- MR. EDMUNDS [of Vermont]. But the law takes no notice of parts
- of a day.
-
- MR. SUMNER. That is a technicality. Why open the question?
-
- Mr. Grimes, following the suggestion, altered his motion to
- “twelve o’clock.” A debate ensued, in which Mr. Sherman, of
- Ohio, Mr. Fessenden, of Maine, and Mr. Trumbull, of Illinois,
- took part. Mr. Sumner followed.
-
-I hope that what we do will be for the welfare of the country, and with
-no reference to mere rumors or reports. There I agree with my friend;
-but then I do not agree with him, when he says, Give the President
-another chance. We have been giving him chances, and we cannot act now
-without taking into consideration his character and position, which
-have become matters of history. I would speak with proper delicacy,
-with proper reserve, but I must speak under the responsibility of
-a Senator. A large portion of our country believe the President a
-wicked man, of evil thoughts and unpatriotic purposes, in spirit and
-conduct the successor of Jefferson Davis, through whom the Rebellion is
-revived. Such are the sentiments of a large portion of our people.
-
- MR. DIXON [of Connecticut]. I desire to ask the Senator if that
- is the opinion of a majority of the American people, in his
- judgment.
-
-MR. SUMNER. It is unquestionably the opinion of a large portion of
-the people of the United States; whether a majority or not the future
-may disclose. I will not anticipate any such judgment. I speak now
-with reference to what is before us. The question is, whether we shall
-give him another opportunity. I say, No. And here I act on no floating
-rumor, to which the Senator from Illinois refers; I act with reference
-to the character of the chief magistrate, displayed in his public
-conduct. It seems to me that it will be something like rashness, if the
-Senate concede to him another occasion to practise on the country in
-carrying out his policy, as we know he has practised in times past.
-We must stop the way. We should not give him a day; we should not give
-him five minutes,--I am ready to say that,--not five minutes, for the
-chance of illegitimate power. I will not allow him to exercise it, and
-then take my chance hereafter of applying the corrective.
-
-And that brings me to the exact point as to whether the present session
-should expire precisely when the coming session begins. I see no reason
-why it should not. I see no reason why we should interpose the buffer
-even of five minutes. Let one session come close upon the other, and
-then we shall exclude every possibility of evil consequences. In
-France, during the old monarchy, when the king died, the moment the
-breath was out of his body the reign of his successor began, so that
-the cry, “The king is dead,” was followed instantly by another cry,
-“Long live the king!” Now I know not why, when this session expires,
-we may not at the same time announce its expiration and announce a new
-session.
-
- The resolution was agreed to, and Congress adjourned
- accordingly.
-
-
-
-
-THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT: WITHDRAWAL OF ASSENT BY A STATE.
-
-REMARKS IN THE SENATE, ON THE RESOLUTIONS OF THE LEGISLATURE OF OHIO
-RESCINDING ITS FORMER RESOLUTION IN RATIFICATION OF THE FOURTEENTH
-AMENDMENT, JANUARY 31, 1868.
-
-
-The resolutions from the Legislature of Ohio are so important in
-character, and so wholly without precedent, I believe, in our history,
-that I think they justify remark even by a Senator who has not the
-honor of any special association with that State.
-
-It seems to me very clear that the authors of these resolutions have
-accomplished nothing except to exhibit their own blind prejudices. By
-the Constitution of the United States, a State may give its assent to
-a Constitutional Amendment. There is no provision for any withdrawal
-of such assent, when once given. The assent of the State, once given,
-is final. A State, I do not hesitate to say, can no more withdraw
-such assent than it can withdraw from the Union; and on the latter
-proposition I believe there is now a universal accord.
-
-But, happily, Sir, this extraordinary effort of an accidental
-Legislature is absolutely impotent. The Amendment in question is
-already a part of the Constitution of the United States, and in full
-vigor, even without the assent of Ohio. By a report from the Secretary
-of State it appears that there is official evidence of the assent of
-the Legislatures of Connecticut, New Hampshire, Tennessee, New Jersey,
-Oregon, Vermont, New York, Illinois, West Virginia, Kansas, Nevada,
-Missouri, Indiana, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania,
-Michigan, Massachusetts, and Nebraska,--being twenty in all, without
-Ohio. To these now we may add Iowa, which has given its assent very
-recently, and also Maine, which has notoriously given its assent,
-although I understand it has not been officially communicated to
-the Department of State,--making, therefore, twenty-two States,
-even without Ohio. Twenty-two States are more than three fourths of
-the Loyal States, or, in other words, of those States that at this
-moment have Legislatures. The full requirement of the Constitution is
-therefore met.
-
-This Amendment was originally proposed by a vote of two thirds of
-Congress, composed of the representatives of the Loyal States. It
-has now been ratified by the Legislatures of three fourths of the
-Loyal States, being the same States which originally proposed it
-through their representatives in Congress. The States that are
-competent to propose a Constitutional Amendment are competent to adopt
-it. Both things have been done. The required majority in Congress
-have proposed it; the required majority of States have adopted it.
-Therefore, I say, this resolution of the Legislature of Ohio is _brutum
-fulmen_,--impotent as words without force. It can have no practical
-effect, except to disclose the character of its authors. As such it may
-be dismissed to the limbo of things lost on earth.
-
- Mr. Johnson, of Maryland, followed with some remarks, to which
- Mr. Sumner replied:--
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--I wish to remind the Senator from Maryland of the exact
-words of the Constitution, which were not, it seems to me, in his
-mind when he spoke. An Amendment, when proposed, “shall be valid to
-all intents and purposes as part of this Constitution, when ratified
-by the Legislatures of three fourths of the several States.” It does
-not say, “when ratified by three fourths of the several States,” but
-“by the ‘Legislatures’ of three fourths of the several States.” Now,
-if there are States without Legislatures, they can have no voice in
-the ratification. Apply this practically. Three fourths of the actual
-Legislatures of this Union have ratified the proposed Amendment, and
-I insist, on the text of the Constitution, and also on the reason
-of the case, that such ratification is complete. But I am unwilling
-that this argument should stand merely on my words. I introduce here
-the authority of the best living text-writer on the jurisprudence
-of our country, who has treated this very point in a manner which
-leaves no opportunity for reply. I refer to the book of Mr. Bishop
-on the Criminal Law, who, in one of his notes,[81] considers whether
-the Amendment of the Constitution abolishing Slavery had been at the
-time he wrote adopted in a constitutional manner. Of course the very
-question which we are now discussing with reference to the Fourteenth
-Amendment arises also on the Amendment prohibiting Slavery. They are
-both in the same predicament. If the Fourteenth Amendment is not now
-a part of the Constitution of the United States, then the Amendment
-prohibiting Slavery is not a part of the Constitution of the United
-States. They both stand on the same bottom; they were both proposed by
-Congress in the same way,--that is, by a vote of two thirds of the
-representatives of the Loyal States; and they have both been ratified
-by the votes of three fourths of the States having Legislatures. I send
-to the Chair the work of Mr. Bishop, and I ask the Secretary to be good
-enough to read what I have marked.
-
- The Secretary read the note above cited.
-
-
-
-
-LOYALTY IN THE SENATE: ADMISSION OF A SENATOR.
-
-REMARKS IN THE SENATE, ON THE RESOLUTION TO ADMIT PHILIP F. THOMAS AS
-SENATOR FROM MARYLAND, FEBRUARY 13, 1868.
-
-
- February 13th, the question of the admission of Hon. Philip F.
- Thomas, Senator-elect from Maryland, charged with disloyalty,
- coming up for consideration, on a resolution of Hon. Reverdy
- Johnson, of that State, that said Thomas “be admitted to his
- seat on his taking the oaths prescribed by the Constitution
- and laws of the United States,” Mr. Sumner moved the following
- substitute:--
-
- “That Philip F. Thomas, Senator-elect from Maryland, cannot
- be admitted to take the oaths of office required by the
- Constitution and laws, inasmuch as he allowed his minor son
- to leave the paternal house to serve as a Rebel soldier,
- and gave him at the time one hundred dollars in money, all
- of which was ‘aid,’ ‘countenance,’ or ‘encouragement’ to
- the Rebellion, which he was forbidden to give; and further,
- inasmuch as in forbearing to disclose and make known the
- treason of his son to the President, or other proper
- authorities, according to the requirement of the statute
- in such cases, he was guilty of misprision of treason as
- defined by existing law.”
-
- Mr. Sumner said:--
-
-A great debate on the question how loyalty shall be secured in the
-Rebel States is for the time silenced in order to consider how loyalty
-shall be secured in this Chamber. Everywhere in the Rebel States
-disloyal persons are struggling for power; and now at the door of the
-Senate we witness a similar struggle. If disloyalty cannot be shut out
-of this Chamber, how can we hope to overcome it elsewhere?
-
-More than once at other times I have discussed the question of
-loyalty in the Senate. But this was anterior to the adoption of the
-Fourteenth Constitutional Amendment. The case is plainer now than
-then, inasmuch as there is now an explicit text requiring loyalty as a
-“qualification.” Formerly we were left to something in the nature of
-inference; now the requirement is plain as language can make it.
-
-By the new Amendment it is provided that “no person shall be a Senator
-or Representative in Congress, … who, having previously taken an oath,
-as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, … to
-support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in
-insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to
-the enemies thereof.”
-
-These words are precisely applicable to the present case. They lay down
-a rule from which there is no appeal; and this rule is not merely in
-the statutes, but in the Constitution. It is the plain declaration that
-loyalty is a requirement in a Senator and Representative. If we do not
-apply it to ourselves now, it is difficult to see with what consistency
-we can apply it to others. Your course here will affect the meaning of
-this Constitutional Amendment, if not its validity for the future.
-
-I do not stop to argue the question if that Amendment is now a part
-of the Constitution; for I would not unnecessarily occupy your time,
-nor direct attention from the case which you are to decide. For the
-present I content myself with two remarks: first, the Amendment has
-already been adopted by three fourths of the States that took part in
-proposing it, and this is enough, for the spirit of the Constitution
-is thus satisfied; and, secondly, it has already been adopted by “the
-_Legislatures_ of three fourths of the several States” which have
-Legislatures, thus complying with the letter of the Constitution.
-Therefore, by the spirit of the Constitution, and also by its letter,
-this Amendment is now a part of the Constitution, binding on all of
-us. As such I invoke its application to this case. In face of this
-positive, peremptory requirement, it is impossible to see how loyalty
-can be other than a “qualification.” In denying it, you practically set
-aside this Amendment.
-
-But, even without this Amendment, I cannot doubt that the original
-text is sufficiently clear and explicit. It is nowhere said in the
-Constitution that certain specified requirements, and none others,
-shall be “qualifications” of Senators. This word “qualifications,”
-which plays such a part in this case, occurs in another connection,
-where it is provided that “each House shall be the judge of the
-elections, returns, and _qualifications_ of its own members.” What
-these “qualifications” may be is to be found elsewhere. Searching the
-Constitution from beginning to end, we find three “qualifications,”
-which come under the head of _form_, being (1.) age, (2.) citizenship,
-and (3.) inhabitancy in the State. But behind and above these is
-another “qualification,” which is of _substance_, in contradiction
-to _form_ only. So supreme is this, that it is placed under the
-safeguard of an oath. This is loyalty. It is easy to see how infinitely
-more important is this than either of the others,--than age, than
-citizenship, or than inhabitancy in the State. A Senator failing in
-either of these would be incompetent by the letter of the Constitution;
-but the Republic might not suffer from his presence. On the other
-hand, a Senator failing in loyalty is a public enemy, whose presence in
-this council-chamber would be a certain peril to the Republic.
-
-It is vain to say that loyalty is not declared to be a “qualification.”
-I deny it. Loyalty is made a “qualification” in the Amendment to the
-Constitution; and then again in the original text, when, in the most
-solemn way possible, it is distinguished and guarded by an oath.
-Men are familiarly said to “qualify,” when they take the oath of
-office; and thus the language of common life furnishes an authentic
-interpretation of the Constitution.
-
-But no man can be allowed to take the oath as Senator, when, on
-the evidence before the Senate, he is not competent. If it appear
-that he is not of sufficient age, or of the required citizenship or
-inhabitancy, he cannot be allowed to go to that desk. Especially if it
-appear that he fails in the all-important “qualification” of loyalty,
-he cannot be allowed to go to that desk. A false oath, taken with our
-knowledge, would compromise the Senate. We who consent will become
-parties to the falsehood; we shall be parties in the offence. It is
-futile to say that the oath is one of purgation only, and that it is
-for him who takes it to determine on his conscience if he can take it.
-The Senate cannot forget the evidence; nor can its responsibility in
-the case be swallowed up in any process of individual purgation. On the
-evidence we must judge, and act accordingly. The “open sesame” of this
-Chamber must be something more than the oath of a suspected applicant.
-
-According to Lord Coke, “an infidel cannot be sworn” as a witness. This
-was an early rule, which has since been softened in our courts. But,
-under the Constitution of the United States and existing statutes, a
-_political infidel_ cannot be sworn as a Senator. Whatever may be his
-inclination or motive, he must not be allowed to approach your desk.
-The country has a right to expect that all who enter here shall have
-a sure and well-founded loyalty, above all question or suspicion. And
-such, I insist, is the rule of the Constitution and of Congress.
-
-As if to place the question beyond all doubt, Congress by positive
-enactment requires that every Senator, before admission to his seat,
-shall swear that he has “voluntarily given no aid, countenance,
-counsel, or encouragement to persons engaged in armed hostility” to the
-United States.[82] Here is little more than an interpretation of the
-Constitution. The conclusion is plain. No person who has voluntarily
-given even “countenance” or “encouragement” to another engaged in the
-Rebellion can be allowed to take that oath.
-
-After this statement of the rule, the question arises, if Philip F.
-Thomas can be permitted to take the oath at your desk, or, in other
-words, to “qualify” as a Senator of the United States. Is he competent?
-This is a question of evidence.
-
-The ample discussion of the facts in this case, and their singular
-plainness, supersede the necessity of all details. The atmosphere about
-Mr. Thomas and his acts are harmonious. From the beginning we find him
-enveloped in coldness and indifference while his country was in peril.
-Observing him more closely, we are shocked by two acts of positive
-disloyalty, one of which is the natural prelude of the other. The
-first muttering of the Rebellion found him a member of the Cabinet of
-Mr. Buchanan; but when this uncertain President proposed the succor of
-our troops at Charleston, already menaced with war, Mr. Thomas withdrew
-from the patriotic service. He resigned his seat, following the lead of
-Cobb, Thompson, and Floyd. A man is known by the company he keeps. His
-company at this time were traitors, and the act they united in doing
-was essentially disloyal. As the Rebellion assumed the front of war,
-they all abandoned their posts: some to join the Rebellion and mingle
-with its armies; Mr. Thomas, more prudently, to watch the course of
-events in Maryland, ready to lift his arm also, if his State pronounced
-the word. This concerted desertion was in itself a conspiracy against
-the Government; and in the case of Mr. Thomas, who was Secretary of
-the Treasury, it was a blow at the national credit, which it was his
-special duty to guard. It was an act of disloyalty to be blasted by
-indignant history, even if your judgment fails now. And this was the
-first stage in this record.
-
-Meanwhile the war rages. Armies are marshalled; battles ensue;
-Washington itself is beleaguered; the Republic trembles with peril.
-But Mr. Thomas continues in the seclusion of his home, enveloped
-in the same disloyal atmosphere, and refusing always the oath of
-allegiance. At last, in 1863, an only son arrives at the age of
-eighteen. Though still a minor, he is already of the military age.
-Naturally filled with the sentiments of his father’s fireside, he
-seeks to maintain them by military service. He is like his father, but
-with the ardor of youth instead of the caution of years. He avows
-his purpose to enlist in the Rebel army, thus to levy war against his
-country, and adhere to its enemies. All this was treason,--plain,
-palpable, unquestionable, downright treason. Instead of detaining his
-son,--instead of keeping him back,--instead of interposing a paternal
-veto,--instead of laying hands gently upon him,--instead of denouncing
-him to the magistrate,--all of which the father might have done,--he
-deliberately lets him go, and then, to cap the climax of criminal
-complicity, furnishes the means for his journey and his equipment. He
-gives one hundred dollars. The father is not rich, and yet he gives
-this considerable sum. Few soldiers started with such ample allowance.
-Thus it stands: the father, who has already deserted his post in the
-Cabinet, and has refused to take the oath of allegiance to his country,
-contributes a soldier to the Rebellion, and that soldier is his only
-son; to complete and assure the great contribution, he contributes a
-sum of money also. If all this accumulated disloyalty, beginning in a
-total renunciation of every patriotic duty, and finally consummated
-by an act of flagrant, unblushing enormity, is not “aid and comfort”
-or “countenance” or “encouragement” to the Rebellion, it is difficult
-to say what can be. There must be new dictionaries for these familiar
-words, and they must receive a definition down to this day unknown.
-They must be treated as thread or gossamer, when they should be links
-of iron.
-
-On an occasion like the present, where the moral guilt is so patent,
-I hesitate to employ technical language. The simplest phrase is the
-best. But the law supplies language of its own. Regarding the act of
-Mr. Thomas in the mildest light, it was “misprision of treason,”
-according to every definition of that crime which can be found in the
-books. Lord Hale, whose authority, in stating the rules of Criminal
-Law, is of the highest character, says, under this head: “Every man is
-bound to use all possible lawful means to prevent a felony, as well
-as to take the felon; and if he doth not, he is liable to a fine and
-imprisonment.”[83] Lord Coke, another eminent authority, says: “If
-any be present when a man is slain, and omit to apprehend the slayer,
-it is a misprision.”[84] The same rule is, of course, applicable to
-treason. Mr. Bishop, who in his remarkable work on the Criminal Law
-has compressed the result of all the authorities, says: “Misprision of
-felony is a criminal neglect, either to prevent a felony from being
-committed by another, or to bring to justice a person known to be
-guilty of felony. Misprision of treason is the same of treason.”[85]
-Then again he says, citing Hawkins, Blackstone, East, and Russell, all
-familiar names in our courts, each an oracle:--
-
- “The doctrine of misprision, as now understood, may be stated
- as follows: To make a man liable for a crime committed through
- the physical volition of another, his own will must in some
- degree concur in or contribute to the crime. _But when it is
- treason or felony, and he stands by while it is done, without
- using the means in his power to prevent it, though his will
- concurs not in it,--or when he knows of its having been in
- his absence committed, but neither makes disclosure of it to
- the authorities nor does anything to bring the offender to
- punishment_,--the law holds him guilty of a breach of the duty
- due from every man to the community wherein he dwells and the
- government which protects him.”[86]
-
-I adduce these authorities in order to show, that, by the Common Law,
-as illustrated by some of its best names, Mr. Thomas is beyond all
-question an offender. Clearly he did not use “the means in his power”
-to prevent the treason of his son, nor did he “make disclosure of it to
-the authorities,” according to the received rule of law.
-
-But the statutes of the United States leave us no room for doubt
-or indulgence. According to the precise text, the present case is
-anticipated and provided for. The Statute of Crimes, adopted in
-1790, at the beginning of the National Government, after declaring
-the punishment of treason, proceeds to declare the punishment of
-“misprision of treason,” as follows:--
-
- “That, if _any person or persons, having knowledge of the
- commission of any of the treasons aforesaid, shall conceal and
- not as soon as may be disclose and make known the same_ to
- the President of the United States or some one of the Judges
- thereof, or to the President or Governor of a particular State
- or some one of the Judges or Justices thereof, _such person or
- persons, on conviction, shall be adjudged guilty of misprision
- of treason_, and shall be imprisoned not exceeding seven years,
- and fined not exceeding one thousand dollars.”[87]
-
-Apply these plain words to the present case. Nobody can doubt that
-Mr. Thomas had “knowledge” of the treason of his son, and, having
-this knowledge, failed to “disclose and make known the same” to the
-President of the United States or the other proper authorities. Abraham
-Lincoln was at the time President. There is no pretence that the
-father communicated the crime of the son to this patriot magistrate,
-or to any other loyal officer by whom he could have been arrested.
-Therefore, beyond all question, on the facts of the case, the father
-is guilty under the statute, and liable to seven years of imprisonment
-and a fine of one thousand dollars. And now, instead of seven years of
-imprisonment and a fine of one thousand dollars, it is proposed to give
-him six years of trust and honor as a Senator of the United States,
-with an annual allowance of five thousand dollars.
-
-According to the old law, the indictment against Mr. Thomas would
-allege, that, “not having the fear of God before his eyes, but being
-moved and seduced by the instigation of the Devil,” he perpetrated his
-crime. And now, with this crime unatoned for, he comes here to ask your
-support and countenance. We are to forget all that he did, “moved and
-seduced” by evil instigation, and welcome him to this Chamber, instead
-of handing him over to judgment.
-
-It is treating this case with a levity which it is hard to pardon,
-when Senators argue that the father was not under obligations to
-exercise all the paternal power in restraint of his son, or at least
-in denouncing him to the proper authorities. What is patriotism, what
-is the sacred comprehensive charity of country, if a father can be
-blameless after such a license to his son? The country was another
-mother to this son, and he went away to strike this mother on the
-bosom. There is a case in antiquity which illustrates the solemn duty
-of the father at least to detain the son. I quote from Sallust. This
-remarkable writer, in his history of the Catilinarian conspiracy,
-tells us that there were many not enlisted in the conspiracy who went
-out to join Catiline; that among these was Aulus Fulvius, the son of
-a Senator; and the historian adds, without comment, that the father,
-when his son was brought back, ordered him to be slain: “_Fuere tamen
-extra conjurationem complures, qui ad Catilinam profecti sunt: in his
-A. Fulvius, Senatoris filius; quem retractum ex itinere parens necari
-jussit_.”[88] Humanity rejects the barbarous exercise of the paternal
-power according to the Roman Law; but patriotism may find even in this
-example a lesson of paternal duty. The American father should not have
-slain his son, but he should have kept him from joining the enemies of
-his country. This requirement of duty was none the less strong because
-not enforced by death. I utter not only the rule of patriotism, but the
-rule of law, when I say that it was positive and peremptory. I will not
-admit that an American citizen can be blameless who dismisses a son
-from the paternal roof with money in his purse, to make war upon his
-country. All that the son did afterward, all that the son sought to
-do, became the act of the father who sent him forth on his parricidal
-errand. The father’s treason was continued and protracted in the
-treason of the son.
-
-In making this contribution to the Rebellion, the act of the father
-was enhanced by his eminent position. He had held a seat in the
-Cabinet, binding him more than any common citizen to the most watchful
-allegiance, and giving to what he did peculiar importance. A soldier
-contributed to the Rebellion by such a person was a startling event.
-It was aid and comfort, countenance and encouragement, of far-reaching
-significance. It was a hostile act, directly injurious to his country,
-and of evil example, the influence of which no man can measure. How
-many others were weakened in loyalty by this parricidal act who can
-tell? When the citizen who has enjoyed public trust and been a “pillar
-of State” gives way, others about him must fall likewise. So great a
-parricide must cause other parricides.
-
-And now this father, who gave a son to the Rebellion, comes into this
-sanctuary of the Constitution, where loyalty is the first condition of
-admission, and asks for a seat. _Immo in Senatum venit._ Is there not
-hardihood in the application? Of course, he cannot be admitted without
-your act having an influence proportioned to the importance of the
-position. It will be felt everywhere throughout the country. Admit him,
-and you will unloose the bonds of loyalty and give a new license to the
-Rebellion in its protracted struggle. On the contrary, if you send him
-away, you will furnish a warning to the disloyal, and teach a lesson of
-patriotism which will thrill the hearts of good citizens now anxiously
-watching for peace and reconciliation through the triumph of loyalty.
-
-I speak this positively, because on this case I see no doubt. The facts
-are indisputable, and over all towers one supreme act of parricide,
-for which there can be no excuse or apology. A soldier was contributed
-to the enemies of his country. There is no question of motive. The
-parricidal act was complete, and it explains itself. There is no
-doubt that it was done. In the presence of such an act, so absolutely
-criminal, there can be no room for inquiry as to the motive. All this I
-put aside and look only at the transcendent fact, in which all pretence
-of innocence is so entirely lost and absorbed that it cannot be seen.
-As well seek to find a motive, if a son struck at the bosom of his
-mother. The law supplies the motive, when it says, in its ancient
-phrase, “moved and seduced by the instigation of the Devil.”
-
-Some there are who doubt the motive of the father, and claim for him
-now the benefit of that doubt. Even if the motive of this criminal act
-were in question, as I insist that it cannot be, then do I say, that,
-in a case like this, when disloyalty is to be shut out of this Chamber,
-I give the benefit of doubt to my country.
-
-There is another voice which sometimes reaches me. We are told, that,
-if the applicant be disloyal, then we may expel him. For myself, I
-prefer to take no such risk. Viewing the case as I do, I have no right
-to take any such risk. Disloyalty must be met at the door, and not
-allowed to enter in. The old verses, more than once repeated in our
-public discussions, are applicable now,--never more so:--
-
- “I hear a lion in the lobby roar:
- Say, Mr. Speaker, shall we shut the door,
- And keep him there? or shall we let him in,
- To try if we can turn him out again?”[89]
-
- February 19th, after a debate of several days, Mr. Thomas was
- declared “not entitled to take the oath of office, or to hold a
- seat, as a Senator of the United States,”--Yeas 27, Nays 20.
-
-
-
-
-INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT.
-
-LETTER TO A COMMITTEE IN NEW YORK, ON THIS SUBJECT, FEBRUARY 17, 1868.
-
-
- From time to time International Copyright has occupied
- attention, and Mr. Sumner has often in correspondence expressed
- himself with regard to it. The following letter, in answer
- to an inquiry, was published by a New York committee of the
- following gentlemen: George P. Putnam, S. Irenæus Prime, Henry
- Ivison, James Parton, Egbert Hasard.
-
- SENATE CHAMBER, February 17, 1868.
-
- MY DEAR SIR,--Pardon my delay. There are two ways of dealing
- with the question of International Copyright,--one by the treaty
- power, and the other by reciprocal legislation.
-
- I have always thought that the former was the easier, but at the
- present moment the House of Representatives is not disposed to
- concede much to the treaty power.
-
- Mr. Everett, while Secretary of State, negotiated a treaty
- on this subject with Great Britain, which was submitted to
- the Senate, reported by the Committee on Foreign Relations,
- considered in the Senate, and finally left on the table, without
- any definitive vote.
-
- I shall send you a copy of this treaty, which, I believe, has
- never seen the light.
-
- I have always been in favor of an International Copyright, as
- justice to authors and a new stage in the unity of nations.
- Perhaps the condition of public affairs at this time, the
- preoccupation of the public mind, the imminence of the
- Presidential election, and also the alienation from England, may
- present temporary obstacles. But I am sanguine that at last the
- victory will be won. If authors should have a copyright anywhere,
- they should have it everywhere within the limits of civilization.
-
- Accept my best wishes, and believe me, dear Sir,
-
- Faithfully yours,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
- JAMES PARTON, ESQ., Secretary of the Committee.
-
-
-
-
-THE IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT.
-
-THE RIGHT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE PRO TEM. TO VOTE.
-
-REMARKS IN THE SENATE, ON THE QUESTION OF THE COMPETENCY OF MR. WADE,
-SENATOR FROM OHIO, THEN PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE PRO TEM., TO VOTE ON
-THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT JOHNSON, MARCH 5, 1868.
-
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--I shall not attempt to follow learned Senators in the
-question whether this is a Senate or a Court. That question, to my
-mind, is simply one of language, and not of substance. Our powers at
-this moment are under the Constitution of the United States; nor can we
-add to them a tittle by calling ourselves a Court or calling ourselves
-a Senate. There they are in the Constitution. Search its text and you
-will find them. The Constitution has not given us a name, but it has
-given us powers; and those we are now to exercise. The Senate has the
-sole power to try impeachments. No matter for the name, Sir. I hope
-that I do not use an illustration too familiar, when I remind you that
-a rose under any other name has all those qualities which make it the
-first of flowers.
-
-I should not at this time have entered into this discussion, if I had
-not listened to objections on the other side which seem to me founded,
-I will not say in error, for that would be bold when we are discussing
-a question of so much novelty, but I will say founded in a reading of
-history which I have not been able to verify. Senator after Senator
-on the other side, all distinguished by ability and learning, have
-informed us that the Constitution intended to prevent a person who
-might become President from presiding at the trial of the President. I
-would ask learned Senators who have announced this proposition, where
-they find it in the Constitution. The Constitution says:--
-
- “When the President of the United States is tried, the Chief
- Justice shall preside.”
-
-This is all; and yet on this simple text the superstructure of Senators
-has been reared.
-
-The Constitution does not proceed to say why the Chief Justice shall
-preside; not at all; nothing of the kind. Senators supply the reason,
-and then undertake to apply it to the actual President of the Senate.
-Where, Sir, do they find the reason? They cannot find the reason which
-they now assign in any of the contemporary authorities illustrating
-the Constitution; they cannot find it in the debates of the National
-Convention reported by Madison, or in any of the debates in the States
-at that time; nor can they find it in the “Federalist.” When does that
-reason first come on the scene? Others may be more fortunate than I;
-but I have not been able to find it earlier than 1825, nearly forty
-years after the formation of the Constitution, in the Commentaries of
-William Rawle. We all know the character of this work,--one of great
-respectability, and which most of us in our early days have read and
-studied. How does he speak of it? As follows:--
-
- “The Vice-President, being the President of the Senate,
- presides on the trial, except when the President of the
- United States is tried. As the Vice-President succeeds to the
- functions and emoluments of the President of the United States,
- whenever a vacancy happens in the latter office, it would be
- inconsistent with the implied purity of a judge that a person
- under a probable bias of such a nature should participate in
- the trial, and it would follow that he should wholly retire
- from the court.”[90]
-
-Those are the words of a commentator on the Constitution. They next
-appear eight years later, in the Commentaries of Mr. Justice Story.
-After citing the provision, “When the President of the United States
-is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside,” the learned commentator
-proceeds:--
-
- “The reason of this clause has been already adverted to. It
- was to preclude the Vice-President, who might be supposed
- to have a natural desire to succeed to the office, from
- being instrumental in procuring the conviction of the Chief
- Magistrate.”[91]
-
-And he cites in his note “Rawle on the Constitution, ch. 22, p.
-216,”[92] being the very passage that I have just read. Here is the
-first appearance of this reason, which is now made to play so important
-a part, being treated even as a text of the Constitution itself. At
-least I have not been able to meet it at an earlier day.
-
-If you repair to the contemporary authorities, including the original
-debates, you will find no such reason assigned,--nothing like it,--not
-even any suggestion of it. On the contrary, you will find Mr. Madison,
-in the Virginia Convention, making a statement which explains in the
-most satisfactory manner the requirement of the Constitution.[93] No
-better authority could be cited. Any reason supplied by him anterior to
-the adoption of the Constitution must be of more weight than any _ex
-post facto_ imagination or invention of learned commentators.
-
-If we trust to the lights of history, the reason for the introduction
-of this clause in the Constitution was because the framers of the
-Constitution contemplated the possibility of the suspension of
-the President from the exercise of his powers, in which event the
-Vice-President could not be in your chair, Sir. If the President were
-suspended, the Vice-President would be in his place. The reports
-will verify what I say. If you refer to the debates of the National
-Convention, under the date of Friday, September 14, 1787, you will find
-the following entry, which I read now by way of introduction to what
-follows at a later date, on the authority of Mr. Madison himself.
-
- “Mr. Rutledge and Mr. Gouverneur Morris moved ‘that persons
- impeached be suspended from their offices until they be tried
- and acquitted.’
-
- “MR. MADISON. The President is made too dependent already
- on the Legislature by the power of one branch to try him in
- consequence of an impeachment by the other. This intermediate
- suspension will put him in the power of one branch only. They
- can at any moment, in order to make way for the functions of
- another who will be more favorable to their views, vote a
- temporary removal of the existing magistrate.
-
- “Mr. King concurred in the opposition to the amendment.”[94]
-
-The proposition was rejected by the decisive vote of eight States
-in the negative to three in the affirmative. We all see, in reading
-it now, that it was rejected on good grounds. It would obviously be
-improper to confer upon the other branch of Congress the power, by its
-own vote, to bring about a suspension of the Chief Magistrate. But
-it did not follow, because the Convention rejected the proposition
-that a suspension could take place on a simple vote of the House
-of Representatives, that therefore the President could not be
-suspended. When the Senate was declared to have the sole power to
-try impeachments, it was by necessary implication invested with the
-power, incident to every court, and known historically to belong to
-the English court of impeachment, from which ours was borrowed, of
-suspending the party accused. All this was apparent at the time, if
-possible, more clearly than now. It was so clear, that it furnishes an
-all-sufficient reason for the provision that the Chief Justice should
-preside on the trial of the President, without resorting to the later
-reason which has been put forward in this debate.
-
-But we are not driven to speculate on this question. While the
-Constitution was under discussion in the Virginia Convention, George
-Mason objected to some of the powers conferred upon the President,
-especially the pardoning power. This was on June 18, 1788, and will be
-found under that date in the reports of the Virginia Convention. This
-earnest opponent of the Constitution said that the President might
-“pardon crimes which were advised by himself,” and thus further his own
-ambitious schemes. This brought forward Mr. Madison, who had sat, as
-we all know, throughout the debates of the National Convention, and
-had recorded its proceedings, and who, of all persons, was the most
-competent to testify at that time as to the intention of the framers.
-What said this eminent authority? I give you his words:--
-
- “There is one security in this case to which gentlemen may not
- have adverted. If the President be connected in any suspicious
- manner with any person, and there be grounds to believe he will
- shelter him, the House of Representatives can impeach him;
- they”--
-
-evidently referring to the Senate, or the Senate in connection with the
-House--
-
- “can remove him, if found guilty; _they can suspend
- him, when suspected_, and the power will devolve on the
- Vice-President.”[95]
-
-Mark well these words,--“they can suspend him, when suspected.” If only
-suspected, the President can be suspended. What next? “And his power
-will devolve on the Vice-President.” In which event, of course, the
-Vice-President would be occupied elsewhere than in this Chamber.
-
-Those were the words of James Madison, spoken in debate in the Virginia
-Convention. Taken in connection with the earlier passage in the
-National Convention, they seem to leave little doubt with regard to the
-intention of the framers of the Constitution. They were unwilling to
-give to the other House alone the power of suspension; but they saw,
-that, when they authorized the Senate to try impeachments, they gave to
-it the power of suspension, if it should choose to exercise it; and the
-suspension of the President necessarily involved the withdrawal of the
-Vice-President from this Chamber, and the duty of supplying his place.
-
-I submit, then, on the contemporary testimony, that the special reason
-why the Chief Justice is called to preside, when the President is on
-trial, is less what learned Senators have assigned than because the
-Vice-President under certain circumstances would not be able to be
-present. It was to provide for such a contingency, being nothing less
-than his necessary absence in the discharge of the high duties of Chief
-Magistrate, that a substitute was necessary, and he was found in the
-Chief Justice. All this was reasonable. It would have been unreasonable
-not to make such a provision.
-
-But this is not all. There is an incident, immediately after the
-adoption of the Constitution, which is in harmony with this authentic
-history. The House of Representatives at an early day acted on the
-interpretation of the Constitution given by Mr. Madison. The first
-impeachment, as we all know, was of William Blount, a Senator, and in
-impeaching him the House of Representatives demanded that he should “be
-sequestered from his seat in the Senate.” This was in 1797. The Senate
-did not comply with this demand; but the demand nevertheless exists in
-the history of your Government, and it illustrates the interpretation
-which was given at that time to the powers of the Senate. The language
-employed, that the person impeached should be “sequestered,” is the
-traditional language of the British Constitution, constantly used, and
-familiar to our fathers. In employing it, the House of Representatives
-gave their early testimony that the Senate could suspend from his
-functions any person impeached before them; and thus the House of
-Representatives unite with Madison in supplying a sufficient reason
-for the provision that on the trial of the President the Chief Justice
-shall preside.
-
-In abandoning the reason which I have thus traced to contemporary
-authority, you launch upon an uncertain sea. You may think the reason
-assigned by the commentators to be satisfactory. It may please your
-taste; but it cannot be accepted as an authentic statement. If the
-original propositions were before me, I should listen to any such
-suggestion with the greatest respect. I do not mean to say now, that,
-as a general rule, it has not much in its favor; but I insist, that,
-so far as we are informed, the reason of the commentators was an
-afterthought, and that there was another reason which sufficiently
-explains the rule now under consideration.
-
-I respectfully submit, Sir, that you cannot proceed in the
-interpretation of this text upon the theory adopted by the learned
-Senators over the way. You must take the text as it is. You cannot go
-behind it; you cannot extend it. Here it is: “When the President of
-the United States is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside.” That
-is the whole, Sir. “The Chief Justice shall preside.” No reason is
-assigned. Can you assign a reason? Can you supply a reason? Especially
-can you supply one which is not sustained by the authentic contemporary
-history of the Constitution, and particularly when you have authentic
-contemporary history which supplies another reason? Unless I am much
-mistaken, this disposes of the objection, proceeding from so many
-Senators, that the Senator from Ohio cannot take the oath because he
-may possibly succeed to the President now impeached at your bar.
-He may vote or not, as he pleases; and there is no authority in the
-Constitution, or any of its contemporary expounders, to criticize him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This is all, Sir, I have to say at this time on this head. There were
-other remarks made by Senators over the way to which I might reply.
-There was one that fell from my learned friend, the Senator from
-Maryland, [Mr. JOHNSON,] in which he alluded to myself. He represented
-me as having cited many authorities from the House of Lords, tending
-to show, in the case of Mr. Stockton, that this person at the time was
-not entitled to vote on the question of his seat. The Senator does
-not remember that debate, I think, as well as I do. The point which I
-tried to present to the Senate, and which, I believe, was affirmed by
-a vote of the body, was simply this: that a man cannot sit as a judge
-in his own case. That was all,--at least so far as I recollect; and I
-submitted that Mr. Stockton at that time was a judge undertaking to
-sit in his own case.[96] Pray, Sir, what is the pertinency of this
-citation? Is it applicable at all to the Senator from Ohio? Is his case
-under consideration? Is he impeached at the bar of the Senate? Is he in
-any way called in question? Is he to answer for himself? Not at all.
-How, then, does the principle of law, that no man shall sit as a judge
-in his own case, apply to him? How does the action of the Senate in the
-case of Mr. Stockton apply to him? Not at all. The two cases are as
-wide as the poles asunder. One has nothing to do with the other.
-
-Something has been said of the “interest” of the Senator from Ohio
-on the present occasion. “Interest”! This is the word used. We are
-reminded that in a certain event the Senator may become President,
-and that on this account he is under peculiar temptations, which may
-swerve him from justice. The Senator from Maryland went so far as to
-remind us of the large salary to which he might succeed,--not less
-than twenty-five thousand dollars a year,--and thus added a pecuniary
-temptation to the other disturbing forces. Is not all this very
-technical? Does it not forget the character of this great proceeding?
-Sir, we are a Senate, and not a Court of _Nisi Prius_. This is not
-a case of assault and battery, but a trial involving the destinies
-of this Republic. I doubt if the question of “interest” is properly
-raised. I speak with all respect for others, but I submit that it is
-inapplicable. It does not belong here. Every Senator has his vote, to
-be given on his conscience. If there be any “interest” to sway him,
-it must be that of justice, and the safety of the country. Against
-these all else is nothing. The Senator from Ohio, whose vote is now
-in question, can see nothing but those transcendent interests by the
-side of which office, power, and money are of small account. Put in
-one scale these interests, so dear to the heart of the patriot, and in
-the other all the personal temptations which have been imagined, and I
-cannot doubt, that, if the Senator from Ohio holds these scales, the
-latter will kick the beam.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHIEF JUSTICE, PRESIDING IN THE SENATE, CANNOT RULE OR VOTE.
-
-OPINION IN THE CASE OF THE IMPEACHMENT OF ANDREW JOHNSON, PRESIDENT OF
-THE UNITED STATES, MARCH 31, 1868.
-
-
- In the course of this trial there was an important claim of
- power by the Chief Justice, as presiding officer of the Senate,
- on which at the time Mr. Sumner expressed his opinion to the
- Senate, when it withdrew for consultation. As this claim was
- calculated in certain contingencies to affect the course of
- proceedings, possibly the final judgment, and as it might
- hereafter be drawn into a precedent, Mr. Sumner was unwilling
- to lose this opportunity of recording his reasons against it.
-
-In determining the relations of the Chief Justice to the trial of the
-President, we must look, first, to the National Constitution; for it
-is solely by virtue of the National Constitution that this eminent
-magistrate is transported from his own natural field to another, where
-he is for the time an exotic. The Chief Justice in his own court is at
-home; but it is equally clear, that, when he comes into the Senate, he
-is a stranger. Though justly received with welcome and honor, he cannot
-expect membership, or anything beyond the powers derived directly from
-the National Constitution, by virtue of which he temporarily occupies
-the Chair.
-
-Repairing to our authoritative text, we find the only applicable
-words:--
-
- “The Senate shall have the sole power to try all impeachments.…
- When the President of the United States is tried, the Chief
- Justice shall _preside_: and no person shall be convicted
- without the concurrence of two thirds of the members present.”
-
-This is all. The Chief Justice shall _preside_, but subject to two
-limitations specifically declared. First, the trial is to be by the
-Senate _solely_, and nobody else,--thus carefully excluding the
-presiding officer from all participation, except so far as is implied
-in the power to preside; and, secondly, judgment of conviction can be
-only by a vote of “two thirds of _the members present_,”--thus again
-excluding the presiding officer, unless it is assumed that he is a
-member of the Senate.
-
-On the face of this text it is difficult to find ambiguity. Nobody
-questions that the Chief Justice must preside. Can anybody question
-that the trial must be by the Senate solely, and nobody else? To change
-this requirement is to fly in the face of the National Constitution.
-Can anybody question that the judgment of conviction must be by votes
-of “members present,” and nobody else? Now, since the Chief Justice
-is not a “member” of the Senate, it is plain that he is positively
-excluded from vote on the final question. It only remains that he
-should “preside.” And here the question recurs as to the meaning of
-this familiar term.
-
-The person who presides is simply, according to the language of our
-Rules, “presiding officer,” and this designation is the equivalent or
-synonym of speaker, and also of prolocutor, each of which signifies
-somebody who speaks for the house. It is not implied that he votes
-with the house, much less that he decides for the house, but only
-that he is the voice of the house,--its speaker. What the house has
-to say it says through him; but, except as organ of the house, he is
-silent, unless also a member, when to his powers as presiding officer
-he superadds the powers of a member also. From this brief statement it
-appears at once how limited his functions must be.
-
-Here I might stop; but, since this question has assumed unexpected
-importance, I am induced to go further. It is easy to show that the
-language of the National Constitution, if seen in the light of English
-parliamentary history, must have an interpretation identical with its
-natural import.
-
-Nothing is clearer than this. If language employed in the National
-Constitution had already, at the time of its formation, received a
-definite meaning, it must be interpreted accordingly. Thus, when the
-Constitution secures “trial by jury,” it secures that institution as
-defined by antecedent English law. So, also, when it declares that the
-judicial power shall extend to “all cases in law and equity” arising
-under the National Constitution, it recognizes the distinction between
-law and equity peculiar to English law. Courts of Common Law and Courts
-of Equity are all implied in this language; and since there is no
-further definition of their powers, we must ascertain them in England.
-Cushing, in determining the rules of proceeding in our American
-Legislatures, says:--
-
- “Such was the practice of the two Houses of the British
- Parliament when our ancestors emigrated; … and such has
- continued to be, and now is, the practice in that body.”[97]
-
-This resource has been most persuasively presented by Mr. Wirt, in
-his remarkable argument on the impeachment of Judge Peck, where he
-vindicates and expounds the true rule of interpretation.
-
-According to this eminent authority, what he calls “the English
-archetypes” were the models for the framers of the National
-Constitution. The courts were fashioned after these “archetypes.” They
-were instituted according to “the English _originals_, to which they
-were manifestly referred by the Constitution itself.”[98] Here again I
-quote the words of Mr. Wirt.
-
-All this is precisely applicable to that part of the National
-Constitution under consideration. In essential features it was borrowed
-from England. There is its original, its model, its archetype.
-Therefore to England we go.
-
-Not only to England must we go, but also to Parliamentary Law, as
-recognized in England at the adoption of the National Constitution.
-The powers of a presiding officer, where not specifically declared,
-must be found in Parliamentary Law. The very term _preside_ is
-parliamentary. It belongs to the technicalities of this branch of law,
-as much as _indict_ belongs to the technicalities of the Common Law. In
-determining the signification of this term, it will be of little avail
-to show some local usage, or, perhaps, some decision of a court. The
-usage or decision of a Parliament must be shown. Against this all vague
-speculation or divination of reason is futile. I will not encumber this
-discussion by superfluous authorities. Insisting that this question
-must be determined by Parliamentary Law, I content myself with adducing
-the often cited words of Lord Coke:--
-
- “And as every court of justice hath laws and customs for its
- direction, some by the Common Law, some by the Civil and Canon
- Law, some by peculiar laws and customs, etc., so the High
- Court of Parliament _suis propriis legibus et consuetudinibus
- subsistit_. It is _lex et consuetudo Parliamenti_, that all
- weighty matters in any Parliament, moved concerning the peers
- of the realm, or commons in Parliament assembled, _ought to
- be determined and adjudged and discussed by the course of the
- Parliament_, and not by the Civil Law, nor yet by the common
- laws of this realm used in more inferior courts.”[99]
-
-Here is the true rule. To “the course of the Parliament” we must
-resort. In “the course of the Parliament” we must find all the powers
-of a presiding officer, and all that is implied in the authority to
-preside. “The Chief Justice shall preside.” Such is the Constitution.
-Nothing is specified with regard to his powers; nothing is said. What
-was intended is left to inference from the language employed, which
-must be interpreted according to “the course of the Parliament,”
-precisely as what was intended by trial by jury is ascertained from the
-Common Law. In the latter case we go to the Common Law; in the former
-case we go to “the course of the Parliament.” You may as well turn away
-from the Common Law in the one as from “the course of the Parliament”
-in the other. In determining “the course of the Parliament” we resort
-to the summary of text-writers, and, better still, to the authentic
-instances of history.
-
-Something has been said in this discussion with regard to the example
-of Lord Erskine, who presided at the impeachment of Lord Melville. This
-was in 1806, during the short-lived ministry of Fox, when Erskine was
-Chancellor. It is by misapprehension that this instance is supposed
-to sustain the present assumption. When seen in its true light, it is
-found in harmony with the general rule. Erskine had at the time two
-characters. He was Lord Chancellor, and in this capacity presiding
-officer of the House of Lords, without the right to rule or vote, or
-even to speak. Besides being Chancellor, he was also a member of the
-House of Lords, with all the rights of other members. As we advance
-in this inquiry, it will be seen that again and again it has been
-practically decided, that, whatever the powers of a presiding officer
-who is actually a member, a presiding officer who is not a member
-cannot rule or vote, or even speak. In this statement I anticipate
-the argument. I do it at this stage only to put aside the suggestion
-founded on the instance of Lord Chancellor Erskine.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I begin with the most familiar authority,--I mean the eminent writer
-and judge, Sir William Blackstone. In his Commentaries, where is found,
-in elegant form, the complete body of English law, you have this whole
-matter stated in a few suggestive words:--
-
- “The Speaker of the House of Lords, _if a Lord of Parliament_,
- may give his opinion or argue any question in the House.”[100]
-
-If not a Lord of Parliament, he could not give his opinion or argue any
-question. This is in accordance with all the authorities and unbroken
-usage; but it has peculiar value at this moment, because it is the text
-of Blackstone. This work was the guide-book of our fathers. It first
-appeared in 1765-69, the very period when the controversy with the
-mother country was fervid; and it is an unquestionable fact of history
-that it was read in the Colonies with peculiar interest. Burke, in one
-of his masterly orations, portraying the character of our fathers,
-says: “I hear that they have sold nearly as many of Blackstone’s
-Commentaries in America as in England.”[101] Nothing is clearer than
-that they knew it well.
-
-The framers of the National Constitution had it before them constantly.
-It was their most familiar work. It was to them as Bowditch’s Navigator
-is to the mariner in our day. They looked to it for guidance on the
-sea they were traversing. When they undertook to provide that the
-Chief Justice, who was not a member of the Senate, should preside at
-the impeachment of the President, they knew well that he could have no
-power to “give his opinion or argue any question in the House,” for
-Blackstone had instructed them explicitly on this head. They knew that
-he was simply a presiding officer, according to the immemorial usage of
-the upper House in England, with such powers as belong to a presiding
-officer who is not a member of the House, and none other.
-
-The powers of the presiding officer of the House of Lords are
-illustrated by authority and precedents, all in harmony with the
-statement of Blackstone. Ordinarily the Keeper of the Great Seal is the
-presiding officer; but, unless a member of the body, he can do little
-more than put the question. Any other person, as a Chief Justice, may
-be delegated by royal commission. According to the rules of the House,
-even if a peer, he cannot speak without quitting the woolsack, which is
-the Chair, and moving “to his own place as a peer.”[102] The right of
-speech belongs to him as a member, but he cannot exercise it without
-leaving his place as presiding officer. So is he circumscribed.
-
-A late writer on Parliamentary Law, whose work is a satisfactory guide,
-thus sententiously sums up the law and usage:--
-
- “The position of the Speaker of the House of Lords is somewhat
- anomalous; for, though he is the president of a deliberative
- assembly, he is invested with no more authority than any other
- member; and if not himself a member, his office is limited to
- the putting of questions and other formal proceedings.”[103]
-
-This statement is in obvious harmony with that of Blackstone; so that
-there is no difference between the writer who is our guide to-day and
-the learned commentator who was the guide of our fathers.
-
-Mr. May goes still further, and lets us know that it is only as a
-member of the House that the presiding officer can address it, even on
-points of order:--
-
- “Upon points of order, the Speaker, if a peer, may address
- the House; but, as his opinion is liable to be questioned,
- like that of any other peer, he does not often exercise his
- right.”[104]
-
-Thus, even if a peer, even if a member of the upper House, the
-presiding officer cannot rule a point of order, nor address the
-House upon it, except as any other member; and what he says is open
-to question, like the utterance of any other member. Such is the
-conclusion of the most approved English authority.
-
-American writers on Parliamentary Law concur with English. Cushing,
-who has done so much to illustrate the whole subject, says of the
-presiding officer of the Lords, that he “is invested with no more
-authority for the preservation of order than any other member; and if
-not himself a member, his office is limited to the putting of questions
-and other formal proceedings; … if he is a peer, he may address the
-House and participate in the debates as a member.” He then says again:
-“If a peer, he votes with the other members; if not, he does not vote
-at all.” And he adds: “There is no casting vote in the Lords.”[105]
-This statement was made long after the adoption of the National
-Constitution, and anterior to the present controversy.
-
-There are occasions when the Lords have a presiding officer called
-a Lord High Steward. This is on the trial of a peer, whether upon
-impeachment or indictment. Here the same rule is stated by Edmund
-Burke, in his masterly Report to the House of Commons on the
-impeachment of Warren Hastings:--
-
- “Every peer present at the trial (and every temporal peer
- hath a right to be present in every part of the proceeding)
- voteth upon every question of law and fact, and the question
- is carried by the major vote,--the High Steward himself voting
- merely as a peer and member of that court, in common with the
- rest of the peers, and in no other right.”[106]
-
-In another place, the Report, quoting the Commons’ Journal, says:--
-
- “That the Lord High Steward was but as a Speaker, or
- _Chairman_, for the more orderly proceeding at the trials.”[107]
-
-And then again:--
-
- “The appointment of him doth not alter the nature of the
- court, which still remaineth the Court of the Peers in
- Parliament.”[108]
-
-The name of Burke gives to this illustration additional authority and
-interest. It is not difficult to see how he would have decided the
-present question.
-
-In our day there have been instances of the Lord Chancellor as
-presiding officer without being a peer. Brougham took his seat on the
-22d November, 1830, before his patent as a peer had been made out, and
-during this interval his energies were suppressed in the simple duty
-of presiding officer and nothing else. The same was the case with that
-eminent lawyer, Sir Edward Sugden, who sat as presiding officer on
-the 4th March, 1852, although still a commoner; and it was also the
-case with Sir Frederick Thesiger, who sat as presiding officer on the
-1st March, 1858, although still a commoner. These instances attest
-the prevalence of the early rule down to our day. Even Brougham, who
-never shrank from speech or from the exercise of power, was constrained
-to bow before its exigency. He sat as Lord Chancellor, and in that
-character put the question, but this was all, until he became a member
-of the House. Lord Campbell expressly records, that, while his name
-appears in the entry of those present on the 22d November, 1830, as
-_Henricus Brougham, Cancellarius_, “he had no right to debate and vote
-till the following day,” when the entry of his name and office appears
-as _Dominus Brougham et Vaux, Cancellarius_.[109]
-
-Passing from these examples of recent history, I return to the rule as
-known to our fathers at the adoption of the National Constitution. On
-this head the evidence is complete. It is found in the State Trials
-of England, in parliamentary history, and in the books of law; but it
-is nowhere better exhibited than in the Lives of the Chancellors, by
-Lord Campbell, himself a member of the House of Lords and a Chancellor,
-familiar with it historically and practically. He has stated the
-original rule, and in his work, which is as interesting as voluminous,
-has furnished constantly recurring illustrations of it. In the
-Introduction to his Lives, where he describes the office of Chancellor,
-he enunciates the rule:--
-
- “Whether peer or commoner, the Chancellor is not, like the
- Speaker of the Commons, moderator of the proceedings of the
- House in which he seems to preside; he is not addressed in
- debate; he does not name the peer who is to be heard; he is
- not appealed to as an authority on points of order; and he
- may cheer the sentiments expressed by his colleagues in the
- ministry.”[110]
-
-Existing rules of the Senate add to these powers; but such is the rule
-with regard to the presiding officer of the House of Lords, even when
-a peer. He is not appealed to on points of order. If a commoner, his
-power is still less.
-
- “If he be a commoner, notwithstanding a resolution of the House
- that he is to be proceeded against for any misconduct as if he
- were a peer, he has neither vote nor deliberative voice, and he
- can only put the question, and communicate the resolutions of
- the House according to the directions he receives.”[111]
-
-In the early period of English history the Chancellors were often
-ecclesiastics, though generally commoners. Fortescue, Wolsey, and More
-were never peers. This also was the case with Sir Nicholas Bacon,
-father of Lord Bacon, who held the seals under Queen Elizabeth for
-twenty years, and was colleague in the cabinet of Burleigh. Lord
-Campbell remarks on his position as presiding officer of the House of
-Lords:--
-
- “Not being a peer, he could not take a share in the Lords’
- debates; but, presiding as Speaker on the woolsack, he
- exercised a considerable influence on their deliberations.”[112]
-
-Then again we are told:--
-
- “Being a commoner, he could neither act as Lord Steward nor sit
- upon the trial of the Duke of Norfolk, who was the first who
- suffered for favoring Mary’s cause.”[113]
-
-Thus early do we meet illustration of this rule, which constantly
-reappears in the annals of Parliament.
-
-The successor of Sir Nicholas Bacon was Lord Chancellor Bromley; and
-here we find a record interesting at this moment. After presiding at
-the trial of Mary, Queen of Scots, the Lord Chancellor became ill
-and took to his bed. Under the circumstances, Sir Edmund Anderson,
-Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, was authorized by the Queen to act
-as a substitute for the Chancellor; and thus the Chief Justice became
-presiding officer of the House of Lords to the close of the session,
-without being a peer.
-
-Then came Sir Christopher Hatton, the favorite of Queen Elizabeth, and
-so famous as the dancing Chancellor, who presided in the House of Lords
-by virtue of his office, but never as peer. The same was the case with
-his successor, Sir John Puckering. He was followed by the exemplary
-Ellesmere, who was for many years Chancellor without being a peer, but
-finished his career by adding to his title as presiding officer the
-functions of a member. The greatest of all now followed. After much
-effort and solicitation, Bacon becomes Chancellor with a peerage; but
-it is recorded in the Lords’ Journals, that, when he spoke, he removed
-from the woolsack “to his seat as a peer,” thus attesting that he had
-no voice as presiding officer. At last, when the corruptions of this
-remarkable character began to overshadow the land, the Chief Justice
-of the King’s Bench, Sir James Ley, was designated by the King to act
-as Speaker of the House of Lords. Soon afterward Bacon fell. Meanwhile
-it is said that the Chief Justice “had very creditably performed
-the duties of Speaker of the House of Lords.”[114] In other words,
-according to the language of our Constitution, he had presided well.
-
-Then came Williams, Coventry, and Finch, as Lord Keepers. As the last
-absconded to avoid impeachment by the House of Commons, Littleton,
-Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, “was placed on the woolsack as
-Speaker.”[115] At a later time he received the Great Seal as Lord
-Keeper. This promotion was followed by a peerage, at the prompting of
-no less a person than the Earl of Strafford, “who thought he might be
-more useful, if permitted to take part in the proceedings of the House
-as a peer, than if he could only put the question as Speaker.”[116]
-Clarendon says, that, as a peer, he could have done Strafford “notable
-service.”[117] But the timid peer did not render the expected service.
-
-Then came the period of Civil War, when one Great Seal was with the
-King and another was with Parliament. Meanwhile the Earl of Manchester
-was appointed Speaker of the upper House, and as such took his place on
-the woolsack. As a peer he had all the privileges of a member of the
-House over which he presided. Charles the Second, during his exile,
-appointed Hyde, afterward Earl of Clarendon, as Chancellor; but the
-monarch was for the time without a Court and without a Parliament. On
-the Restoration, in 1660, the Chancellor at once entered upon all his
-duties, judicial and parliamentary; and it is recorded, that, “though
-still a commoner, holding the Great Seal, he took his place on the
-woolsack as Speaker by prescription.”[118] A year later the commoner
-was raised to the peerage, thus becoming more than presiding officer.
-During illness from the gout the place of the Chancellor as presiding
-officer was sometimes supplied by Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Chief Justice
-of the Common Pleas, who on these occasions was presiding officer,
-and nothing more. Lord Campbell says he “frequently sat Speaker in the
-House of Lords,”[119]--meaning that he presided.
-
-On the disgrace of Lord Clarendon, the disposal of the Great Seal was
-the occasion of perplexity. The historian informs us, that, “after many
-doubts and conflicting plans among the King’s male and female advisers,
-it was put into the hands of a grave Common-Law judge,”[120] being
-none other than the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, who had already
-presided in the absence of Lord Clarendon; but he was never raised to
-the peerage. Then comes another explanation of the precise relation
-of such an official to the House. Lord Campbell expressly remarks,
-that, “never being created a peer, his only duty in the House of Lords
-was to put the question, and to address the two Houses in explanation
-of the royal will on the assembling of Parliament.”[121] Here is the
-constantly recurring definition of the term _preside_.
-
-For some time afterward there seems to have been little embarrassment.
-Nottingham, who did so much for Equity, Shaftesbury, who did so little,
-Guilford, so famous through contemporary biography, and Jeffreys, so
-justly infamous,--successively heads of the law,--were all peers.
-But at the Revolution of 1688 there was an interregnum, which again
-brought into relief the relations between the upper House and its
-presiding officer. James, on his flight, dropped the Great Seal into
-the Thames. There was, therefore, no presiding officer for the Lords.
-To supply this want, the Lords, at the meeting of the Convention
-Parliament, chose one of their own number, the Marquis of Halifax,
-as Speaker, and, in the exercise of the power inherent in them,
-they continued to reëlect him day by day. During this period he was
-strictly President _pro tempore_. At last, Sir Robert Atkyns, Chief
-Baron of the Exchequer, a commoner, took his seat upon the woolsack as
-Speaker, appointed by the Crown. Here, again, we learn that “serious
-inconvenience was experienced from the occupier of the woolsack not
-being a member of the House.”[122] At last, in 1693, the Great Seal was
-handed to Sir John Somers, Lord Keeper; and here is another authentic
-illustration of the rule. Although official head of the English law,
-and already exalted for his ability and varied knowledge, this great
-man, one of the saviours of constitutional liberty in England, was
-for some time merely presiding officer. The historian records, that,
-“while he remained a commoner, he presided on the woolsack only as
-Speaker”;[123] that he “had only, as Speaker, to put the question, …
-taking no part in debate.”[124] This is more worthy of notice because
-Somers was recognized as a consummate orator. At last, according to
-the historian, “there was a strong desire that he should take part in
-the debates, and, to enable him, the King pressed his acceptance of a
-peerage, which, after some further delay, he did, and he was afterward
-known as Lord Somers.[125]
-
-In the vicissitudes of public life this great character was dismissed
-from office, and a successor was found in an inferior person, Sir
-Nathan Wright, who was created Lord Keeper without a peerage. For the
-five years of his official life it is recorded that he occupied the
-woolsack, “merely putting the question, and having no influence over
-the proceedings.”[126] Thus he presided.
-
-Then came the polished Cowper, at first without a peerage, but after
-a short time created a member of the House. Here again the historian
-records, that, while he remained a commoner, “he took his place on
-the woolsack as Speaker of the House of Lords, and without a right to
-debate or vote.”[127] It appears, that, “not being permitted to share
-in the debates in the House of Lords, he amused himself by taking notes
-of the speeches on the opposite sides.”[128] Afterward, even when a
-peer, and, as Chancellor, presiding at the impeachment of Sacheverell,
-Lord Cowper did not interfere further than by saying, “Gentlemen of the
-House of Commons,” or “Gentlemen, you that are counsel for the prisoner
-may proceed.”[129]
-
-Harcourt followed Cowper as Keeper of the Great Seal, but he was not
-immediately raised to the peerage. It is recorded that during one
-year he had “only to sit as Speaker,”[130]--that is, only to preside.
-Afterwards, as peer, he became a member. On the accession of George
-the First, Harcourt, in turn, gave place to Cowper, who was again made
-Chancellor. To him succeeded the Earl of Macclesfield, with all the
-rights of membership.
-
-Lord Macclesfield, being impeached of high crimes and misdemeanors as
-Chancellor, Sir Peter King, at the time Chief Justice of the Common
-Pleas, was made presiding officer of the upper House, with only the
-limited powers belonging to a presiding officer who is not a member of
-the body. Here the record is complete. Turn to the trial and you will
-see it all. It was he who gave directions to the managers, and also
-to the counsel,--who put the question, and afterward pronounced the
-sentence; but he acted always as presiding officer and nothing else.
-I do not perceive that he made any rulings during the progress of the
-trial. He was Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, acting as President
-_pro tempore_. The report, describing the opening of the proceedings,
-says that the articles of impeachment, with the answer and replication,
-were read “by direction of the Lord Chief Justice King, Speaker of the
-House of Lords.”[131] Another definition of the term _preside_.
-
-All this is compendiously described by Lord Campbell:--
-
- “Sir Peter, not being a peer, of course had no deliberative
- voice, but, during the trial, as the organ of the House of
- Peers, he regulated the procedure without any special vote,
- intimating to the managers and to the counsel for the defendant
- when they were to speak and to adduce their evidence. After the
- verdict of _Guilty_, he ordered the Black Rod to produce his
- prisoner at the bar; and the Speaker of the House of Commons
- having demanded judgment, he, in good taste, abstaining from
- making any comment, dryly, but solemnly and impressively,
- pronounced the sentence which the House had agreed upon.”[132]
-
-This proceeding was in 1725. At this time, Benjamin Franklin, the
-printer-boy, was actually in London. It is difficult to imagine that
-this precocious character, whose observation in public affairs was
-as remarkable as in philosophy, should have passed eighteen months in
-London at this very period without noting this remarkable trial and the
-manner in which it was conducted. Thus, early in life, he saw that a
-Chief Justice might preside at an impeachment without being a member
-of the House of Lords or exercising any of the powers which belong to
-membership.
-
-Besides his eminence as Chief Justice, King was the nephew of the
-great thinker who has exercised such influence on English and American
-opinion, John Locke. Shortly after presiding at the impeachment as
-Chief Justice, he became Chancellor with a peerage.
-
-He was followed in his high post by Talbot and Hardwicke, each with a
-peerage. Jumping the long period of their successful administrations,
-when the presiding officer was also a member of the upper House, I
-come to another instance where the position of the presiding officer
-was peculiarly apparent,--and this, too, when Benjamin Franklin was
-in London, as agent for Pennsylvania. I refer to Sir Robert Henley,
-who became Lord Keeper in 1757, without a peerage. The King, George
-the Second, did not like him, and therefore, while consenting to place
-him at the head of the law, declined to make him a member of the House
-over which he was to preside. At last, in 1760, the necessities of
-the public service constrained his elevation to the peerage, and soon
-afterward George the Third, who succeeded to the throne without the
-animosities of his grandfather, created him Chancellor and Earl of
-Northington.
-
-For nearly three years, Henley, while still a commoner, was presiding
-officer. During this considerable period he was without voice or vote.
-The historian remarks, that, “if there had been any debates, he was
-precluded from taking part in them.”[133] In another place he pictures
-the defenceless condition of the unhappy magistrate with regard to his
-own decisions in the court below, when heard on appeal:--
-
- “Lord Keeper Henley, till raised to the peerage, used to
- complain bitterly of being obliged to put the question for the
- reversal of his own decrees, without being permitted to say a
- word in support of them.”[134]
-
-Lord Eldon, in his Anecdote Book, furnishes another statement of this
-case:--
-
- “When Sir Robert Henley was Keeper of the Great Seal, and
- presided in the House of Lords as Lord Keeper, he could not
- enter into debate as a Chancellor being a peer does; and
- therefore, when there was an appeal from his judgments in the
- Court of Chancery, and the law Lords then in the House moved
- to reverse his judgments, … the Lord Keeper could not state
- the grounds of his opinions given in judgment, and support his
- decisions.”[135]
-
-And thus for nearly three years this commoner presided.
-
-A few weeks after Henley first took his place as presiding officer,
-Franklin arrived in London for the second time, and continued there, a
-busy observer, until after the Judge was created a peer. Even if he had
-been ignorant of parliamentary usage, or had forgotten what passed at
-the trial of Lord Macclesfield, he could not have failed to note that
-the House of Lords had for its presiding officer an eminent judge,
-who, not being a member, could take no part in its proceedings beyond
-putting the question.
-
-Afterward, in 1770, there was a different arrangement. Owing to
-difficulty in finding a proper person as Chancellor, the Great Seal
-was put in commission, and Lord Mansfield, Chief Justice of England,
-was persuaded to act as presiding officer. Curiously enough, Franklin
-was again in England, on his third visit, and remained through the
-service of Lord Mansfield in this capacity. Thus this illustrious
-American, afterward a member of the Convention that framed the National
-Constitution, had at two different times seen the House of Lords with a
-presiding officer who, not being a member of the body, could only put
-the question, and then again with another presiding officer who, being
-a member of the body, could vote and speak, as well as put the question.
-
-But Franklin was not the only member of the National Convention to
-whom these precedents were known. One or more had been educated at the
-Temple; others were accomplished lawyers, familiar with the courts
-of the mother country. I have already mentioned that Blackstone’s
-Commentaries, where the general rule is clearly stated, was as well
-known in the Colonies as in the mother country. Besides, our fathers
-were not ignorant of the history of England, which, down to the
-Declaration of Independence, had been their history. The English law
-was also theirs. Not a case in its books which did not belong to them
-as well as to the frequenters of Westminster Hall. The State Trials,
-involving principles of Constitutional Law, and embodying these very
-precedents, were all known. At least four editions had appeared
-several years before the adoption of the National Constitution. I
-cannot err in supposing that all these were authoritative guides at
-the time, and that the National Constitution was fashioned in all the
-various lights, historical and judicial, which they furnished.
-
-The conclusion is irresistible, that the National Constitution, when
-providing a presiding officer for the trial of the President of the
-United States, used the term _preside_ in the sense already acquired in
-Parliamentary Law, and did not intend any different signification; that
-our fathers knew perfectly well the parliamentary distinction between a
-presiding officer a member of the House and a presiding officer not a
-member; that, in constituting the Chief Justice presiding officer for
-a special temporary purpose, they had in view similar instances in the
-mother country, when the Lord Keeper, Chief Justice, or other judicial
-personage, had been appointed to preside over the House of Lords, of
-which he was not a member, as our Chief Justice is appointed to preside
-over the Senate, of which he is not a member; that they found in this
-constantly recurring example an apt precedent for their guidance;
-that they followed this precedent to all intents and purposes, using
-received parliamentary language, “the Chief Justice shall preside,” and
-nothing more; that, according to this precedent, they never intended
-to invest the Chief Justice, President _pro tempore_ of the Senate,
-with any other powers than those of a presiding officer not a member of
-the body; and that these powers, exemplified in an unbroken series of
-instances extending over centuries, under different kings and through
-various administrations, were simply to put the question and to direct
-generally the conduct of business, without undertaking in any way, by
-voice or vote, to determine any question, preliminary, interlocutory,
-or final.
-
-In stating this conclusion I present simply the result of the
-authorities. It is not I who speak; it is the authorities. My own
-judgment may be imperfect; but here is a mass of testimony, concurring
-and cumulative, without a single exception, which cannot err.
-
-Plainly and unmistakably, the provision in our Constitution authorizing
-the Chief Justice to _preside_ in the Senate, of which he is not a
-member, was modelled on the English original. This, according to the
-language of Mr. Wirt, was the “archetype” our fathers followed. As such
-it was embodied in the National Constitution, as if the text expressly
-declared that the Chief Justice, when presiding in the Senate, had
-all the powers accorded by parliamentary usage to such a functionary
-when presiding in the upper House of Parliament without being a member
-thereof. In saying that he shall “preside” the Constitution confers no
-powers of membership, and by the well-defined term employed limits him
-to those precise functions sanctioned at the time by immemorial usage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus far I have considered this provision in the light of authorities
-already known and recognized at the adoption of the National
-Constitution. This is enough; for it is by these authorities that its
-meaning must be determined. You cannot reject these without setting at
-defiance a fixed rule of interpretation, and resorting instead to vague
-inference or mere imagination, quickened, perhaps, by your desires.
-Mere imagination and vague inference, quickened, perhaps, by your
-desires, are out of place when Parliamentary Law is beyond all question.
-
-Pardon me, if I protract this argument by an additional illustration,
-derived from our own Congressional history. This is found under the
-parallel provision of the National Constitution relating to the
-Vice-President, which, after much debate in another generation,
-received authoritative interpretation: “The Vice-President of the
-United States shall be _President of the Senate_, but shall have
-no vote, unless they be equally divided.” In other words, the
-Vice-President, like the Chief Justice, shall _preside_ in the Senate,
-but, unlike the Chief Justice, with a casting vote. His general powers
-are all implied in the provision that he shall preside.
-
-No question has occurred with regard to the vote of the Vice-President,
-for this is expressly regulated by the National Constitution. But the
-other powers of the Vice-President, when presiding in the Senate,
-are left to Parliamentary Law and express rules. Some of the latter
-were settled at an early day. From the rules of the Senate at the
-beginning it appears, that, independent of his casting vote, nothing
-was originally recognized as belonging to a _presiding_ Vice-President
-beyond his power to occupy the chair. All else was determined by the
-rules. For instance, Senators, when speaking, are to address the
-Chair. This rule, which seems to us so superfluous, was adopted 16th
-April, 1789, early in the session of the first Congress, in order to
-change the existing Parliamentary Law, under which a member of the
-upper House of Parliament habitually addresses his associates, and
-never the Chair. Down to this day, in England, a peer rising to speak
-says, “My Lords,” and never “My Lord Chancellor,” although the latter
-_presides_. Another rule, adopted at the same date, has a similar
-origin. By Parliamentary Law, in the upper House of Parliament, when
-two members rise at the same time, the House, by their cry, indicate
-who shall speak. This was set aside by a positive rule of the Senate
-that in such a case “the President shall name the person to speak.” The
-Parliamentary Law, that the presiding officer, whether a member or not
-a member, shall put the question, was reinforced by an express rule
-that “all questions shall be put by the President of the Senate.”
-
-Although the rules originally provided, that, when a member is called
-to order, “the President shall determine whether he is in order or
-not,” they failed to declare by whom the call to order should be made.
-There was nothing conferring this power upon the presiding officer,
-while by Parliamentary Law in the upper House of Parliament no
-presiding officer, _as such_, could call to order, whatever he might
-do as member. The powers of the presiding officer in the Senate were
-left in this uncertainty, but the small number of Senators and the
-prevailing courtesy prevented trouble. At last, in the lapse of time,
-the number increased, and debates assumed a more animated character.
-Meanwhile, in 1825, Mr. Calhoun became Vice-President. This ingenious
-person, severely logical, and enjoying at the time the confidence of
-the country to a rare degree, insisted, that, as presiding officer, he
-had no power but to carry into effect the rules adopted by the body,
-and that therefore, in the absence of any rule on the subject, he was
-not empowered to call a Senator to order for words spoken in debate.
-His conclusion was given as follows:--
-
- “The Chair had no power beyond the rules of the Senate. It
- would stand in the light of a usurper, were it to attempt to
- exercise such a power. It was too high a power for the Chair.…
- The Chair would never assume any power not vested in it, but
- would ever show firmness in exercising those powers that were
- vested in the Chair.”[136]
-
-The question with regard to the powers of the Chair was transferred
-from the Senate Chamber to the public press, where it was discussed
-with memorable ability. An article in the “National Journal,”[137]
-under the signature of “Patrick Henry,” attributed to John Quincy
-Adams, at the time President, assumed that the powers of the
-Vice-President, in calling to order, were not derived from the
-Senate, but that they came strictly from the National Constitution
-itself, which authorizes him to preside, and that in their exercise
-the Vice-President was wholly independent of the Senate. To this
-assumption Mr. Calhoun replied in the “National Intelligencer,” in
-two articles,[138] under the signature of “Onslow,” where he shows an
-ability not unworthy of the eminent parliamentarian whose name he for
-the time adopted. The point in issue was not unlike that now before us.
-It was insisted, on the one side, that certain powers were inherent
-in the Vice-President as presiding officer, precisely as it is now
-insisted that certain powers are inherent in the Chief-Justice when he
-becomes presiding officer. Mr. Calhoun replied in words applicable to
-the present occasion:--
-
- “I affirm, that, as a presiding officer, the Vice-President
- has no inherent power whatever, unless that of doing what the
- Senate may prescribe by its rules be such a power. There are,
- indeed, inherent powers; but they are in the _body_, and not
- in the _officer_. He is a mere agent to execute the will of
- the former. He can exercise no power which he does not hold by
- delegation, either express or implied.”[139]
-
-Then again, in reply to an illustration that had been employed, he
-says:--
-
- “There is not the least analogy between the rights and duties
- of a judge and those of a presiding officer in a deliberative
- assembly. The analogy is altogether the other way. It is
- between the Court and the House.”[140]
-
-It would be difficult to answer this reasoning. Unless all the
-precedents, in unbroken series, are set aside, a presiding officer
-not a member of the Senate has no inherent power except to occupy the
-Chair and to put the question. All else must be derived from grant in
-the Constitution or in the rules of the body. In the absence of any
-such grant, we must be contented to observe the mandates of the _Lex
-Parliamentaria_. The objections of Mr. Calhoun brought to light the
-feeble powers of our presiding officer, and a remedy was forthwith
-applied by amendment of the rules, making it his duty to call to order.
-To his general power as presiding officer was superadded, by express
-rule, a further power not existing by Parliamentary Law; and such is
-the rule of the Senate at this day.
-
-I turn away from this Vice-Presidential episode, contenting myself
-with reminding you how clearly it shows, that, independently of the
-rules of the Senate, the presiding officer _as such_ had small powers;
-that he could do very little more than put the question and direct
-the Secretary; and, in short, that our fathers, in the interpretation
-of his powers, had tacitly recognized the time-honored and prevailing
-usage of Parliament, which in itself is a commanding law. But a
-Chief Justice, when presiding in the Senate, is not less under this
-commanding law than the Vice-President.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus far I have confined myself to the Parliamentary Law governing the
-upper House of Parliament and of Congress. Further illustration is
-found in the position of the Speaker, whether in the House of Commons
-or the House of Representatives. One cardinal distinction is to be
-noted at the outset, by which, in both countries, he is distinguished
-from the presiding officer of the upper House: the Speaker is always
-a member of the House. As a member he has a constituency which is
-represented through him; and here is another difference. The presiding
-officer of the upper House has no constituency; therefore his only
-duty is _to preside_, unless some other function be superadded by the
-National Constitution or the rules of the body.
-
-All the authorities make the Speaker merely the organ of the House,
-except so far as his representative capacity is recognized. In the
-Commons he can vote only when the House is equally divided; in our
-House of Representatives his name is sometimes called, although there
-is no tie; but in each case he votes in his representative capacity,
-and not as Speaker. In the time of Queen Elizabeth it was insisted,
-that, because he was “one out of our own number, and _not a stranger_,
-therefore he hath a voice.” But Sir Walter Raleigh replied, that the
-Speaker “was foreclosed of his voice _by taking that place_.”[141] The
-latter opinion, which has been since overruled, attests the disposition
-at that early day to limit his powers.
-
-Cushing, in his elaborate work, brings together numerous illustrations,
-and gives the essence:--
-
- “The presiding officer, though entitled on all occasions to
- be treated with the greatest attention and respect by the
- individual members, because the power and dignity and honor
- of the assembly are officially embodied in his person, is yet
- but the servant of the House to declare its will and to obey
- implicitly all its commands.”[142]
-
- “The duties of a presiding officer are of such a nature,
- and require him to possess so entirely and exclusively the
- confidence of the assembly, that, with certain exceptions,
- which will presently be mentioned, he is not allowed to
- exercise any other functions than those which properly belong
- to his office; _that is to say, he is excluded from submitting
- propositions to the assembly, from participating in its
- deliberations, and from voting_.”[143]
-
-At an early day an English Speaker vividly characterized his relations
-to the House, when he describes himself as “one of themselves to be
-the mouth, indeed the servant, of all the rest.”[144] This character
-appears in the memorable incident, when King Charles in his madness
-entered the Commons, and, going directly to the Speaker, asked for the
-five members he wished to arrest. Speaker Lenthall answered in ready
-words, revealing the function of the presiding officer: “May it please
-your Majesty, I have neither eyes to see nor tongue to speak, _in this
-place_, but as the House is pleased to direct me, whose servant I am
-_here_.”[145] This reply was as good in law as in patriotism. Different
-words were employed by Sir William Scott, afterward Lord Stowell, when,
-in 1802, on moving the election of Mr. Speaker Abbot, he declared that
-a Speaker must add “to a jealous affection for the privileges of the
-House an awful sense of its duties.”[146] But the early Speaker and the
-great Judge did not differ. Both attest that the Speaker, when in the
-Chair, is only the organ of the House, and nothing more.
-
-Passing from the Speaker to the Clerk, we find still another
-illustration, showing that the word _preside_, under which the
-Chief Justice derives all his powers, has received an authoritative
-interpretation in the rules of the House of Representatives, and the
-commentaries thereon. I cite from Barclay’s Digest.
-
- “Under the authority contained in the Manual, and the usage
- of the House, the Clerk _presided_ over its deliberations
- while there was no Speaker, but simply put questions, and,
- where specially authorized, preserved order, not, however,
- undertaking to decide questions of order.”[147]
-
-In another place, after stating that in several Congresses there
-was a failure to elect a Speaker for several days, that in the
-twenty-sixth Congress there was a failure for eleven days, that in the
-thirty-first Congress there was a failure for nearly a month, that in
-the thirty-fourth and thirty-sixth Congresses respectively there was a
-failure for not less than two months, the author says:--
-
- “During the three last-named periods, while the House was
- without a Speaker, the Clerk _presided_ over its deliberations;
- not, however, exercising the functions of Speaker to the extent
- of deciding questions of order, but, as in the case of other
- questions, putting them to the House for its decision.”[148]
-
-This limited power of the Clerk is described in a marginal note of the
-author,--“Clerk _presides_.” The author then proceeds:--
-
- “To relieve future Houses of some of the difficulties which
- grew out of the very limited power of the Clerk as _a presiding
- officer_, the House of the thirty-sixth Congress adopted the
- present 146th and 147th rules, which provide, that, ‘pending
- the election of a Speaker, the Clerk shall preserve order and
- decorum, and shall decide all questions of order that may
- arise, subject to appeal to the House.’”[149]
-
-From this impartial statement we have a practical definition of the
-word _preside_. It is difficult to see how it can have a different
-signification in the National Constitution. The word is the same in the
-two cases, and it must have substantially the same meaning, whether
-it concern a Clerk or a Chief Justice. Nobody ever supposed that a
-_presiding_ Clerk could rule or vote. Can a _presiding_ Chief Justice?
-
-The claim of a presiding Chief Justice becomes still more questionable
-when it is considered how positively the Constitution declares that
-“the Senate shall have the _sole_ power to try all impeachments,” and,
-still further, that conviction can be only by “the concurrence of two
-thirds of _the members present_.” These two provisions accord powers to
-_the Senate solely_. If a presiding Chief Justice can rule or vote, the
-Senate has not “the sole power to try”; for ruling and voting, even on
-interlocutory questions, may determine the trial. A vote to postpone,
-to withdraw, even to adjourn, might, under peculiar circumstances,
-exercise a decisive influence. A vote for a protracted adjournment
-might defeat the trial. Notoriously such votes are among the devices
-of parliamentary opposition. In doing anything like this, a presiding
-Chief Justice makes himself _a trier_, and, if he votes on the final
-judgment, he makes himself _a member of the Senate_. But he cannot be
-either.
-
-It is only a casting vote that thus far the presiding Chief Justice
-has assumed to give. But he has the same power to vote always as to
-vote when the Senate is equally divided. No such power in either
-case is found in the National Constitution or in Parliamentary Law.
-By the National Constitution he presides, and nothing more, while by
-Parliamentary Law there is no casting vote where the presiding officer
-is not a member of the body. Nor does there seem to be any difference
-between a casting vote on an interlocutory question and a casting
-vote on the final question. The former is determined by a majority,
-and the latter by two thirds; but it has been decided in our country,
-that, “if the assembly, on a division, stands exactly one third to
-two thirds, there is then occasion for the giving of a casting vote,
-because the presiding officer can then, by giving his vote, decide
-the question either way.”[150] This statement reveals still further
-how inconsistent is the claim of the presiding Chief Justice with the
-positive requirement of the National Constitution.
-
-I would not keep out of sight any consideration which seems in any
-quarter to throw light on this claim; and therefore I take time to
-mention an analogy which has been invoked. The exceptional provision
-in the Constitution, under which the Vice-President has a casting
-vote on ordinary occasions, is taken from its place in another clause
-and applied to the Chief Justice. It is gravely argued that the Chief
-Justice is a substitute for the Vice-President, and, as the latter,
-by express grant, has a casting vote on ordinary occasions, therefore
-the Chief Justice has such when presiding on an impeachment. To this
-argument there are two obvious objections: first, there is no language
-giving a casting vote to the Chief Justice, and, in the absence of
-express grant, it is impossible to imply it in opposition to the
-prevailing rule of Parliamentary Law; and, secondly, it is by no means
-clear that the Vice-President has a casting vote, when called to
-preside on an impeachment. On ordinary occasions, in the business of
-the Senate, the grant is explicit; but it does not follow that this
-grant can be extended to embrace an impeachment, in face of positive
-provisions by which the power to _try_ and _vote_ is confined to
-_Senators_. According to the undoubted rule of interpretation, _Ut
-res magis valeat quam pereat_, the casting vote of the Vice-President
-must be subject to this curtailment. Therefore, if the Chief Justice
-is regarded as a substitute for the Vice-President, it will be only to
-find himself again within the same limitations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I cannot bring this survey to an end without an expression of deep
-regret that I find myself constrained to differ from the Chief Justice.
-In faithful fellowship for long years, we have striven together for
-the establishment of Liberty and Equality as the fundamental law of
-this Republic. I know his fidelity, and revere his services; but not on
-this account can I hesitate the less, when I find him claiming in this
-Chamber an important power which, in my judgment, is three times denied
-in the National Constitution: first, when it is declared that the
-Senate alone shall _try_ impeachments; secondly, when it is declared
-that only _members_ shall convict; and, thirdly, when it is declared
-that the Chief Justice shall _preside_, and nothing more,--thus
-conferring upon him those powers only which by Parliamentary Law belong
-to a presiding officer not a member of the body. In the face of such a
-claim, so entirely without example, and of such possible consequences,
-I cannot be silent. Reluctantly and painfully I offer this respectful
-protest.
-
-There is a familiar saying of jurisprudence, that it is the part of
-a good judge to amplify his jurisdiction: _Boni judicis est ampliare
-jurisdictionem_. This maxim, borrowed from the horn-books, was
-originally established for the sake of justice and humanity, that they
-might not fail; but it has never been extended to other exercises
-of authority. On the contrary, all accepted maxims are against such
-assumption in other cases. Never has it been said that it is the part
-of a good presiding officer to amplify his power; and there is at least
-one obvious reason: a presiding officer is only an _agent_, acting
-always in presence of his _principal_. Whatever the promptings of the
-present moment, such an amplification can find no sanction in the
-National Constitution, or in that Parliamentary Law from which there is
-no appeal.
-
-Thus, which way soever we turn,--whether to the National Constitution,
-or to Parliamentary Law, as illustrated in England or the United
-States,--we are brought to conclude that the Chief Justice in the
-Senate Chamber is not in any respect Chief Justice, but only presiding
-officer; that he has no judicial powers, or, in other words, powers
-_to try_, but only the powers of a presiding officer not a member
-of the body. According to the injunction of the Constitution, he
-can _preside_, but this is all, unless other powers are superadded
-by concession of the Senate, subject always to the constitutional
-limitation that the Senate alone can _try_, and, therefore, alone can
-rule or vote on questions which enter into the trial. The function of
-a presiding officer may be narrow, but it must not be disparaged. For
-a succession of generations, great men in the law, Chancellors and
-Chief Justices, have not disdained to discharge it. Out of the long and
-famous list I mention one name of surpassing authority: Somers, the
-illustrious defender of constitutional liberty, unequalled in debate as
-in judgment, exercised this function without claiming other power. He
-was satisfied to preside. Such an example is not unworthy of us. If the
-present question could be determined by sentiments of personal regard,
-I should gladly say that our Chief Justice is needed to the Senate
-more than the Senate is needed to him. But the National Constitution,
-which has regulated the duties of all, leaves us no alternative. We
-are the Senate; he is the presiding officer,--although, whether in the
-Court Room or the Senate Chamber, he is always the most exalted servant
-of the law. This character he cannot lose by change of seat. As such
-he lends to this historic occasion the dignity of his presence and
-the authority of his example. Sitting in that Chair, he can do much
-to smooth the course of business, and to fill the Chamber with the
-spirit of justice. Under the rules of the Senate, he can become its
-organ,--but nothing more.
-
-
-
-
-EXPULSION OF THE PRESIDENT.
-
-OPINION IN THE CASE OF THE IMPEACHMENT OF ANDREW JOHNSON, PRESIDENT OF
-THE UNITED STATES, MAY 26, 1868.
-
-
-I voted against the rule of the Senate allowing opinions to be filed in
-this proceeding, and regretted its adoption. With some hesitation I now
-take advantage of the opportunity, if not the invitation, it affords.
-Voting “Guilty” on all the articles, I feel that there is little need
-of explanation or apology. Such a vote is its own best defender. But I
-follow the example of others.
-
-
-BATTLE WITH SLAVERY.
-
-This is one of the last great battles with Slavery. Driven from these
-legislative chambers, driven from the field of war, this monstrous
-power has found refuge in the Executive Mansion, where, in utter
-disregard of Constitution and law, it seeks to exercise its ancient
-domineering sway. All this is very plain. Nobody can question it.
-Andrew Johnson is the impersonation of the tyrannical Slave Power.
-In him it lives again. He is lineal successor of John C. Calhoun and
-Jefferson Davis, and he gathers about him the same supporters. Original
-partisans of Slavery, North and South, habitual compromisers of great
-principles, maligners of the Declaration of Independence, politicians
-without heart, lawyers for whom a technicality is everything, and a
-promiscuous company who at every stage of the battle have set their
-faces against Equal Rights,--these are his allies. It is the old troop
-of Slavery, with a few recruits, ready as of old for violence, cunning
-in device, and heartless in quibble. With the President at their head,
-they are now intrenched in the Executive Mansion.
-
-Not to dislodge them is to leave the country a prey to a most hateful
-tyranny. Especially is it to surrender the Unionists of the Rebel
-States to violence and bloodshed. Not a month, not a week, not a day
-should be lost. The safety of the Republic requires action at once.
-Innocent men must be rescued from sacrifice.
-
-I would not in this judgment depart from the moderation proper to the
-occasion; but God forbid, that, when called to deal with so great an
-offender, I should affect a coldness I cannot feel! Slavery has been
-our worst enemy, assailing all, murdering our children, filling our
-homes with mourning, darkening the land with tragedy; and now it rears
-its crest anew, with Andrew Johnson as its representative. Through him
-it assumes once more to rule and impose its cruel law. The enormity of
-his conduct is aggravated by his barefaced treachery. He once declared
-himself the Moses of the colored race. Behold him now the Pharaoh! With
-such treachery in such a cause there can be no parley. Every sentiment,
-every conviction, every vow against Slavery must be directed against
-him. Pharaoh is at the bar of the Senate for judgment.
-
-The formal accusation is founded on recent transgressions, enumerated
-in articles of impeachment; but it is wrong to suppose that this is
-the whole case. It is very wrong to try this impeachment merely on
-these articles. It is unpardonable to higgle over words and phrases,
-when, for more than two years, the tyrannical pretensions in evidence
-before the Senate have been manifest, as I shall show, in terrible,
-heart-rending consequences.
-
-
-IMPEACHMENT A POLITICAL PROCEEDING.
-
-Before entering upon the formal accusation instituted by the House
-of Representatives of the United States in their own name and in the
-name of all the people thereof, it is important to understand the
-nature of the proceeding. And here on the threshold we encounter the
-effort of the apologists seeking in every way to confound this great
-constitutional trial with an ordinary case at _Nisi Prius_, and to
-win for the criminal President an Old Bailey acquittal, where on some
-quibble the prisoner is allowed to go without day. From beginning
-to end this has been painfully apparent, thus degrading the trial
-and baffling justice. Point by point has been pressed, sometimes by
-counsel and sometimes even by Senators, leaving the substantial merits
-untouched, as if, on a solemn occasion involving the safety of the
-Republic, there could be any other question.
-
-The first effort was to call the Senate, sitting for the trial of
-impeachment, a Court, and not a Senate. Ordinarily, names are of
-little consequence; but it cannot be doubted that this appellation
-has been made the starting-point for technicalities proverbial in
-courts. Constantly we have been reminded of what is called our judicial
-character, and of the supplementary oath we have taken, as if a Senator
-were not always under oath, and as if other things within the sphere
-of his duties were not equally judicial in character. Out of this
-plausible assumption has come that fine-spun thread which lawyers know
-so well how to weave.
-
-The whole mystification disappears, when we look at the National
-Constitution, which in no way speaks of impeachment as judicial,
-and in no way speaks of the Senate as a court. On the contrary, it
-uses positive language inconsistent with this assumption and all its
-pretended consequences. On this head there can be no doubt.
-
-By the National Constitution it is expressly provided that “_the
-judicial power_ of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme
-Court and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to
-time ordain and establish,”--thus positively excluding the Senate from
-any exercise of “the judicial power.” And yet this same Constitution
-provides that “the Senate shall have the sole power to try all
-impeachments.” In the face of these plain texts it is impossible not to
-conclude, that, in trying impeachments, Senators exercise a function
-which is not regarded by the National Constitution as “judicial,” or,
-in other words, as subject to the ordinary conditions of judicial
-power. Call it senatorial or political, it is a power by itself, and
-subject to its own conditions.
-
-Nor can any adverse conclusion be drawn from the unauthorized
-designation of “court” which has been foisted into our proceedings.
-This term is very expansive, and sometimes very insignificant. In
-Europe it means the household of a prince. In Massachusetts it is still
-applied to the Legislature of the State, which is known as the General
-Court. If applied to the Senate, it must be interpreted by the National
-Constitution, and cannot be made in any respect a source of power or a
-constraint.
-
-It is difficult to understand how this term, which plays such a part
-in present pretensions, obtained its vogue. It does not appear in
-English impeachments, although there is reason for it there which
-is not found here. From ancient times, Parliament, including both
-Houses, has been called a court, and the House of Lords is known as
-a court of appeal. The judgment on English impeachments embraces not
-merely removal from office, as under the National Constitution, but
-also punishment; and yet it does not appear that the Lords sitting
-on impeachments are called a court. They are not so called in any of
-the cases, from the first, in 1330, entitled simply, “Impeachment of
-Roger Mortimer, Earl of March, for Treason,” down to the last, in 1806,
-entitled, “Trial of the Right Honorable Henry Lord Viscount Melville,
-before the Lords’ House of Parliament in Westminster Hall, for High
-Crimes and Misdemeanors whereof he was accused in certain Articles of
-Impeachment.” In the historic case of Lord Bacon, we find, at the first
-stage, this title, “Proceedings in Parliament against Francis Bacon
-Lord Verulam,” and, after the impeachment was presented, the simple
-title, “Proceedings in the House of Lords.” Had this simplicity been
-followed among us, there would have been one source of misunderstanding
-the less.
-
-There is another provision of the National Constitution which testifies
-still further, and, if possible, more completely. It is the limitation
-of the judgment in cases of impeachment, making it political and
-nothing else. It is not punishment, but protection to the Republic. It
-is confined to removal from office and disqualification; but, as if
-aware that this was no punishment, the National Constitution further
-provides that this judgment shall be no impediment to indictment,
-trial, judgment, and punishment “according to law.” Thus again is the
-distinction declared between an impeachment and a proceeding “according
-to law.” The former, which is political, belongs to the Senate, which
-is a political body; the latter, which is judicial, belongs to the
-courts, which are judicial bodies. The Senate removes from office; the
-courts punish. I am not alone in drawing this distinction. It is well
-known to all who have studied the subject. Early in our history it was
-put forth by the distinguished Mr. Bayard, of Delaware, the father of
-Senators, in the case of Blount;[151] and it is adopted by no less an
-authority than our highest commentator, Judge Story, who was as much
-disposed as anybody to amplify the judicial power. In speaking of this
-text, he says that impeachment “is not so much designed to punish an
-offender as _to secure the State against gross official misdemeanors_;
-it touches neither his person nor his property, _but simply divests
-him of his political capacity_.”[152] All this seems forgotten by
-certain apologists on the present trial, who, assuming that impeachment
-was a proceeding “according to law,” have treated the Senate to the
-technicalities of the law, to say nothing of the law’s delay.
-
-Discerning the true character of impeachment under the National
-Constitution, we are constrained to confess that it is a political
-proceeding before a political body with political purposes; that it
-is founded on political offences, proper for the consideration of a
-political body, and subject to a political judgment only. Even in
-cases of treason and bribery, the judgment is political, and nothing
-more. If I were to sum up in one word the object of impeachment under
-the National Constitution, meaning what it has especially in view,
-with its practical limitation, I should say _expulsion from office_.
-The present question is, Shall Andrew Johnson, on the case before the
-Senate, be expelled from office?
-
-Expulsion from office is not unknown to our proceedings. By the
-National Constitution a Senator may be expelled with “the concurrence
-of two thirds,” precisely as a President may be expelled with “the
-concurrence of two thirds.” In each case the same exceptional vote of
-two thirds is required. Do not the two illustrate each other? From the
-nature of things, they are essentially similar in character,--except
-that on expulsion of the President the motion is made by the House
-of Representatives at the bar of the Senate, while on expulsion of
-a Senator the motion is made by a Senator. How can we require a
-technicality of proceeding in the one which is rejected in the other?
-If the Senate is a court, bound to judicial forms on the expulsion of
-the President, must it not be the same on the expulsion of a Senator?
-But nobody attributes to it any such strictness in the latter case.
-Numerous precedents attest how, in dealing with its own members, the
-Senate seeks substantial justice without reference to form. In the
-case of Blount, which is the first in our history, the expulsion
-was on the report of a committee, declaring him “guilty of a high
-misdemeanor, entirely inconsistent with his public trust and duty as
-a Senator.”[153] At least one Senator has been expelled on simple
-motion.[154] Others have been expelled without any formal allegation or
-formal proof.
-
-According to another provision of the National Constitution, overriding
-both cases, “each House may determine the rules of its proceedings.”
-The Senate, on the expulsion of its own members, has already done this,
-and set an example of simplicity. But it has the same power over its
-rules of proceeding on the expulsion of the President; and there can
-be no reason for simplicity in the one case not equally applicable in
-the other. Technicality is as little consonant with the one as with the
-other. Each has for its object the public safety. For this the Senator
-is expelled; for this, also, the President is expelled. _Salus populi
-suprema lex._ The proceedings in each case must be in subordination to
-this rule.
-
-There is one formal difference, under the National Constitution,
-between the power to expel a Senator and the power to expel the
-President. The power to expel a Senator is unlimited in terms. The
-Senate may, “with the concurrence of two thirds, expel a member,”
-nothing being said of the offence; whereas the President can be
-expelled only for “treason, bribery, or _other high crimes and
-misdemeanors_.” A careful inquiry will show that under the latter words
-there is such a latitude as to leave little difference between the two
-cases. This brings us to the question of impeachable offences.
-
-
-POLITICAL OFFENCES ARE IMPEACHABLE OFFENCES.
-
-So much depends on the right understanding of this proceeding, that,
-even at the risk of protracting the discussion, I cannot hesitate
-to consider this branch of the subject, although what I have already
-said may render it superfluous. What are impeachable offences has
-been much considered in this trial, and sometimes with very little
-appreciation of the question. Next to the mystification from calling
-the Senate a court has been that other mystification from not calling
-the transgressions of Andrew Johnson “impeachable offences.”
-
-It is sometimes boldly argued that there can be no impeachment under
-the National Constitution, unless for an offence defined and made
-indictable by Act of Congress, and therefore Andrew Johnson must go
-free, unless it can be shown that he is such an offender. But this
-argument mistakes the Constitution, and also mistakes the whole theory
-of impeachment.
-
-It mistakes the Constitution in attributing to it any such absurd
-limitation. The argument is this: Because in the National Constitution
-there are no Common-Law crimes, therefore there are no such crimes on
-which an impeachment can be maintained. But there are two answers:
-first, that the District of Columbia, where the President resides and
-exercises his functions, was once part of Maryland, where the Common
-Law prevailed; that, when it came under the national jurisdiction,
-it brought with it the whole body of the law of Maryland, including
-the Common Law; and that at this day the Common Law of crimes is
-still recognized here. But the second answer is stronger still.
-By the National Constitution, _expulsion from office_ is “on
-impeachment for and conviction of treason, bribery, _or other high
-crimes and misdemeanors_”; and this, according to another clause
-of the Constitution, is “the supreme law of the land.” Now, when
-a constitutional provision can be executed without superadded
-legislation, it is absurd to suppose that such legislation is
-necessary. Here the provision executes itself without reënactment; and
-as for definition of “treason” and “bribery” we resort to the Common
-Law, so for definition of “high crimes and misdemeanors” we resort to
-the Parliamentary Law and the instances of impeachment by which it
-is illustrated. Thus clearly the whole testimony of English history
-enters into this case with its authoritative law. From the earliest
-text-writer on this subject[155] we learn the undefined and expansive
-character of these offences; and these instances are in point now.
-Thus, where a Lord Chancellor has been thought to put the great seal
-to an ignominious treaty, a Lord Admiral to neglect the safeguard
-of the seas, an Ambassador to betray his trust, a Privy Councillor
-to propound dishonorable measures, a confidential adviser to obtain
-exorbitant grants or incompatible employments, or _where any magistrate
-has attempted to subvert the fundamental law or introduce arbitrary
-power_,--all these are high crimes and misdemeanors, according to these
-precedents, by which the National Constitution must be interpreted. How
-completely they cover the charges against Andrew Johnson, whether in
-the formal accusation or in the long antecedent transgressions to which
-I shall call attention as an essential part of the case, nobody can
-question.
-
-Broad as this definition may seem, it is in harmony with the declared
-opinions of the best minds that have been turned in this direction. Of
-these none so great as Edmund Burke, who, as manager on the impeachment
-of Warren Hastings, excited the admiration of all by varied stores of
-knowledge and philosophy, illumined by the rarest eloquence, marking
-an epoch of British history. Thus spoke the greatest genius that has
-ever explained the character of impeachment:--
-
- “It is by this tribunal that statesmen who abuse their power
- are tried before statesmen and by statesmen, upon solid
- principles of State morality. _It is here that those who by an
- abuse of power have polluted the spirit of all laws can never
- hope for the least protection from any of its forms._ It is
- here that those who have refused to conform themselves to the
- protection of law can never hope to escape through any of its
- defects.”[156]
-
-The value of this testimony is not diminished because the orator
-spoke as manager. By professional license an advocate may state
-opinions not his own, but a manager cannot. Appearing for the House of
-Representatives and all the people, he speaks with the responsibility
-of a judge, so that his words may be cited hereafter. Here I but
-follow the claim of Mr. Fox.[157] Therefore the words of Burke are as
-authoritative as beautiful.
-
-In different, but most sententious terms, Mr. Hallam, who is so great
-a light in constitutional history, thus exhibits the latitude of
-impeachment and its comprehensive grasp:--
-
- “A minister is answerable for _the justice, the honesty, the
- utility of all measures_ emanating from the Crown, _as well as
- for their legality_; and thus the executive administration is,
- or ought to be, subordinate, in all great matters of policy, to
- the superintendence and virtual control of the two Houses of
- Parliament.”[158]
-
-Thus, according to this excellent witness, even failure in justice,
-honesty, and utility, as well as in legality, may be the ground of
-impeachment; and the Administration should in all great matters of
-policy be subject to the two Houses of Parliament,--the House of
-Commons to impeach, and the House of Lords to try. Here again the case
-of Andrew Johnson is provided for.
-
-Our best American lights are similar, beginning with the “Federalist”
-itself, which teaches that impeachment is for “those offences which
-proceed from _the misconduct of public men_, or, in other words, from
-the abuse or violation of some public trust: they are of a nature which
-may with peculiar propriety be denominated _political_, as they relate
-chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.”[159] If
-ever injuries were done immediately to society itself, if ever there
-was an abuse or violation of public trust, if ever there was misconduct
-of a public man, all these are now before us in the case of Andrew
-Johnson. The “Federalist” has been echoed ever since by all who have
-spoken with knowledge and without prejudice. First came the respected
-commentator, William Rawle, who specifies among causes of impeachment
-“the fondness for the inordinate extension of power,” “the influence
-of party and of prejudice,” “the seductions of foreign states,” “the
-baser appetite for illegitimate emolument,” and “the involutions
-and varieties of vice, too many and too artful to be anticipated by
-positive law,” all resulting in what the commentator says are “not
-unaptly termed _political offences_.”[160] And thus Rawle unites with
-the “Federalist” in stamping upon impeachable offences the epithet
-“political.” If in the present case there has been on the part of
-Andrew Johnson no base appetite for illegitimate emolument and no
-yielding to foreign seductions, there has been most notoriously the
-influence of party and prejudice, also to an unprecedented degree an
-individual extension of power, and an involution and variety of vice
-impossible to be anticipated by positive law,--all of which, in gross
-or in detail, is impeachable. Here it is in gross. Then comes Story,
-who, writing with the combined testimony of English and American
-history before him, and moved only by a desire of truth, records
-his opinion with all the original emphasis of the “Federalist.” His
-words are like a judgment. The process of impeachment, according to
-him, is intended to reach “personal misconduct, or gross neglect, or
-usurpation, or habitual disregard of the public interests, in the
-discharge of the duties of _political office_”; and the commentator
-adds, that it “is to be exercised over offences which are committed
-by public men in violation of their public trust and duties,” that
-“the offences to which it is ordinarily applied are of a _political_
-character,” and that, strictly speaking, “the power partakes of a
-_political_ character.”[161] Every word here is like an ægis for the
-present case. The later commentator, Curtis, is, if possible, more
-explicit even than Story. According to him, an impeachment “is not
-necessarily a trial for crime”; its purposes “lie wholly beyond the
-penalties of the statute or the customary law”; and this commentator
-does not hesitate to say that it is a proceeding “to ascertain _whether
-cause exists for removing a public officer from office_”; and he
-adds, that such cause of removal “may exist where no offence against
-positive law has been committed,--as where the individual has, from
-immorality, or imbecility, _or maladministration, become unfit to
-exercise the office_.”[162] Here again the power of the Senate over
-Andrew Johnson is vindicated so as to make all doubt or question absurd.
-
-I close this question of impeachable offences by asking you to consider
-that all the cases which have occurred in our history are in conformity
-with the rule which so many commentators have announced. The several
-trials of Pickering, Chase, Peck, and Humphreys exhibit its latitude
-in different forms. Official misconduct, including in the cases of
-Chase and Humphreys offensive utterances, constituted the high crimes
-and misdemeanors for which they were respectively arraigned. These are
-precedents. Add still further, that Madison, in debate on the power
-of removal, at the very beginning of our Government, said: “I contend
-that _the wanton removal of meritorious officers_ would subject the
-President to impeachment and removal from his own high trust.”[163] But
-Andrew Johnson, standing before a crowd, said of meritorious officers
-that he would “kick them out,”[164] and forthwith proceeded to execute
-his foul-mouthed menace. How small was all that Madison imagined, how
-small was all that was spread out in the successive impeachments of our
-history, if gathered into one case, compared with the terrible mass now
-before us!
-
-From all these concurring authorities, English and American, it is
-plain that impeachment is a power broad as the National Constitution
-itself, and applicable to the President, Vice-President, and all civil
-officers through whom the Republic suffers or is in any way imperilled.
-Show me an act of evil example or influence committed by a President,
-and I show you an impeachable offence, great in proportion to the
-scale on which it is done, and the consequences menaced. The Republic
-must receive no detriment; and impeachment is a power by which this
-sovereign rule is maintained.
-
-
-UNTECHNICAL FORM OF PROCEDURE.
-
-The form of procedure has been noticed in considering the political
-character of impeachment; but it deserves further treatment by itself.
-Here we meet the same latitude. It is natural that the trial of
-political offences, before a political body, with a political judgment
-only, should have less of form than a trial at Common Law; and yet this
-obvious distinction is constantly disregarded. The authorities, whether
-English or American, do not leave the question open to doubt.
-
-An impeachment is not a technical proceeding, as at _Nisi Prius_ or in
-a county court, where the rigid rules of the Common Law prevail. On
-the contrary, it is a proceeding according to Parliamentary Law, with
-rules of its own, unknown in ordinary courts. The formal statement and
-reduplication of words, constituting the stock-in-trade of so many
-lawyers, are exchanged for a broader manner, more consistent with the
-transactions of actual life. The precision of history and of common
-sense is enough, without the technical precision of an indictment.
-
-From time immemorial there has been a just distinction between
-proceedings in Parliament and proceedings in the ordinary courts of
-justice, which I insist shall not be abandoned. The distant reign of
-Richard the Second, beyond the misfortunes touching us so much in
-Shakespeare, supplies a presiding rule which has been a pole-star of
-Constitutional Law; nor is this in any vague, uncertain language, but
-in the most clear and explicit terms, illumined since by great lights
-of law.
-
-On what was called an appeal in Parliament, or impeachment, it has
-solemnly declared that the Lords were not of right obliged to proceed
-according to the course or rules of the Roman law or according to the
-law or usage of any of the inferior courts of Westminster Hall, but by
-the law and usage of Parliament, which was itself a court.
-
- “In this Parliament [in the 11th year of King Richard the
- Second, A. D. 1387-88] all the Lords then present, spiritual as
- well as temporal, claimed as their franchise that the weighty
- matters moved in this Parliament, and which shall be moved in
- other Parliaments in future times, touching the peers of the
- land, shall be managed, adjudged, and discussed by the course
- of Parliament, and in no sort by the Law Civil, or by the
- common law of the land, used in the other lower courts of the
- kingdom.”[165]
-
-The Commons approved the proceedings, and it has been remarked, in an
-important official report, that “neither then nor ever since have they
-made any objection or protestation that the rule laid down by the Lords
-… ought not to be applied to the impeachments of commoners as well as
-peers.”[166] Accordingly Lord Coke declares, that “all weighty matters
-in any Parliament moved concerning the peers of the realm, or commoners
-in Parliament assembled, ought to be determined, and adjudged, and
-discussed by the course of the Parliament, and not by the Civil
-Law, nor yet by the common laws of this realm used in more inferior
-courts.” Then, founding on the precedent of 11th Richard the Second, he
-announces, that “judges ought not to give any opinion of _a matter of
-Parliament_, because it is not to be decided by the common laws, but
-_secundum legem et consuetudinem Parliamenti_”; and he adds, “So the
-judges in divers Parliaments have confessed.”[167]
-
-But impeachment is “a matter of Parliament,” whether in England or in
-the United States. It was so at the beginning, and has been ever since.
-
-Even anterior to Richard the Second the same conclusion was recognized,
-with illustrative particularity, as appears by the trial of those who
-murdered King Edward the Second, thus commented by an eminent writer on
-Criminal Law, who was also an experienced judge, Foster:--
-
- “It is well known, that, in parliamentary proceedings of
- this kind, it is and ever was sufficient that matters appear
- with proper light and certainty to a common understanding,
- without that _minute exactness_ which is required in criminal
- proceedings in Westminster Hall.”[168]
-
-Thus early was the “minute exactness” of a criminal court discarded,
-while the proceedings were adapted to “a common understanding.” This
-becomes important, not only as a true rule of procedure, but as an
-answer to some of the apologists, especially the Senator from West
-Virginia [Mr. VAN WINKLE], who makes technicality a rule and essential
-condition.
-
-Accordingly by law and custom of Parliament we are to move; and here we
-meet rules of pleading and principles of evidence entirely different
-from those of the Common Law, but established and fortified by a long
-line of precedents. This stands forth in the famous “Report from the
-Committee of the House of Commons appointed to inspect the Lords’
-Journals in relation to their Proceedings on the Trial of Warren
-Hastings,” which, beyond its official character, is enhanced as the
-production of Edmund Burke.
-
- “Your Committee do not find that any rules of pleading, as
- observed in the inferior courts, have ever obtained in the
- proceedings of the High Court of Parliament, in a cause or
- matter in which the whole procedure has been within their
- original jurisdiction. Nor does your Committee find that any
- demurrer or exception, as of false or erroneous pleading, hath
- been ever admitted to any impeachment in Parliament, as not
- coming within the form of the pleading.”[169]
-
-This principle appears in the great trial of Strafford, 16th Charles
-the First, 1640-41, stated by no less a person than Pym, on delivering
-a message of the Commons reducing the charges to more particularity:
-“Not that they are bound by this way of _special_ charge; and
-therefore, as they have taken care in their House, upon protestation,
-that this shall be no prejudice to bind them from proceeding _upon
-generals_ in other cases, and that they are not to be ruled by
-proceedings in other courts, which protestation they have made for
-preservation of power of Parliaments, so they desire that the like care
-may be had in your Lordships’ House.”[170] In this broad language is a
-just rule applicable to the present case.
-
-The question came to formal judgment on the memorable trial of the Tory
-preacher, Sacheverell, March 10, 1709-10, impeached for high crimes
-and misdemeanors, on account of two sermons in which he put forth the
-doctrines of Non-Resistance and denounced the Revolution of 1688, by
-which English liberty was saved. After argument on both sides, and
-questions propounded by the Lords, the judges delivered their opinion
-_seriatim_, that, by the law of England and the constant practice of
-Westminster Hall, “the particular words supposed to be criminal ought
-to be specified in indictments or informations.” And yet, in face of
-this familiar and indisputable rule of the Common Law, thus pointedly
-declared, the Lords solemnly resolved:--
-
- “That, by the law and usage of Parliament, in prosecutions by
- impeachments for high crimes and misdemeanors, by writing or
- speaking, the particular words supposed to be criminal are not
- necessary to be expressly specified in such impeachments.”[171]
-
-The respondent, being found guilty, moved in arrest of judgment:--
-
- “That no entire clause, sentence, or expression, contained in
- either of his sermons or dedications, is particularly set
- forth in his impeachment, which he has already heard the
- judges declare to be necessary in all cases of indictments or
- informations.”[172]
-
-The Lord Chancellor, denying the motion, communicated to the respondent
-the resolution already adopted after full debate and consideration, and
-added:--
-
- “So that, in their Lordships’ opinion, the law and usage
- of the High Court of Parliament being a part of the law of
- the land, and that usage not requiring the words should be
- _expressly specified_ in impeachments, the answer of the
- judges, which related only to the course used in indictments
- and informations, does not in the least affect your case.”[173]
-
-And so the judgment was allowed to stand.
-
-The substantial justice of this proceeding is seen, when it is
-considered that the whole of the libel had been read at length, so
-that the respondent had the benefit of anything which could be alleged
-in extenuation or exculpation, as if the libellous sermons had been
-entered _verbatim_. The Report already cited presents the practical
-conclusion:--
-
- “It was adjudged sufficient to state the crime generally in the
- impeachment. The libels were given in evidence; and it was not
- then thought of, that nothing should be given in evidence which
- was not specially charged in the impeachment.”[174]
-
-The principle thus solemnly adjudged was ever afterwards asserted by
-the managers for the House of Commons in all its latitude, and with
-an energy, zeal, and earnestness proportioned to the magnitude of the
-interests involved,--as appeared conspicuously on the impeachment
-for high treason of the Lords who had taken part in the Rebellion
-of 1715 to bring back the Stuarts. Lord Wintoun, after conviction,
-moved in arrest of judgment, and excepted against the impeachment for
-error, on account of the treason not being described with sufficient
-certainty,--the day on which the treason was committed not having
-been alleged. The learned counsel, arguing that Parliamentary Law
-was part of Common Law, submitted “whether there is not the same
-certainty required in one method of proceeding at the Common Law as
-in another.”[175] To this ingenious presentment, by which proceedings
-in Parliament were brought within the grasp of the Common Law, the
-able and distinguished managers replied with resolution, asserting the
-supremacy of Parliamentary Law. Walpole, afterwards the famous Prime
-Minister, began:--
-
- “Those learned gentlemen seem to forget _in what court they
- are_. They have taken up so much of your Lordships’ time
- in quoting of authorities and using arguments to show your
- Lordships what would quash an indictment in the courts below,
- that they seem to forget they are now in a court of Parliament
- and on an impeachment of the Commons of Great Britain.… I hope
- it will never be allowed here as a reason, that what quashes
- an indictment in the courts below will make insufficient an
- impeachment brought by the Commons of Great Britain.”[176]
-
-The Attorney-General supported Walpole:--
-
- “I would take notice that we are upon an impeachment, and
- not upon an indictment. The courts below have set forms to
- themselves, which have prevailed for a long course of time,
- and thereby are become the forms by which those courts are to
- govern themselves; but it never was thought that the forms
- of those courts had any influence on the proceedings of
- Parliament.”[177]
-
-Cowper, a brother of the Lord Chancellor of that name, said:--
-
- “If the Commons, in preparing articles of impeachment, should
- govern themselves by precedents of indictments, in my humble
- opinion they would depart from the ancient, nay, the constant,
- usage and practice of Parliament.”[178]
-
-Sir William Thomson followed:--
-
- “The precedents in impeachments are not so _nice and precise in
- form_ as in the inferior courts.”[179]
-
-The judges, in answer to questions propounded, declared the necessity
-in indictments of mentioning “a certain day.” But the Lords, in
-conformity with ancient usage, set aside this technical objection, and
-announced:--
-
- “That the impeachment is sufficiently certain in point of time,
- according to the forms of impeachments in Parliament.”[180]
-
-Thus do authoritative precedents exhibit a usage of Parliament, or
-Parliamentary Law, unlike that of the Common Law, which on trials of
-impeachment seeks substantial justice, but is not “nice and precise in
-form.” If the proceedings are not absolutely according to the rule of
-reason, plainly the technicalities of the Common Law are out of place.
-It is enough, if they are clear to “a common understanding,” without
-the “minute exactness” of a criminal court. But this is according to
-reason. A mere technicality, much more a quibble, often efficacious
-on a demurrer, is a wretched anachronism, when we are considering a
-question of political duty. Especially must this be so under the genius
-of republican institutions. The latitude established in England cannot
-be curtailed in the United States, and it becomes more essential in
-proportion to the elevation of the proceedings. Ascending into the
-region of history, the laws of history cannot be neglected.
-
-Even if the narrow rules and exclusions of the Common Law could be
-tolerated on the impeachment of an inferior functionary, they must be
-disclaimed on the trial of a chief magistrate, involving the public
-safety. The technicalities of law were invented for protection against
-power, not for the immunity of a usurper or tyrant. When set up for the
-safeguard of the weak, they are respectable, but on impeachments they
-are intolerable. Here again I cite Edmund Burke:--
-
- “God forbid that those who cannot defend themselves upon their
- merits and their actions may defend themselves behind those
- fences and intrenchments that are made to secure the liberty
- of the people, that power and the abusers of power should
- cover themselves by those things which were made to secure
- liberty!”[181]
-
-Never was there a case where this principle was more applicable than
-now.
-
-The origin of impeachment in the National Constitution and contemporary
-authority vindicate this very latitude. In this light the proceeding
-was explained by the “Federalist,” in words which should be a guide
-now:--
-
- “_This can never be tied down by such strict rules_, either
- in the delineation of the offence by the prosecutors or in
- the construction of it by the judges, as in common cases
- serve to limit the discretion of courts in favor of personal
- security.”[182]
-
-This article was by Alexander Hamilton, writing in concert with
-James Madison and John Jay. Thus, by the highest authority, at the
-adoption of the National Constitution, it is declared that impeachment
-“can never be tied down by strict rules,” and that this latitude is
-applicable to “the delineation of the offence,” meaning thereby the
-procedure or pleading, and also to “the construction of the offence,”
-in both of which cases the “discretion” of the Senate is enlarged
-beyond that of ordinary courts, and so the ancient Parliamentary Law is
-vindicated, and the Senate is recognized within its sphere.
-
-
-RULES OF EVIDENCE.
-
-From form of procedure I pass to rules of evidence; and here again the
-Senate must avoid technicalities, and not allow any artificial rule to
-shut out the truth. It would allow no such thing on the expulsion of a
-Senator. How allow it on the expulsion of a President? On this account
-I voted to admit all evidence offered during the trial,--believing,
-in the first place, that it ought to be heard and considered, and, in
-the second place, that, even if shut out from this Chamber, it could
-not be shut out from the public, or be shut out from history, both
-of which must be the ultimate judges. On the impeachment of Prince
-Polignac and his colleagues of the French Cabinet, in 1830, for signing
-the ordinances which cost Charles the Tenth his throne, some forty
-witnesses were sworn, without objection, in a brief space of time, and
-no testimony was excluded. An examination of the two volumes entitled
-“Procès des Derniers Ministres de Charles X.” confirms what I say. This
-example, which commends itself to the enlightened reason, seems in
-harmony with declared principles of Parliamentary Law.
-
-As in pleadings, so in evidence, the Law of Parliament, and not the
-Common Law, is the guide of the Senate. In other courts the rules vary,
-as on trial by jury in the King’s Bench depositions are not received,
-while in Chancery just the reverse is the case. The Court of Parliament
-has its own rules. Here again I quote the famous Report:--
-
- “No doctrine or rule of law, much less the practice of any
- court, ought to have weight or authority in Parliament further
- than as such doctrine, rule, or practice is agreeable to the
- proceedings in Parliament, or hath received the sanction of
- approved precedent there, _or is founded on the immutable
- principles of substantial justice_, without which, your
- Committee readily agrees, no practice in any court, high or
- low, is proper or fit to be maintained.”[183]
-
-The true rule was enunciated:--
-
- “The Court of Parliament ought to be open with great facility
- to the production of all evidence, except that which the
- precedents of Parliament teach them authoritatively to
- reject, or which hath no sort of natural aptitude directly
- or circumstantially to prove the case.… The Lords ought _to
- enlarge, and not to contract, the rules of evidence_, according
- to the nature and difficulties of the case.”[184]
-
-Its point appears in a single sentence:--
-
- “To refuse evidence is to refuse to hear the cause.”[185]
-
-In striking harmony with this most reasonable conclusion is the
-well-known postulate of Jeremy Bentham, who gave so much thought to the
-Law of Evidence: “Evidence is the basis of justice: to exclude evidence
-is to exclude justice.”[186]
-
-The precedents of impeachment, including the trials of Strafford,
-Sacheverell, Macclesfield, and the Rebel Lords in 1715, and again in
-1745, all illustrate the liberality of the proceedings, while the
-judgment of Lord Hardwicke, in concurrence with the rest of the judges,
-and with the support of the bar, announced, that “the judges and sages
-of the law have laid it down that there is but _one_ general rule of
-evidence,--the best that the nature of the case will admit.”[187] And
-this is the master rule governing all subordinate rules. In harmony
-with it is another announced by Lord Mansfield: “All evidence is
-according to the subject-matter to which it is applied.”[188] These two
-rules are expansive, and not narrow,--liberal, and not exclusive. They
-teach us to regard “the nature of the case” and “the subject-matter.”
-But the case is an impeachment, and the subject-matter is misbehavior
-in high office. Before us is no common delinquent, whose offence is
-against a neighbor, but the Chief Magistrate, who has done wrong to his
-country. One has injured an individual, the other has injured all. Here
-again I quote the Report:--
-
- “The abuses stated in our impeachment are not those of mere
- individual, natural faculties, but the abuses of civil and
- political authority. The offence is that of one who has carried
- with him, in the perpetration of his crimes, whether of
- violence or of fraud, the whole force of the State.”[189]
-
-In such a case there must be a latitude of evidence commensurate with
-the arraignment. And thus we are brought to the principle with which I
-began.
-
-There are other rules, which it is not too late to profit by. One
-relates to the burden of proof, and is calculated to have a practical
-bearing. Another relates to matters of which the Senate will take
-cognizance without any special proof, thus importing into the case
-unquestionable evidence explaining and aggravating the transgressions
-charged.
-
-1. Look carefully at the object of the trial. Primarily it is for the
-expulsion of the President from office. Its motive is not punishment,
-not vengeance, but the public safety. Nothing less could justify the
-ponderous proceeding. It will be for the criminal courts to award the
-punishment due to his offences. The Senate considers only how the
-safety of the people, which is the supreme law, can be best preserved;
-and to this end the ordinary rule of evidence is reversed. If on any
-point you entertain doubts, the benefit of those doubts must be given
-to your country; and this is the supreme law. When tried on indictment
-in the criminal courts, Andrew Johnson may justly claim the benefit
-of your doubts; but at the bar of the Senate, on the question of
-expulsion from office, his vindication must be in every respect and on
-each charge beyond a doubt. He must show that his longer continuance in
-office is not inconsistent with the public safety,--
-
- “Or at least so prove it,
- That the probation bear no hinge nor loop
- To hang a doubt on.”
-
-Anything short of this is to trifle with the Republic and its
-transcendent fortunes.
-
-It is by insisting upon doubts that the apologists of the President,
-at the bar and in the Senate, seek to save him. For myself, I see none
-such; but assuming that they exist, then should they be marshalled for
-our country. This is not a criminal trial, where the rule prevails.
-Better the escape of many guilty than that one innocent should suffer.
-This rule, so proper in its place, is not applicable to a proceeding
-for expulsion from office; and who will undertake to say that any claim
-of office can be set against the public safety?
-
-In this just rule of evidence I find little more than time-honored
-maxims of jurisprudence, requiring interpretation always in favor
-of Liberty. Early in the Common Law we were told that he is to be
-adjudged impious and cruel who does not favor Liberty: _Impius et
-crudelis judicandus est qui Libertati non favet_.[190] Blackstone,
-whose personal sympathies were with power, is constrained to confess
-that “the law is always ready to catch at anything in favor of
-Liberty.”[191] But Liberty and all else are contained in the public
-safety; they depend on the rescue of the country from a Presidential
-usurper. Therefore should we now, in the name of the law, “catch at
-anything” to save the Republic.
-
-2. There is another rule of evidence, which, though of common
-acceptance in the courts, has peculiar value in this case, where it
-must exercise a decisive influence. It is this: Courts will take
-judicial cognizance of certain matters without any special proof on
-the trial. Some of these are of general knowledge, and others are
-within the special knowledge of the court. Among these, according to
-express decision, are the frame of government, and the public officers
-administering it; the accession of the Chief Executive; the sitting
-of Congress, and its usual course of proceeding; the customary course
-of travel; the ebbs and flows of the tide; _also whatever ought to be
-generally known within the limits of the jurisdiction, including the
-history of the country_. Besides these matters of general knowledge,
-a court will take notice of its own records, the conduct of its own
-officers, and whatever passes in its own presence or under its own
-eyes. For all this I cite no authority; it is superfluous. I add
-a single illustration from the great English commentator: “If the
-contempt be committed in the face of the court, the offender may be
-instantly apprehended and imprisoned, at the discretion of the judges,
-without any further proof or examination.”[192]
-
-If this be the rule of courts, _a fortiori_ it must be the rule of the
-Senate on impeachments; for we have seen, that, when sitting for this
-purpose, the Senate enjoys a latitude of its own. Its object is the
-Public Safety; and therefore no aid for the arrival at truth can be
-rejected, no gate can be closed. But here is a gate opened by the sages
-of the law, and standing open always, to the end that justice may not
-fail.
-
-Applying this rule, it will be seen at once how it brings before the
-Senate, without any further evidence, a long catalogue of crime,
-affecting the character of the President beyond all possibility of
-defence, and serving to explain the later acts on which the impeachment
-is founded. It was in this Chamber, in the face of the Senate and
-the ministers of foreign powers, and surrounded by the gaze of
-thronged galleries, that Andrew Johnson exhibited himself in beastly
-intoxication while he took his oath of office as Vice-President; and
-all that he has done since is of record here. Much of it appears on our
-Journals. The rest is in authentic documents published by the order of
-the Senate. Never was record more complete.
-
-Here in the Senate we know officially how he made himself the attorney
-of Slavery, the usurper of legislative power, the violator of law, the
-patron of rebels, the helping hand of rebellion, the kicker from office
-of good citizens, the open bung-hole of the Treasury, the architect
-of the “Whiskey Ring,” the stumbling-block to all good laws by wanton
-vetoes and then by criminal hindrances: all these things are known
-here beyond question. To the apologists of the President, who set up
-the quibbling objection that they are not alleged in the Articles of
-Impeachment, I reply, that, even if excluded on this account from
-judgment, they may be treated as evidence. They are the reservoir from
-which to draw, in determining the true character of the later acts
-for which the President is arraigned, and especially the _intent_ by
-which he was animated. If these latter were alone, without connection
-with transgressions of the past, they would have remained unnoticed,
-impeachment would not have been ordered. It is because they are a
-prolongation of that wickedness under which the country has so long
-suffered, and spring from the same bloody fountain, that they are now
-presented for judgment. They are not alone; nor can they be faithfully
-considered without drawing upon the past. The story of the god Thor in
-Scandinavian mythology is revived, whose drinking-horn could not be
-drained by the strongest quaffer, for it communicated with the vast and
-inexhaustible ocean. Andrew Johnson is our god Thor, and these latter
-acts for which he stands impeached are the drinking-horn whose depths
-are unfathomable.
-
-
-OUTLINE OF TRANSGRESSIONS.
-
-From this review, showing how this proceeding is political in
-character, before a political body, and with a political judgment,
-being expulsion from office and nothing more,--then how the
-transgressions of the President, in protracted line, are embraced under
-“impeachable offences,”--then how the form of procedure is liberated
-from ordinary technicalities of law,--and, lastly, how unquestionable
-rules of evidence open the gates to overwhelming testimony,--I pass to
-the consideration of the testimony, and how the present impeachment
-became a necessity. I have already called it one of the last great
-battles with Slavery. See now how the battle began.
-
-Slavery in all its pretensions is a defiance of law; for it can have
-no law in its support. Whoso becomes its representative must act
-accordingly; and this is the transcendent crime of Andrew Johnson.
-For the sake of Slavery, and to uphold its original supporters in
-their endeavors to continue this wrong under another name, he has set
-at defiance the National Constitution and the laws of the land; and
-he has accompanied this unquestionable usurpation by brutalities and
-indecencies in office without precedent, unless we go back to the Roman
-emperor fiddling or the French monarch dancing among his minions. This
-usurpation, with its brutalities and indecencies, became manifest as
-long ago as the winter of 1866, when, being President, and bound by
-oath of office to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution,
-and to take care that the laws are faithfully executed, he assumed
-legislative powers in the reconstruction of the Rebel States, and,
-in carrying forward this usurpation, nullified an Act of Congress,
-intended as the corner-stone of Reconstruction, by virtue of which
-Rebels are excluded from office under the National Government, and
-thereafter, in vindication of this misconduct, uttered a scandalous
-speech, in which he openly charged members of Congress with being
-assassins, and mentioned some by name. Plainly he should have been
-impeached and expelled at that early day. The case against him was
-complete. That great patriot of English history, Lord Somers, has
-likened impeachment to Goliath’s sword hanging in the Temple, to
-be taken down only when occasion required;[193] but if ever there
-was occasion for its promptest vengeance, it was then. Had there
-been no failure at that time, we should be now by two years nearer
-to restoration of all kinds, whether political or financial. So
-strong is my conviction of the fatal remissness of the impeaching
-body, that I think the Senate would do a duty in strict harmony
-with its constitutional place in the Government, and the analogies
-of judicial tribunals so often adduced, if it reprimanded the House
-of Representatives for this delay. Of course the Senate could not
-originate impeachment. It could not take down the sword of Goliath. It
-must wait on the House, as the court waits on the grand jury. But this
-waiting has cost the country more than can be told.
-
-Meanwhile the President proceeded in transgression. There is nothing
-of usurpation he has not attempted. Beginning with assumption of all
-power in the Rebel States, he has shrunk from nothing in maintenance of
-this unparalleled assumption. This is a plain statement of fact. Timid
-at first, he grew bolder and bolder. He saw too well that his attempt
-to substitute himself for Congress in the work of Reconstruction was
-sheer usurpation, and therefore, by his Secretary of State, did not
-hesitate to announce that “it must be distinctly understood that the
-restoration will be _subject to the decision of Congress_.”[194] On
-two separate occasions, in July and September, 1865, he confessed the
-power of Congress over the subject; but when Congress came together in
-December, the confessor of Congressional power found that he alone had
-this great prerogative. According to his new-fangled theory, Congress
-had nothing to do but admit the States with governments instituted
-through his will alone. It is difficult to measure the vastness of
-this usurpation, involving as it did a general nullification. Strafford
-was not bolder, when, speaking for Charles the First, he boasted that
-“the King’s little finger was heavier than the loins of the Law”;[195]
-but these words helped the proud minister to the scaffold. No monarch,
-no despot, no sultan, could claim more than an American President; for
-he claimed all. By his edict alone governments were organized, taxes
-levied, and even the franchises of the citizen determined.
-
-Had this assumption of power been incidental, for the exigency of
-the moment, as under pressure of war, and especially to serve human
-rights, to which before his elevation the President had professed
-such vociferous devotion, it might have been pardoned. It would have
-passed into the chapter of unauthorized acts which a patriot people
-had condoned. But it was the opposite in every particular. Beginning
-and continuing in usurpation, it was hateful beyond pardon, because it
-sacrificed Unionists, white and black, and was in the interest of the
-Rebellion, and of Rebels who had been in arms against their country.
-
-More than one person was appointed provisional governor who could not
-take the oath of office required by Act of Congress. Other persons
-in the same predicament were appointed in the revenue service. The
-effect of these appointments was disastrous. They were in the nature
-of notice to Rebels everywhere, that participation in the Rebellion
-was no bar to office. If one of their number could be appointed
-governor, if another could be appointed to a confidential position in
-the Treasury Department, there was nobody on the long list of blood
-who might not look for preferment. And thus all offices, from governor
-to constable, were handed over to disloyal scramble. Rebels crawled
-forth from their retreats. Men who had hardly ventured to expect life
-were candidates for office, and the Rebellion became strong again.
-The change was felt in all gradations of government, in States,
-counties, towns, and villages. Rebels found themselves in places of
-trust, while true-hearted Unionists, who had watched the coming of
-our flag and should have enjoyed its protecting power, were driven
-into hiding-places. All this was under the auspices of Andrew Johnson.
-It was he who animated the wicked crew. He was at the head of the
-work. Loyalty was persecuted. White and black, whose only offence was
-that they had been true to country, were insulted, abused, murdered.
-There was no safety for the loyal man except within the flash of our
-bayonets. The story is as authentic as hideous. More than two thousand
-murders have been reported in Texas alone since the surrender of Kirby
-Smith. In other States there was like carnival. Property, person, life,
-were all in jeopardy. Acts were done to “make a holiday in Hell.” At
-New Orleans was a fearful massacre, worse, considering the age and
-place, than that of St. Bartholomew, which darkens a century of France,
-or that of Glencoe, which has printed an ineffaceable stain upon one
-of the greatest reigns of English history. All this is directly traced
-to Andrew Johnson. The words of bitterness uttered at another time are
-justified, while Fire, Famine, and Slaughter shriek forth,--
-
- “He let me loose, and cried, Halloo!
- To him alone the praise is due.”[196]
-
-
-ACCUMULATION OF IMPEACHABLE OFFENCES.
-
-This is nothing but the outline, derived from historic sources _which
-the Senate on this occasion is bound to recognize_. Other acts fall
-within the picture. The officers he appointed in defiance of law were
-paid also in the same defiance. Millions of property were turned
-over without consideration to railroad companies, whose special
-recommendation was participation in the Rebellion. The Freedmen’s
-Bureau, that sacred charity of the Republic, was despoiled of its
-possessions for the sake of Rebels, to whom their forfeited estates
-were given back after they had been vested by law in the United States.
-The proceeds of captured and abandoned property, lodged under law
-in the National Treasury, were ravished from their place of deposit
-and sacrificed. Rebels were allowed to fill the antechambers of the
-Executive Mansion and to enter into the counsels. The pardoning
-power was prostituted, and pardons were issued in lots to suit
-Rebels, thus grossly abusing that trust whose discreet exercise is so
-essential to the administration of justice. The powers of the Senate
-over appointments were trifled with and disregarded by reappointing
-persons already rejected, and by refusing to communicate the names
-of others appointed during the recess. The veto power, conferred by
-the National Constitution as a remedy for ill-considered legislation,
-was turned by him into a weapon of offence against Congress, and into
-an instrument to beat down the just opposition which his usurpation
-had aroused. The power of removal, so sparingly exercised by patriot
-Presidents, was seized as an engine of tyranny, and openly employed
-to maintain his wicked purposes, by the sacrifice of good citizens
-who would not be his tools. Incompetent and dishonest creatures,
-recommended only by their echoes to his voice, were appointed to
-office, especially in the collection of the internal revenue, through
-whom a new organization, known as the “Whiskey Ring,” has been able
-to prevail over the Government, and to rob the Treasury of millions,
-at the cost of tax-paying citizens, whose burdens are thus increased.
-Laws enacted by Congress for the benefit of the colored race, including
-that great statute for the establishment of the Freedmen’s Bureau,
-and that other great statute for the establishment of Civil Rights,
-were first attacked by Presidential veto, and, when finally passed by
-requisite majority over the veto, were treated by him as little better
-than dead letter, while he boldly attempted to arrest a Constitutional
-Amendment by which the rights of citizens and the national debt
-were placed under the guaranty of irrepealable law. During these
-successive assumptions, usurpations, and tyrannies, utterly without
-precedent in our history, this deeply guilty man ventured upon public
-speeches, each an offence to good morals, where, lost to all shame,
-he appealed in coarse words to the coarse passions of the coarsest
-people, scattering firebrands of sedition, inflaming anew the rebel
-spirit, insulting good citizens, and, with regard to office-holders,
-announcing, in his own characteristic phrase, that he would “kick them
-out,”--the whole succession of speeches being, from their brutalities
-and indecencies, in the nature of a “criminal exposure of his person,”
-indictable at Common Law, for which no judgment can be too severe.
-Even this revolting transgression has additional aggravation, when it
-is considered, that, through these utterances, the cause of justice
-was imperilled, and the accursed demon of civil feud lashed again into
-vengeful fury.
-
-All these things, from beginning to end, are plain facts, recorded
-in our annals, and known to all. And it is further recorded in our
-annals and known to all, that, through these enormities,--any one
-of which is ample for condemnation, while all together present an
-aggregation of crime,--untold calamities have been brought upon our
-country, disturbing business and finance, diminishing the national
-revenues, postponing specie payments, dishonoring the Declaration of
-Independence in its grandest truths, arresting the restoration of the
-Rebel States, reviving the dying Rebellion, and, instead of that peace
-and reconciliation so much longed for, sowing strife and wrong, whose
-natural fruit is violence and blood.
-
-
-OPEN DEFIANCE OF CONGRESS.
-
-For all these, or any one of them, Andrew Johnson should have been
-impeached and expelled from office. The case required a statement only,
-not an argument. Unhappily this was not done. As a petty substitute
-for the judgment which should have been pronounced, and as a bridle on
-Presidential tyranny in “kicking out of office,” Congress enacted a
-law known as the Tenure-of-Office Act, passed March 2, 1867, over his
-veto, by two thirds of both Houses.[197] And to prepare the way for
-impeachment, by removing scruples of technicality, its violation was
-expressly declared a high misdemeanor.
-
-The President began at once to chafe under its restraint. Recognizing
-the Act, and following its terms, he first suspended Mr. Stanton from
-office, and then, in anticipation of his restoration by the Senate,
-made the attempt to win General Grant into surrender of the department,
-so as to oust Mr. Stanton and render restoration by the Senate
-ineffectual. Meanwhile Sheridan in Louisiana, Pope in Alabama, and
-Sickles in South Carolina, who, as military commanders, were carrying
-into the pacification of these States the energies so brilliantly
-displayed in the war, were pursued by the same vindictive spirit. They
-were removed by the President, and Rebellion throughout that whole
-region clapped its hands. This was done in the exercise of his power
-as Commander-in-Chief. At last, in unappeased rage, he openly violated
-the Tenure-of-Office Act, so as to bring himself under its judgment, by
-defiant attempt to remove Mr. Stanton from the War Department without
-the consent of the Senate, and the appointment of Lorenzo Thomas,
-Adjutant-General of the United States, as Secretary of War _ad interim_.
-
-
-IMPEACHMENT AT LAST.
-
-The Grand Inquest of the nation, after sleeping on so many enormities,
-was awakened by this open defiance. The gauntlet was flung into its
-very chamber, and there it lay on the floor. The President, who had
-already claimed everything for the Executive with impunity, now rushed
-into conflict with Congress on the very ground selected in advance by
-the latter. The field was narrow, but sufficient. There was but one
-thing for the House of Representatives to do. Andrew Johnson must be
-impeached, or the Tenure-of-Office Act would become a dead letter,
-while his tyranny would receive a letter of license, and impeachment as
-a remedy for wrong-doing would be blotted from the Constitution.
-
-Accordingly it was resolved that the offender, whose crimes had so long
-escaped judgment, should be impeached. Once entered upon this work,
-the House of Representatives, after setting forth the removal of Mr.
-Stanton and the appointment of General Thomas in violation of law and
-Constitution, proceeded further to charge him in different forms with
-conspiracy wrongfully to obtain possession of the War Department; also
-with attempt to corrupt General Emory, and induce him to violate an
-Act of Congress; also with scandalous speeches, such as no President
-could be justified in making; concluding with a general Article setting
-forth attempts on his part to prevent the execution of certain Acts of
-Congress.
-
-Such is a simple narrative, which brings us to the Articles of
-Impeachment. Nothing I have said thus far is superfluous; for it shows
-the origin of this proceeding, and illustrates its moving cause. The
-Articles themselves are narrow, if not technical; but they are filled
-and broadened by the transgressions of the past, all of which enter
-into the present offences. The whole is an unbroken series, with
-a common life. As well separate the Siamese twins as separate the
-offences charged from that succession of antecedent crimes with which
-they are linked, any one of which is enough for judgment. The present
-springs from the past, and can be truly seen only in its light, which,
-in this case, is nothing less than “darkness visible.”
-
-
-ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT.
-
-In entering upon the discussion of the Articles of Impeachment, I
-confess my regret that so great a cause, on which so much depends,
-should be presented on such narrow ground, although I cannot doubt that
-the whole past must be taken into consideration in determining the
-character of the acts alleged. If there has been a violation of law
-and Constitution, the apologists of the President then insist that all
-was done with good intentions. Here it is enough, if we point to the
-past, which thus becomes part of the case. But of this hereafter. It
-is unnecessary for me to take time in setting forth the Articles. The
-abstract is enough. They will naturally come under review before the
-close of the inquiry.
-
-Of the transactions embraced by the Articles, the removal of Mr.
-Stanton has unquestionably attracted most attention, although I
-cannot doubt that the scandalous harangues are as justly worthy
-of condemnation. But the former has been made the pivot of the
-impeachment,--so much so that the whole case seems to revolve on this
-transaction. Therefore I shall not err, if, following the Articles, I
-put this foremost.
-
-This transaction may be brought to the touchstone of the National
-Constitution, and also of the Tenure-of-Office Act. But since the
-allegation of violation of this Act has been so conspicuous, and this
-Act may be regarded as a Congressional interpretation of the power of
-removals under the National Constitution, I begin with the questions
-arising under it.
-
-
-TENURE-OF-OFFICE ACT.
-
-The general object of the Tenure-of-Office Act was to protect civil
-officers from removal without the advice and consent of the Senate; and
-it was made in express terms applicable to “every person holding any
-civil office to which he has been appointed by and with the advice and
-consent of the Senate.” To this provision, so broad in character, was
-appended a proviso:--
-
- “_Provided_, That the Secretaries of State, of the Treasury, of
- War, of the Navy, and of the Interior, the Postmaster-General,
- and the Attorney-General, shall hold their offices respectively
- for and during the term of the President by whom they may have
- been appointed and for one month thereafter, subject to removal
- by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.”[198]
-
-As this general protection from removal without the advice and consent
-of the Senate might be productive of embarrassment during the recess of
-the Senate, it was further provided, in a second section, that, during
-such recess, any person, except judges of the United States courts, may
-be suspended from office by the President on reasons assigned, which it
-is made his duty to report to the Senate within twenty days after its
-next meeting, and if the Senate concurs, then the President may remove
-the officer and appoint a successor; but if the Senate does not concur,
-then the suspended officer shall forthwith resume his functions.
-
-On this statute two questions arise: first, as to its
-constitutionality, and, secondly, as to its application to Mr. Stanton,
-so as to protect him from removal without the advice and consent of the
-Senate.
-
-It is impossible not to confess in advance that both have been already
-practically settled. The statute was passed over the veto of the
-President by two thirds of both Houses, who thus solemnly united in
-declaring its constitutionality. Then came the suspension of Mr.
-Stanton, and his restoration to office by a triumphant vote of the
-Senate, being no less than thirty-five to six,--thus establishing not
-only the constitutionality of the statute, but also its protecting
-application to Mr. Stanton. And then came the resolution of the Senate,
-adopted, after protracted debate, on the 21st February, by a vote
-of twenty-eight to six, declaring, that, under the Constitution and
-laws of the United States, the President has no power to remove the
-Secretary of War and to designate any other officer to perform the
-duties of that office _ad interim_; thus for the third time affirming
-the constitutionality of the statute, and for the second time its
-protecting application to Mr. Stanton. There is no instance in our
-history where there has been such a succession of votes, with such
-large majorities, declaring the conclusions of the Senate, and fixing
-them beyond recall. “Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just”;
-but the Tenure-of-Office Act is armed _thrice_, by the votes of the
-Senate. The apologists of the President seem to say of these solemn
-votes, “Thrice the brinded cat hath mewed”; but such a threefold record
-cannot be treated with levity.
-
-The question of the constitutionality of this statute complicates
-itself with the power of removal under the National Constitution; but I
-shall not consider the latter question at this stage. It will naturally
-present itself when we consider the power of removal under the
-National Constitution, which has been claimed by the President. For the
-present I assume the constitutionality of the statute.
-
-
-ITS APPLICATION TO MR. STANTON.
-
-I come at once to the question of the application of the statute to Mr.
-Stanton, so as to protect him against removal without the consent of
-the Senate. And here I doubt if any question would have arisen but for
-the hasty words of the Senator from Ohio [Mr. SHERMAN], so often quoted
-in this proceeding.
-
-Unquestionably the Senator from Ohio, when the report of the Conference
-Committee of the two Houses was under discussion, stated that the
-statute did not protect Mr. Stanton in his office; but this was the
-individual opinion of this eminent Senator, and nothing more. On
-hearing it, I cried from my seat, “The Senator must speak for himself”;
-for I held the opposite opinion. It was clear to my mind that the
-statute was intended to protect Mr. Stanton, and that it did protect
-him. The Senator from Oregon [Mr. WILLIAMS], who was Chairman of the
-Conference Committee and conducted its deliberations, informs us that
-there was no suggestion in committee that the statute did not protect
-all of the President’s Cabinet, including, of course, Mr. Stanton.
-The debates in the House of Representatives are the same way. Without
-holding the scales to weigh any such conflicting opinions, I rest on
-the received rule of law, that they cannot be taken into account in
-determining the meaning of the statute. And here I quote the judgment
-of the Supreme Court of the United States, pronounced by Chief Justice
-Taney:--
-
- “In expounding this law, _the judgment of the Court cannot in
- any degree be influenced by the construction placed upon it by
- individual members of Congress in the debate which took place
- on its passage_, nor by the motives or reasons assigned by them
- for supporting or opposing amendments that were offered. The
- law as it passed is the will of the majority of both Houses,
- and the only mode in which that will is spoken is in the Act
- itself; and we must gather their intention from the language
- there used, comparing it, when any ambiguity exists, with the
- laws upon the same subject, _and looking, if necessary, to the
- public history of the times in which it was passed_.”[199]
-
-It is obvious to all acquainted with a legislative body that the rule
-thus authoritatively declared is the only one that could be safely
-applied. The Senate, in construing the present statute, must follow
-this rule. Therefore I repair to the statute, stopping for a moment to
-glance at the public history of the times, in order to understand its
-object.
-
-We have seen how the President, in carrying forward his usurpation
-in the interest of the Rebellion, trifled with the Senate in regard
-to appointments, and abused the traditional power of removal, openly
-threatening good citizens in office that he would “kick them out,” and
-filling all vacancies, from high to low, with creatures whose first
-promise was to sustain his barbarous policy. I do not stop to portray
-this outrage, constituting an impeachable offence, according to the
-declared opinion of Mr. Madison,[200] one of the strongest advocates of
-the Presidential power of removal. Congress, instead of adopting the
-remedy suggested by this father of the Constitution, and expelling the
-President by process of impeachment, attempted to wrest from him the
-power he was abusing. For this purpose the Tenure-of-Office Act was
-passed. It was deemed advisable to include the Cabinet officers within
-its protection; but, considering the intimate relations between them
-and the President, a proviso was appended, securing to the latter the
-right of choosing them in the first instance. Its object was, where
-the President finds himself, on accession to office, confronted by a
-hostile Senate, to assure this right of choice, without obliging him to
-keep the Cabinet of his predecessor; and accordingly it says to him,
-“Choose your own Cabinet, but expect to abide by your choice, unless
-you can obtain the consent of the Senate to a change.”
-
-Any other conclusion is flat absurdity. It begins by misconstruing the
-operative words of the proviso, that the Cabinet officers “shall hold
-their offices respectively for and during the term of the President by
-whom they may have been appointed.” On the face there is no ambiguity
-here. Only by going outside can any be found, and this disappears on a
-brief inquiry. At the date of the statute Andrew Johnson had been in
-office nearly two years. Some of his Cabinet were originally appointed
-by President Lincoln; others had been formally appointed by himself.
-But all were there equally by his approval and consent. One may do an
-act himself, or make it his own by ratifying it, when done by another.
-In law it is equally his act. Andrew Johnson did not originally
-appoint Mr. Stanton, Mr. Seward, or Mr. Welles, but he adopted their
-appointments; so that at the passage of the statute they stood on the
-same footing as if originally appointed by him. Practically, and in the
-sense of the statute, they were appointed by him. They were a Cabinet
-of his own choice, just as much as the Cabinet of his successor, duly
-appointed, will be of his own choice. If the statute compels the
-latter, as it clearly does, to abide by his choice, it is unreasonable
-to suppose that it is not equally obligatory on Andrew Johnson.
-Otherwise there is special immunity for the President whose misconduct
-rendered it necessary, and Congress is exhibited as legislating for
-some future unknown President, and not for Andrew Johnson, already too
-well known.
-
-Even the Presidential apologists do not question that the members
-of the Cabinet commissioned by Andrew Johnson are protected by the
-statute. How grossly unreasonable to suppose that Congress intended to
-make such a distinction among his Cabinet as to protect those whose
-support of his usurpation had gained the seats they enjoyed, while
-it exposed to his caprice a great citizen whose faithful services
-during the war had won the gratitude of his country, whose continuance
-in office was regarded as an assurance of public safety, and whose
-attempted removal has been felt as a national calamity! Clearly, then,
-it was the intention of the statute to protect the whole Cabinet,
-whether originally appointed by Andrew Johnson, or originally appointed
-by his predecessor and continued by him.
-
-I have no hesitation in saying that no other conclusion is possible
-without violence to the statute. I cannot forget, that, while we are
-permitted “to open the law upon doubts,” we are solemnly warned “not
-to open doubts upon the law.”[201] It is Lord Bacon who gives us this
-rule, whose obvious meaning is, that, where doubts do not exist, they
-should not be invented. It is only by this forbidden course that any
-question can be raised. If we look at the statute in its simplicity,
-its twofold object is apparent,--first, to prohibit removals, and,
-secondly, to limit certain terms of service. The prohibition to remove
-plainly applies to all; the limitation of service applies only to
-members of the Cabinet. I agree with the excellent Senator from Iowa
-[Mr. HARLAN], that this analysis removes all ambiguity. The pretension
-that any one of the Cabinet was left to the unchecked power of the
-President is irreconcilable with the concluding words of the proviso,
-which declare that they shall be “subject to removal by and with the
-advice and consent of the Senate,”--thus expressly excluding the
-prerogative of the President.
-
-Let us push this inquiry still further, by looking more particularly at
-the statute reduced to a skeleton, so that we may see its bones.
-
-1. _Every person holding any civil office_, by and with the advice
-and consent of the Senate, is entitled to hold such office until a
-successor is appointed.
-
-2. If members of the Cabinet, _then during the term of the President by
-whom they have been appointed_, and one month thereafter, unless sooner
-removed by consent of the Senate.
-
-Mr. Stanton obviously falls within the general class, “every person
-holding any civil office”; and he is entitled to the full benefit of
-the provision for their benefit.
-
-As obviously he falls within the sub-class, members of the Cabinet.
-
-Here his rights are equally clear. It is in the discussions under this
-head that the ingenuity of lawyers has found amplest play, mainly
-turning upon what is meant by “term” in the statute. I glance for a
-moment at some of these theories.
-
-1. One pretension is, that, the “term” having expired with the life
-of President Lincoln, Mr. Stanton is retroactively legislated out
-of office on the 15th May, 1865. As this is a penal statute, this
-construction makes it _ex post facto_, and therefore unconstitutional.
-It also makes Congress enact the absurdity that Mr. Stanton had for two
-years been holding office illegally; whereas he had been holding under
-the clearest legal title, which could no more be altered by legislation
-than black could be made white. A construction rendering the statute at
-once unconstitutional and absurd must be rejected.
-
-2. The quibble that would exclude Mr. Stanton from the protection
-of the statute, because he was appointed during the first “term” of
-President Lincoln, and the statute does not speak of “terms,” is hardly
-worthy of notice. It leads to the same absurd results as follow from
-the first supposition, enhanced by increasing the retroactive effect.
-
-3. Assuming that the statute does not terminate Mr. Stanton’s right a
-month after President Lincoln’s death, it is insisted that it must take
-effect at the earliest possible moment, and therefore on its passage.
-From this it follows that Mr. Stanton has been illegally in office
-since the 2d of March, 1867, and that both he and the President have
-been guilty of a violation of law, the former in exercising the duties
-of an office to which he had no right, and the latter for appointing
-him, or continuing him in office, without consent of the Senate, in
-violation of the Constitution and the statute in question. This is
-another absurdity to be rejected.
-
-Assuming, as is easy, that it is President Lincoln’s “term,” we have
-the better theory, that it did not expire with his life, but continues
-until the 4th of March, 1869, in which event Mr. Stanton is clearly
-entitled to hold until a month thereafter. This construction is
-entirely reasonable, and in harmony with the Constitution, and the
-legislation under it. I confess that it is one to which I have often
-inclined.
-
-This brings me back to the construction with which I began, and I
-find Andrew Johnson the President who appointed Mr. Stanton. To make
-this simple, it is only necessary to read “chosen” for “appointed”
-in the statute,--or, if you please, consider the continuance of
-Mr. Stanton in office, with the concurrence of the President, as a
-practical appointment, or equivalent thereto. Clearly Mr. Stanton
-was in office, when the statute passed, from the “choice” of the
-President. Otherwise he would have been removed. His continuance was
-like another commission. This carries out the intention of the framers
-of the statute, violates no sound canon of construction, and is
-entirely reasonable in every respect. Or, if preferred, we may consider
-the “term” that of President Lincoln, and then Mr. Stanton would be
-protected in office until one month after the 4th of March next. But
-whether the “term” be of Andrew Johnson or President Lincoln, he is
-equally protected.
-
-Great efforts have been made to show that Mr. Stanton does not come
-within the special protection of the proviso, without considering the
-irresistible consequence that he is then within the general protection
-of the statute, being “a person holding a civil office.” Turn him
-out of the proviso and he falls into the statute, unless you are as
-imaginative as one of the apologists, who placed him in a sort of
-intermediate limbo, like a lost spirit floating in space, as in one
-of Flaxman’s Illustrations of Dante. But the imagination of this
-conception cannot make us insensible to its surpassing absurdity. It is
-utterly unreasonable, and every construction must be rejected which is
-inconsistent with common sense.
-
-
-SUSPENSION OF MR. STANTON RECOGNIZED HIM AS PROTECTED BY THE STATUTE.
-
-Here I might close this part of the case; but there is another
-illustration. In suspending Mr. Stanton from office, as long ago as
-August, the President himself recognized that he was protected by
-the statute. The facts are familiar. The President, in formal words,
-undertook to say that the suspension was by virtue of the Constitution;
-but this was a dishonest pretext, in harmony with so much in his
-career. Whatever he may say, his acts speak louder than his words.
-In notice of the suspension to the Secretary of the Treasury, and
-then again in a message to the Senate assigning his reasons for the
-suspension, both being according to requirements of the statute,
-he testified, that, in his judgment at that time, Mr. Stanton came
-within its protection. If not, why thus elaborately comply with its
-requirements? Why the notice to the Secretary of the Treasury? Why the
-message to the Senate? All this was novel and without example. Why
-write to General Grant of “being sustained” by the Senate? Approval or
-disapproval of the Senate could make no difference in the exercise of
-the power he now sets up. Approval could not confirm the suspension;
-disapproval could not restore the suspended Secretary of War. In fine,
-why suspend at all? Why exercise the power of suspension, when the
-President sets up the power of removal? If Mr. Stanton was unfit for
-office and a thorn in his side, why not remove him at once? Why resort
-to this long and untried experiment merely to remove at last? There is
-but one answer. Beyond all question the President thought Mr. Stanton
-protected by the statute, and sought to remove him according to its
-provisions, beginning, therefore, with his suspension. Failing in this,
-he undertook to remove him in contravention of the statute, relying in
-justification on his pretension to judge of its constitutionality, or
-the pusillanimity of Congress, or something else “to turn up,” which
-should render justification unnecessary.
-
-Clearly the suspension was made under the Tenure-of-Office Act, and
-can be justified in no other way. From this conclusion the following
-dilemma results: If Mr. Stanton was within the statute, by what right
-was he removed? If he was not, by what right was he suspended? The
-President may choose his horn. Either will be sufficient to convict.
-
-I should not proceed further under this head but for the new device
-which makes its appearance under the auspices of the Senator from Maine
-[Mr. FESSENDEN], who tells us, that, “whether Mr. Stanton came under
-the first section of the statute or not, the President had a clear
-right to suspend him under the second.” Thus a statute intended as a
-bridle on the President gives the power to suspend Mr. Stanton, but
-fails to give him any protection. This statement would seem enough.
-The invention of the Senator is not less fallacious than the pretext of
-the President. It is a device well calculated to help the President and
-to hurt Mr. Stanton, with those who regard devices more than the reason
-of the statute and its spirit.
-
-Study the statute in its reason and its spirit, and you cannot fail to
-see that the second section was intended merely as a pendant to the
-first, and was meant to apply to the cases included in the first, and
-none other. It was a sort of safety-valve, or contrivance to guard
-against possible evils from bad men who could not be removed during the
-recess of the Senate. There was no reason to suspend a person who could
-be removed. It is absurd to suppose that a President would resort to a
-dilatory and roundabout suspension, when the short cut of removal was
-open to him. Construing the statute by this plain reason, its second
-section must have precisely the same sphere of operation as the first.
-By the letter, Mr. Stanton falls within both; by the intention, it is
-the same. It is only by applying to the first section his own idea of
-the intention, and by availing himself of the letter of the second,
-that the Senator is able to limit the one and to enlarge the other, so
-as to exclude Mr. Stanton from the protection of the statute, and to
-include him in the part allowing suspensions. Applying either letter or
-spirit consistently, the case is plain.
-
-I turn for the present from the Tenure-of-Office Act, insisting that
-Mr. Stanton is within its protection, and, being so, that his removal
-was, under the circumstances, a high misdemeanor, aggravated by its
-defiant purpose and the long series of transgressions which preceded
-it, all showing a criminal intent. The apologies of the President will
-be considered hereafter.
-
-
-SUBSTITUTION OF ADJUTANT-GENERAL THOMAS AD INTERIM.
-
-The case of Mr. Stanton has two branches: first, his removal, and,
-secondly, the substitution of Adjutant-General Thomas as Secretary of
-War _ad interim_. As the former was contrary to positive statute, so
-also was the latter without support in any Act of Congress. For the
-present I content myself with the latter proposition, without opening
-the question of Presidential powers under the National Constitution.
-
-The offender rests his case on the Act of Congress of February 13,
-1795, which empowers the President, “in case of _vacancy_ in the office
-of Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, or of the Secretary
-of the Department of War, … whereby they cannot perform the duties of
-their said respective offices, … to authorize any person or persons, at
-his discretion, to perform the duties of the said respective offices,
-until a successor be appointed, or such vacancy be filled”; and the
-supply of the vacancy is limited to six months.[202] Under this early
-statute the President defends himself by insisting that there was a
-“vacancy,” when, in fact, there was none. All this is in that unfailing
-spirit of prerogative which is his guide. Here is assumption of power.
-In fact, Mr. Stanton was at his office, quietly discharging its duties,
-when the President assumed that there was a “vacancy,” and forthwith
-sent the valiant Adjutant-General to enter upon possession. Assumption
-and commission were on a par. There is nothing in any law of the land
-to sanction either. Each testifies against the offender.
-
-The hardihood of this proceeding becomes more apparent, when it is
-understood that this very statute of 1795, on which the offender
-relies, was repealed by the statute of February 20, 1863,[203] passed
-in our own day, and freshly remembered. The latter statute, by
-necessary implication, obliterated the former. Such is the obvious
-intention, and I do not hesitate to say that any other construction
-leads into those absurdities which constitute the staple of the
-Presidential apologists. The object of Congress was to provide a
-substitute for previous statutes, restricting the number of vacancies
-which might be filled and the persons who might fill them. And this was
-done.
-
-As by the National Constitution all appointments must be with the
-advice and consent of the Senate, therefore any legislation in
-derogation thereof must be construed strictly; but the President
-insists that it shall be extended, even in face of the constitutional
-requirement. To such pretensions is he driven! The exception recognized
-by the National Constitution is only where a vacancy occurs during the
-recess of the Senate, when the President is authorized to appoint until
-he can obtain the consent of the Senate, and no longer. Obviously,
-cases may arise where sudden accident vacates the office, or where the
-incumbent is temporarily disabled. Here was the occasion for an _ad
-interim_ appointment, and the repealing statute, embodying the whole
-law of the subject, was intended for such cases,--securing to the
-President time to select a successor, and also power to provide for
-a temporary disability. Such is the underlying principle, which it is
-for us to apply. The expiration of a commission, which ordinary care
-can foresee, is not one of the sudden emergencies for which provision
-must be made; and assuming that vacancies by removal were contemplated,
-which must be denied, it is plain that the delay required for the
-examination of the case would give time to select a successor, while
-removal without cause would never be made until a successor was ready.
-
-Look now at the actual facts, and you will see how little they come
-within the reason of an _ad interim_ appointment. Evidently the
-President had resolved to remove Mr. Stanton last summer. Months
-elapsed, leaving his purpose without consummation till February. All
-the intervening time was his to select a successor, being a period
-longer than the longest fixed for the duration of an _ad interim_
-appointment by the very statutes under which he professed to act. In
-conversation with General Sherman, a month before the removal, he
-showed that he was then looking for a successor _ad interim_. Why not
-a permanent successor? It took him only a day to find Mr. Ewing. If,
-as there is reason to suppose, Mr. Ewing was already selected when
-Adjutant-General Thomas was pushed forward, why appoint the latter
-at all? Why not, in the usual way, transmit Mr. Ewing’s name as the
-successor? For the excellent reason, that the offender knew the Senate
-would not confirm him, and that therefore Mr. Stanton would remain in
-office; whereas through an _ad interim_ appointment he might obtain
-possession of the War Department, which was his end and aim. The _ad
-interim_ appointment of General Thomas was, therefore, an attempt to
-obtain possession of an office without the consent of the Senate,
-precisely because the offender knew that he could not obtain that
-consent. And all this was under pretext of an Act of Congress alike in
-letter and spirit inapplicable to the case.
-
-Thus does it appear, that, while Mr. Stanton was removed in violation
-of the Tenure-of-Office Act, Adjutant-General Thomas was appointed
-Secretary of War _ad interim_ in equal derogation of the Acts of
-Congress regulating the subject.
-
-
-REMOVAL AND SUBSTITUTION AD INTERIM A VIOLATION OF THE CONSTITUTION.
-
-It remains to consider if the removal and substitution were not each
-in violation of the National Constitution. The case is new, for never
-until now could it arise. Assuming that the Tenure-of-Office Act does
-not protect Mr. Stanton, who is thus left afloat in the limbo between
-the body of the Act and the proviso, then the President is remitted to
-his prerogative under the National Constitution, and he must be judged
-accordingly, independently of statute. Finding the power of removal
-there, he may be justified; but not finding it there, he must bear the
-consequences. And here the Tenure-of-Office Act furnishes a living and
-practical construction of the National Constitution from which there is
-no appeal.
-
-From the Constitution it appears that the power of appointment is
-vested in the President and Senate conjointly, and that nothing is said
-of the power of removal, except in case of impeachment, when it is
-made by the Senate. Therefore the power of removal is not express, but
-implied only, and must exist, if at all, as a necessary consequence
-of the power to appoint. But in whom? According to a familiar rule,
-the power which makes can unmake. Unless this rule be rejected, the
-power of removal must exist in the President and Senate conjointly;
-nor is there anything unreasonable in this conclusion. Removal can
-always be effected during the session of the Senate by the nomination
-and confirmation of a successor, while provision can be made for the
-recess by an Act of Congress. This conclusion would be irresistible,
-were the Senate always in session; but since it is not, and since cases
-may arise during the recess requiring the immediate exercise of this
-power, it has been argued that at least during the recess it must be in
-the President alone. From this position there has been a jump to the
-next, and it has been insisted, that, since, for the sake of public
-convenience, the power of removal exists in the President, he is at
-liberty to exercise it either during the recess or the session itself.
-Here is an obvious extension of the conclusion, which the premises do
-not warrant. The reason failing, the conclusion must fail. _Cessante
-ratione legis, cessat ipsa lex._ Especially must this be the case
-under the National Constitution. A power founded on implied necessity
-must fail when the necessity does not exist. The implication cannot be
-carried beyond the reason. Therefore the power of removal during the
-recess, doubtful at best, unless sanctioned by Act of Congress, cannot
-be extended to justify the exercise of that power while the Senate is
-in session, ready to act conjointly with the President.
-
-Against this natural conclusion, we have the assumption that a contrary
-construction of the National Constitution was established after debate
-in 1789. I avoid all details with regard to this debate, cited and
-considered so often. I content myself by asking if at best it was
-anything but a Congressional construction of the National Constitution,
-and, as such, subject to be set aside by another voice from the same
-quarter. It was, moreover, a Congressional construction adopted
-during the administration of Washington, whose personal character
-must have influenced opinion largely; and it prevailed in the House
-of Representatives only after earnest debate by a majority of twelve,
-and in the Senate only by the casting vote of the Vice-President, John
-Adams, who, from position as well as principle, was not inclined to
-shear the President of any prerogative. Once adopted, and no strong
-necessity for a change occurring, it was allowed to go unaltered, but
-not unquestioned. Jurists like Kent and Story, statesmen like Webster,
-Clay, Calhoun, and Benton, recorded themselves adversely, and it was
-twice reversed by vote of the Senate. This was in 1835 and again in
-1836, when a bill passed the Senate, introduced by Mr. Calhoun and
-sustained by the ablest statesmen of the time, practically denying the
-power of the President.[204] The Tenure-of-Office Act was heralded in
-1863 by a statute making the Comptroller of the Currency removable “by
-and with the advice and consent of the Senate,”[205]--thus, in this
-individual case, asserting for the Senate a check on the President;
-and then in 1866, by a more important measure, being the provision
-in the Army Appropriation Act,[206] that “no officer in the military
-or naval service shall in time of peace be dismissed from service,
-except upon and in pursuance of the sentence of a court-martial,”--thus
-putting another check on the President. Finally, this Congressional
-construction, born of a casting vote, and questioned ever since, has
-been overruled by another Congressional construction, twice adopted
-in both Houses, first by large majorities on the original passage of
-the Tenure-of-Office Act, and then by a vote of two thirds on the
-final passage of the same Act over the veto of the President,--and
-then again adopted by more than two thirds of the Senate, when the
-latter condemned the removal of Mr. Stanton: and all this in the light
-of experience, after ample debate, and with all the consequences
-before them. Such a Congressional construction must have a controlling
-influence, and the fact that it reversed the practice of eighty years
-and overcame the disposition to stand on the ancient ways would seem to
-increase rather than diminish its weight.
-
-Now mark the consequences. Originally, in 1789, there was a
-Congressional construction which in effect made the National
-Constitution read,--
-
- “The President _shall have_ the power of removal.”
-
-For the next eighty years all removals were made under this
-construction. The Tenure-of-Office Act was a new Congressional
-construction, overruling the first, and entitled to equal, if not
-superior weight. By virtue of this Congressional construction the
-National Constitution now reads,--
-
- “The President _shall not have_ the power of removal.”
-
-It follows, then, that in removing Mr. Stanton the President violated
-the National Constitution as now construed.
-
-The dilemma is this: If the President can remove Mr. Stanton during
-the session of the Senate, without any power by statute, it is only by
-virtue of a prerogative vested in him by the National Constitution,
-which must necessarily override the Tenure-of-Office Act, as an
-unconstitutional effort to abridge it. If, on the other hand, this Act
-is constitutional, the prerogative of removal is not in the President,
-and he violated the National Constitution when he assumed to exercise
-it.
-
-The Tenure-of-Office Act cannot be treated otherwise than as
-constitutional,--certainly not in the Senate, where some among the
-apologists of the President voted for it. Therefore the prerogative
-of removal is not in the President. The long practice which grew up
-under a mere reading of the National Constitution has been declared
-erroneous. To this extent the National Constitution has been amended,
-and it is as absurd to plead the practice under the first reading, in
-order to justify an offence under the second, as to plead the existence
-of Slavery before the Constitutional Amendment, in order to justify
-this monstrosity now.
-
-Thus must we conclude that the offender has violated not only the
-Tenure-of-Office Act, but also the National Constitution; that, even
-assuming Mr. Stanton unprotected by the statute, the case is not ended;
-that this statute, if construed so as to exclude him, cannot be
-rejected as a Congressional construction of the National Constitution;
-and that, under this Congressional construction, which in value is
-second only to a Constitutional Amendment, the prerogative of removal
-without the consent of the Senate does not belong to the President.
-Of course the power of suspension under the National Constitution,
-which is only an incident of the larger pretension, must fall also.
-Therefore, in the defiant removal of Mr. Stanton, and also in the
-pretended suspension under the National Constitution with which the
-transaction began, the President violated the Constitution, and was
-guilty of an impeachable offence.
-
-And so, too, we must conclude, that, in the substitution of Lorenzo
-Thomas as Secretary of War _ad interim_, the offender violated not only
-the Acts of Congress for the supply of vacancies, but also the National
-Constitution. Knowing that he could not obtain possession of the office
-with the consent of the Senate, he sought to accomplish this purpose
-without that consent. Thus, under color of a statute, he practically
-set the National Constitution at defiance. Mark here the inconsistency.
-He violates the Tenure-of-Office Act, alleging that it is against the
-National Constitution, whose champion he professes to be, and then
-takes advantage of the Acts of Congress for the supply of vacancies to
-set aside this Constitution in one of its most important requirements;
-for all which he is justly charged with an impeachable offence.
-
-All this seems clear. Any other conclusion gives to the President
-the power under the National Constitution to vacate all national
-offices, and leaves the Republic the wretched victim of tyranny, with
-a ruler who is not even a constitutional monarch, but a king above
-all laws. It was solemnly alleged in the Charge against Charles the
-First of England, that, “being admitted King of England, and therein
-trusted with a limited power _to govern by and according to the laws
-of the land, and_ NOT OTHERWISE,” he nevertheless undertook “_to rule
-according to his will_, and to overthrow the rights and liberties of
-the people.”[207] These very words now declare the crime of Andrew
-Johnson.
-
-
-THE APOLOGIES.
-
-Here I might close; but the offender has found apologists, who plead
-his cause at the bar and in the Senate. The apologies are a strange
-compound, enlarging rather than diminishing the offences proved. There
-is, first, the Apology of Good Intentions; next, the Apology of making
-a case for the Supreme Court, being the Moot-Court Apology; and then,
-the Apology that the President may sit in judgment on the laws, and
-determine whether they shall be executed, which I call the Apology of
-Prerogative. Following these is a swarm of technicalities, devices, and
-quibbles, utterly unworthy of the Senate, and to be reprobated by all
-who love justice.
-
-
-THE APOLOGY OF GOOD INTENTIONS.
-
-I begin with the Apology of Good Intentions. In the light of all that
-has occurred, with the volume of history open before us, with the
-records of the Senate in our hands, and with the evidence at the bar
-not utterly forgotten, it is inconceivable that such an apology can be
-put forward. While making it, the apologists should be veiled, so that
-the derisive smile on their faces may not be observed by the Senate, to
-whose simplicity it is addressed. It is hard to treat this apology; but
-it belongs to the case, and therefore I deal with it.
-
-A mere technical violation of law, with no evil consequences, and
-without any claim of title, is followed by nominal damages only. If
-a person, without permission, steps on a field of grass belonging
-to another, he is a trespasser, and the law furnishes a familiar
-proceeding against him; but if he has done this accidentally, and
-without any real damage, it would be hard to pursue him, unless
-assertion of the title were thought important. But if the trespasser
-is an old offender, who from the beginning has broken fences, ruined
-trees, and trampled down the garden, and now defiantly comes upon the
-field of grass, insisting upon absolute ownership, then it is vain to
-set up the apology that very little damage is done. The antecedent
-transgressions, ending in claim of title, enter into the present
-trespass, and make it a question whether the rightful owner or the
-trespasser shall hold possession. Here the rightful owner is the people
-of the United States, and the trespasser is Andrew Johnson. Therefore
-in the name of the people is he impeached.
-
-This simple illustration opens the whole case. Mere technical violation
-of statute or of Constitution, without antecedents and without
-consequents, would not justify impeachment. All of us can recall such,
-even in the administration of Abraham Lincoln; and I cannot doubt,
-that, since this proceeding began, the Chief Justice violated the
-National Constitution when he undertook to give a casting vote, not
-being a member of the Senate. These were accidents, besides being
-innocuous. From violation of statute or of Constitution the law
-ordinarily infers evil intent, and, where such a case is submitted to
-judgment, it throws upon the violator the burden of exculpation. He
-must show that his conduct was innocent,--in other words, that it was
-without evil intent, or claim of title. In the present cause we have
-the denial of evil intent, with a claim of title.
-
-The question of intent raised by the offender cannot be considered
-narrowly. This is a trial of impeachment, and not a criminal case
-in a county court. It is a proceeding for expulsion from office on
-account of political offences, and not a suit at law. When the offender
-sets up good intentions, he challenges inquisition, according to the
-latitude of such proceeding. The whole past is unrolled by himself, and
-he cannot prevent the Senate from seeing it. By a commanding rule of
-evidence it is all before us without further proof. You cannot shut it
-out; you cannot refuse to look at it. And yet we have been seriously
-told that we must shut out from sight everything but the technical
-trespass. It only remains, that, imitating the ostrich, we should
-thrust our heads into the sand, and, not seeing danger, foolishly
-imagine it does not exist. This may do at _Nisi Prius_; it will not do
-in the Senate.
-
-To such extent has this ostrich pretension been carried, that we were
-solemnly admonished at the bar, and the paradox has found voice in the
-Senate, that we must judge the acts of Andrew Johnson “as if committed
-by George Washington.” Here is the paradox in length and breadth. I
-deny it. I scout it. On the contrary, I say that we must judge all
-these acts as if committed by Andrew Johnson, and nobody else. In other
-words, we must see things as they are. As well insist that an act of
-guilt should be judged as the mistake of innocence. As well argue that
-the stab of the assassin should be treated as the cut of the surgeon.
-
-To the Apology of Good Intentions I oppose all that long unbroken
-series of transgressions, each with a voice to drown every pretext
-of innocence. I would not repeat what I have already said, but, in
-presence of this apology, it is my duty to remind the Senate how the
-career of this offender is compounded of falsehood and usurpation; how,
-beginning with promises to make treason odious, he soon installed it
-in authority; how, from declared sympathy with Unionists, white and
-black, he changed to be their persecutor; how in him are continued the
-worst elements of Slavery, an insensibility to right and a passion
-for power; how, in this spirit, he usurped great prerogatives not
-belonging to him; how, in the maintenance of this usurpation, he stuck
-at nothing; how he violated law; how he abused the pardoning power;
-how he prostituted the appointing power; how he wielded the power of
-removal to maintain his tyranny; how he sacrificed the Freedmen’s
-Bureau, and lifted up the Whiskey Ring; how he patronized massacre and
-bloodshed, and gave a license to the Ku-Klux-Klan; how, in madness,
-he entered into conflict with Congress, contesting its rightful power
-over the reconstruction of the Rebel States, and, when Congress
-would not succumb to his usurpation, how he thwarted and vilified
-it, expectorating foul-mouthed utterances which are a disgrace to
-human nature; how he so far triumphed in his wickedness that in nine
-States no Union man is safe and no murderer of a Union man can be
-punished; and, lastly,--for time fails, though not the long list of
-transgressions,--how he conspired against the patriot Secretary of
-War, because he found in that adamantine character an obstacle to
-his revolutionary career. And now, in the face of this terrible and
-indisputable record, entering into and filling this impeachment, I hear
-a voice saying that we must judge the acts in question “as if committed
-by George Washington.” The statement of this pretension is enough. I
-hand it over to the contempt it deserves.
-
-
-THE MOOT-COURT APOLOGY.
-
-Kindred to the Apology of Good Intentions, or, perhaps, a rib out of
-its side, is the Moot-Court Apology, which pretends that the President,
-in removing Mr. Stanton, only wished to make a case for the Supreme
-Court, and thus submit to this tribunal the constitutionality of the
-Tenure-of-Office Act.
-
-By this pretension the Supreme Court is converted into a moot-court to
-sit in judgment on Acts of Congress, and the President becomes what, in
-the time of Charles the Second, Lord Keeper Guilford said a good lawyer
-must be, “a put-case.”[208] Even assuming, against evidence, that
-such was his purpose, it is hard to treat it without reprobation. The
-Supreme Court is not arbiter of Acts of Congress. If this pretension
-ever found favor, it was from the partisans of Slavery and State
-Rights, who, assured of the sympathy of the Court, sought in this
-way to complete an unjust triumph. The power claimed is tribunitial
-in character, being nothing less than a veto. Its nearest parallel
-in history is in the ancient Justicia of Aragon, who could set aside
-even royal ordinances as unconstitutional. The National Constitution
-leaves no doubt as to the proper functions of the Supreme Court. It
-may hear and determine “all cases in law and equity arising under
-the Constitution, the laws of the United States, and treaties made
-under their authority”; but this is all. Its business is to decide
-“cases,”--not to sit in judgment on Acts of Congress and issue its
-tribunitial veto. If a “case” arises where a statute is said to clash
-with the National Constitution, it must be decided as any other case of
-conflict of laws. But nothing within the just powers of the Court can
-touch an Act of Congress, except incidentally, and then its judgment is
-binding only on the parties. The incidental reason assigned--as, for
-instance, that a statute is unconstitutional--does not bind anybody,
-not even the parties or the Court itself. Of course such incidental
-reason cannot bind Congress.
-
-On the evidence it is clear enough that the President had no honest
-purpose to make a case for the Supreme Court. He may have talked
-about it, but he was never in earnest. When asked by General Sherman
-“why lawyers could not make a case,” he said, in reply, “that it was
-found impossible, or a case could not be made up.” And so at each
-stage we find him practically discarding the idea. He issues the order
-of removal. Mr. Stanton disobeys. Here was exactly his opportunity.
-Instead of making the case by commencing the proper process, he tells
-Adjutant-General Thomas to “go on and take possession of the office”;
-and then, putting an end to this whole pretension of a case for the
-Court, he proceeds to treat the latter in every respect, whether of
-law or fact, as Secretary, welcomes him to his Cabinet, invites him
-to present the business of his Department, and, so far from taking
-advantage of the opportunity he had professed to desire, denies its
-existence. How could he inquire by what authority Mr. Stanton assumed
-to hold the office of Secretary of War, when he denied, in fact, that
-he was holding it?
-
-Look a little further, and the reason of this indifference becomes
-apparent. The old writ of _Quo Warranto_ was the only process
-by which a case could be made, and this only at the suit of the
-Attorney-General. Had the President made an order of removal, the
-Secretary would have been compelled to hold only by virtue of the law
-and the Constitution. In answer to the writ he would have pleaded
-this protection, and the Court must have decided the validity of the
-plea. Meanwhile he would have remained in office. Had he left, the
-process would have failed, and there was none other by which he could
-raise the question. The decision of the Supreme Court in _Wallace_ v.
-_Anderson_[209] would prevent resort to a _Quo Warranto_ on his part,
-while the earlier case of _Marbury_ v. _Madison_[210] would shut him
-out from a _Mandamus_. The apologists have not suggested any other
-remedy. It is clear, therefore, that Mr. Stanton’s possession of the
-office was a _sine qua non_ to a case in the Supreme Court, and that
-this could be only by _Quo Warranto_. The local attorney employed by
-the President testifies that in such a case judgment could not be
-reached within a year. This was enough to render it impracticable;
-for, if commenced, it would leave the hated Secretary at his post
-for the remainder of the Presidential term. During the pendency of
-the proceeding Mr. Stanton would continue legitimate possessor of
-the office. Therefore the commencement of a case would defeat the
-Presidential passion for instant removal. True to his passion, he
-removed the Secretary, well knowing that in this way he prevented a
-case for the Court.
-
-Against this conclusion, where all the testimony is harmonized,
-we have certain fruitless conversations with his Cabinet, and an
-attempt to raise the question on _Habeas Corpus_ after the arrest of
-Adjutant-General Thomas. Conversations, whose exclusion has given a
-handle to the apologists, which they do not fail to use, only show that
-the President made this question a subject of talk, and that, in the
-end, it became apparent that he could not make a case so as to remove
-Mr. Stanton during his term, and as this was his darling object, the
-whole idea was abandoned. The arrest of Adjutant-General Thomas seemed
-for a moment to furnish another chance; but it is enough to say of the
-futile attempt at that time, that it was not only after the removal of
-Mr. Stanton, but after impeachment had been voted by the House.
-
-Had the President been in earnest, it was very easy for him to make a
-case by proceeding against a simple postmaster; but this did not suit
-him. He was in earnest only to remove Mr. Stanton.
-
-Nothing is clearer than that this Moot-Court Apology is a wretched
-pretension and afterthought. It is the subterfuge of a criminal to
-cover up his crime,--as if a surgeon had committed murder, and then set
-up the apology that it was an experiment in science.
-
-
-THE APOLOGY OF PREROGATIVE.
-
-Then comes the Apology of Prerogative, being nothing less than the
-intolerable pretension that the President can sit in judgment on Acts
-of Congress, and, in his discretion, refuse to execute them. This
-apology is in the nature of a claim of right. Let it be established,
-and, instead of a government of laws, which is the glory of a republic,
-we have only the government of a single man. Here is the one-man power
-with a vengeance.
-
-Of course, if the President can sit in judgment on the Tenure-of-Office
-Act, and set it aside as unconstitutional, there is no Act of Congress
-he may not treat in the same way. He may set aside the whole succession
-of statutes for the government of the army; and his interview with
-General Emory attests his willingness to venture in that direction.
-In the spirit of oppression which seems to govern him, he may set
-aside the great statute for the establishment of civil rights without
-distinction of color. But why confine myself to instances? The whole
-statute-book will be subject to his prerogative. Vain the requirement
-of the National Constitution, that the President “shall take care
-that the laws be faithfully executed.” Vain that other requirement,
-that a bill approved by two thirds of both Houses over his veto
-“shall become a law.” His veto is perpetual; nor is it limited to any
-special enactment. It is as broad as the whole recorded legislation
-of the Republic. There is nothing it cannot hurry into that maelstrom
-ingulfing all.
-
-The President considers the statute unconstitutional, say the
-apologists. A mistake in judgment on such a question is not an
-impeachable offence, add the apologists. To which I reply, that it
-is not for mistake in judgment, but for usurpation in undertaking to
-exercise his judgment at all on such a question, that he is impeached;
-in other words, he is impeached for undertaking to set aside a statute.
-Whether the statute is constitutional or not is immaterial. The
-President, after the statute has become a law, is not the person to
-decide.
-
-Ingenuity seeks to perplex the question by putting impossible
-cases. For instance, suppose Congress should have lost its wits so
-far as to enact, in direct terms, that the President should not be
-commander-in-chief of the army and navy, or that he should not have
-the power to grant pardons; and suppose, still further, that Congress,
-in defiance of positive inhibition, should undertake to create
-“titles of nobility”; must not the President treat such enactments as
-unconstitutional? Of course he must; but such instances do not help
-the prerogative now claimed. Every such enactment would be on its face
-unconstitutional. It would be an act of unreasoning madness, which
-President as well as Court must disregard as if plain nonsense. Its
-unconstitutionality would be like an axiom, not to be questioned.
-No argument or authority is needed. It proves itself. Nor would the
-duty of disobedience be less obligatory, even if the enactment were
-sanctioned by the Supreme Court: and it is not more violent for me to
-suppose it sanctioned by the Supreme Court than for the apologists
-to suppose it sanctioned by Congress. The enactment would be a
-self-evident monstrosity, and therefore to be disobeyed, as if one of
-the Ten Commandments were reversed so as to read, “Thou shalt kill.”
-Such extreme cases serve no purpose. The National Constitution is the
-supreme law of the land, and the people will not allow its axiomatic
-requirements to be set aside. An illustration outside the limits of
-reason is of no value.
-
-In the cases supposed, the unconstitutionally of the enactment is
-axiomatic, excluding opinion or argument. It is matter of fact, and
-not matter of opinion. When the case is one on which there are two
-sides or two different views, it is then within the domain of argument.
-It is in no sense axiomatic. It is no longer matter of fact, but
-matter of opinion. When submitted to the Supreme Court, it is for
-their “opinion.” Without occupying time with refinements, I content
-myself with asserting that the judgment of the Court must be matter of
-opinion. One of the apologists has asserted that such a judgment is
-matter of fact, and, generally, that the constitutionality of a statute
-is matter of fact. I assert the contrary. When a bench of judges stands
-five to four, shall we say that the majority declare a “fact,” and the
-minority declare an “opinion”?
-
-Assuming, then, what I think will not be denied, that the
-constitutionality of a statute is matter of opinion, the question
-occurs, What opinion shall be regarded for the time as decisive?
-Clearly the opinion of Congress must control all executive officers,
-from the lowest to the President. According to a venerable maxim of
-jurisprudence, all public acts are presumed to be correct,--_Omnia rite
-acta præsumuntur_. A statute must be presumed constitutional, unless
-on its face the contrary; and no decision of any court is required in
-its favor. It is the law of the land, and must be obeyed as such.
-The maxim which presumes constitutionality is just as binding as the
-analogous maxim of the Criminal Law which presumes innocence. The
-President, reversing all this, presumes the statute unconstitutional,
-and acts accordingly. In the name of Prerogative he sets it aside.
-
-The apologists have been driven to invoke the authority of
-President Jackson, who asserted for himself the power to judge the
-constitutionality of an Act of Congress which in the course of
-legislation required his approval, although the question involved had
-been already adjudged by the Supreme Court. And he was clearly right.
-The Court itself would not be bound by its adjudication. How could it
-constrain another branch of the Government? But Andrew Jackson never
-put forth the pretension that it was within his prerogative to nullify
-a statute which had been passed over his veto in the way prescribed by
-the National Constitution. He was courageous, but there was no such
-unconstitutional audacity in his life.
-
-The apologists also summon to their aid those great instances where
-conscientious citizens have refused obedience to unjust laws. Such was
-the case of Hampden, who set an example for all time in refusing to
-pay ship-money. Such also was the case of many in our own country, who
-spurned the Fugitive Slave Bill. These exalted characters, on their
-conscience, refused to obey the law, and suffered accordingly. The
-early Christians were required by imperial mandate to strew grain on
-the altar of Jove. Though good citizens, they preferred to be martyrs.
-Such a refusal can be no apology for a President, who, in the name of
-prerogative, breaks the great oath to see that the laws are faithfully
-executed. Rather do these instances, in their moral grandeur, rebuke
-the offender.
-
-Here I turn from this Apology of Prerogative, regretting that I cannot
-say more to unfold its destructive character. If anything could
-aggravate the transgressions of Andrew Johnson, stretching in long line
-from the beginning of his administration, it would be the claim of
-right he sets up, under which the slenderest violation of law becomes
-a high crime and misdemeanor, to be pursued and judged by an indignant
-people. The supremacy of the laws must be preserved, or the liberties
-of all will suffer.
-
-
-TECHNICALITIES AND QUIBBLES.
-
-I now come upon that swarm of technicalities, devices, quirks, and
-quibbles, which from the beginning have infested this proceeding. It is
-hard to speak of such things without showing a contempt not entirely
-parliamentary. To say that they are petty and miserable is not enough.
-To say that they are utterly unworthy of this historic occasion is to
-treat them politely. They are nothing but parasitic insects, “vermin
-gendered in a lion’s mane,”--so nimble and numerous, that, to deal with
-them as they skip about, one must have the patience of the Italian
-peasant, who catches and kills, one by one, the diminutive animals
-that infest his person. The public has not forgotten the exhibition of
-“industrious fleas.” The Senate has witnessed the kindred exhibition of
-“industrious quibbles.”
-
-I can give specimens only, and out of many I take one which can never
-be forgotten. It is found in the Opinion of the Senator from West
-Virginia [Mr. VAN WINKLE], which, from beginning to end, treats this
-impeachment as if it were a prosecution for sheep-stealing in the
-police-court of Wheeling, and brings to the defence the unhesitating
-resources of a well-trained criminal lawyer. This famous Opinion,
-which is without parallel in the annals of jurisprudence, must always
-be admired as the marvel of technicality in a proceeding where
-technicality should not intrude. It stands by itself, solitary in
-originality. Others have been technical also, but the Senator from West
-Virginia is nothing else. Travelling from point to point, or rather
-seeing point after point skip before him, at last he lights upon one
-of the largest dimensions, which he boldly seizes and presents to the
-Senate.
-
-According to him, there is no allegation in the Articles that the
-order for the removal of Mr. Stanton was actually delivered to him,
-and, this being so, the Senator declares, that, “if there is evidence
-of a delivery to be found in the proceedings, it cannot be applicable
-to this Article, in which there is no charge or averment.” And this
-is gravely uttered on this transcendent occasion, when an indignant
-people has risen to demand judgment of a criminal ruler. The Article
-alleges that the order was “unlawfully issued,” and nobody doubts that
-its delivery was proved; but this is not enough, according to the
-Senator. I challenge history for another instance of equal absurdity
-in legal pretension. The case approaching it the closest is the famous
-extravagance of the Crown lawyer in the British Parliament, who, in
-reply to the argument of our fathers that they could not be taxed
-without representation, bravely insisted that they were represented,
-and sustained himself by declaring, that, under the Colonial charters,
-the lands were held in common socage as “of the manor of Greenwich in
-Kent,” and, as Greenwich was represented in Parliament, therefore the
-Colonies were represented there.[211] The pretension was perfect in
-form, but essentially absurd. The Senator from West Virginia outdoes
-even this climax of technicality. Other generations, as they read this
-great trial, with its accumulation of transgressions ending in the
-removal of Mr. Stanton, will note with wonder that a principal reason
-assigned for the verdict of Not Guilty was the failure of the Articles
-to allege that the order for removal was actually received, although
-there was a distinct allegation that it was “unlawfully issued,”
-with evidence that it was received, and no human being, not even the
-technical Senator, imagined that it was not. But how inconsistent
-with the Law of Impeachment already set forth,[212] which seeks
-substantial justice, and will not be arrested by any nice requirements!
-Lord Mansfield did not hesitate to condemn certain objections as
-“disgraceful subtilties.” What would he have said to the Senator from
-West Virginia?
-
-There is another invention, which has in its support some of the
-ablest of the apologists, like the Senator from Iowa [Mr. GRIMES], the
-Senator from Maine [Mr. FESSENDEN], and the Senator from Illinois [Mr.
-TRUMBULL]. It is said, that, as Mr. Stanton did not go out, therefore
-there was no removal, and therefore Andrew Johnson is not guilty. If
-the authority of names could change the unreal into the real, then
-this pretension might have weight. It is impossible that anything so
-essentially frivolous should be recognized in this proceeding. Such
-are the shifts of a cause to be defended only by shifts! Clearly the
-offence of the President was in the order “unlawfully issued,” and this
-was complete at the moment of its delivery. So far as depended upon
-him, Mr. Stanton was removed. This is the way in which the country
-saw the transaction, and the way also in which it will be recorded by
-history.
-
-But these same apologists, with curious inconsistency, when they come
-to consider the appointment of Adjutant-General Thomas, insist that
-there was vacancy in law, called by the Senator from Maine _legal_
-vacancy. But such vacancy could be only because there had been removal
-in law. There is no escape from this consequence. If there was removal
-in law, and there was no right to make it, the President was guilty of
-misdemeanor in law, and must take the consequences.
-
-It would be unprofitable to follow these inventions further. From these
-know all. In the face of Presidential pretensions inconsistent with
-constitutional liberty, the apologists have contributed their efforts
-to save the criminal by subtilties which can secure his acquittal in
-form only, as by a flaw in an indictment; and they have done this,
-knowing that he will be left in power to assert his prerogative, and
-that his acquittal will be a new letter of license. Nothing the skill
-of the lawyer could supply has been wanting. This learned profession
-lends to the criminal all the arts in which it excels, giving all to
-him and forgetting the Republic. Every doubt, every scruple, every
-technicality, every subtilty, every quibble, is arrayed on his side,
-when, by every rule of reason and patriotism, all should be arrayed
-on the side of our country. The Public Safety, which is the supreme
-law, is now imperilled. Are we not told by Blackstone that “the law is
-always ready to catch at anything in favor of Liberty”?[213] But these
-apologists catch at anything to save a usurper. In the early days of
-the Common Law there were technicalities in abundance, but they were
-for the maintenance of justice. On such was founded that extensive _ac
-etiam_ jurisdiction of the King’s Bench, which gives occasion for the
-elegant Commentator to remark, that, however startling these may be at
-first to the student, “he will find them, upon further consideration,
-to be highly beneficial and useful.”[214] These generous fictions for
-the sake of justice must not be confounded with the devices by which
-justice is defeated.
-
-The trick of the apologists has been, by stringent application of
-technical rules, to shut out all except offences charged, and then,
-when stress was laid upon these offences, to cry out that at most they
-were only technical, and too trifling for impeachment. To satisfy
-lawyers, the House weakly declined to act on the bloody transgressions
-of two years, but sought to provide against the future. Like the
-Roman ambassadors, they traced a line about the offender, which he
-was not to pass except at peril. This was the line of law. At last
-he passed the line, openly, knowingly, defiantly; and now that he is
-arraigned, we are told that this plain offence is nothing, only a
-little technicality. One of the counsel at the bar, [Mr. GROESBECK,] in
-a speech which showed how much feeling and talent could be given to a
-wrong side, exclaimed:--
-
- “It almost shocks me to think that the President of the United
- States is to be dragged out of his office on these miserable
- little questions whether he could make an _ad interim_
- appointment for a single day.”
-
-Only by excluding the whole context and all its antecedents could the
-question be reduced to this trivial form; and yet, even thus reduced,
-it involved nothing less than the supremacy of the laws.
-
-I know not how such a question can be called “trifling.” Often a
-great cause is presented on a narrow issue: as when English liberty
-was argued on the claim of ship-money, which was a tax of a few
-shillings only. Behind this question, called trifling by the kingly
-apologists of that day, loftily stood the great cause of the People
-against Prerogative, being the same now pending before the Senate.
-That other cause, on which at a later day hung the destinies of this
-continent, was presented on a narrower issue still. There was a tax
-of threepence a pound on tea, which our fathers refused to pay. But
-behind this question, so trifling to the apologists of prerogative,
-as behind that of ship-money, stood loftily the same great cause. The
-first cost Charles the First his head. The second cost George the Third
-his colonies. If such a question can be disparaged as of small moment,
-then have the martyred dead in all times suffered in vain, then was the
-costly blood lavished for the suppression of our Rebellion an empty
-sacrifice.
-
-Constantly we are admonished that we must confine ourselves to the
-Articles. Senators express a pious horror at looking outside the
-Articles, and insist upon directing attention to these only. Here
-the Senator from Maine is very strong. It is “the specific offences
-charged,” and these only, that he sees. He will not look at anything
-else, although spread upon the record of the Senate, and filling the
-land with accumulated horrors. Of course such a system of exclusion
-sacrifices justice, belittles this trial, and forgets that essential
-latitude of inquiry which belongs to a political proceeding, having
-for its purpose expulsion from office only, and not punishment. It is
-easy, by looking at an object through the wrong end of an opera-glass,
-to find it dwarfed, contracted, and solitary. This is not the way to
-look at Nature; nor is it the way to look at Andrew Johnson. The great
-offender should be seen in the light of day, precisely as he is, nor
-more nor less, with nothing dwarfed, with no limits to the vision, and
-with all the immense background of thronging transgressions filling
-the horizon as far as eye can reach. The sight may ache; but how else
-can justice be done? A Senator who begins by turning these Articles
-into an inverted opera-glass takes the first step towards judgment of
-acquittal. Alas that the words of Burke are not true, when, asserting
-the comprehensive character of impeachment, he denied, that, under it,
-“they who have no hope at all in the justice of their cause can have
-any hope that by some subtilties of form, some mode of pleading, by
-something, in short, different from the merits of the cause, they may
-prevail.”[215] The orator was right in thus indignantly dismissing all
-questions of pleading and all subtilties of form. This proceeding is
-of substance, and not of form. It is on the merits only that it can be
-judged. Anything short of this is the sacrifice of justice.
-
-Such is the case of this enormous criminal. Events belonging to
-history, enrolled in the records of the Senate, and familiar to the
-country, are deliberately shut out from view, while we are treated to
-legal niceties without end. The lawyers have made a painful record.
-Nothing ever occurred so much calculated to bring the profession into
-disrepute; for never before has been such a theatre where lawyers
-were actors. Their peculiarities have been exhibited. Here was a
-great question of justice, appealing to the highest sentiments, and
-involving the best interests of the country; but lawyers, instinctive
-for the dialectics of the profession, forgot everlasting truth, never
-to be forgotten with impunity. They started at once in full cry, and
-the quibble became to them what Dr. Johnson says it was to the great
-dramatist: “He follows it at all adventures; it is sure to lead him out
-of his way, and sure to ingulf him in the mire. It has some malignant
-power over his mind, and its fascinations are irresistible.… A quibble
-is the golden apple for which he will always turn aside from his
-career, or stoop from his elevation. A quibble, poor and barren as it
-is, gave him such delight that he was content to purchase it by the
-sacrifice of reason, propriety, and truth.”[216] In this Shakespearean
-spirit our lawyers have acted. They have pursued quibbles with the
-ardor of the great dramatist, and even now are chasing them through the
-Senate Chamber.
-
-Unhappily this is according to history, and our lawyers are not among
-the splendid exceptions. But there is reward for those who stand
-firm. Who does not reverence the exalted magistrate of France, the
-Chancellor L’Hospital, who set the great example of rectitude and
-perfect justice? Who does not honor those lawyers of English history
-through whose toils Liberty was upheld? There was Selden, so wise and
-learned; Pym, so grand in statesmanship; Somers, who did so much to
-establish the best securities of the Constitution. Nor can I forget,
-at a later day, that greatest advocate, Erskine, who lent to the
-oppressed his wonderful eloquence; nor Mackintosh and Brougham, who
-carried into courts that enlarged intelligence and sympathetic nature
-which the profession of the law could not constrain. These are among
-the names that have already had their reward, above the artful crowd
-which in all times has come to the defence of prerogative. It is no
-new thing that we witness now. The lawyer in other days has been, as
-we know him, prone to the support of power, and ready with technical
-reasons. Whichever side he takes, he finds reasons plenty as pins.
-When free to choose, and not hired, his argument is the reflection of
-himself. All that he says is his own image. He takes sides on a law
-point according to his sentiments. Cultured in law, and with aptitude
-sharpened by its contests, too easily he finds a legal reason for an
-illegal judgment. Next to an outright mercenary, give me a lawyer to
-betray a great cause. Forms of law lend themselves to the betrayal.
-It is impossible to forget that the worst pretensions of prerogative,
-no matter how colossal, have been shouldered by lawyers. It was they
-who carried ship-money against the patriot exertions of Hampden; and
-in our country it was they who held up Slavery in all its terrible
-pretensions from beginning to end. What is sometimes called “the legal
-mind” of Massachusetts, my own honored State, bent before the technical
-reasoning which justified the unutterable atrocities of the Fugitive
-Slave Bill, while the Supreme Court of the State adopted the crime from
-the bench. Alas that it should be so! When will lawyers and judges see
-that nothing short of justice can stand?
-
-
-GUILTY ON ALL THE ARTICLES.
-
-After this survey it is easy for me to declare how I shall vote. My
-duty is to vote, Guilty on all the Articles. If consistent with the
-rules of the Senate, I should vote, “Guilty of all, and infinitely
-more.”
-
-Not doubting that Mr. Stanton was protected by the Tenure-of-Office
-Act, and that he was believed to be so by the President, it is clear
-to me that the charges in the first and second Articles are sustained.
-These two go together. I have said already, in the course of this
-Opinion, that the appointment of Adjutant-General Thomas as Secretary
-of War _ad interim_ was without authority of law, and under the
-circumstances a violation of the National Constitution. Accordingly the
-third Article is sustained.
-
-Then come what are called the Conspiracy Articles. Here also I am
-clear. Plainly there was an agreement between the President and
-Adjutant-General Thomas to obtain possession of the War Department,
-and prevent Mr. Stanton from continuing in office, and this embraced
-control of the mails and property belonging to the Department, all
-of which was contrary to the Tenure-of-Office Act. Intimidation and
-threats were certainly used by one of the conspirators, and in the case
-of conspiracy the acts of one are the acts of all. The evidence that
-force was intended is considerable, and all this must be interpreted by
-the general character of the offender, his menacing speeches, and the
-long series of transgressions preceding the conspiracy. I cannot doubt
-that the conspiracy was to obtain possession of the War Department,
-peaceably, if possible, forcibly, if necessary. As such it was
-violation of law, demanding the judgment of the Senate. This disposes
-of the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh Articles.
-
-The eighth Article charges that Adjutant-General Thomas was appointed
-to obtain the control of moneys appropriated for the military service
-and the Department of War. All this would be incident to the control of
-the War Department. Controlling the latter, he would be able to wield
-the former. The evidence applicable to the one is also applicable to
-the other.
-
-The ninth Article opens a different question. This charges a wicked
-purpose to corrupt General Emory and draw him from his military
-duty. Not much passed between the President and the General; but it
-was enough to show the President playing the part of Iago. There
-was hypocritical profession of regard for the Constitution, while
-betraying it. Here again his past character explains his purpose beyond
-reasonable doubt.
-
-Then come the scandalous speeches, proved as set forth in the Articles,
-so that even the Senator from West Virginia [Mr. VAN WINKLE] must admit
-that evidence and pleading concur. Here is no question of form. To
-my mind this is one of the strongest Articles. On this alone, without
-anything else, I should deem it my duty to vote for expulsion from
-office. A young lieutenant, at the bottom of the ladder, if guilty of
-such things, would be cashiered promptly. A President, at the top of
-the ladder, with less excuse from the inexperience of early life, and
-with greater responsibility from the elevation he had reached, should
-be cashiered promptly also; and this is the object of impeachment.
-No person capable of such speeches should be allowed to govern this
-country. It is absurd to tolerate the idea. Besides being degraded, the
-country cannot be safe in such hands. The speeches are a revelation of
-himself, not materially different from well-known incidents; but they
-serve to exhibit him in his true character. They show him unfit for
-official trust. They were the utterances of a drunken man; and yet it
-does not appear that he was drunk. Now it is according to precedents of
-our history that a person disqualified by drunkenness shall be removed
-from office. This was the case of Pickering in 1804. But a sober man,
-whose conduct suggests drunkenness, is as bad at least as if he were
-drunk. Is he not worse? If without the explanation of drunkenness he
-makes such harangues, I cannot doubt that his unfitness for office
-becomes more evident, inasmuch as his deplorable condition is natural,
-and not abnormal. The drunken man has lucid intervals; but where is the
-assurance of a lucid interval for this perpetual offender? Derangement
-is with him the normal condition.
-
-It is astonishing to find that these infamous utterances, where
-ribaldry vies with blasphemy, have received a coat of varnish from
-the Senator from Maine [Mr. FESSENDEN], who pleads that they were not
-“official,” nor did they “violate the Constitution, or any provision
-of the Statute or Common Law, either in letter or spirit.” In presence
-of such apologies for revolting indecencies it is hard to preserve
-proper calmness. Were they not uttered? This is enough. The drunkenness
-of Andrew Johnson, when he took his oath as Vice-President, was not
-“official”; but who will say that it was not an impeachable offence?
-And who will say that these expectorations differ in vileness from that
-drunkenness? If they did not violate the National Constitution, or any
-provision of law, common or statute, as is apologetically alleged, I
-cannot doubt that they violated the spirit of all laws. And then we are
-further reminded by the apologist of that “freedom of speech” which is
-a constitutional right; and thus, in the name of a great right, we are
-to license utterances that shock the moral sense, and are a scandal to
-human nature. Spirit of John Milton! who pleaded so grandly for this
-great liberty, but would not allow it to be confounded with license,
-speak now to save this Republic from the shame of surrender to an
-insufferable pretension!
-
-The eleventh Article is the most comprehensive. In some respects it is
-an _omnium gatherum_. In one mass is the substance of other Articles,
-and something else beside. Here is an allegation of a speech by the
-President in which he denied that Congress was a Congress, and then,
-in pursuance of this denial, attempted to prevent the execution of
-the Tenure-of-Office Act, also of an important clause in the Army
-Appropriation Act, and also of the Reconstruction Act. Evidence
-followed, sustaining completely the compound allegation. The speech
-was made as set forth. The attempt to prevent the execution of the
-Tenure-of-Office Act who can question? The attempt to corrupt General
-Emory is in evidence. The whole history of the country shows how
-earnest the President has been to arrest the Reconstruction Act, and
-generally the Congressional scheme of Reconstruction. The removal of
-Mr. Stanton was to be relieved of an impediment. I accept this Article
-in gross and in detail. It has been proved in all its parts.
-
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-In the judgment which I now deliver I cannot hesitate. To my vision
-the path is clear as day. Never in history was there a great case
-more free from all just doubt. If Andrew Johnson is not guilty, then
-never was a political offender guilty; and if his acquittal is taken
-as a precedent, never can a political offender be found guilty. The
-proofs are mountainous. Therefore you are now determining whether
-impeachment shall continue a beneficent remedy in the National
-Constitution, or be blotted out forever, and the country handed over
-to the terrible process of revolution as its sole protection. If the
-milder process cannot be made effective now, when will it ever be?
-Under what influences? On what proofs? You wait for something. What?
-Is it usurpation? You have it before you, open, plain, insolent. Is it
-abuse of delegated power? That, too, you have in this offender, hardly
-less broad than the powers he has exercised. Is it violation of law?
-For more than two years he has set your laws at defiance; and when
-Congress, by special enactment, strove to constrain him, he broke
-forth in rebellion against the constitutional authority. Perhaps you
-ask still for something more. Is it a long catalogue of crime, where
-violence and corruption alternate, while loyal men are sacrificed and
-the Rebellion is lifted to its feet? That also is here.
-
-The apologists are prone to remind the Senate that they are acting
-under the obligation of an oath. So are the rest of us, even if we do
-not ostentatiously declare it. By this oath, which is the same for all,
-we are sworn to do “impartial justice.” It is justice, and this justice
-must be impartial. There must be no false weights, and no exclusion
-of proper weights. Therefore I cannot allow the jargon of lawyers
-on mere questions of form to sway the judgment against justice. Nor
-can I consent to shut out from view the long list of transgressions
-explaining and coloring the final act of defiance. To do so is not
-to render impartial justice, but to depart from this prescribed
-rule. The oath we have taken is poorly kept, if we forget the Public
-Safety in devices for the criminal. Above all else, now and forever,
-is that justice which “holds the scales of right with even hand.” In
-this sacred name, and in the name also of country, that great charity
-embracing so many other charities, I make this final protest against
-all questions of form at the expense of the Republic.
-
-Something also is said of the people, now watching our proceedings
-with patriotic solicitude, and it has been proclaimed that they are
-wrong to intrude their judgment. I do not think so. This is a political
-proceeding, which the people are as competent to decide as the Senate.
-They are the multitudinous jury, coming from no small vicinage, but
-from the whole country: for on this impeachment, involving the Public
-Safety, the vicinage is the whole country. It is they who have sent us
-here, as their representatives, and in their name, to consult for the
-common weal. In nothing can we escape their judgment, least of all on
-a question like that before us. It is a mistake to suppose that the
-Senate only has heard the evidence. The people have heard it also,
-day by day, as it was delivered, and have carefully considered the
-case on its merits, properly dismissing all apologetic subtilties. It
-is for them to review what has been done. They are above the Senate,
-and will “rejudge its justice.” Thus it has been in other cases. The
-popular superstition which long surrounded the Supreme Court could
-not save that eminent tribunal from condemnation, amounting sometimes
-to execration, when, by an odious judgment, it undertook to uphold
-Slavery; and down to this day Congress has justly refused to place the
-bust of the Chief Justice pronouncing this judgment in the hall of the
-tribunal where he presided so long. His predecessors are all there
-in marble; no marble of Taney is there. The present trial, like that
-in the Supreme Court, is a battle with Slavery. Acquittal is another
-Dred Scott decision, and another chapter in the Barbarism of Slavery.
-How can Senators, discharging a political function only, expect that
-the voice of the people will be more tender for them than for a Chief
-Justice pronouncing judgment from the bench of the Supreme Court, in
-the exercise of judicial power? His fate we know. Nor learning, nor
-private virtues, nor venerable years could save him from justice.
-In the great pillory of history he stands, and there he must stand
-forever.
-
-The people cannot witness with indifference the abandonment of the
-great Secretary, who organized their armies against the Rebellion, and
-then organized victory. Following him gratefully through the trials
-of the war, they found new occasion for gratitude when he stood out
-alone against that wickedness which was lifted to power on the pistol
-of an assassin. During these latter days, while tyrannical prerogative
-invaded all, he has kept the bridge. When, at a similar crisis of
-English history, Hampden stood out against the power of the Crown, it
-is recorded by the contemporary historian, Clarendon, that “he grew
-the argument of all tongues; every man inquiring who and what he was,
-that durst at his own charge support the liberty and property of the
-kingdom, and rescue his country, as he thought, from being made a prey
-to the Court.”[217] Such things are also said with equal force of our
-Secretary. Nor is it forgotten that the Senate, by two solemn votes
-of more than two thirds, has twice instructed him to stay at the War
-Department, the President to the contrary notwithstanding. The people
-will not easily understand on what principle of Constitution, law, or
-morals, the Senate can twice instruct the Secretary to stay, and then,
-by another vote, deliberately surrender him a prey to Presidential
-tyranny. Talk of a somersault; talk of self-stultification: are not
-both here? God save me from participation in this disastrous wrong, and
-may He temper it kindly to our afflicted country!
-
-For myself, I cannot despair of the Republic. It is a life-boat, which
-wind and wave cannot sink; but it may suffer much and be beaten by
-storm. All this I clearly see before us, if you fail to displace an
-unfit commander, whose power is a peril and a shame.
-
-Alas for all the evil that must break upon the country, especially in
-the suffering South, as it goes forth that this bad man is confirmed in
-the prerogatives he has usurped!
-
-Alas for that peace and reconciliation, the longing of good men, now
-postponed!
-
-Alas for that security, so important to all, as the only foundation on
-which to build, politically or financially! This, too, is postponed.
-How can people found a government, or plant or buy, unless first secure?
-
-Alas for the Republic, degraded as never before, while the Whiskey Ring
-holds its orgy of corruption, and the Ku-Klux-Klan holds its orgy of
-blood!
-
-Alas for the hearts of the people, bruised to unutterable sadness, as
-they witness a cruel tyranny installed once more!
-
-Alas for that race so long oppressed, but at last redeemed from
-bondage, now plunged back into another hell of torment!
-
-Alas for the fresh graves already beginning to yawn, while violence,
-armed with your verdict, goes forth, like another Fury, and murder is
-quickened anew!
-
-Alas for the Unionists, white and black alike, who have trusted to our
-flag! You offer them a sacrifice to persecutors whose representative
-is before you for judgment. They are the last in my thoughts, as I
-pronounce that vote which is too feeble to save them from intolerable
-wrong and outrage. They are fellow-citizens of a common country,
-brethren of a common humanity, two commanding titles, both strong
-against the deed. I send them at this terrible moment the sympathy and
-fellowship of a heart that suffers with them. So just a cause cannot
-be lost. Meanwhile, may they find in themselves, and in the goodness of
-an overruling Providence, that refuge and protection which the Senate
-refuses to give!
-
-
-
-
-CONSTITUTIONAL RESPONSIBILITY OF SENATORS FOR THEIR VOTES IN CASES OF
-IMPEACHMENT.
-
-RESOLUTIONS IN THE SENATE, JUNE 3, 1868.
-
-
- June 3d, Mr. Sumner submitted the following Resolutions, which
- were read and ordered to be printed.
-
-Whereas a pretension has been put forth to the effect that the vote of
-a Senator on an impeachment is so far different in character from his
-vote on any other question that the people have no right to criticize
-or consider it; and whereas such pretension, if not discountenanced,
-is calculated to impair that freedom of judgment which belongs to
-the people on all that is done by their representatives: Therefore,
-in order to remove all doubts on this question, and to declare the
-constitutional right of the people in cases of impeachment,--
-
-1. _Resolved_, That, even assuming that the Senate is a Court in the
-exercise of judicial power, Senators cannot claim that their votes are
-exempt from the judgment of the people; that the Supreme Court, when it
-has undertaken to act on questions essentially political in character,
-has not escaped this judgment; that the decisions of this high tribunal
-in support of Slavery have been openly condemned; that the memorable
-utterance known as the Dred Scott decision was indignantly denounced
-and repudiated, while the Chief Justice who pronounced it became a mark
-for censure and rebuke; and that plainly the votes of Senators on an
-impeachment cannot enjoy an immunity from popular judgment which has
-been denied to the Supreme Court, with Taney as Chief Justice.
-
-2. _Resolved_, That the Senate is not at any time a Court invested
-with judicial power, but that it is always a Senate with specific
-functions declared by the Constitution; that, according to express
-words, “the judicial power of the United States shall be vested in
-one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may
-from time to time ordain and establish,” while it is further provided
-that “the Senate shall have the sole power to try all impeachments,”
-thus positively making a distinction between the judicial power and
-the power to try impeachments; that the Senate, on an impeachment,
-does not exercise any portion of the judicial power, but another and
-different power, exclusively delegated to the Senate, having for its
-sole object removal from office and disqualification therefor; that,
-by the terms of the Constitution, there may be, after conviction on
-impeachment, a further trial and punishment “according to law,” thus
-making a discrimination between a proceeding by impeachment and a
-proceeding “according to law”; that the proceeding by impeachment is
-not “according to law,” and is not attended by legal punishment, but
-is of an opposite character, and from beginning to end political,
-being instituted by a political body on account of political offences,
-being conducted before another political body having political power
-only, and ending in a judgment which is political only; and therefore
-the vote of a Senator on impeachment, though different in form, is
-not different in responsibility, from his vote on any other political
-question; nor can any Senator, on such an occasion, claim immunity from
-that just accountability which the representative at all times owes to
-his constituents.
-
-3. _Resolved_, That Senators in all that they do are under the constant
-obligation of an oath, binding them to the strictest rectitude;
-that on an impeachment they take a further oath, according to the
-requirement of the Constitution, which says, Senators, when sitting
-to try impeachment, “shall be on oath or affirmation”; that this
-simple requirement was never intended to change the character of the
-Senate as a political body, and cannot have any such operation; and
-therefore Senators, whether before or after the supplementary oath,
-are equally responsible to the people for their votes,--it being the
-constitutional right of the people at all times to sit in judgment on
-their representatives.
-
-
-
-
-VALIDITY AND NECESSITY OF FUNDAMENTAL CONDITIONS ON STATES.
-
-SPEECH IN THE SENATE, JUNE 10, 1868.
-
-
- The Senate having under consideration the bill to admit the
- States of North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia,
- and Alabama to representation in Congress, Mr. Sumner said:--
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--What I have to say to-day will be confined to a
-single topic. I shall speak of _the validity and necessity of
-fundamental conditions on the admission of States into the body of
-the Nation_,--passing in review objections founded on the asserted
-equality of States, and also on a misinterpretation of the power to
-determine the “qualifications” of electors, and that other power to
-make “regulations” for the election of certain officers. Here I shall
-encounter the familiar pretensions of another time, no longer put forth
-by defiant Slave-Masters, but retailed by conscientious Senators, who
-think they are supporting the Constitution, when they are only echoing
-the voice of Slavery.
-
-Fundamental conditions on the admission of States are older than our
-Constitution; for they appear in the Ordinance for the vast Territory
-of the Northwest, adopted anterior to the Constitution itself. In that
-Ordinance there are various conditions, of perpetual obligation, as
-articles of compact. Among these is the famous prohibition of Slavery.
-In the early days of our Nation nobody thought of questioning the
-validity of these conditions. Scattered efforts were made to carry
-Slavery into some portions of this region, and unquestionably there
-were sporadic cases, as in Massachusetts itself; but the Ordinance
-stood firm and unimpeached.
-
-One assurance of its authority will be found in the historic fact,
-that in 1820, on the admission of Missouri as a State of the Union,
-there was a further provision that in all territory of the United
-States north of 36° 30´ north latitude, “Slavery and involuntary
-servitude, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes, whereof the
-parties shall have been duly convicted, shall be and is hereby FOREVER
-_prohibited_.”[218] This was the famous Missouri Compromise. Missouri
-was admitted as a State without any restriction of Slavery, but all
-the outlying territory west and north was subjected to this condition
-_forever_. It will be observed that the condition was in no respect
-temporary, but that it was “forever,”--thus outlasting any territorial
-government, and constituting a fundamental law, irrepealable through
-all time. Surely this condition, perpetual in form, would not have
-been introduced, had it been supposed to be inoperative,--had it
-been regarded as a sham, and not a reality. This statute, therefore,
-testifies to the judgment of Congress at that time.
-
-It was only at a later day, and at the demand of Slavery, that the
-validity of the great Ordinance of Freedom was called in question. Mr.
-Webster, in his memorable debate with Mr. Hayne in 1830, vindicated
-this measure in language worthy of the cause and of himself, giving to
-it a palm among the laws by which civilization has been advanced, and
-asserting its enduring character:--
-
- “We are accustomed, Sir, to praise the lawgivers of antiquity;
- we help to perpetuate the fame of Solon and Lycurgus; but
- I doubt whether one single law of any lawgiver, ancient or
- modern, has produced effects of more distinct, marked, and
- lasting character than the Ordinance of 1787.… It fixed forever
- the character of the population in the vast regions northwest
- of the Ohio, by excluding from them involuntary servitude. It
- impressed on the soil itself, while it was yet a wilderness,
- an incapacity to sustain any other than freemen. _It laid the
- interdict against personal servitude in original compact, not
- only deeper than all local law, but deeper also than all local
- constitutions._”[219]
-
-Words of greater beauty and power cannot be found anywhere in the
-writings or speeches of our American orator. It would be difficult
-to declare the perpetual character of this original interdict more
-completely. The language is as picturesque as truthful. Deeper than all
-local law, deeper than all local constitutions, is this fundamental
-law; and such is its essential quality, that the soil which it protects
-cannot sustain any other than freemen. Of such a law the orator
-naturally proceeded to say:--
-
- “We see its consequences at this moment; and we shall never
- cease to see them, perhaps, while the Ohio shall flow. _It was
- a great and salutary measure of prevention._”[220]
-
-In these last words the value of such a law is declared. It is for
-_prevention_, which is an essential object of all law. In this case
-it is the more important, as the evil to be prevented is the most
-comprehensive of all.
-
-Therefore, on the authority of Mr. Webster, in harmony with reason
-also, do I say, that this original condition was not only perpetual in
-character, but beneficent also. It was beneficence in perpetuity.
-
-Mr. Chase, in his admirable argument before the Supreme Court of the
-United States, in the _Vanzandt_ case, is hardly behind Mr. Webster in
-homage to this Ordinance, or in a sense of its binding character. In
-his opinion it is a compact of perpetual obligation:--
-
- “I know not that history records a sublimer act than this. The
- United American States, having just brought their perilous
- struggle for freedom and independence to a successful issue,
- proceeded to declare the terms and conditions on which their
- vacant territory might be settled and organized into States;
- and these terms were, not tribute, not render of service, not
- subordination of any kind, but _the perpetual maintenance of
- the genuine principles of American Liberty, declared to be
- incompatible with Slavery_; and that these principles might be
- inviolably maintained, they were made _the articles of a solemn
- covenant_ between the original States, then the proprietors
- of the territory and responsible for its future destiny, and
- the people and the States who were to occupy it. Every settler
- within the territory, by the very act of settlement, became a
- party to this _compact, bound by its perpetual obligations_,
- and entitled to the full benefit of its excellent provisions
- for himself and his posterity. No subsequent act of the
- original States could affect it, without his consent. _No act
- of his, nor of the people of the territory, nor of the States
- established within it, could affect it, without the consent of
- the original States._”[221]
-
-According to these words, which I am sure would not be disowned by
-the present Chief Justice of the United States, the Ordinance is a
-sublime act, having for its object nothing less than _the perpetual
-maintenance of the genuine principles of American Liberty_. In form it
-is a compact, unalterable except by the consent of the parties, and
-therefore _forever_.
-
-If anything in our history is settled by original authority, supported
-by tradition and time, it is the binding character of the Ordinance
-for the Government of the Northwest Territory. Nobody presumed to call
-it in question, until at last Slavery flung down its challenge to
-everything that was settled for Freedom. The great Ordinance, with its
-prohibition of Slavery, was not left unassailed.
-
-All this makes a strange, eventful passage of history. The enlightened
-civilization of the age was beginning to be felt against Slavery,
-when its representatives turned madly round to confront the angel of
-light. The madness showed itself by degrees. Point by point it made
-itself manifest in Congress. The Slave-Masters forgot morals, history,
-and the Constitution. Their manifold pretensions resolved themselves
-into three, in which the others were absorbed: first, that Slavery,
-instead of an evil to be removed, was a blessing to be preserved;
-secondly, that the right of petition could not be exercised against
-Slavery; thirdly, that, in all that concerns Slavery, State Rights were
-everything, while National Rights were nothing. These three pretensions
-entered into Congress, like so many devils, and possessed it. The first
-broke forth in eulogies of Slavery, and even in blandishments for the
-Slave-Trade. The second broke forth in the “Atherton Gag,” under which
-the honest, earnest petitions from the national heart against Slavery,
-even in the District of Columbia, were tabled without reference, and
-the great Right of Petition, promised by the Constitution, became a
-dead letter. The third, beginning with the denial of the power of
-the Nation to affix upon new States the perpetual condition of Human
-Rights, broke forth in the denial of the power of the Nation over
-Slavery in the Territories or anywhere else, even within the national
-jurisdiction. These three pretensions all had a common origin, and one
-was as offensive and unreasonable as another. The praise of Slavery and
-the repudiation of the Right of Petition by the enraged Slave-Masters
-were not worse than the pretension of State Rights against the power
-of the Nation to prohibit Slavery in the national jurisdiction, or to
-affix righteous conditions upon new States.
-
-The first two pretensions have disappeared. These two devils have been
-cast out. Nobody dares to praise Slavery; nobody dares to deny the
-Right of Petition. The third pretension has disappeared only so far
-as it denied the power of the Nation over Slavery in the Territories;
-and we are still doomed to hear, in the name of State Rights, the old
-cry against conditions upon new States. This devil is not yet entirely
-cast out. Pardon me, if I insist upon putting the national rights over
-the Territories and the national rights over new States before their
-admission in the same category. These rights not only go together, but
-they are one and the same. They are not merely companion and cognate,
-but they are identical. The one is necessarily involved in the other.
-Prohibition in the Territories is prolonged in conditions upon new
-States. The Ordinance of 1787, which is the great example, asserts the
-_perpetuity_ of all its prohibitions; and this is the rule alike of
-law and statesmanship. Vain were its prohibitions, if they fell dead
-in presence of State Rights. The pretension is too irrational. The
-Missouri Act takes up the rule asserted in the Ordinance, and declares
-that in certain Territories Slavery shall be prohibited _forever_. A
-territorial existence terminating in State Rights is a short-lived
-_forever_. Only by recognizing the power of the Nation over the States
-formed out of the Territory can this _forever_ have a meaning above the
-prattle of childhood or the vaunt of Bombastes.
-
-The whole pretension against the proposed condition is in the name of
-State Rights; but it cannot be doubted that it may be traced directly
-to Slavery. Shall the pretension be allowed to prevail, now that
-Slavery has disappeared? The principal has fallen; why preserve the
-incident? The wrong guarded by this pretension has yielded; why should
-not the pretension yield also? Asserting, as I now do, the validity and
-necessity of the proposed condition, I would not seem indifferent to
-the rights of the States in those proper spheres appointed for them.
-Unquestionably States have rights under the Constitution, which we
-are bound to respect,--nay, more, which are a source of strength and
-advantage. It is through the States that the people everywhere govern
-themselves, and our Nation is saved from a central domination. Here
-is the appointed function of the States. They supply the machinery of
-local self-government for the convenience of life, while they ward off
-the attempts of an absorbing imperialism. _But there can be no State
-Rights against Human Rights._ Because a State, constituting part of a
-Nation dedicated to Human Rights, may govern itself and supply the
-machinery of local self-government, _it does not follow that such a
-State may deny Human Rights within its borders_. State Rights, when
-properly understood, are entirely consistent with the maintenance of
-Human Rights by the Nation. The State is not humbled, when it receives
-the mandate of the Nation to do no wrong; nor can the Nation err, when
-it asserts everywhere within its borders the imperialism of Human
-Rights. Against this righteous supremacy all pretensions of States must
-disappear, as darkness before the King of Day.
-
-The song of State Rights has for its constant refrain the asserted
-_Equality of the States_. Is it not strange that words so constantly
-employed as a cover for pretensions against Human Rights cannot be
-found in the Constitution? It is true, that, by the Laws of Nations,
-all sovereign States, great or small, are equal; but this principle
-has been extended without authority to States created by the Nation
-and made a part of itself. There is but one active provision in the
-Constitution which treats the States as equal, and this provision shows
-how this very Equality may be waived. Every State, large or small,
-has two Senators, and the Constitution places this Equality of States
-under its safeguard by providing that “no State, _without its consent_,
-shall be deprived of its _equal suffrage_ in the Senate.” But this very
-text contains what lawyers might call a “negative pregnant,” being a
-negation of the right to change this rule, with an affirmation that
-it may be changed. The State, _with its consent_, may be deprived of
-its equal suffrage in the Senate. And this is the whole testimony of
-the Constitution to that Equality of States which is now asserted in
-derogation of all compacts or conditions. It is startling to find how
-constantly the obvious conclusions from the text of the Constitution
-have been overlooked. Even in the contemplation of the Constitution
-itself, a State may waive its equal suffrage in the Senate, so as to be
-represented by a single Senator only. Of course, all this must depend
-on its own consent, in concurrence with the Nation. Nothing is said of
-the manner in which this consent may be given by the State or accepted
-by the Nation. But if this important limitation can in any way be made
-the subject of agreement or compact, pray, Sir, where will you stop?
-What other power or prerogative of the State may not be limited also,
-especially where there is nothing in the Constitution against any such
-limitation? All this I adduce simply by way of illustration. There is
-no question now of any limitation, in the just sense of this term. A
-condition in favor of Human Rights cannot be a limitation on a State or
-on a citizen.
-
-If we look further, and see how the Senatorial equality of States
-obtained recognition in the Constitution, we shall find new occasion
-to admire that facility which has accorded to this concession so
-powerful an influence; and here the record is explicit. The National
-Convention had hardly assembled, when the small States came forward
-with their pretensions. Not content with suffrage in the Senate, they
-insisted upon equal suffrage in the House of Representatives. They had
-in their favor the rule of the Continental Congress, and also of the
-Confederation, under which each State enjoyed one vote. Assuming to be
-independent sovereignties, they had likewise in their favor the rule of
-International Law. Against these pretensions the large States pleaded
-the simple rule of justice; and here the best minds concurred. On this
-head the debates of the Convention are interesting. At an early day we
-find Mr. Madison moving “that the equality of suffrage established by
-the Articles of Confederation ought not to prevail in the _National_
-Legislature.”[222] This proposition, so consistent with reason, was
-seconded by Gouverneur Morris, and, according to the report, “being
-generally relished,” was about being adopted, when Delaware, by one
-of her voices on the floor, protested, saying, that, in case it
-were adopted, “it might become the duty of her deputies to retire
-from the Convention.”[223] Such was the earliest cry of Secession.
-Gouverneur Morris, while observing that the valuable assistance
-of those members could not be lost without real concern, gave his
-testimony, that “the change proposed was so fundamental an article in
-a _National_ Government that it could not be dispensed with.”[224]
-Mr. Madison followed, saying, very justly, that, “whatever reason
-might have existed for the equality of suffrage when the Union was a
-Federal one _among sovereign States_, it must cease when a _National_
-government should be put into the place.”[225] Franklin, in similar
-spirit, reminded the Convention that the equal suffrage of the States
-“was submitted to originally by Congress under a conviction of its
-impropriety, inequality, and injustice.”[226] This is strong language
-from the wise old man, but very true. Elbridge Gerry, after depicting
-the States as “intoxicated with the idea of their sovereignty,” said
-that “the injustice of allowing each State an equal vote was long
-insisted on. He voted for it; but it was against his judgment, and
-under the pressure of public danger and the obstinacy of the lesser
-States.”[227] Against these overwhelming words of Madison, Morris,
-Franklin, and Gerry, the delegates from Delaware pleaded nothing
-more than that, without an equal suffrage, “Delaware would have
-about one ninetieth for its share in the general councils, whilst
-Pennsylvania and Virginia would possess one third of the whole”;[228]
-and New Jersey, by her delegates, pleaded also “that it would not be
-safe for Delaware to allow Virginia sixteen times as many votes” as
-herself.[229] On the part of the small States, the effort was for power
-disproportioned to size. On the part of the large States there was a
-protest against the injustice and inequality of these pretensions,
-especially in a government national in its character. The question was
-settled by the great compromise of the Constitution, according to which
-representation in the House of Representatives was proportioned to
-population, while each State was entitled to an equal suffrage in the
-Senate. To this extent the small States prevailed, and the Senate ever
-since has testified to the equality of States; or rather, according to
-the language of the “Federalist” on this very point, it has been “a
-palladium to the residuary sovereignty of the States.”[230] Thus, by
-the pertinacity of the small States, was this concession extorted from
-the Convention, in defiance of every argument of justice and equity,
-and contrary to the judgment of the best minds; and now it is exalted
-into a universal rule of Constitutional Law, before which justice and
-equity must hide their faces.
-
-This protracted and recurring conflict in the Convention is
-compendiously set forth by our great authority, Judge Story, when he
-says:--
-
- “It constituted one of the great struggles between the large
- and the small States, which was constantly renewed in the
- Convention, and impeded it in every step of its progress in
- the formation of the Constitution. The struggle applied to
- the organization of each branch of the Legislature. The small
- States insisted upon an equality of vote and representation in
- each branch, and the large States upon a vote in proportion to
- their relative importance and population.… The small States at
- length yielded the point as to an equality of representation
- in the House, and acceded to a representation proportionate to
- the Federal numbers. But they insisted upon an equality in the
- Senate. To this the large States were unwilling to assent, and
- for a time the States were on this point equally divided.”[231]
-
-This summary is in substantial harmony with my own abstract of the
-debates. I present it because I would not seem in any way to overstate
-the case. And here let me add most explicitly, that I lend no voice to
-any complaint against the small States; nor do I suggest any change in
-the original balances of our system. I insist only that the victory
-achieved in the Constitution by the small States shall not be made the
-apology for a pretension inconsistent with Human Rights. And now, for
-the sake of a great cause, the truth must be told.
-
-It must not be disguised that this pretension has another origin,
-outside the Constitution. This is in the Ordinance of 1787, where it
-is positively provided that any State formed out of the Northwest
-Territory “shall be admitted, by its delegates, into the Congress of
-the United States _on an equal footing with the original States in all
-respects whatever_.” Next after the equal suffrage in the Senate stands
-this provision with its talismanic phrase, _equal footing_. New States
-are to be admitted on an _equal footing_ with the original States in
-all respects whatever. This language is strong; but nobody can doubt
-that it must be read in the light of the Ordinance where it appears.
-Read in this light, its meaning cannot be questioned. By the Ordinance
-there are no less than six different articles of compact, “forever
-unalterable, unless by common consent,” constituting so many perpetual
-safeguards: the first perpetuating religious liberty; the second
-perpetuating _Habeas Corpus_, trial by jury, and judicial proceedings
-according to the course of the Common Law; the third perpetuating
-schools and the means of education; the fourth perpetuating the title
-of the United States in the soil without taxation, the freedom of
-the rivers as highways, and the liability of the people for a just
-proportion of the national debt; the fifth perpetuating the right of
-the States to be admitted into the Union on an _equal footing_ with
-the original States; and then, next in order, the sixth perpetuating
-freedom,--being that immortal condition which is the golden bough of
-this mighty oak,--that “there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary
-servitude in the said Territory.” Now it is clear that subjection
-to these perpetual conditions was not considered in any respect
-inconsistent with that “equal footing” which was stipulated. Therefore,
-even assuming that States, when admitted, shall be on an “equal
-footing” with others, there can be no hindrance to any conditions by
-Congress kindred to those which were the glory of the Ordinance.
-
-To all who, borrowing a catchword from Slavery, assert the Equality of
-States in derogation of fundamental conditions, I oppose the plain text
-of the Constitution, which contains no such rule, except in a single
-instance, and there the equality may be waived; and I oppose also the
-Ordinance of 1787, which, while requiring that new States shall be
-admitted on an “equal footing” with other States, teaches by its own
-great example that this requirement is not inconsistent with conditions
-of all kinds, and especially in favor of Human Rights. The Equality of
-States on the lips of Slave-Masters was natural, for it was a plausible
-defence against the approaches of Freedom; but this unauthorized
-phrase, which has deceived so many, must be rejected now, so far at
-least as it is employed against the Equal Rights of All. As one of the
-old garments of Slavery, it must be handed to the flames.
-
-From this review it is easy to see that we approach the present
-question without any impediment or constraint in the Constitution.
-Not a provision, not a clause, not a sentence, not a phrase in
-the Constitution can be made an apology even for the present
-objection,--absolutely nothing; and here I challenge reply. Without
-any support in the Constitution, its partisans borrow one of the
-worst pretensions of Slavery, and utter it now as it was uttered by
-Slave-Masters. Once more we hear the voice of Slavery crying out in
-familiar tones, that conditions cannot be imposed on new States.
-Alas that Slavery, which we thought had been slain, is not entirely
-dead! Again it stalks into this Chamber, like the majesty of buried
-Denmark,--“in the same figure, like the king that’s dead,”--and
-then, like this same ghost, it cries out, “Swear!” and then again,
-“Swear!”--and Senators pledged to Freedom take up the old pretension
-and swear it anew. For myself, I insist not only that Slavery shall be
-buried out of sight, but that all its wretched pretensions hostile to
-Human Rights shall be buried with it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The conditions upon new States are of two classes: _first_, those that
-_may_ be required; _secondly_, those that _must_ be required.
-
-The first comprehends those conditions which the Nation may consider
-it advisable to require, before admitting a new member into the
-partnership of government. The Constitution, in positive words, leaves
-to the Nation a discretion with regard to the admission of new States.
-The words are: “New States _may_ be admitted by the Congress into the
-Union,”--thus plainly recognizing a latitude under which any conditions
-not inconsistent with the Constitution may be required, as by a firm on
-the admission of a new partner. All this is entirely reasonable; but
-I do not stop to dwell on it, for the condition which I have at heart
-does not come under this head.
-
-A fundamental condition in favor of Human Rights is of that essential
-character that it _must_ be required. Not to require it is to abandon
-a plain duty; so it seems to me. I speak with all deference to others,
-but I cannot see it otherwise.
-
-The Constitution declares that “the United States shall guaranty to
-every State in this Union _a republican form of government_.” These are
-grand words, perhaps the grandest in the Constitution, hardly excepting
-the Preamble, which is so full of majestic meaning and such a fountain
-of national life. Kindred to the Preamble is this supreme obligation
-imposed on the United States to guaranty a republican government. There
-it is. You cannot avoid this duty. Called to its performance, you
-must supply a practical definition of a republican government. This
-again you cannot avoid. By your oaths, by all the responsibilities
-of your position, you must say what in your judgment is a republican
-government, and you must so decide as not to discredit our fathers and
-not to give an unworthy example to mankind. Happily the definition
-is already of record in our history. Our fathers gave it to us, as
-amid the thunders of Sinai, when they put forth their Declaration of
-Independence. There it stands in the very front of our Great Charter,
-embodied in two simple, self-evident truths,--first, that all men are
-equal in rights, and, secondly, that all just government is founded
-only on the consent of the governed,--the two together making an
-axiomatic definition which proves itself. Its truth is like the sun;
-blind is he who cannot see it. And this is the definition bequeathed as
-a freehold by our fathers. Though often assailed, even by Senators, it
-is none the less true. So have I read of savages who shot their arrows
-at the sun. Clearly, then, that is a republican government where all
-have equal rights and participate in the government. I know not if
-anything need be added; I am sure that nothing can be subtracted.
-
-The Constitution itself sets the example of imposing conditions upon
-the States. Positively it says, no State shall enter into any treaty,
-alliance, or confederation; no State shall grant letters of marque
-and reprisal; no State shall coin money; no State shall emit bills
-of credit. Again it says, no State shall, without the consent of
-Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, or keep troops or ships of war in
-time of peace. All these are conditions in the text of the Constitution
-so plain and intelligible as to require no further elucidation. To
-repeat them on the admission of a State would be superfluous. It is
-different, however, with that highest condition of all, that the State
-shall be republican. This requires repetition and elucidation, so as to
-remove all doubt of its application, and to vitalize it by declaring
-what is meant by a republican government.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here I might close this argument; but there are two hostile pretensions
-which must be exposed: the first founded on a false interpretation of
-“qualifications,” being nothing less than the impossible assumption,
-that, because the States may determine the “qualifications” of
-electors, therefore they can make color a criterion of the electoral
-franchise; and the second founded on a false interpretation of the
-asserted power of the States “to regulate suffrage,” being nothing
-less than the impossible assumption that under the power to regulate
-suffrage the rights of a whole race may be annihilated. These two
-pretensions are of course derived from Slavery. They are hatched from
-the eggs that the cuckoo bird has left behind. Strange that Senators
-will hatch them!
-
-1. By the Constitution it is provided that “the electors in each State
-shall have the _qualifications_ requisite for electors of the most
-numerous branch of the State Legislature.” On this clause Senators
-build the impossible pretension that a State cannot be interrupted
-in its disfranchisement of a race. Here is the argument: Because a
-State may determine the _qualifications_ of electors, _therefore_ it
-may deprive a whole race of equal rights and of participation in the
-Government. Logically speaking, here are most narrow premises for the
-widest possible conclusion. On the mere statement, the absurdity is
-so unspeakable as to recall the kindred pretension of Slavery, that,
-because commerce is lawful, therefore commerce in human flesh is lawful
-also. If the consequences were not so offensive, this “argal” might be
-handed over to consort with that of the Shakespearean grave-digger.
-But the argument is not merely preposterous, it is insulting to the
-human understanding, and a blow at human nature itself. If I use
-strong language, it is because such a proclamation of tyranny requires
-it. Admitting that the States may determine the “qualifications” of
-electors, what then? Obviously it must be according to the legitimate
-meaning of this word. And here, besides reason and humanity, two
-inexhaustible fountains, we have two other sources of authority:
-first, the Constitution, in which the word appears, and, secondly, the
-dictionaries of the English language, out of both of which we must
-condemn the intolerable pretension.
-
-The Constitution, where we find this word, follows the Declaration
-of Independence, and refuses to recognize any distinction of color.
-Search, and you will confess that there is no word of “color”
-in its text; nor is there anything there on which to found any
-disfranchisement of a race. The “qualifications” of different officers,
-as President, Vice-President, Senators, and Representatives, are
-named; but “color” is not among these. The Constitution, like the Ten
-Commandments and the Beatitudes, embraces all alike within its mandates
-and all alike within its promises. There are none who must not obey
-it; there can be none who may not claim its advantages. By what title
-do you exclude a race? The Constitution gives no such title; you can
-only find it in yourselves. The fountain is pure; it is only out of
-yourselves that the waters of bitterness proceed.
-
-The dictionaries of our language are in harmony with the Constitution.
-Look at “Qualification” in Webster or Worcester, the two best
-authorities of our time, and you will find that the word means
-“fitness,” “capability,” “accomplishment,” “the condition of being
-qualified”; but it does not mean “color.” It embraces age, residence,
-character, education, and the payment of taxes,--in short, all those
-conditions which, when honestly administered, are in the nature of
-_regulation_, not of _disfranchisement_. The English dictionaries
-most used by the framers of the Constitution were Bailey and Johnson.
-According to Bailey, who was the earliest, this important word is thus
-defined:--
-
- “(1.) _That which fits any person or thing for any particular
- purpose._”
-
- “(2.) _A particular faculty or endowment, an accomplishment._”
-
-According to Johnson, who is the highest authority, it is thus
-defined:--
-
- “(1.) _That which makes any person or thing fit for anything._”
-
- EXAMPLE.--“It is in the power of the prince to make piety and
- virtue become the fashion, if he would make them necessary
- _qualifications_ for preferment.--SWIFT.”
-
- “(2.) _Accomplishment._”
-
- EXAMPLE.--“Good _qualifications_ of mind enable a magistrate
- to perform his duty, and tend to create a public esteem of
- him.--ATTERBURY.”
-
-By these definitions this word means “fitness,” or “accomplishment,”
-and, according to the well-chosen examples from Swift and Atterbury,
-it means qualities like “piety” and “virtue,” or like faculties “of
-mind,” all of which are more or less within the reach of every human
-being. But it is impossible to extend this list so as to make “color”
-a quality,--absolutely impossible. Color is a physical condition
-affixed by the God of Nature to a large portion of the human race,
-and insurmountable in its character. Age, education, residence,
-property,--all these are subject to change; but the Ethiopian
-cannot change his skin. On this last distinctive circumstance I
-take my stand. _An insurmountable condition is not a qualification,
-but a disfranchisement._ Admit that a State may determine the
-“qualifications” of electors, it cannot, under this authority,
-arbitrarily exclude a whole race.
-
-Try this question by examples. Suppose South Carolina, where the blacks
-are numerous, should undertake to exclude the whites from the polls on
-account of “color”; would you hesitate to arrest this injustice? You
-would insist that a government sanctioning such a denial of rights,
-under whatever pretension, could not be republican. Suppose another
-State should gravely declare that _all with black eyes_ should be
-excluded from the polls, and still another should gravely declare that
-_all with black hair_ should be excluded from the polls, I am sure
-that you would find it difficult to restrain the mingled derision
-and indignation which such a pretension must excite. But this fable
-pictures your conduct. All this is now gravely done by States; and
-Senators gravely insist that such exclusion is proper in determining
-the “qualifications” of electors.
-
-2. Like unto the pretension founded on a misinterpretation of
-“qualifications” is that other founded on a misinterpretation of
-the asserted power of a State to make “regulations.” Listen to this
-pretension. Assuming that a State may _regulate_ the elections without
-the intervention of Congress, it is insisted that it may disfranchise a
-race. Because a State may regulate the elective franchise, _therefore_
-it may destroy this franchise. Surely it is one thing to regulate,
-and quite another thing to destroy. The power to regulate cannot
-involve any such conclusion of tyranny. To every such wretched result,
-howsoever urged, there is one sufficient reply,--_Non sequitur_.
-
-According to the Constitution, “the _times, places, and manner_ of
-holding elections for Senators and Representatives shall be prescribed
-in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any
-time by law make or alter such _regulations_, except as to the places
-of choosing Senators.” Here is the text of this portentous power
-to blast a race. In these simple words no such power can be found,
-unless the seeker makes the Constitution a reflection of himself. The
-times, places, and manner of holding elections are referred to the
-States,--nothing more; and even these may be altered by Congress. Being
-matters of form and convenience only, in the nature of _police_, they
-are justly included under the head of “regulations,” like the sword and
-uniform of the army. Do we not familiarly speak of a _regulation_ sword
-and a _regulation_ sash? Who will dare to say that under this formal
-power of _regulation_ a whole race may be despoiled of equal rights
-and of all participation in the Government? This very pretension was
-anticipated by Mr. Madison, and condemned in advance. Here are his
-decisive words in the Virginia Convention:--
-
- “Some States might regulate the elections on the principles of
- equality, and others might regulate them otherwise.… Should the
- people of any State by any means be deprived of the right of
- suffrage, _it was judged proper that it should be remedied by
- the General Government_.”[232]
-
-Thus was it expressly understood, at the adoption of the Constitution,
-that Congress should have the power to prevent any State, under the
-pretence of regulating the suffrage, from depriving the people of this
-right, or from interfering with the principle of _Equality_.
-
-Kindred to this statement of Mr. Madison is that other contemporary
-testimony which will be found in the “Federalist,” where the
-irrepealable rights of citizens are recognized without distinction of
-color. This explicit language cannot be too often quoted. Here it is:--
-
- “It is only under the pretext that the laws have transformed
- the negroes into subjects of property that a place is denied to
- them in the computation of numbers; and it is admitted, that,
- if the laws were to restore the rights which have been taken
- away, _the negroes could no longer be refused an equal share of
- representation with the other inhabitants_.”[233]
-
-This testimony is as decisive as it is authentic. Consider that it was
-given in explanation and vindication of the Constitution. Consider that
-the Constitution was commended for adoption by the assertion, that, on
-the termination of Slavery, “the negroes could no longer be refused an
-_equal share_ of representation with the other inhabitants.” In the
-face of this assurance, how can it be now insisted, that, under the
-simple power to regulate the suffrage, a State may deny to a whole race
-that “equal share of representation” which was promised? Thus from
-every quarter we are brought to the same inevitable conclusion.
-
-Therefore I dismiss the pretension founded on the power to make
-_regulations_, as I dismiss that other founded on the power to
-determine _qualifications_. Each proceeds on a radical misconception.
-Admit that a State may determine _qualifications_; admit that a State
-may make _regulations_; it cannot follow, by any rule of logic or law,
-that, under these powers, either or both, it may disfranchise a race.
-The pretension is too lofty. No such enormous prerogative can be wrung
-out of any such moderate power. As well say, that, because a constable
-or policeman may keep order in a city, therefore he may inflict the
-penalty of death,--or, because a father may impose proper restraint
-upon a child, therefore he may sell him into slavery. We have read
-of an effort to extract sunbeams out of cucumbers; but the present
-effort to extract a cruel prerogative out of the simple words of the
-Constitution is scarcely less absurd.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I conclude as I began, in favor of requiring conditions from States on
-their admission into the Nation; and I insist that it is our especial
-duty, in every possible way, by compact and by enactment, to assure
-among these conditions the Equal Rights of All, and the participation
-of every citizen in the government over him, without which the State
-cannot be republican. For the present I confine myself to the question
-of conditions on the admission of States, without considering the
-broader obligation of Congress to make Equal Rights coextensive with
-the Nation, and thus to harmonize our institutions with the principles
-of the Declaration of Independence. That other question I leave to
-another occasion.
-
-Meanwhile I protest against the false glosses originally fastened
-upon the Constitution by Slavery, and, now continued, often in
-unconsciousness of their origin, perverting it to the vilest uses of
-tyranny. I protest against that exaggeration of pretension which out
-of a power to make “regulations” and to determine “qualifications” can
-derive an unrepublican prerogative. I protest against that pretension
-which would make the asserted Equality of States the cover for a denial
-of the Equality of Men. The one is an artificial rule, relating to
-artificial bodies; the other is a natural rule, relating to natural
-bodies. The one is little more than a legal fiction; the other is
-a truth of Nature. Here is a distinction which Alexander Hamilton
-recognized, when, in the debates of the Convention, he nobly said:--
-
- “As States are a collection of individual men, which ought we
- to respect most,--the rights of the people composing them,
- or of the artificial beings resulting from the composition?
- Nothing could be more preposterous or absurd than to sacrifice
- the former to the latter.”[234]
-
-High above States, as high above men, are those commanding principles
-which cannot be denied with impunity. They will be found in the
-Declaration of Independence, expressed so clearly that all can read
-them. Though few, they are mighty. There is no humility in bending to
-their behests. As man rises in the scale of being while walking in
-obedience to the Divine will, so is a State elevated by obedience to
-these everlasting truths. Nor can we look for harmony in our country
-until these principles bear unquestioned sway, without any interdict
-from the States. That unity for which the Nation longs, with peace and
-reconciliation in its train, can be assured only through the Equal
-Rights of All, proclaimed by the Nation everywhere within its limits,
-and maintained by the national arm. Then will the Constitution be
-filled and inspired by the Declaration of Independence, so that the
-two shall be one, with a common life, a common authority, and a common
-glory.
-
-
-
-
-ELIGIBILITY OF A COLORED CITIZEN TO CONGRESS.
-
-LETTER TO AN INQUIRER AT NORFOLK, VA., JUNE 22, 1868.
-
-
- This letter appeared in a Richmond paper.
-
- SENATE CHAMBER, June 22, 1868.
-
- DEAR SIR,--I have your letter of the 18th, in reference to the
- eligibility of a colored man to Congress.
-
- I know of no ground on which he could be excluded from his seat,
- if duly elected; and I should welcome the election of a competent
- representative of the colored race to either House of Congress as
- a final triumph of the cause of Equal Rights. Until this step is
- taken, our success is incomplete.
-
- Yours truly,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
-
-
-
-INDEPENDENCE, AND THOSE WHO SAVED THE ORIGINAL WORK.
-
-LETTER ON THE SOLDIERS’ MONUMENT AT NORTH WEYMOUTH, MASS., JULY 2, 1868.
-
-
- SENATE CHAMBER, July 2, 1868.
-
- MY DEAR SIR,--I wish that I could take part in the interesting
- ceremonies to which you invite me; but my duties will keep me
- here.
-
- On the anniversary of the birth of our Nation you will
- commemorate the death of patriots who gave their lives that the
- Nation might live. Grateful to our fathers, who at the beginning
- did so much, we owe an equal debt to those who saved the original
- work.
-
- The monument which you rear will be national in its character.
- Dedicated on the anniversary of Independence, it will have for
- its special object to guard forever the memory of those through
- whom the first fruits of Independence have been secured.
-
- Our fathers established the National Independence; our recent
- heroes have made it perpetual through those vital principles
- which can never die. Honor to the fathers! Honor also to the
- sons, worthy of the fathers!
-
- Accept my best wishes; believe me, my dear Sir, very faithfully
- yours,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
- GEN. B. F. PRATT.
-
-
-
-
-COLORED SENATORS,--THEIR IMPORTANCE IN SETTLING THE QUESTION OF EQUAL
-RIGHTS.
-
-LETTER TO AN INQUIRER IN SOUTH CAROLINA, JULY 3, 1868.
-
-
- The following letter, from a South Carolina paper, is one of
- many in the same sense which found its way to the public.
-
- SENATE CHAMBER, July 3, 1868.
-
- DEAR SIR,--I have never given any opinion in regard to the
- Senatorial question in your State, except to express regret that
- the golden opportunity should be lost of making a colored citizen
- Senator from South Carolina.
-
- Such a Senator, if competent, would be a powerful support to the
- cause of Equal Rights. His presence alone would be a constant
- testimony and argument. Nothing could do so much to settle the
- question of Equal Rights forever in the United States. The howl
- against the negro, which is sometimes heard in the Senate, would
- cease. A colored Senator would be as good as a Constitutional
- Amendment, making all backward steps impossible.
-
- I write now frankly, in reply to your inquiry, and without any
- purpose of interfering in your election. You will pardon my
- anxiety for the cause I have so much at heart.
-
- Accept my best wishes, and believe me, dear Sir, faithfully yours,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
- To THADDEUS K. SASPORTAS, Esq., Columbia, S. C.
-
-
-
-
-FINANCIAL RECONSTRUCTION THROUGH PUBLIC FAITH AND SPECIE PAYMENTS.
-
-SPEECH IN THE SENATE, ON THE BILL TO FUND THE NATIONAL DEBT, JULY 11,
-1868.
-
-
- We denounce all forms of Repudiation as a national crime
- [_prolonged cheers_]; and the national honor requires the
- payment of the public indebtedness, _in the utmost good faith_,
- to all creditors, at home and abroad, _not only according to
- the letter, but to the spirit of the laws under which it was
- contracted_. [_Applause._]--CHICAGO PLATFORM, May, 1868.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Fundamentum est autem justitiæ fides, id est, dictorum
- conventorumque constantia et veritas.--CICERO, _De Officiis_,
- Lib. I. Cap. 7.
-
-
-SPEECH.
-
- The Senate having under consideration the Bill for funding the
- National Debt and for the Conversion of the Notes of the United
- States, Mr. Sumner said:--
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--After a tempest sweeping sea and land, strewing the
-coast with wrecks, and tumbling houses to the ground, Nature must
-become propitious before the energy of man can repair the various
-losses. Time must intervene. At last ships are launched again, and
-houses are built, in larger numbers and fairer forms than before. A
-tempest has swept over us, scourging in every direction; and now that
-its violence has ceased, we are occupied in the work of restoration.
-Nature is already propitious, and time, too, is silently preparing the
-way, while the national energies are applied to the work.
-
-To know what to do, we must comprehend the actual condition of things,
-and how it was brought about. All this is easy to see, if we will only
-look.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is a mistake of too constant occurrence to treat the financial
-question by itself, without considering its dependence upon the
-abnormal condition through which the country has passed. The financial
-question, in all its branches, depends upon the political, and cannot
-be separated. I might use stronger language. It is a part of the
-political question; and now that Reconstruction seems about to be
-accomplished, it is that enduring part which still remains.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our present responsibilities, whether political or financial, have a
-common origin in that vast Rebellion, when the people of eleven States,
-maddened by Slavery, rose against the Nation. As the Rebellion was
-without example in its declared object, so it was without example in
-the extent and intensity of its operations. It sought nothing less than
-the dismemberment of our Nation and the establishment of a new power
-with Slavery as its quickening principle. The desperate means enlisted
-by such a cause could be encountered only by the most strenuous
-exertions in the name of Country and of Human Rights. Here was Slavery,
-barbarous, brutal, vindictive, warring for recognition. The tempest
-or tornado can typify only feebly the ravage that ensued. There were
-days of darkness and despair, when the national existence was in peril.
-Rebel armies menaced the Capitol, and Slavery seemed about to vindicate
-its wicked supremacy.
-
-Looking at the scene in its political aspects, we behold one class
-of disorders, and looking at it in its financial aspects, we behold
-still another,--both together constituting a fearful sum-total,
-where financial disorder mingles with political. Turn, first, to the
-political, and you will see States, one after another, renouncing their
-relations with the Nation, and constituting a new government, under
-the name of Confederacy, with a new Constitution, making Slavery its
-corner-stone,--all of which they sought to maintain by arms, while,
-in aggravation of these perils, Foreign Powers gave ominous signs of
-speedy recognition and support. Look next to the financial side, and
-you will see business in some places entirely prostrate, in others
-suddenly assuming new forms; immense interests destroyed; property
-annihilated; the whole people turned from the thoughts of peace to
-the thoughts of war; vast armies set on foot, in which the youthful
-and strong were changed from producers to destroyers, while life
-itself was consumed; an unprecedented taxation, commensurate with the
-unprecedented exigency; and all this followed by the common incidents
-of war in other countries and times,--first, the creation of a national
-debt, and, secondly, the substitution of inconvertible paper as a
-currency. In this catalogue of calamities, political and financial, who
-shall say which was the worst? Certainly it is difficult to distinguish
-between them. One grew out of the other, so that they belong together
-and constitute one group, all derived ultimately from the Rebellion,
-and directly depending upon it. So long as Slavery continued in arms,
-each and all waxed in vastness; and now, so long as any of these
-remain, they testify to this same unnatural crime. The tax-gatherer,
-taking so much from honest industry, was born of the Rebellion.
-Inconvertible paper, deranging the business of the country at home and
-abroad, had the same monstrous birth. Our enormous taxation is only a
-prolongation of the Rebellion. Every greenback is red with the blood of
-fellow-citizens.
-
-To repair these calamities, political and financial, the first stage
-was the overthrow of the Rebellion in the field, thus enabling the
-Nation to reduce its armaments, to arrest its accumulating debt, and
-to cease anxiety on account of foreign intervention so constantly
-menaced. Thus relieved, we were brought to a resting-place, and the
-Nation found itself in condition to begin the work of restoration.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Foremost came the suppression of Slavery, in which the Rebellion
-had its origin. Common prudence, to say nothing of common humanity,
-required this consummation, without which there would have been a
-short-lived truce only. So great a change necessarily involved other
-changes, while there was the ever-present duty to obtain from the
-defeated Rebels, if not indemnity for the past, at least security for
-the future. It was impossible to stop with the suppression of Slavery.
-That whole barbarous code of wrong and outrage, whose first article was
-the denial of all rights to an oppressed race, was grossly inconsistent
-with the new order of things. It was necessary that it should yield to
-the Equal Rights of All, promised by the Declaration of Independence.
-The citizen, lifted from Slavery, must be secured in all his rights,
-civil and political. Loyal governments, republican in form, must be
-substituted for Rebel governments. All this being done, the States,
-thus transformed, will assume once more their ancient relations to the
-Nation. This is the work of Political Reconstruction, constituting the
-new stage after the overthrow of the Rebellion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile there has been an effort and a longing for Financial
-Reconstruction also,--sometimes without sufficiently reflecting that
-there can be small chance for any success in this direction until after
-Political Reconstruction. Here also we must follow Nature, and restore
-by removing the disturbing cause. This is the natural process. Vain
-all attempt to reconstruct the national finances while the Rebellion
-was still in arms. This must be obvious to all. Vain also while
-Slavery still domineered. Vain also while Equal Rights are without a
-sure defence against the oppressor. Vain also while the Nation still
-palpitates with its efforts to obtain security for the future. Vain
-also until the States are all once more harmonious in their native
-spheres, like the planets, receiving and dispensing light.
-
-Nothing is more sensitive than Credit, which is the essential element
-of financial restoration. A breath will make it flutter. How can you
-expect to restore the national credit, now unnaturally sensitive, while
-the Nation is still uneasy from those Rebel pretensions which have cost
-so much? Security is the first condition of Financial Reconstruction;
-and I am at a loss to find any road to it, except through Political
-Reconstruction. All this seems so plain that I ought to apologize for
-dwelling on it. And yet there are many, who, while professing a desire
-for an improvement in our financial condition, perversely turn their
-backs upon the only means by which this can be accomplished. Never was
-there equal folly. Language cannot picture it. Every denial of Equal
-Rights, every impediment to a just reconstruction in conformity with
-the Declaration of Independence, every pretension of a “white man’s
-government” in horrid mockery of self-evident truths declared by our
-fathers, and of that brotherhood of mankind declared by the Sermon on
-Mars Hill, is a bar to that Financial Reconstruction without which the
-Rebellion still lingers among us. So long as a dollar of irredeemable
-paper is forced upon the country, the Rebellion still lives, in its
-spurious progeny.
-
-Party organization and Presidential antagonism have thus far stood
-in the way, while at each stage individual perverseness has played
-its part. The President has set himself obstinately against Political
-Reconstruction; so also has the Democratic Party; others have followed,
-according to the prejudices of their nature; and so the national
-finances have suffered. Not the least of the offences of Andrew Johnson
-is the adverse influence he has exerted on this question. All that he
-has done from the beginning has tended to protract the Rebellion and
-to extend the disorder of our finances. And yet there are many not
-indifferent to the latter who have looked with indifference upon his
-criminal conduct. So far as their personal interests depended on an
-improved condition of the finances, they have already suffered; but
-it is hard that the country should suffer also. Andrew Johnson has
-postponed specie payments, and his supporters of all degrees must share
-the responsibility.
-
-Such is my confidence in the resources of our country, in the industry
-of its people, and in the grandeur of its destinies, that I cannot
-doubt the transcendent future. Alas that it should be interrupted by
-unwise counsels, even for a day! Financial Reconstruction is postponed
-only. It must come at last. Here I have no panacea that is not as
-simple as Nature. I know of no device or trick or medicine by which
-this cure can be accomplished. It will come with the general health of
-the body politic. It will come with the renovated life of the Nation,
-when it is once more complete in form, when every part is in sympathy
-with the whole, and the Rebellion, with all its offspring, is trampled
-out forever. In such a condition of affairs, inconvertible paper would
-be an impossibility, as much as a bill of sale for a human being.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile there are certain practical points which must not be
-forgotten. Foremost among these I put the absolute dependence of the
-national finances upon the faithful performance of all our obligations
-to the national freedmen. Pardoned Rebels will never look with
-complacency upon the national debt, or the interest which testifies
-semiannually to its magnitude. Their political colleagues at the North
-will be apt to sympathize with them. Should the scales at any time hang
-doubtful, it is to others that we must turn to adjust the balance.
-Therefore, for the sake of the national finances, I insist that the
-national freedmen shall be secured and maintained in Equal Rights, so
-that local prejudices and party cries shall be unavailing against them.
-You who have at heart the national credit, on which so much depends,
-must never fail to cherish the national freedmen, treating their
-enemies as if they were your enemies. Every blow at them will rebound
-upon yourselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In dealing with the financial question, there are two other points of
-ever-present importance: first, the necessity of diminishing, so far as
-practicable, the heavy burden of taxation so oppressive to the people;
-and, secondly, the necessity of substituting specie for inconvertible
-paper. Here are two objects, which, when accomplished, will add
-infinitely to the wealth and happiness of the country, besides being
-the assurance that the Nation has at last reached that condition of
-repose so much longed for.
-
-Before considering these two points in detail, I venture to remark that
-there is one condition, preliminary in character and equally essential
-to both, through which taxation will be lightened and specie payments
-will be hastened. I refer to the Public Faith, which must be sacredly
-preserved above all question or suspicion. The word of our Nation
-must be as good as its bond; and nobody must attempt to take a tittle
-from either. Nothing short of universal wreck can justify any such
-bankruptcy. Let the Public Faith be preserved, and all that you now
-seek will be easy.
-
-A virtuous king of early Rome dedicated a temple on the Capitol Hill
-itself to a divinity under the name of _Publica Fides_, who was
-represented with a wreath of laurel about her head, carrying ears
-of corn and a basket of fruit,--typical of honor and abundance sure
-to follow in her footprints. In the same spirit another temple was
-dedicated to the god Terminus, who presided over boundaries. The
-stones set up to mark the limits of estates were sacred, and on these
-very stones there were religious offerings to the god. The heathen
-maledictions upon the violator were echoed also by the Hebrews, when
-they said: “Cursed be he that removeth his neighbor’s landmark: and
-all the people shall say, Amen.”[235] In those early Roman and Hebrew
-days there was no national debt divided into bonds; there was nothing
-but land. But a national bond is as well defined as a piece of land.
-Here, then, is a place for the god Terminus. Every obligation is like a
-landmark, not to be removed without curses. Here, also, is a place for
-that other divinity, _Publica Fides_, with laurelled head, and hands
-filled with corn and fruit.
-
-Public Faith may be seen in the evil which springs from its loss and in
-the good which overflows from its preservation. It is like honor: and
-yet, once lost, more than dishonor is the consequence; once assured,
-more than honor is the reward. It is a possession surpassing all others
-in value. The gold and silver in your Treasury may be counted; it
-stands recorded, dollar for dollar, in the national ledger; but the
-sums which the unsuspected credit of a magnanimous nation can command
-are beyond the record of any ledger. Public Faith is more than mines
-of silver or gold. Only from Arabian story can a fit illustration be
-found, as when, after all human effort had failed, the Genius of the
-Lamp reared the costly palace and stored it with beauty. Public Faith
-is in itself a treasury, a tariff, and an internal revenue, all in
-one. These you may lose; but if the other is preserved, it will be
-only for a day. The Treasury will be replenished, the tariff will be
-renewed, the internal revenue will be restored. With Public Faith as an
-unfailing law, the Nation, like Pactolus, will sweep over golden sands;
-or, like Midas, it will change into gold whatever it touches. Keep,
-then, the Public Faith as the “open sesame” to all that you can desire;
-keep it as you would keep the philosopher’s stone of fable, having
-which, you have all.
-
-And yet, in the face of this plain commandment, on which hangs so much
-of all that is most prized in national existence, we are called to
-break faith. It is proposed to tax the national bonds, in violation
-of the original bargain on which the money was lent. Sometimes the
-tax is to be by the Nation, and sometimes by the States. The power to
-do this wrong you may possess, but the right never. Do what you will,
-there is one thing you cannot do: you cannot make wrong right. It is
-in vain that you undertake to set aside the perpetual obligation which
-you have assumed. Against every such pretension, whether by speech
-or vote, there is this living duty, which will survive Congress and
-politician alike. Puny as the hand of a child is the effort to undo
-this original bargain. The Nation has promised six per cent. interest,
-payable semiannually in coin, nor more nor less, without any abatement;
-and then, having bound itself, it proceeds to guard against the States
-by declaring specifically that the bonds shall be “exempt from taxation
-by or under State authority.” Such is the bargain. There it is; and it
-must continue unchanged, except by the consent of the parties, until
-the laws of the universe tumble into chaos.
-
-The rogue in Shakespeare exclaims, “What a fool Honesty is! and Trust,
-his sworn brother, a very simple gentleman!” In equal levity it is
-said, “Tax the bonds,” although, by the original bargain on which
-the money was obtained, amid the trials of war for the safety of the
-Nation, it was expressly stipulated that these bonds should not be
-taxed. Nevertheless, tax the bonds! Of course, by taxing the bonds the
-bargain is brutally broken,--and this, too, after the Nation has used
-the money. Such a transaction in common life, except where bankruptcy
-had supervened, would be intolerable. A proud Nation, justly sensitive
-to national honor, as the great Republic through whose example liberal
-institutions are commended to mankind, cannot do this thing.
-
-The proposition to tax the bonds, in open violation of the original
-bargain, is similar in spirit to that other enterprise, which, under
-various discordant ensigns, proposes to pay the national bonds with
-inconvertible paper. Here at once, and on the threshold, Public
-Faith interposes a summary protest. On such a question debate even
-is dangerous; the man who doubts is lost. The money was borrowed and
-lent on the undoubting faith that it was to be paid in coin. Nothing
-to the contrary was suggested, imagined, or dreamed, at the time.
-Behind all forms of language, and even all omissions, this obligation
-stands forth, in the nature of the case, explained and confirmed by the
-history of our national loans, and by the official acts of successive
-Secretaries of the Treasury interpreting the obligations of the Nation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So much stress is laid upon the language of the five-twenties that I
-cannot let it pass. The terms employed were precisely those in previous
-bonds of the United States where the principal was paid in coin, some
-of which are still outstanding. Had there been any doubt about the
-meaning, it was fixed by the general understanding, and by special
-declarations of responsible persons speaking for the Nation. On 26th
-May, 1863, Mr. Harrington, the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury,
-in an official letter, says: “These bonds will, therefore, be paid in
-gold.” On 15th February, 1864, Mr. Field, also Assistant Secretary of
-the Treasury, writes: “I am directed by the Secretary to say that it is
-the purpose of the Government to pay said bonds, like other bonds of
-the United States, in coin, at maturity.” On 18th May, 1864, Mr. Chase,
-at the time Secretary of the Treasury, wrote: “These bonds, _according
-to the usage of the Government_, are payable in coin.” Mr. Fessenden,
-while Secretary of the Treasury, in his annual report to Congress,
-expressed the same conclusion; and his successor, Mr. McCulloch,
-in a letter of 15th November, 1866, says: “I regard, as did also my
-predecessors, all bonds of the United States as payable in coin.”
-There are also numerous advertisements from the Treasury, and from its
-business agents, all in the same sense.
-
-Here is a succession of authorities, embracing high functionaries of
-the United States, all concurring in affixing upon these bonds the
-obligation to pay in coin. As testimony to the meaning of the bonds,
-it is important; but considering that all these persons represented
-the National Treasury, and that they were the agents of the Nation
-for the sale of these very bonds, their representations are more
-than testimony. Until their authority is disowned by Congress, and
-their representations discarded, it is difficult to see why their
-language must not be treated as part of the contract, at least in
-all sales subsequent to its publication. It must not be forgotten
-that these original sales were mainly to bankers and brokers, and
-in large amounts, for the purpose of resale to small purchasers
-seeking investments. It was in reply to parties interested in these
-resales that the letters of Assistant Secretary Field and Mr. Chase
-were written, pledging the Nation to payment in coin. At the date of
-these important letters Congress was in session, and, although the
-opportunity was constant, there was no protest against the meaning
-thus authoritatively affixed to these obligations. The bonds were
-in the market, advertised and sold daily, with a value established
-by the representations of these national agents; and Congress did
-not interfere to set aside these representations. By subsequent
-Acts similar loans were authorized, and nobody protested. There was
-the supplementary clause of 3d March, 1864, for the issue of eleven
-millions of these bonds, to cover an excess subscribed above the
-amount authorized by the original Act. This was debated in the Senate
-on the 1st of March; but you will search the “Globe” in vain for any
-protest. Then came other Acts, at different dates, by which the loan
-was further enlarged to its present extent, and all the time these
-representations were uncontradicted. Against them there was no Act of
-Congress, no protest, nothing. If this is not “acquiescence,” then I am
-at a loss to know how acquiescence can be shown. Therefore do I insist
-that these representations are a part of the contract by which the
-Nation is bound.
-
-It is said that in the five-twenty bonds there are words promising
-interest in coin, but nothing with regard to the principal. Forgetting
-the contemporary understanding and the official interpretation, and
-assuming that at maturity the bond is no better than a greenback, it
-becomes important to know the character of this obligation. On its
-face a greenback is a promise to pay a certain number of dollars.
-It is paper, and it promises to pay “dollars.” Here is an example,
-which I take from my pocket: “The United States promise to pay to the
-bearer _five dollars_”--not five dollars in paper, or in some other
-substituted promise, but “five dollars,” which can mean nothing else
-than the coin known over the world with the stamp of Spain, Mexico,
-and the United States, being a fixed value, which passes current
-in every zone and at the antipodes. The “dollar” is an established
-measure of value, like the five-franc piece of France, or the pound
-sterling of England. As well say, that, on a promise to pay so many
-francs in France, or so many pounds sterling in England, you could
-honestly acquit yourself by handing over a scrap of printed paper,
-inconvertible in value. This could not be done. The promise in our
-greenbacks carries with it an ultimate obligation to pay the silver
-dollar whose chink is so familiar in the commerce of the world. The
-convertibility of the greenback is for the present suspended; but when
-paid, it must be in coin. To pay with another promise is to renew, and
-not to discharge the debt. But the obligation in our bonds is to pay
-“dollars” also, _whenever the bonds are paid_; it may be after five
-years, or, in the discretion of the Nation, not till twenty years,
-but, _when paid_, it must be in “dollars.” Such is the stipulation;
-nor could the addition of “coin” or “gold” essentially change this
-obligation. _It is contrary to reason that a bond should be paid in
-an inferior obligation._ It is dishonest to force inconvertible paper
-without interest in payment of an interest-bearing obligation. The
-statement of the case is enough. Such an attempt disturbs the reason
-and shocks the moral sense.
-
-Between the bond and the greenback there is an obvious distinction,
-doubly attested by the Act of Congress creating them both,--for they
-were created together. This distinction appears, first, in the title of
-the Act, and, secondly, in its provisions. According to its title, it
-is “An Act to authorize the issue of United States notes, _and for the
-redemption or funding thereof, and for funding the floating debt of the
-United States_.”[236] In brief, greenbacks were made a legal tender,
-and authority was given to fund them in these bonds. This appears
-in the very title of the Act. Now the object of funding is to bring
-what is uncertain and floating into a permanent form; and accordingly
-greenbacks were funded and placed on interest. The bonds were a
-substitute for the greenbacks; but the new theory makes the greenbacks
-a substitute for the bonds. To carry forward still further the policy
-of the Act, it was provided that the greenbacks might be exchanged at
-once for bonds; and then, by the Act of 11th July, 1862,[237] it was
-further provided that these very greenbacks “may be paid in coin,” at
-the direction of the Secretary, instead of being received in exchange
-for certificates of deposit, which were convertible into bonds,--thus
-treating the bonds as the equivalent of coin. The subsequent repeal
-of these provisions does not alter their testimony to the character
-of these bonds. Thus, at every turn, we are brought to the same
-conclusion. The dishonor of these obligations, whatever form it may
-assume, and whatever pretext it may adopt, is nothing but Repudiation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The word _Repudiation_, now so generally used to denote the refusal to
-pay national obligations, has been known in this sense only recently.
-In the early dictionaries of our language it had no such signification.
-According to Dr. Johnson, it meant simply “divorce,” “rejection,” as
-when a man put away his wife. It began to be known in its present
-sense when Mississippi, the State of Jefferson Davis, dishonored her
-bonds. From that time the word has been too familiar in our public
-discussions. It was not unnatural that a State mad with Slavery should
-dishonor its bonds. Rejecting all obligations of humanity and justice,
-it easily rejected the obligations of Public Faith. Slavery was in
-itself a perpetual _repudiation_, and slave-masters were unblushing
-_repudiators_. Such an example is not fit for our Nation at this great
-period of its history.
-
-It is one of the calamities of war, that, while it compels the
-employment of large means, it blunts the moral sense, and breeds too
-frequently an insensibility to the obligations incurred. A national
-debt shares for the time the exceptional character of war itself.
-Contracted hastily, it is little regarded except as a burden. At
-last, when business is restored and all things assume their natural
-proportions, it is recognized in its true character. The country
-accommodates itself to the pressure. This time is now at hand among
-us, if not arrested by disturbing influences. Unhappily, the demands
-of Public Faith are met by higgling and chaffering, and we are gravely
-reminded that the “bloated bond-holders” now expect more than they
-gave,--forgetting that they gave in the darkness of the war, at the
-appeal of the Nation, and to keep those armies in the field through
-which its existence was preserved,--forgetting also that among these
-bond-holders, now so foully stigmatized, were the poor, as well as the
-rich, all giving according to their means. It was not in the ordinary
-spirit of money-lending that those contributions were made. Love of
-country entered into them, and made them more than money. If the
-interest was considerable, it was only in proportion to the risk. Every
-loan at that time was a contract of bottomry on the Nation,--like money
-lent to a ship in a strange port, and conditioned on its arrival safe
-at home,--so that it failed entirely, if Slavery, by the aid of Foreign
-Powers, established its supremacy. God be praised, the enemy has been
-overcome! It remains now that we should overcome that other enemy,
-which, hardly less malignant than war itself, would despoil the Nation
-of its good name and take from it all the might of honesty. And here
-to every citizen, and especially to every legislator, I would address
-those incomparable words of Milton in his sonnet to Fairfax:--
-
- “Oh, yet a nobler task awaits thy hand,
- (For what can war but endless war still breed?)
- Till truth and right from violence be freed,
- _And Public Faith cleared from the shameful brand_
- _Of public fraud_.”
-
-The proposition to pay bonds in greenbacks becomes futile and fatuous,
-when it is considered that such an operation would be nothing more
-than the substitution of greenbacks for bonds, and not a payment of
-anything. The form of the debt would be changed, but the debt would
-remain. Of the twenty-five hundred millions which we now owe, whether
-in greenbacks or bonds, every dollar must be paid, sooner or later,
-or be ignobly repudiated. By paying the interest of the bonds in
-coin, instead of greenbacks, the annual increase of the debt to this
-extent is prevented. But the principal remains to be paid. If this
-be attempted in greenbacks, it will be by an issue far beyond all
-the demands of the currency. There will be a deluge of greenbacks.
-The country must suffer inconceivably under such a dispensation. The
-interest on the bonds may be stopped by the substitution, but the
-currency will be depreciated infinitely beyond any such dishonest
-saving. The country will be bankrupt. Inconvertible paper will
-overspread the land, to the exclusion of coin or any chance of coin
-for some time to come. Farewell then to specie payments! Greenbacks
-will be everywhere. The multitudinous rats that swam the Rhine and
-devoured Bishop Hatto in his tower were not more destructive. The cloud
-of locusts described by Milton as “warping on the eastern wind” and
-“darkening all the land of Nile,” were not more pestilential.
-
-I am now brought to the practical question, to which I have already
-alluded: How the public burdens shall be lightened. Of course, in
-this work, the Public Faith, if kept sacred, will be a constant and
-omnipresent agency, powerful in itself, and powerful also in its
-reinforcement of all other agencies.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It will not seem trivial, if I insist on systematic economy in the
-administration of the Government. All needless expenditure must be
-lopped off. Our swollen appropriations must be compressed. Extravagance
-and recklessness, so natural during a period of war, must give way to
-moderation and thrift. All this without any denial of what is just or
-beneficent. The rule should be economy without niggardliness. Always
-there must be a good reason for whatever we spend. Every dollar, as it
-leaves the National Treasury, must be able to exhibit its passport.
-Doubtless the army and navy can be further reduced without detriment to
-the public service. Beyond this great saving there should be a constant
-watchfulness against those schemes of public plunder, great and small,
-from which the Nation has latterly suffered so much. All these things
-are so plain as to be little more than truisms.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another help will be found in the simplification of our system of
-taxation, so that it shall be less complex and shall apply to fewer
-objects. In Europe taxation has become a science, according to which
-the largest possible amounts are obtained at the smallest possible
-inconvenience. Instead of sweeping through all the highways and byways
-of life, leaving no single thing unvisited, the English system has a
-narrow range and visits a few select articles only. I see no reason
-why we should not profit by this example, much to the convenience of
-the Government and of the citizen. The tax-gatherer will never be a
-very welcome guest, but he may be less of an intruder than now. A
-proper tax on two articles, whiskey and tobacco, with proper securities
-for its collection, would go far to support the Government.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Still another agency will be found in some proper scheme for a
-diminution of the interest on our national debt, so far as this can be
-done without a violation of Public Faith; and this brings me to the
-very bill now before the Senate.
-
-All are anxious to relieve the country from recurring liabilities,
-which come round like the seasons. How can this be done best? First, by
-the strict performance of all existing engagements, so that the Public
-Faith shall be our inseparable ally; and, secondly, by funding the
-existing debt in such ways as to provide a reduced rate of interest. A
-longer term would justify a smaller interest. There may be differences
-as to the form of the substitute, but it would seem as if something of
-this kind must be done.
-
-Immediately after the close of the war, as the smoke of battle was
-disappearing, but before the national ledger was sufficiently examined
-to justify a comparison between liabilities and resources, there was a
-generous inclination to proceed at once to the payment of the national
-debt. Volunteers came forward with their contributions for this
-purpose, in the hope that the generation which suppressed the Rebellion
-might have the added glory of removing this great burden. This ardor
-was momentary. It was soon seen that the task was too extensive,
-and that it justly belonged to another generation, with aggrandized
-population and resources, in presence of which the existing debt, large
-to us, would be small. Here the census has its instructive lesson.
-According to the rate of increase in past years, our population will
-advance in the following proportion:--
-
- In 1870, 42,323,341
- In 1880, 56,967,216
- In 1890, 76,677,872
- In 1900, 103,208,415
- In 1910, 138,918,526
-
-The resources of the country, already so vast, will swell in still
-larger proportions. Population increasing beyond example, improved
-systems of communication expanding in every direction, and the
-mechanical arts with their infinite activities old and new,--all these
-must carry the Nation forward beyond any present calculation, so
-that the imagination tires in the effort to grasp the mighty result.
-Therefore to the future we may tranquilly leave the final settlement of
-the national debt, meanwhile discharging our own incidental duty, so
-that the Public Faith shall be preserved.
-
-Here is a notable difference between the United States and other
-countries, where population and resources have arrived at such a point
-that future advance is very gradual. With us each decade is a leap
-forward; with them it marks a gradation sometimes scarcely appreciable.
-This difference must not be forgotten in the estimate of our capacity
-to deal with a debt larger than that of any European power except
-England. But we must confess our humiliation, as we find that our
-debt, with its large interest in coin, secured by mortgage on the
-immeasurable future of the Nation, is less regarded abroad than the
-English debt, with its smaller interest and its more limited security.
-Our sixes will command only seventy-four per cent. in the market of
-London, while the three per cent. consols of England are freely bought
-at ninety-four per cent. One of our bonds brings twenty per cent. less
-than an English bond, although the interest on it is one hundred per
-cent. more. I know no substantial reason for this enormous difference,
-except in the superior credit established by England. With the national
-credit above suspicion, our debt must stand as well, and, as our
-multiplying resources become known, even better still. Thus constantly
-are we brought to the same lesson of Public Faith.
-
-In spite of the general discredit of our national stocks abroad,
-Massachusetts fives payable in 1894 sell at the nominal price of 84,
-with the pound sterling at $4.44, equal to 91½ in our gold, with the
-pound sterling at $4.83. There can be no other reason for this higher
-price than the superior credit enjoyed by Massachusetts; and thus again
-is Public Faith exalted. Why should not the Nation, with its infinite
-resources, surpass Massachusetts?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The bill before us proposes a new issue of bonds, redeemable in coin
-after twenty, thirty, and forty years, with interest at five per cent.,
-four and one half per cent., and four per cent., in coin, exempt from
-State or municipal taxation, and also from national taxation, except
-the general tax on income,--these bonds to be used exclusively for
-the conversion of an equal amount of the interest-bearing debt of the
-United States, except the existing five per cent. bonds and the three
-per cent. certificates. These proposed bonds have the advantage of
-being explicit in their terms. The obligations of the Government are
-fixed clearly and unchangeably beyond the assaults of politicians.
-
-A glance at the national debt will show the operation of this measure.
-The sum-total on the 1st of February, 1868, according to the statement
-from the Treasury, was $2,514,315,373, being, in round numbers,
-twenty-five hundred millions. Out of this may be deducted legal-tender
-and fractional notes, as currency, amounting to $388,405,565, and
-several other smaller items. The following amounts represent the
-portions of debt provided for by this bill:--
-
- Six per cent., due 1881, $ 283,676,600
- Six per cent., five-twenties, 1,398,488,850
- Seven and three tenths Treasury notes,
- convertible into five-twenty bonds at
- maturity, 214,953,850
- --------------
- $1,897,119,300
-
-This considerable sum may be funded under the proposed bill.
-
-If this large portion of the national debt, with its six per cent.
-interest in coin, can be funded at a less interest, there will be a
-corresponding relief to the country. But there is one way only in which
-this can be successfully accomplished. It is by making the Public
-Faith so manifest that the holders will be induced to come into the
-change for the sake of the longer term. All that is done by them must
-be voluntary. Every holder must be free to choose. He may prefer his
-short bond at six per cent., or a long bond at five per cent., or a
-longer at four and one half per cent., or a still longer at four per
-cent. This is his affair. There must be no compulsion. Any menace
-of compulsion will defeat the transaction. It will be nothing less
-than Repudiation, with a certain loss of credit, which no saving of
-interest can repay. You must continue to borrow on a large scale; but
-who will lend to the repudiator, unless at a destructive discount? Any
-reduction of interest without the consent of the holders will reduce
-your capacity to borrow. A forced reduction of interest will be like
-a forced loan. While seeming to save interest, you will lose capital.
-Do not be deceived. Any compulsory conversion is only another form of
-Repudiation. It is tantamount to this declared crime. It is the same
-misdeed, taking still another shape,--as Proteus was the same heathen
-god in all his various transformations. It is Repudiation under an
-_alias_.
-
-Happily the bill before us is free from any such damning imputation.
-The new bonds are authorized; but the holders of existing obligations
-are left free to exercise their judgment in making the change. I am
-assured by those who, from practical acquaintance with business, ought
-to know, that these bonds will be rapidly taken for the five-twenties.
-
-The same bill, in its second section, sets apart $135,000,000 annually
-to the payment of the interest and the reduction of the principal of
-the national debt; and this is to be in lieu of a sinking fund. This is
-an additional security. It is another assurance of our determination to
-deal honestly.
-
-The third section of the same bill is newer in its provisions, and,
-perhaps, more open to doubt. But, though uncertain with regard to it
-in the beginning, I have found that it commended itself on careful
-examination. On its face it provides for a system of conversion and
-reconversion. The holder of lawful money to the amount of $1,000, or
-any multiple of $1,000, may convert the same into the funded debt for
-an equal amount; and any holder of the funded debt may receive for the
-same at the Treasury lawful money, unless the notes then outstanding
-shall be equal to $400,000,000. If bonds in the funded debt shall be
-worth more than greenbacks, the latter would be converted into bonds
-according to the ordinary laws of trade. The latest relation of these
-two is as follows: $100 greenbacks equal seventy-one dollars gold;
-$100 five per cent. equal seventy-six dollars gold. If the greenbacks
-are convertible into the five per cent., they will, of course, be
-converted while the above relation continues. This must be so long
-as the national credit is maintained abroad and the demand for our
-securities continues there. By this process our greenbacks will be
-gradually absorbed, and those that are not absorbed will be lifted in
-value. It would seem as if bonds and greenbacks must both gain from
-this business, and with them the country must gain also. Here would be
-a new step to specie payments.
-
-The bill closes with a provision authorizing contracts in coin, instead
-of greenbacks, according to the agreement of parties. This authority is
-in harmony with the other provisions of the bill, and is still another
-step toward specie payments.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I am now brought to the last branch of this discussion, in which all
-the others are absorbed: I mean the necessity of specie payments, or,
-in other words, the necessity of coin in the place of inconvertible
-paper. Other things are means to this end: this is the end itself.
-Until this is accomplished, Financial Reconstruction exists in
-aspiration only, and not in reality.
-
-The suspension of specie payments was originally a war measure, like
-the suspension of the _Habeas Corpus_. It was so declared by myself at
-the time it was authorized. Pardon me, if I quote my own words in the
-debate on the bill:--
-
- “It is a discretion kindred to that under which the _Habeas
- Corpus_ is suspended, so that citizens are arrested without
- the forms of law,--kindred to that under which an extensive
- territory is declared to be in a condition of insurrection, so
- that all business with its inhabitants is suspended,--kindred
- to that, which unquestionably exists, to obtain soldiers,
- if necessary, by draft or conscription instead of the free
- offering of volunteers,--kindred to that under which private
- property is taken for public uses,--and kindred, also, to that
- undoubted discretion which sanctions the completest exercise of
- the transcendent right of self-defence.”[238]
-
-As a war measure, it should cease with the war, or so soon thereafter
-as practicable. It should not be continued a day beyond positive
-exigency. While the war lasted, it was a necessity, as the war itself.
-Its continuance now prolongs into peace this belligerent agency, and
-projects its disturbing influence into the most distant places. Like
-war, whose greatest engine it was, it is the cause of incalculable
-evil. Like war, it troubles the entire Nation, deranges business, and
-demoralizes the people. As I hate war, so do I hate all its incidents,
-and long to see them disappear. Already in these remarks I have
-pictured the financial anarchy of our country, the natural reflection
-of the political; but the strongest illustration is in a disordered
-currency, which is present to everybody with a dollar in his pocket.
-
-The derangement of business may be seen at home and abroad. It is not
-merely derangement; it is dislocation. Everything is out of joint.
-Business has its disease also, showing itself in opposite conditions:
-shrunk at times, as with paralysis; swollen at times to unhealthy
-proportions, as with _elephantiasis_. The first condition of business
-is stability, which is only another form of security; but this is
-impossible, when nobody can tell from day to day the value of the
-currency. It may change in a night. The reasonable contract of to-day
-may become onerous beyond calculation to-morrow. There is no fixed
-standard. The seller is afraid to sell, the buyer afraid to buy.
-Nobody can sell or buy a farm, nobody can build or mortgage a house,
-except at an unnatural hazard. Salaries and all fixed incomes suffer.
-The pay of every soldier in the army, every sailor in the navy, every
-office-holder from the President to the humblest postmaster, is brought
-under this tyrannical influence. Harder still, innocent pensioners,
-wards of the Nation, must bear the same doom. Maimed soldiers, bereaved
-widows, helpless orphans, whose cup is already full, are compelled to
-see their scanty dole shrink before their sight till it seems ready to
-vanish in smoke.
-
-A greenback is a piece of paper with a promise on its face and green
-on its back, declared to be money by Act of Congress, but which the
-Government refuses to pay. It is “failed paper” of the Government. The
-mischief of such a currency is everywhere, enveloping the whole country
-and penetrating all its parts. It covers all and enters all. It is a
-discredit to the national name, from which the Nation suffers in whole
-and in detail. It weakens the Nation and hampers the citizen. There is
-no national enterprise which it does not impede. The Pacific Railroad
-feels it. There is not a manufacture or business which does not feel it
-also. There is not a town, or village, or distant place, which it does
-not visit.
-
-A practical instance will show one way in which individuals suffer
-on an extensive scale, being generally those who are least able. I
-follow an ingenious merchant, Mr. Atkinson, of Boston, whose figures
-sustain his conclusion, when I insist that our present currency, from
-its unstable character, operates as an _extra_ tax of more than one
-hundred millions annually on the labor and business of the country;
-and this vast sum is taken from the pockets of the people, not for the
-support of the Government, but to swell the unreported fund out of
-which the excesses of the present day are maintained. There are few
-business men who would not put the annual loss in their affairs, from
-the fluctuation in the currency, somewhere from one to five per cent.
-One per cent. is the lowest. Mr. Hazard, of Rhode Island, puts it at
-two per cent. Now the aggregate sales in the fiscal year ending June,
-1867, were over eleven thousand millions ($11,000,000,000) in currency,
-excluding sales of stocks or bonds. One per cent. on this prodigious
-amount represents a tax of one hundred and ten millions, paid annually
-by consumers, according to their consumption, and not in any degree
-according to their ability. This is one instance only of the damages
-annually paid on account of our currency. If we estimate the annual
-tax at more than one per cent., the sum-total will be proportionally
-larger. Even at the smallest rate, it is many millions more than
-all the annual expenses of our Government immediately preceding the
-Rebellion.
-
-Fluctuations in the measure of value are as inconvenient and fatal
-as fluctuations in the measures of length and bulk. A dollar which
-has to-day one value and to-morrow another is no better than a yard
-which has to-day one length and another to-morrow, or a bushel which
-has to-day one capacity and another to-morrow. It is as uncertain
-as “Equity” measured by the varying foot of successive chancellors,
-sometimes long and sometimes short, according to the pleasant
-illustration of Selden in his “Table-Talk.” Such fluctuations are more
-than a match for any prudence. Business is turned into a guess, or a
-game of hazard, where the prevailing anarchy is overruled by accident:--
-
- “Chaos umpire sits,
- And by decision more embroils the fray
- By which he reigns; next him high arbiter
- Chance governs all.”
-
-In such a condition of things the gamblers have the advantage. The
-stock exchange becomes little better than a faro bank. By such scenes
-the country is demoralized. The temptation of excessive gains leads
-from the beaten path of business. Speculation without money takes the
-place of honest industry, extending from the stock exchange everywhere.
-The failed paper of the Government teaches the lesson of bankruptcy.
-The Government refuses to take up its notes, and others do likewise.
-These things cannot be without a shock to public morals. Honesty ceases
-to be even a policy. Broken contracts prepare the way for crime, which
-comes to complete the picture.
-
-Our foreign commerce is not less disturbed; for here we are brought
-within the sphere of other laws than our own. Gold is the standard
-of business throughout the civilized world. Until it becomes again
-the standard among us, we are not, according to the familiar phrase
-of President Lincoln, in “practical relation” with the civilized
-world. We are States out of the great Union. Our currency has the
-stamp of legality at home, but it is worthless abroad. In all foreign
-transactions we are driven to purchase gold at a premium, or to adopt
-a system of barter which belongs to the earlier stages of commerce.
-Corn, wheat, and cotton are exchanged for the products we desire, and
-this traffic is the coarse substitute for that refined and plastic
-system of exchanges which adapts itself so easily to all the demands of
-business. Commerce with foreign powers is prosecuted at an incalculable
-disadvantage. Our shipping, which in times past has been the pride of
-the Nation, whitening every sea with its sails, is reduced in number
-and value. Driven from the ocean by pirate flags during the Rebellion,
-it cannot struggle back to its ancient supremacy until the accustomed
-laws of trade once more resume their rule.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There are few who will deny the transcendent evil which I have set
-forth. There are few who will advocate inconvertible paper as currency.
-How shall the remedy be applied? On this question, so interesting to
-the business and good name of the country, there are theories without
-number,--some so ingenious as to be artificial rather than natural.
-What is natural is simple; and I am persuaded that our remedy must be
-of this character.
-
-The legal-tender note, which we wish to expel from our currency, has
-two different characters: first, as mere currency, for use in the
-transactions of business; and, secondly, as real value, from the
-assurance that ultimately it will be paid in coin, according to its
-promise. These two different characters may be sententiously expressed
-as _availability_ and _convertibility_. The notes are now available
-without being convertible. Our desire is to make them convertible,--in
-other words, the equivalent of coin in value, dollar for dollar. On the
-1st of June last past these notes were $388,675,802 in amount.
-
-Discarding theories, however ingenious, and following Nature, I call
-attention to a few practical points, before reverting to those cardinal
-principles applicable to this subject, from which there can be no
-appeal.
-
-_First._ The present proposition for funding is an excellent measure
-for this purpose, being at once simple and practical: not that it
-contains any direct promise for the redemption of our currency, but
-because it places the national debt on a permanent footing at a smaller
-interest than is now paid. By this change three things essential to
-financial reconstruction are promoted: economy, stability, and national
-credit. With these once established, specie payments cannot be long
-postponed.
-
-_Secondly._ Another measure of immediate value is _the legalization of
-contracts in coin_, so that henceforth all agreements made in coin may
-be legally enforced in coin or its equivalent. This would establish
-specie payments wherever parties desired, and to this extent begin the
-much-desired change. Contracts in coin would increase and multiply,
-until the exception became the rule. There would for a time be _two
-currencies_; but the better must gradually prevail. The essential
-equity of the new system would be apparent, while there would be a
-charm in once more looking upon familiar faces long hidden from
-sight, as the hoarded coin came forth. Nor can any possible injury
-ensue. The legalization is applicable only to future contracts, as the
-parties mutually agree. Every citizen in this respect would be a law
-to himself. If he chose in his own business to resume specie payments,
-he could do so. There would be a voluntary resumption by the people,
-one by one. But this influence could not be confined to the immediate
-parties. Beyond the contagion of its example, there would be a positive
-necessity on the part of the banks that they should adapt themselves to
-the exigency by the substitution of proper commercial equivalents; and
-thus again we take another step in specie payments.
-
-_Thirdly._ Another measure of practical value is _the contraction of
-the existing currency_, so as to bring it on a par with coin, dollar
-for dollar. Before alluding to any of the expedients to accomplish
-this precious object, it is important to arrive at some idea of the
-amount of currency of all kinds required for the business of the
-country. To do this, we may look at the currency before the Rebellion,
-when business was in its normal condition. I shall not occupy space
-with tables, although they are now before me, but content myself with
-results. From the official report of the Treasury it appears that on
-the 1st of January, 1860, the whole active circulation of the country,
-including bank circulation, bank deposits available as currency, specie
-in bank, specie in Treasury, estimated specie in circulation, and
-deducting reserves, amounted to $542,097,264. It may be assumed that
-this sum-total was the amount of currency required at the time. From
-the same official tables it appears that on the 1st of October, 1867,
-the whole active circulation of the country, beginning with greenbacks
-and fractional currency, and including all the items in the other
-account, amounted to $1,245,138,193. Thus from 1860, when the currency
-was normal, to 1867, some time after the suspension of specie payments,
-there was an increase of one hundred and thirty per cent. Omitting bank
-deposits for both years, the increase was one hundred and forty-six per
-cent. Making due allowance for the increase of population, business,
-and Government transactions, there remains a considerable portion of
-this advance which must be attributed to the abnormal condition of
-the currency. I follow various estimates in putting this at sixty or
-seventy per cent., representing the difference of prices at the two
-different periods, and the corresponding excess of currency above the
-requirements of the country. Therefore, for the reduction of prices,
-there must be a reduction of the currency; and this must be to the
-amount of $300,000,000. So it seems, unless these figures err.
-
-Against the movement for contraction, which is commended by its
-simplicity and its tendency to a normal condition of things, we have
-two adverse policies,--one, the stand-still policy, and the other,
-worse yet, the policy of inflation. By the first the currency is
-left _in statu quo_,--stationary,--subject to the influence of other
-conditions, which may operate to reduce it. Better stand still than
-move in a wrong direction. By the latter the currency is enlarged at
-the expense of the people,--being at once a tax and a derangement of
-values. You pamper the morbid appetite for paper money, and play the
-discarded part of John Law. You blow up a bladder, without thinking
-that it is nothing but a bladder, ready to burst. As the volume of
-currency is increased, the purchasing power of each dollar is reduced
-in proportion. As you add to the currency, you take from the dollar.
-You do little more than mark your goods at higher prices, and imagine
-that they have increased in value. Already the price is too high. Do
-not make it higher. Already the currency is corrupted. Do not corrupt
-it more. The cream has been reduced to skimmed milk. Do not let it be
-reduced to chalk and water. Let there be national cream for all the
-people.
-
-Obviously any contraction of the currency must be conducted with
-caution, so as to interfere as little as possible with existing
-interests. It should be understood in advance, so that business may
-adapt itself to the change. Once understood, it must be pursued wisely
-to the end. I call attention to a few of the expedients by which this
-contraction may be made.
-
-1. Any holder may have liberty to fund his greenbacks in bonds, as he
-may desire; so that, as coin increases, they will be merged in the
-funded debt, and the currency be reduced in corresponding proportion.
-
-2. Greenbacks, when received at the Treasury, may be cancelled, or they
-may be redeemed directly, so far as the coin on hand will permit.
-
-3. Greenbacks may be converted into compound-interest notes, to be
-funded in monthly instalments, running over a term of years, thus
-reaching specie payments within a brief period.
-
-4. Another expedient, more active still, is the application of the coin
-on hand to the payment of greenbacks at a given rate,--say $6,000,000
-a month,--selecting for payment those holders who present the largest
-amount of five-twenties for conversion into the long bonds at a low
-rate of interest, or shall pay the highest premium on such bonds.
-
-I mention these as expedients, having the authority of financial
-names, calculated to operate in the same direction, without violent
-change or spasmodic action. Under their mild and beneficent influence
-the currency would be gradually reduced, so that the final step, when
-taken, would be hardly felt. With so great an object in view, I do not
-doubt its accomplishment at an early day, if the Nation only wills it.
-“Where there is a will, there is a way”; and never was this proverb
-truer than on this occasion. To my mind it is clear, that, when the
-Nation wills a currency in coin, then must this victory over the
-Rebellion be won,--provided always that there is no failure in those
-other things on which I have also dwelt as the _conditions precedent_
-of this final victory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-How vain it is to expect Financial Reconstruction until Political
-Reconstruction has been completed I have already shown. How vain to
-expect specie payments until the Nation has once more gained its
-natural vigor, and it has become _one_ in reality as in name! Let this
-be, and the Nation will be like a strong man, in the full enjoyment of
-all his forces, coping with the trials of life.
-
-There must also be peace within our borders, so that there shall be no
-discord between President and Congress. Therefore, so long as Andrew
-Johnson is President, the return to specie payments is impossible. So
-long as a great party, called Democratic, better now called Rebel, wars
-on that Political Reconstruction which Congress has organized, there
-can be no specie payments. So long as any President, or any political
-party, denies the Equal Rights of the freedman, it is vain to expect
-specie payments. Whoso would have equity must do equity; and now, if
-you would have specie payments, you must do this great equity. The rest
-will follow. When General Grant said, “Let us have peace,” he said
-also, “Let us have specie payments.” Among all the blessed gifts of
-peace there is none more certain.
-
-Nor must it be forgotten that there can be no departure in any way
-from the requirements of Public Faith. This is a perpetual obligation,
-complete in all respects, and just as applicable to the freedman as
-to the bond-holder. Repudiation in all its forms, direct or indirect,
-whether of the freedman or the bond-holder, must be repudiated. The
-freedman and bond-holder are under the same safeguard, and there is the
-same certain disaster from any repudiation of either. Unless the Public
-Faith is preserved inviolate, you cannot fund your debt at a smaller
-interest, you cannot convert your greenbacks, you cannot comply with
-the essential terms of Reconstruction. Amid all surrounding abundance
-you are poor and powerless, for you are dishonored. Do not say, as
-an apology, that all should have the same currency. True as this may
-be, it is a cheat, when used to cover dishonor. The currency of all
-should be coin, and you should lift all the national creditors to this
-solid platform rather than drag a single citizen down. A just Equality
-is sought by levelling up instead of levelling down. In this way the
-national credit will be maintained, so that it will be a source of
-wealth, prosperity, and renown.
-
-Pardon me, if now, by way of recapitulation, I call your attention
-to three things in which all others centre. The first is the _Public
-Faith_. The second is the _Public Faith_. The third is the _Public
-Faith_. Let these be sacredly preserved, and there is nothing of power
-or fame which can be wanting. All things will pay tribute to you,
-even from the uttermost parts of the sea. All the sheaves will stand
-about, as in the dream of Joseph, and make obeisance to your sheaf.
-Good people, especially all concerned in business, whether commerce,
-banking, or labor, our own compatriots or the people of other lands,
-will honor and uphold the nation which, against all temptation, keeps
-its word.
-
-
-
-
-NO REPRISALS ON INNOCENT PERSONS.
-
-SPEECH IN THE SENATE, ON THE BILL CONCERNING THE RIGHTS OF AMERICAN
-CITIZENS, JULY 18, 1868.
-
-
- The Senate had under consideration the Bill concerning the
- Rights of American Citizens in Foreign States, which had
- already passed the House of Representatives. As it came from
- the House it contained the following section:--
-
- “SEC. 3. _And be it further enacted_, That, whenever
- it shall be duly made known to the President that any
- citizen of the United States has been arrested and is
- detained by any foreign Government, in contravention of
- the intent and purposes of this Act, upon the allegation
- that naturalization in the United States does not operate
- to dissolve his allegiance to his native sovereign, or
- if any citizen shall have been arrested and detained,
- whose release upon demand shall have been unreasonably
- delayed or refused, _the President shall be, and hereby
- is, empowered to suspend, in part or wholly, commercial
- relations with the said Government, or, in case no other
- remedy is available, to order the arrest and to detain in
- custody any subject or citizen of such foreign Government
- who may be found within the jurisdiction of the United
- States, and who has not declared his intention to become a
- citizen of the United States, except ambassadors and other
- public ministers and their domestics and domestic servants;
- and the President shall without delay give information to
- Congress of any proceedings under this Act_.”
-
- Mr. Sumner reported an amendment, to strike out the words in
- Italic authorizing the suspension of commercial relations and
- reprisals on persons, and substitute therefor these words:--
-
- “It shall be the duty of the President forthwith to report
- to Congress all the circumstances of any such arrest and
- detention, and any proceedings for the release of the
- citizen so arrested and detained, that Congress may take
- prompt action to secure to every citizen of the United
- States his just rights.”
-
- On this amendment Mr. Sumner spoke as follows.
-
-MR. PRESIDENT,--Before entering upon this discussion, I wish to read a
-brief telegram, which came by the cable last evening, as follows:--
-
- “LONDON, _July 17_.--In the House, last evening, Stanley, the
- Secretary of Foreign Affairs, made an important statement in
- answer to a question asking for information. In reply, he said
- he had already sent to the United States Government a note on
- the matter of Naturalization, the substance of which was, that
- the British ministry was ready to accept the American views of
- the question. He therefore thought a misunderstanding between
- the two nations impossible.”
-
-Add to this important information the well-known fact, that the United
-States have already ratified treaties with North Germany and Bavaria,
-and that we are engaged in negotiating treaties with other powers, for
-the settlement of this vexed question, and we may surely approach this
-discussion without any anxiety, except for the honor of our country.
-
-Permit me to say, at the outset, that the declared object of the
-present bill is all lost in certain special features, which are nothing
-less than monstrous, and utterly unworthy of a generous Republic hoping
-to give an example to mankind. Surely, Sir, it is noble to reach out
-and protect the rights of the citizen at home and abroad; but no zeal
-in this behalf should betray us into conduct which cannot be regarded
-without a blush.
-
-This bill proposes to confer upon the President prodigious powers,
-such as have never been lavished before in our history. They are
-without precedent. On this account alone they should be considered
-carefully; and they should not be granted, unless on good reason. If
-it be shown that they are not only without precedent, but that they
-are inconsistent with the requirements of modern civilization, that
-they are of evil example, and that they tend directly to war,--then, on
-this account, we should hesitate still more before we venture to grant
-them. Not lightly can a nation set itself against the requirements of
-civilization; not lightly can a nation do an act of evil example; not
-lightly can a nation take any step toward war. The whole business is
-solemn. Nothing graver could challenge the attention of the Senate.
-
-Two powers are conferred upon the President: first, to suspend
-commercial relations with a foreign government, and, secondly, to
-arrest and detain in custody any subject of a foreign government
-found within the jurisdiction of the United States. The suspension of
-commercial relations, and the arrest of innocent foreigners, simply
-at the will of the President,--these are the two powers. It would be
-difficult to imagine greater.
-
-We have had in our own history the instance of an embargo, when all our
-merchant ships were kept at home and forbidden to embark in foreign
-commerce. That measure was intended to save our commerce from insult
-and our sailors from impressment. This was done by Act of Congress.
-I am not aware of any instance, in our own history or in the history
-of any other country, where there has been a suspension of commercial
-relations with any foreign power, unless as an act of war. The moment
-war is declared, there is, from the fact of war, a suspension of
-commercial relations with the hostile power. Commerce with that power
-is impossible, and there can be no contract even between the citizens
-or subjects of the two powers. But this is war. It is now proposed
-to do this same thing and to call it peace. The proposition is new,
-absolutely new. Not an instance of history, not a phrase in the Law
-of Nations, sanctions it. I need not say how little congenial it is
-with the age in which we live. The present object of good men is to
-make war difficult, if not impossible. Here is a way to make war
-easy. To the President is given this alarming power. In Europe war
-proceeds from the sovereign: in England, from the Queen in Council;
-in France, from Louis Napoleon. This is according to the genius of
-monarchies. By the Constitution of our Republic it is Congress alone
-that can declare war. And yet by this bill One Man, in his discretion,
-may do little short of declaring war. He may hurl one of the bolts of
-war, and sever the commercial relations of two great powers. Consider
-well what must ensue. Suppose the bolt is hurled at England. All that
-various commerce on which so much depends, all that interchange of
-goods which contributes so infinitely to the wants of each, all that
-shipping and all those steamers traversing the ocean between the two,
-all the multitudinous threads of business by which the two peoples are
-woven together, warp and woof, as in a mighty loom,--all these must be
-severed.
-
-The next power conferred on the President is like unto the first in
-its abnormal character. It is nothing less than authority, in his
-discretion, to make reprisals, by seizing innocent foreigners happening
-to be in the United States. The more this is considered, the more it
-must be regarded with distrust.
-
-Reprisals belong to the incidents of war in the earlier ages, before
-civilization had tempered the rudeness of mankind. All reprisals are of
-doubtful character. Reprisals on persons are barbarous. I do not say,
-that, according to the received rights of war, some terrible occasion
-may not arise even for this barbarous agency; but I insist that it is
-frowned upon by all the best authorities even in our own country, that
-it is contrary to enlightened reason, and that it is utterly without
-any recent example. Admitting that such reprisals are not entirely
-discarded by writers on the Law of Nations, they are nevertheless
-condemned. By the rights of war, as once declared, the lives of
-prisoners taken on the field of battle were forfeit. Early history
-attests the frequency of this bloody sacrifice. Who now would order the
-execution of prisoners of war? The day has passed when any such outrage
-can be tolerated. But it is hardly less barbarous to seize innocent
-persons whom business or pleasure has brought within your peaceful
-jurisdiction, under the guaranty of the Public Faith.
-
-I am unwilling to occupy time on a matter which is so clear in the
-light of modern civilization, and of that enlightened reason which is
-the handmaid to civilization. And yet the present effort will justify
-me in exposing the true character of reprisals, as seen in the light of
-history.
-
-Reprisals were recognized by the Greeks, but disowned by the Romans.
-According to Bynkershoek, who is so much quoted on the Law of Nations,
-“there is no instance of such wickedness in the history of that
-magnanimous people; neither do their laws exhibit the least trace of
-it.”[239] This is strong language, and is in itself a condemnation of
-this whole agency. It is of the more weight, as the author is our
-austerest authority on questions of the Law of Nations, giving to the
-rights of war the strongest statement. According to him, reprisals
-are nothing less than “wickedness” (_improbitas_), and unworthy of a
-magnanimous people. During the Middle Ages, and afterwards, reprisals
-were in vogue; but they never found favor. They have been constantly
-reprobated. Even when formally sanctioned, they have been practically
-excluded by safeguards and conditions. In a treaty between Cromwell and
-the States-General there was a stipulation against reprisals, “unless
-the prince whose subject shall conceive himself to have been injured
-shall first lay his complaint before the sovereign whose subject is
-supposed to have committed the tortious act, and _unless that sovereign
-shall not cause justice to be rendered to him within three months after
-his application_.”[240] This stipulation was renewed under Charles the
-Second.[241] The same principle was declared by the Grand Pensionary,
-De Witt, who, in the name of the United Provinces, protested, “that
-reprisals cannot be granted, _except in case of an open denial of
-justice_,” and “that, even in case of a denial of justice, a sovereign
-cannot empower his subjects to make reprisals, _until he has repeatedly
-demanded justice for them_.”[242] A similar rule was also declared in
-the famous letter to the King of Prussia, in the case of the Silesian
-loan, written by Murray, afterward Lord Mansfield, and much praised by
-Montesquieu and by Vattel.[243] Here it is said: “The Law of Nations,
-founded upon justice, equity, convenience, and the reason of the thing,
-and confirmed by long usage, does not allow of reprisals, except in
-case of violent injuries, directed or supported by the State, and
-justice absolutely denied, _in re minime dubia_, by all the tribunals,
-and afterwards by the prince.”[244] This is clear and strong. I might
-quote authorities without end to the same point. I content myself
-with adding the words of General Halleck, who, after saying, in his
-admirable manual, that “reprisals bring us to the awful confines of
-actual war,” proceeds to lay down the rule, that reprisals, even on
-property, can be only “where justice has been plainly denied or most
-unreasonably delayed.”[245] This rule commends itself as proper and
-just. It is your duty to apply it on the present occasion. But, in
-the face of the authorities in our own country, judges, jurists,
-publicists, and commentators, in long array, according to whom our own
-claim of allegiance is coincident with that of England,--and then,
-again, in face of the well-known and much-heralded disposition of
-foreign powers, including England, to settle this whole question by
-treaty, is it not absurd to say that here is a case for reprisals of
-any kind?
-
-In the early days reprisals were directed against persons as well as
-property. Even against property it was done with hesitation, only in
-cases free from all doubt, and after ample appeal to the sovereign for
-justice. Against persons it was done very rarely. Grotius, our greatest
-master, who brought the rules of International Law to the touchstone of
-reason, asserts that all reprisals are vindicated by custom rather than
-by Nature. His language is, that this rule “is not indeed authorized
-by Nature, but generally received by custom.”[246] Since then the
-tendency has been to a constant mitigation of this pretension, even as
-regards property. Without burdening this discussion with cases, which
-are numerous, I give a summary of Wheaton in these words: “It appears
-to be the modern rule of international usage, that property of the
-enemy found within the territory of the belligerent state, or debts due
-to his subjects by the Government or individuals, at the commencement
-of hostilities, are not liable to be seized and confiscated as prize of
-war.”[247] This rule, which is applicable to the condition of things
-on the breaking out of war, attests the care with which the modern Law
-of Nations watches the rights of individuals, and how it avoids making
-them suffer. Thus even debts are not liable to seizure. How much more
-should an innocent person be exempt from any such outrage!
-
-It is when we consider the modern rule with regard to persons, instead
-of property, that we are impressed still more by its benignity. Here I
-quote, first a British authority, and then an American. Mr. Phillimore,
-the author of the very elaborate and candid treatise on the Law of
-Nations, so full of various learning, after admitting that reprisals,
-“strictly speaking, affect the persons as well as the goods,” proceeds
-to say, that, “in modern times, however, they have been chiefly
-confined to goods”; and then adds, in words worthy of consideration
-now, that “it is to be hoped that the reprisal of persons has fallen,
-with other unnecessary and unchristian severities, into desuetude; _and
-certainly, to seize travellers, by way of reprisal, is a breach of the
-tacit faith pledged to them by the State, when they were allowed to
-enter her borders_.”[248] The same enlightened conclusion is expressed
-by Dana, in his excellent notes to Wheaton, as follows: “The right of
-making reprisals is not limited to property, but extends to persons;
-_still, the practice of modern times discountenances the arrest and
-detention of innocent persons strictly in the way of reprisal_.”[249]
-Thus do British and American publicists concur in homage to a common
-civilization.
-
-If we look at the reason of the modern rule which spares persons, we
-shall find it in two different considerations, each of controlling
-authority: first, that an innocent person cannot be seized in a foreign
-country without a violation of the Public Faith; and, secondly, that no
-private individual can be justly held responsible for the act of his
-Government. On the first head Vattel speaks as follows: “The sovereign
-who declares war can no more detain the subjects of the enemy who are
-found in his states at the time of the declaration than he can their
-effects. _They have come into his dominions on the Public Faith._ In
-permitting them to enter his territories and continue there he tacitly
-promised them full liberty and full security for their return.”[250]
-In the same sense Halleck says, “Travellers and passing guests are in
-general excepted from such liability.”[251] Here again Grotius speaks
-with the authority of a Christian lawgiver, saying that by the Law of
-Nations there can be no reprisals “on travellers or sojourners.”[252]
-The other reason was assigned by Mr. Webster, in his correspondence
-with the British Government in relation to the “Caroline.” The British
-Government having acknowledged the act of McLeod in burning this vessel
-as their act, Mr. Webster at once declared, that, after this avowal,
-the individuals engaged in it could not be held personally responsible,
-and he added words worthy of memory at this juncture: “The President
-presumes that it can hardly be necessary to say that the American
-people, not distrustful of their ability to redress public wrongs by
-public means, _cannot desire the punishment of individuals, when the
-act complained of is declared to have been an act of the Government
-itself_.”[253] Weighty words, by which our country is forever bound.
-The same principle is adopted by Halleck, in his text-book, when he
-says, “No individual is justly chargeable with the guilt of a personal
-crime for the act of the community of which he is a member.”[254] All
-these authorities furnish us the same lesson, and warn against the
-present proposition. Shall we at the same time violate the Public
-Faith and wreak a dishonorable vengeance on an innocent traveller or
-sojourner, making him the scapegoat of his country? Shall we do this
-outrage to the stranger within our gates?
-
-Another argument may be found in the extent to which reprisal on
-persons has been discarded by modern precedents. It is denounced,
-not only by authority, but also by practice. I have already said
-that the proposition to suspend commercial relations is without
-an example in history. The other proposition is without example
-since the hateful act of the first Napoleon, condemned afterward by
-himself, when, at the breaking of the short-lived Peace of Amiens, he
-seized innocent Englishmen who happened to be in France, and detained
-them as prisoners, precisely as is now proposed under the present
-bill. Among the numerous victims of this tyrannical decree was Lord
-Elgin, the father of the late Sir Frederick Bruce, on his return
-from Constantinople, where he had been ambassador. There was also an
-ingenious scholar, of feeble health, but exquisite attainments, Joseph
-Forsyth, author of one of the best books ever written on Italy.[255]
-He, too, was seized. In the preface to his admirable work his family
-have recorded the outrage. Read it, if you would know the judgment that
-awaits such a transaction. There is also another record in the pages of
-the English historian who has pictured the events of that time.
-
- “This declaration of war was immediately followed by an act as
- unnecessary as it was barbarous, and which contributed more,
- perhaps, than any other circumstance to produce that strong
- feeling of animosity against Napoleon which pervaded all
- classes of the English during the remainder of the contest. Two
- French vessels had been captured, under the English letters
- of marque, in the Bay of Audierne, and the First Consul made
- it a pretence for ordering the arrest of all the English then
- travelling in France between the ages of eighteen and sixty
- years. Under this savage decree, unprecedented in the annals
- of modern warfare, above ten thousand innocent individuals,
- who had repaired to France in pursuit of business, science, or
- amusement, on the faith of the Law of Nations, which never
- extended hostilities to persons in such circumstances, were at
- once thrown into prison, from whence great numbers of them were
- never liberated till the invasion of the Allies in 1814.”[256]
-
-Napoleon himself, at a later day, when reason resumed its sway,
-condemned the act. In his conversations at St. Helena with Las Cases,
-he said: “The greater part of these English were wealthy or noble
-persons, who were travelling for their amusement. The more novel the
-act was, _the more flagrant its injustice_, the more it answered my
-purpose.”[257] Here, then, was an admission that the act was at once
-novel and unjust. The generals that surrounded him at the time most
-reluctantly enforced it. From the Memoirs of the Duchess D’Abrantès,
-we learn how poignantly her gallant husband, Junot, took it to heart
-and protested. He was unwilling to have anything to do with such an
-infamy. Recovering at last from the stupor caused by the order, the
-brave soldier said: “My General, you know not only my attachment to
-your person, but my absolute devotion to everything which concerns
-you. It is that devotion which induces me to hesitate at obeying your
-orders, before imploring you to take a few hours to reflect on the
-measure which you have now commanded.… Demand my blood; demand my life;
-I will surrender them without hesitation; but to ask a thing which
-must cover us with---- … I am sure, that, when you come to yourself,
-and are no longer fascinated by those around you, who compel you to
-violent measures, you will be of my opinion.”[258] Every word of this
-earnest expostulation may now be justly addressed to the Senate. You,
-too, Senators, should you unhappily yield to those who now insist upon
-violent measures, will regret the surrender. You will grieve that your
-country has been permitted through you to fall from the great example
-which it owes to mankind. Save your country; save yourselves.
-
-Suppose the law is passed, and the authority conferred upon the
-President. Whom shall he seize? What innocent foreigner? What trustful
-traveller? What honored guest? It may be Mr. Dickens, or Mr. Trollope,
-or Rev. Newman Hall; or it may be some merchant here on business,
-guiltless of any wrong and under the constant safeguard of the Public
-Faith. Permit me to say, Sir, that, the moment you do this, you will
-cover the country with shame, of which the present bill will be the
-painful prelude. You will be guilty of a barbarism kindred to that of
-the Abyssinian king Theodorus. You will degrade the national name,
-and make it a byword of reproach. Sir, now is the time to arrest this
-dishonor. See to it by your votes that it is impossible forever.
-
-Sir, it is hard to treat this pretension with composure. Argument,
-denunciation, and ridicule are insufficient. It must be trampled under
-foot, so as to become a hissing and a scorn. With all the granting
-of legislation, it is solemnly proposed that good men shall suffer
-for acts in which they had no part. Innocence is no excuse against
-the present pretension. The whole attempt is out of time; it is an
-anachronism, no better than the revival of the _Prügel-knabe_, who
-was kept at the German courts of former days to receive the stripes
-which the prince had merited for his misdeeds. Surely, if anybody is
-to suffer, let it be the offending Government, or those who represent
-it and share its responsibilities, instead of private persons, who
-in no way represent their Government, and may condemn it. Seize the
-ambassador or minister. You will then audaciously violate the Law of
-Nations. The absurdity of your act will be lost in its madness. In the
-seizure which is now proposed there will be absurdity to make the world
-shake with laughter, if for a moment it can cease to see the flagrant
-cruelty and meanness of your conduct.
-
- A debate ensued, which ran into the next day, in the course of
- which Mr. Conness, of California, insisted that the striking
- out of the reprisals clause would impair the efficiency of
- the bill, and make it nothing but “air.” At the close of the
- debate, immediately before the vote on the amendment, Mr.
- Sumner summed up his objection as follows:--
-
-My objection to the text of the bill which it is proposed to strike out
-is, that it is a proposal of unutterable barbarism, which, if adopted,
-would disgrace this country.
-
- The question, being taken by yeas and nays, resulted,--Yeas 30,
- Nays 7; as follows:--
-
- YEAS,--Messrs. Anthony, Buckalew, Cattell, Chandler, Cole,
- Conkling, Corbett, Cragin, Davis, Fessenden, Harlan, Harris,
- Henderson, Howe, Kellogg, McDonald, Morgan, Morrill of Vermont,
- Osborn, Patterson of New Hampshire, Patterson of Tennessee,
- Pomeroy, Rice, Sumner, Trumbull, Van Winkle, Vickers, Willey,
- Williams, and Wilson,--30.
-
- NAYS,--Messrs. Conness, Nye, Sprague, Stewart, Thayer, Tipton,
- and Whyte,--7.
-
- For the section thus amended, Mr. Williams, of Oregon, moved a
- substitute; whereupon the debate was resumed, and Mr. Sumner
- spoke again.
-
-The amendment of the Senator, and the remarks that he has made,
-it seems to me, go on a mistaken hypothesis. They accept the idea
-that there has been some failure on the part of our Government with
-reference to citizens abroad.
-
- MR. WILSON [of Massachusetts]. Is not that true?
-
-MR. SUMNER. I think it is not true; and if time would allow now, I
-could go into the evidence and show that it is not true. I have the
-documents here. But we are entering upon this question to-night with
-an understanding, almost a compact, that there shall be no debate. I
-do not wish to break that compact. But here are documents lying on my
-table containing all the facts of record with regard to every American
-citizen who has been taken into custody abroad. Examine that record,
-and you will see how strenuous and steadfast our Government has been.
-
-Permit me to say that the argument of the Senator from Oregon [MR.
-WILLIAMS] proceeds on a misunderstanding of the facts. There is no
-occasion now for any such legislative prompting to the Government of
-the United States.
-
- MR. WILLIAMS. I should like to ask the Senator a question.
-
-MR. SUMNER. Certainly.
-
- MR. WILLIAMS. Why is it, if everything has been so smooth and
- so placid upon this subject, that both of the political parties
- of this country have seen proper to put in their platforms
- resolutions in reference to the rights of American citizens
- abroad?
-
-MR. SUMNER. I have not said that things were placid or smooth; but I
-have said that our Government has been strenuous and steadfast in the
-maintenance of the rights of American citizens, whether native-born
-or naturalized; and the record will show the truth of what I say.
-Where has there been a failure? Has it been in Germany? Read the
-correspondence, running now over several years, between the United
-States and the different powers of Germany, and see the fidelity with
-which the rights of our naturalized citizens have been maintained there.
-
-I wish to be as brief as possible. If the Senator will take the trouble
-to read the documents on the table, he will see that among all the
-numerous applications made by the United States to the Government of
-Prussia, the leading power of Germany, there is hardly an instance
-where this power did not meet us kindly and generously. I speak
-according to the record. I have been over every one of these cases; and
-I must say, as I read them I felt a new gratification in the power of
-my country, which made itself felt for the protection of its citizens
-in those distant places, and also a new sense of the comity of nations.
-A letter went forth from one of our ministers, and though at that time
-this difficult question of expatriation was still unsettled, yet, out
-of regard to our country, or out of regard, it might be, sometimes, to
-the personal character of our minister, the claim was abandoned. You
-can hardly find an instance----
-
- MR. CONNESS rose.
-
-MR. SUMNER. Will the Senator let me finish my sentence?
-
- MR. CONNESS. Certainly.
-
-MR. SUMNER. You can hardly find an instance in that voluminous
-correspondence where the claim has been persisted in on the part of
-the Prussian Government. The abstract question was left unsettled; but
-the individual was left free, without claim of allegiance or military
-service. All this was anterior to the treaty, by which this whole
-question is happily settled forever.
-
-But it is not my purpose to discuss the conduct of foreign Governments.
-My simple aim is to show the conduct of our own. That was the point
-with which I began. I said that it needed no quickening such as the
-Senator from Oregon proposes to apply. There is no evidence that our
-Government has not been persistent and earnest for the protection of
-its citizens abroad, whether native-born or naturalized, and I alluded
-to Prussia only by way of illustration. Pass that by. We have then the
-greater and more complex case of England. But I would rather not enter
-upon this. Here are the documents on my table, the passages all marked,
-which would illustrate the conduct of the British Government and the
-British tribunals toward every one of these persons whose names have
-been brought in question. I do not wish to go into this question. I
-should be misunderstood; and it is not necessary. I am speaking now of
-the conduct of our own Government, rather than of the conduct of any
-other Government. Mark, Sir, my reply to the Senator from Oregon was,
-that our Government did not need any additional power or any additional
-impulse to activity in this behalf. Already it has the power to do
-everything permitted by the Law of Nations, and it ought not to do
-anything else.
-
- Mr. Conness followed in support of the bill, and to a
- correction from Mr. Sumner retorted:--
-
- “The honorable Senator would be very quick to demand
- the interference of all the powers of this Government
- in behalf of an arrested American citizen, if he were
- black. But, Sir, those arrested happen to be of another
- color,--not a color which appeals to his sympathies, but
- a color that allows him to belittle their arrest and
- incarceration,--that enables him to say here in the Senate
- that our Government have done everything that they could
- do, all that was necessary. It is true in his judgment,
- I have no doubt; for, if you only write letters, if you
- only publish and utter productions of the brain, if you
- only present views, the honorable Senator is satisfied.
- Those are his means, except when the progress through the
- thoroughfares of the city or the country of an American
- citizen of African descent is involved. Then views are at
- once thrown to the dogs, and he demands the interference of
- the Government, the police authority; if it be a railroad
- company, repeal their acts of incorporation! No matter how
- much capital stands in the way,--it may be $10,000,000 that
- is affected,--repeal their acts at once! How dare they
- impiously set up their tyranny over one human being who is
- stamped with American citizenship?… The law as proposed to
- be passed under the direction of the honorable Chairman of
- the Committee on Foreign Relations amounts to nothing.…
- I hope, without detaining the Senate any longer, that we
- shall not add to our too great delay upon these questions
- the offence and insult that the passage of this Act would
- be as proposed by the Committee.[259]
-
- To this attack Mr. Sumner replied as follows:--
-
-I hesitate very much to say another word; and yet I think the Senate
-will pardon me, if I make a brief reply to the charge, so absolutely
-unjust, of the Senator from California. He throws upon me the reproach
-of indifference to foreigners. Sir, I deny the imputation, and
-challenge comparison on this head with any Senator on this floor. Here
-I know that I am without blame. Sir, you do not forget that more than
-ten years ago there was a storm that passed over this country which
-had a name more familiar than polite: I mean Know-nothing-ism. It was
-everywhere, and enveloped my own State. At that time I had the honor
-of holding the position which I now hold. Did I yield to this storm,
-when it was carrying all before it? Sir, at that time I went down to
-Faneuil Hall, and in the presence of one of the largest audiences
-ever there assembled, and knowing well the prevailing sentiment, I
-made a speech vindicating the rights of emigrants to our country and
-promising them welcome. I have that speech here now, and I will read a
-few sentences from it. This was on the 2d of November, 1855,--nearly
-thirteen years ago. Pardon me for reading this record of other days;
-but I am justified by the attacks to which I have been exposed. If
-any foreign-born citizen is disposed to hearken to the Senator from
-California impeaching me, I ask him to bear in mind how I stood for his
-rights at another time, when there were fewer ready to stand for them
-than now. I read from this forgotten speech, as reported at that time.
-
- Mr. Sumner read the first two paragraphs on the thirteenth page
- of the pamphlet edition.[260]
-
-Such was my argument for the rights of the foreign-born among us. To
-all of them I offered such welcome as I could:--
-
- “There are our broad lands, stretching towards the setting
- sun; let them come and take them. Ourselves children of the
- Pilgrims of a former generation, let us not turn from the
- Pilgrims of the present. Let the home founded by our emigrant
- fathers continue open in its many mansions to the emigrants of
- to-day.”[261]
-
-Sir, those were the words which I uttered in Faneuil Hall at a time
-when the opposition to foreigners was scouring over the whole country.
-Others yielded to that tempest, but I did not yield. All my votes
-in this Chamber, from the first day that I entered it down to this
-moment, have been in the same direction, and for that welcome which
-I thus early announced. Never have I missed an occasion to vote for
-their protection; never shall I miss any such occasion. I was the
-first in the Senate to announce the essential incompatibility between
-the claim of perpetual allegiance and the license of unlimited
-emigration which we had witnessed, saying that every Irishman or German
-leaving with the consent of his Government was a living witness to
-the hollowness of the original pretension. And now I am most anxious
-to see expatriation a law as well as a fact. If I do not adopt the
-expedients proposed, it is because I regard them as less calculated to
-produce the much-desired result than other means equally at hand, to
-the end that the rights of our naturalized citizens may find adequate
-safeguard everywhere. The present bill can do little good, and may
-do harm. It will not protect a single citizen; but it may be a drag
-on those pending negotiations by which the rights of all will be
-secured. Too studious of the Law of Nations, perhaps, to be willing to
-treat it with distrust or neglect, I look to that prevailing agency
-rather than to the more limited instrumentality of Municipal Law. It
-is the province of Municipal Law to determine rights at home,--how a
-foreign-born person may be naturalized in our country,--how he may be
-admitted to all the transcendent privileges of American citizenship;
-but it belongs to another system of law to determine what shall be his
-privileges, should he return to the country which gave him birth. We
-may, by our declarations, by our diplomacy, by our power, do much; but
-it is by our treaties that we shall fix all these rights in adamant.
-The Senator seems to have no higher idea than to write them in the
-fleeting passions of party. My vote will never be wanting to elevate
-them above all such fitful condition, and to place them under the
-perpetual sanction of International Law,--the only law which can bind
-two different powers. Sir, the Senator from California shall not go
-before me; he shall not be more swift than I; he shall not take one
-single step in advance of me. Be the person Irish or German or African
-or Chinese, he shall have from me the same equal protection. Can the
-Senator say as much?
-
-
-
-
-THE CHINESE EMBASSY, AND OUR RELATIONS WITH CHINA.
-
-SPEECH AT THE BANQUET BY THE CITY OF BOSTON TO THE CHINESE EMBASSY,
-AUGUST 21, 1868.
-
-
- The year 1868 was memorable for the Chinese Embassy, with
- Hon. Anson Burlingame at its head, which, arriving first at
- Washington by the way of San Francisco, negotiated a treaty
- with the United States, and then visited Europe. The abundant
- hospitality with which it was received throughout the United
- States was marked at Boston by a distinguished reception and
- entertainment on the part of the municipal authorities. August
- 20th, the Embassy was received by Hon. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff,
- Mayor, and escorted in public procession through the principal
- streets, and with the customary diplomatic salutes, to the
- Parker House, where they were lodged as the guests of the city.
- The next day at noon they were publicly received at Faneuil
- Hall, which was decorated for the occasion. In the evening
- they were entertained at a banquet at the St. James Hotel,
- where were present about two hundred and twenty-five gentlemen,
- including the City Government.
-
- The company is thus described in the official report:--
-
- “Hon. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, Mayor, presided. On his right
- were seated Hon. Anson Burlingame, Chief of the Embassy;
- His Excellency Alexander H. Bullock, Governor of the
- Commonwealth; Teh Lao-yeh, English Interpreter attached to
- the Embassy; Hon. Charles Sumner, Chairman of the Committee
- on Foreign Relations of the United States Senate; Hon.
- Caleb Cushing; Major-General Irwin McDowell, U. S. A.;
- Commodore John Rodgers, U. S. N.; Charles G. Nazro, Esq.,
- President of the Board of Trade. On the left of the Mayor
- were seated Chih Ta-jin, Associate Minister; Mr. McLeavy
- Brown, Secretary to the Embassy; Sun Ta-jin, Associate
- Minister; M. Émile Dechamps, Secretary to the Embassy; Fung
- Lao-yeh, English Interpreter; Ralph Waldo Emerson, LL.D.;
- Rev. George Putnam, D. D.; Mr. Edwin P. Whipple.
-
- “Among the other distinguished guests present were: Dr.
- Oliver Wendell Holmes; Hon. Nathaniel P. Banks, Hon.
- George S. Boutwell, and Hon. Ginery Twichell, Members
- of Congress; Rev. Thomas Hill, D. D., President of
- Harvard College; Hon. George S. Hillard, United States
- District Attorney; Hon. George O. Brastow, President of
- the Senate; Hon. Harvey Jewell, Speaker of the House
- of Representatives; Brevet Major-General H. W. Benham,
- and Brevet Major-General J. G. Foster, U. S. Engineer
- Corps; Major-General James H. Carleton, U. S. A.; Brevet
- Brigadier-General Henry H. Prince, Paymaster U. S. A.;
- Major-General James A. Cunningham, Adjutant-General;
- Hon. Henry J. Gardner, Ex-Governor of the Commonwealth;
- Hon. Josiah Quincy; Hon. Frederic W. Lincoln, Jr.; Dr.
- Peter Parker, formerly Commissioner to China; Hon. Isaac
- Livermore; Sr. Frederico Granados, Spanish Consul; Mr. G.
- M. Finotti, Italian Consul; Mr. Joseph Iasigi, Turkish
- Consul; Hon. Marshall P. Wilder, President of the Board
- of Agriculture; Rev. N. G. Clark, D. D., Secretary of
- the Board of Foreign Missions; and many of the leading
- merchants and professional men of Boston.”
-
- At the banquet speeches were made by the Mayor, Mr. Burlingame,
- Governor Bullock, Mr. Sumner, Mr. Cushing, Mr. Emerson, General
- Banks, Mr. Nazro, and Mr. Whipple.
-
- The Mayor announced as the fifth regular toast, “The
- Supplementary Treaty with China,” and called upon Mr. Sumner to
- respond. Mr. Burlingame had already said in his speech, while
- declining any elaborate exposition of the Treaty: “No, Sir,--I
- leave the exposition of that treaty to the distinguished
- Senator on my right, who was its champion in the Senate, and
- who procured for it a unanimous vote.”
-
- Mr. Sumner said:--
-
-MR. MAYOR,--I cannot speak on this interesting occasion without first
-declaring the happiness I enjoy at meeting my friend of many years in
-the exalted position he now holds. Besides this personal relation, he
-was also an honored associate in representing the good people of this
-community, and in advancing a great cause, which he championed with
-memorable eloquence and fidelity. Such are no common ties.
-
-The splendid welcome now offered by the municipal authorities of Boston
-is only a natural expression of prevailing sentiments. Here his labors
-and triumphs began. In your early applause and approving voices he
-first tasted of that honor which is now his in such ample measure. He
-is one of us, who, going forth into a strange country, has come back
-with its highest trusts and dignities. Once the representative of a
-single Congressional district, he now represents the most populous
-nation of the globe. Once the representative of little more than a
-third part of Boston, he is now the representative of more than a third
-part of the human race. The population of the globe is estimated at
-twelve hundred millions; that of China at more than four hundred and
-sometimes even at five hundred millions.
-
-If in this position there be much to excite wonder, there is still
-more for gratitude in the unparalleled opportunity it affords. What
-we all ask is opportunity. Here is opportunity on a surpassing
-scale,--employed, I am sure, to advance the best interests of the
-human family; and if these are advanced, no nation can suffer. Each
-is contained in all. With justice and generosity as the reciprocal
-rule,--and nothing else can be the aim of this great Embassy,--there
-can be no limits to the immeasurable consequences. Nor can I hesitate
-to say that concessions and privileges are of less consequence than
-that spirit of friendship and good neighborhood, embracing alike the
-distant and the near, which, once established, renders all else easy.
-
-The necessary result of the present experiment in diplomacy will be to
-make the countries it visits better known to the Chinese, and also to
-make the Chinese better known to them. Each will know the other better,
-and better comprehend that condition of mutual dependence which is
-the law of humanity. In relations among nations, as in common life,
-this is of infinite value. Thus far, I fear the Chinese are poorly
-informed with regard to us. I am sure we are poorly informed with
-regard to them. We know them through the porcelain on our tables, with
-its lawless perspective, and the tea-chest, with its unintelligible
-hieroglyphics. There are two pictures of them in the literature of
-our language, which cannot fail to leave an impression. The first is
-in “Paradise Lost,” where Milton, always learned, even in his poetry,
-represents Satan descending in his flight
-
- “on the barren plains
- Of Sericana, where _Chineses_ drive
- With sails and wind their cany wagons light.”[262]
-
-The other is in that admirable “Discourse on the Study of the Law of
-Nature and Nations,” where Sir James Mackintosh, in words of singular
-felicity, points to “the tame, but ancient and immovable civilization
-of China.”[263] It is for us at last to enlarge these pictures, and to
-fill the canvas with life.
-
-I do not know if it has occurred to our honored guest that he is not
-the first stranger who, after sojourning in this distant, unknown
-land, has come back loaded with its honors, and with messages to the
-Christian powers. He is not without a predecessor in his mission.
-There is another career as marvellous as his own. I refer to the
-Venetian Marco Polo, whose reports, once discredited as the fables
-of a traveller, are now recognized among the sources of history, and
-especially of geographical knowledge. Nobody can read them without
-feeling their verity. It was in the latter part of the far-away
-thirteenth century that this enterprising Venetian, with his father
-and uncle, all merchants, journeyed from Venice, by the way of
-Constantinople, Trebizond on the Black Sea, and Central Asia, until
-they reached first the land of Prester John, and then that golden
-country known as Cathay, where the lofty ruler, Kublaï Khan, treated
-them with gracious consideration, and employed young Polo as his
-ambassador. This was none other than China, and the lofty ruler,
-called the Grand Khan, was none other than the first of its Mongolian
-dynasty, having his imperial residence in the immense city of Kambalu,
-or Peking. After many years of illustrious service, the Venetian,
-with his companions, was dismissed with splendor and riches, charged
-with letters for European sovereigns, as our Bostonian is charged
-with similar letters now. There were letters for the Pope, the King
-of France, the King of Spain, and other Christian princes. It does
-not appear that England was expressly designated. Her name, so great
-now, was not at that time on the visiting list of the distant Emperor.
-Such are the contrasts in national life. Marco Polo reached Venice,
-on his return, in 1295, at the very time when Dante, in Florence,
-was meditating his divine poem, and Roger Bacon, in England, was
-astonishing the age with his knowledge. These were his two greatest
-contemporaries, constituting with himself the triumvirate of the
-century.
-
-The return of the Venetian to his native city was attended by incidents
-which have not occurred among us. Bronzed by long residence under the
-sun of the East, wearing the dress of a Tartar, and speaking his native
-language with difficulty, it was some time before his friends could be
-persuaded of his identity. Happily there is no question on the identity
-of our returned fellow-citizen; and surely it cannot be said that
-he speaks his native language with difficulty. A dinner was spread
-at Venice as here at Boston, and now, after the lapse of nearly six
-hundred years, the Venetian dinner still lives in glowing description.
-Marco Polo, with his companions, appeared first in long robes of
-crimson satin reaching to the floor, which, when the guests had washed
-their hands, were changed for other robes of crimson damask, and then
-again, after the first course, for other robes of crimson velvet,
-and at the conclusion of the banquet, for the ordinary dress worn by
-the rest of the company. Meanwhile the other costly garments were
-distributed among the attendants at the table. In all your magnificence
-to-night, Mr. Mayor, I have seen no such largess. Then were brought
-forward the coarse threadbare garments in which they had travelled,
-when, on ripping the lining and patches with a knife, costly jewels,
-in sparkling showers, leaped forth before the eyes of the company, who
-for a time were motionless with wonder. Then at last, says the Italian
-chronicler, every doubt was banished, and all were satisfied that these
-were the valiant and honorable gentlemen of the house of Polo. I do not
-relate this history to suggest any such operation on the dress of our
-returned fellow-citizen. No such evidence is needed to assure us of his
-identity.
-
-The success of Marco Polo is amply attested. From his habit of speaking
-of “millions” of people and “millions” of money, he was known as
-_Messer Millioni_, or the millionaire, being the earliest instance in
-history of a designation so common in our prosperous age. But better
-than “millions” was the knowledge he imparted, and the impulse he
-gave to that science which teaches the configuration of the globe and
-the place of nations on its face. His travels, dictated by him, were
-reproduced in various languages, and, after the invention of printing,
-the book was multiplied in more than fifty editions. Unquestionably
-it prepared the way for the two greatest geographical discoveries of
-modern times,--the Cape of Good Hope, by Vasco da Gama, and the New
-World, by Christopher Columbus. One of his admirers, a French _savant_,
-does not hesitate to say, that, “when, in the long series of ages,
-we seek the three men who, by the magnitude and influence of their
-discoveries, have most contributed to the progress of geography or
-the knowledge of the globe, the modest name of the Venetian traveller
-finds a place in the same line with those of Alexander the Great and
-Christopher Columbus.”[264] It is well known that the imagination of
-the Genoese navigator was fired by the revelations of the Venetian, and
-that, in his mind, the countries embraced by his transcendent discovery
-were none other than the famed Cathay, with its various dependencies.
-In his report to the Spanish sovereigns, Cuba was nothing else than
-Zipangu, or Japan, as described by the Venetian, and he thought himself
-near a Grand Khan,--meaning, as he says, a king of kings. Columbus
-was mistaken. He had not reached Cathay or the Grand Khan; but he had
-discovered a new world, destined in the history of civilization to be
-more than Cathay, and, in the lapse of time, to welcome the Ambassador
-of the Grand Khan.
-
-The Venetian, returning home, journeyed out of the East, westward; our
-Marco Polo, returning home, journeyed out of the West, eastward. And
-yet they both came from the same region: their common starting-point
-was Peking. This change is typical of the surpassing revolution under
-whose influence the Orient will become the Occident. Journeying
-westward, the first welcome is from the nations of Europe; journeying
-eastward, the first welcome is from our Republic. It remains that this
-welcome should be extended, until, opening a pathway for the mightiest
-commerce of the world, it embraces within the sphere of American
-activity that ancient ancestral empire, where population, industry, and
-education, on an unprecedented scale, create resources and necessities
-on an unprecedented scale also. See to it, merchants of the United
-States, and you, merchants of Boston, that this opportunity is not lost.
-
-And this brings me, Mr. Mayor, to the Treaty, which you invited me
-to discuss. But I will not now enter upon this topic. If you did not
-call me to order for speaking too long, I fear I should be called
-to order in another place for undertaking to speak of a treaty not
-yet proclaimed by the President. One remark I will make, and take
-the consequences. The Treaty does not propose much; but it is an
-excellent beginning, and, I trust, through the good offices of our
-fellow-citizen, the honored plenipotentiary, will unlock those great
-Chinese gates which have been bolted and barred for long centuries.
-The Embassy is more than the Treaty, because it prepares the way for
-further intercourse, and helps that new order of things which is among
-the promises of the Future.
-
- Mr. Burlingame’s sudden death, at St. Petersburg, February 23,
- 1870, arrested the remarkable career he had begun, leaving
- uncertain what he might have accomplished for China with
- European powers, and also uncertain the possible influence he
- might have exercised with the great nation he represented, in
- opening its avenues of approach, and bringing it within the
- sphere of Western civilization.
-
-
-
-
-THE REBEL PARTY.
-
-SPEECH AT THE FLAG-RAISING OF THE GRANT AND COLFAX CLUB, IN WARD SIX,
-BOSTON, ON THE EVENING OF SEPTEMBER 14, 1868.
-
-
-I find a special motive for being here to-night in the circumstance
-that this is the ward where I was born and have always voted, and where
-I expect to vote at the coming election. Here I voted twice for Abraham
-Lincoln, and here I expect to vote for Grant and Colfax. According
-to familiar phrase, this is my ward. This, also, is my Congressional
-District. Though representing the Commonwealth in the Senate, I am
-not without a representative in the other House. Your Congressional
-representative is my representative. Therefore I confess a peculiar
-interest in this ward and this district.
-
-In hanging out the national flag at the beginning of the campaign,
-you follow the usage of other times; but to my mind it is peculiarly
-appropriate at the present election. The national flag is the emblem
-of loyalty, and the very question on which you are to vote in the
-present election is whether loyalty or rebellion shall prevail. It is
-whether the national flag shall wave gloriously over a united people
-in the peaceful enjoyment of Equal Rights for All, or whether it shall
-be dishonored by traitors. This is the question. Under all forms of
-statement or all resolutions, it comes back to this. As during the war
-all of you voted for the national flag, while some carried it forward
-in the face of peril, so now all of you must vote for it, and be ready
-to carry it forward again, if need be, in the face of peril.
-
-As loyalty is the distinctive characteristic of our party, so is
-disloyalty the distinctive characteristic of the opposition. I would
-not use too strong language, or go beyond the strictest warrant of
-facts; but I am obliged to say that we cannot recognize the opposition
-at this time as anything else but the Rebel Party in disguise, or the
-Rebel Party under the _alias_ of Democracy. The Rebels have taken the
-name of Democrats, and with this historic name hope to deceive people
-into their support. But, whatever name they adopt, they are the same
-Rebels who, after defeat on many bloody fields, at last surrendered to
-General Grant, and, by the blessing of God and the exertions of the
-good people, will surrender to him again.
-
-I am unwilling to call such a party democratic. It is not so in any
-sense. It is not so according to the natural meaning of the term, for
-a Democrat is a friend of popular rights; nor is it so according to
-the examples of our history, for all these disown the policy of the
-opposition. Thomas Jefferson was an original Democrat; but he drew with
-his own hand the Declaration of Independence, which announces that
-all men are equal in rights, and that just government stands only on
-the consent of the governed. Andrew Jackson was another Democrat; but
-he put down South Carolina treason with a strong hand, and gave the
-famous toast, “The Union, it must be preserved.” These were Democrats,
-representative Democrats, boldly announcing the Equal Rights of All
-and the Unity of the Nation. Thus looking at the word, in its natural
-bearing or in the great examples of our history, we find it entirely
-inapplicable to a party which denies equal rights and palters with
-Rebellion itself. Such a party is the Rebel Party, and nothing else;
-and this is the name by which it should be known.
-
-Look at the history of their leaders,--Rebels all, Rebels all. I
-mention those only who take an active part. A party, like a man, is
-known by the company it keeps. What a company! Here is Forrest, with
-the blood of Fort Pillow still dripping from his hands; Semmes, fresh
-from the Alabama, glorying in his piracies on our commerce; Wade
-Hampton, the South Carolina slave-master and cavalry officer of the
-Rebellion; Beauregard, the Rebel general, who telegraphed for the
-execution of Abolition prisoners; Stephens, Toombs, and Cobb, a Georgia
-triumvirate of Rebels; and at the head of this troop is none other than
-Horatio Seymour of New York, who, without actually enlisting in the
-Rebellion, dallied with it, and addressed its fiendish representatives
-in New York as “friends.” A party with such leaders and such a chief is
-the Rebel Party.
-
-Such a party, so filled and permeated with treason, cannot utter any
-shibboleth of loyalty. Every loyal word must stick in its throat, as
-“Amen” stuck in the throat of Macbeth, after the murder of his royal
-guest. Therefore, I say again, let it be called the Rebel Party. This
-is a truthful designation, stamping upon the party its real character.
-By this name I now summon it to judgment. If I could make my voice
-heard over the Republic, it should carry everywhere this just summons.
-It should go forth from this schoolhouse, traversing the land, echoing
-from valley to valley, from village to village, from town to town, and
-warning all who love their country against a party which is nothing but
-a continuation of the Rebellion. How can such a party pretend to hang
-out the national flag? I do not wonder that its Presidential candidate
-has cried out in his distress, “Press the financial question!” Yes,
-press anything to make the country forget the disloyalty of the
-party,--anything to divert attention from the national flag, which they
-would dishonor. But on the financial question, as everywhere else, they
-are disloyal. Repudiation is disloyalty, early taught by Jefferson
-Davis in his own State, and now adopted by the Rebel Party, North and
-South.
-
-Here I come back to the point with which I began. Hang out the national
-flag! It is the flag of our country, our whole country, beaming
-with all its inseparable stars, and proclaiming in all its folds
-the strength, the glory, and the beauty of Union. Let that flag be
-the light to your footsteps. _By this conquer!_ And surely you will
-conquer. The people are not ready to join with Rebels or submit to
-Rebel yoke. They will stand by the flag at the ballot-box, as they
-stood by it on the bloody field. History has recorded the triumphant
-election of Abraham Lincoln, as the representative of Loyalty against
-Rebellion. Thank God, it will soon make the same joyful record with
-regard to Grant and Colfax, the present representatives of Loyalty
-against Rebellion.
-
-Every man must do his duty, each in his way, according to his
-ability,--some by voice, and others by efforts of a different kind,
-but all must work and vote. The cause is that of our country and its
-transcendent future, pictured in the flag. And permit me to remind you
-that our Congressional District has obligations it cannot forget. It
-must be true to itself and to its own example. At the last Presidential
-election there was a report, which travelled all the way to Washington,
-that ours was a doubtful district. On the evening of the election,
-as soon as the result was known, I had the happiness of telegraphing
-to the President that in this district the majority was some five
-thousand for himself and Mr. Hooper. It so happened that it was the
-first despatch received from any quarter announcing the triumph of that
-great day. On reading it, the President remarked, with his humorous
-point: “Five thousand majority! If this is a specimen of the doubtful
-districts, what may we expect of the whole country?” This victory must
-be repeated. There must be another five thousand majority; and let
-General Grant, like Abraham Lincoln, measure from our majority the
-majorities throughout the country, giving assurance that the Rebel
-Party is defeated and utterly routed in its last desperate struggle.
-This is Beacon Hill, the highest point of Boston, where in early days
-were lighted the beacon fires which flashed over the country. The fires
-which we light on Beacon Hill will be of congratulation and joy.
-
-
-
-
-ENFRANCHISEMENT IN MISSOURI: WHY WAIT?
-
-LETTER TO A CITIZEN OF ST. LOUIS, OCTOBER 3, 1868.
-
-
- The following letter appeared in the _St. Louis Democrat_.
-
- BOSTON, October 3, 1868.
-
- DEAR SIR,--I am pained to learn that there can be any question
- among good Republicans with regard to the enfranchisement of
- the colored race, especially as declared in the Constitutional
- Amendment now pending in Missouri. When shall this great question
- be settled, if not now? Why wait? Why prolong the agony? There is
- only one way in which it can be settled. Why not at once? All who
- vote against it only vote to continue the agitation, which will
- never end except with the establishment of the Equal Rights of
- All.
-
- Only in this way can the Declaration of Independence be
- vindicated in its self-evident truths. As long as men are
- excluded from the suffrage on account of color, it is gross
- impudence for any nation to say that they are equal in rights. Of
- course, men are not equal in strength, size, or other endowments,
- physical or mental; but they are equal in rights, which is what
- our fathers declared. They are equal before God, equal before the
- divine law; they should be made equal before human law. Equality
- before the Law is the true rule.
-
- How can any possible evil result from a rule which is so natural
- and just? There can be no conflict of races where there is no
- denial of rights. It is only when rights are denied that conflict
- begins. See to it that all are treated with justice, and there
- will be that peace which is the aspiration of good men. For the
- sake of peace I pray that this great opportunity be not lost.
-
- I hear a strange cry about the supremacy of one race over
- another. Of course I am against this with my whole heart and
- soul. I was against it when it showed itself in the terrible
- pretensions of the slave-master; and now I am against it, as it
- shows itself in the most shameful oligarchy of which history
- has made mention,--an oligarchy of the skin. Reason, humanity,
- religion, and common sense, all reject the wretched thing. Even
- if the whites are afraid that the blacks will become an oligarchy
- and rule their former masters, this is no reason for a continued
- denial of rights. But this inquietude on account of what is
- nicknamed “negro supremacy” is as amusing as it is incredible.
- It is one of the curiosities of history. Occupied as I am at
- this moment, I should be tempted to put aside all other things
- and journey to the Mississippi in order to look at a company of
- whites who will openly avow their fear of “negro supremacy.” I
- should like to see their pallid faces, and hear the confession
- from their own trembling lips. Such a company of whites would be
- a sight to behold. Falstaff’s sorry troops were nothing to them.
-
- Such foolish fears and foolish arguments cannot prevail against
- the great cause of Equal Rights. Spite of all obstacles and all
- prejudices, this truth must triumph. Was it not declared by our
- fathers? What they declared is a promise perpetually binding on
- us, their children.
-
- Accept my best wishes, and believe me, dear Sir, faithfully yours,
-
- CHARLES SUMNER.
-
-
-
-
-ISSUES AT THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION.
-
-SPEECH AT THE CITY HALL, CAMBRIDGE, OCTOBER 29, 1868.
-
-
- At the Republican State Convention, held at Worcester,
- September 9, 1868, of which Hon. George S. Boutwell was
- President, the following was the last resolution of the
- platform, which was unanimously adopted:--
-
- “That the public life of the Honorable Charles Sumner,
- during three terms of service in the Senate of the United
- States, has fully justified the confidence which has been
- successively reposed in him; that his eloquent, fearless,
- and persistent devotion to the sacred cause of Human
- Rights, as well in its early struggles as in its later
- triumphs,--his beneficent efforts, after the abolition of
- Slavery, in extirpating all the incidents thereof,--his
- constant solicitude for the material interests of the
- country,--his diligence and success, as Chairman of the
- Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, in vindicating the
- policy of maintaining the just rights of the Government
- against foreign powers, and at the same time preserving
- peace with the nations,--all present a public record
- of rare usefulness and honor; and that his fidelity,
- experience, and honorable identification with our national
- history call for his reëlection to the high office in which
- he has rendered such illustrious service to his country and
- to mankind.”
-
- The report of the _Boston Daily Advertiser_ stated that
- “the reading of the resolutions was accompanied by repeated
- applause,--the last one, relating to Mr. Sumner, calling forth
- a perfect tempest of approval.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- January 19, 1869, Mr. Sumner was reëlected Senator for the
- term of six years, beginning with March 4th following, by the
- concurrent vote of the two Houses of the Legislature. The vote
- was as follows:--
-
- _In the Senate._
-
- Charles Sumner, 37
- Josiah G. Abbott, 2
-
- _In the House._
-
- Charles Sumner, 216
- Josiah G. Abbott, 15
- Nathaniel P. Banks, 1
-
-
-SPEECH.
-
-FELLOW-CITIZENS,--If I have taken little part in the present canvass,
-you will do me the justice to believe that it is from no failure of
-interest in the cause for which I have so often pleaded; nor is it from
-any lukewarmness to the candidates. The cause is nothing less than our
-country redeemed from peril and dedicated to Human Rights, so as to
-become an example to mankind. The candidates are illustrious citizens,
-always loyal to this great cause, both of surpassing merit, and one
-of unequalled renown in the suppression of the Rebellion. In this
-simple statement I open the whole case. The cause would commend any
-candidates, and I might almost add that the candidates would commend
-any cause.
-
-It is only in deference to my good physician that I have thus far
-forborne those customary efforts to which I was so strongly prompted;
-and now I speak in fear of offending against his rules. But I am
-unwilling that this contest shall close without my testimony, such as
-it is, and without mingling my voice with that general acclaim which is
-filling the land.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Indulge me still further while for a moment I allude to myself. The
-Republican State Convention has by formal resolution presented me
-for reëlection to the Senate, so that this question enters into
-the larger canvass. Meeting my fellow-citizens now, it would not
-be out of order, I believe, nor should I depart from any of the
-proprieties of my position, if I proceeded to give you an account of
-my stewardship during the term of service about to expire. But when
-I consider that this extends over six busy years, beginning while
-the Rebellion still raged and continuing through all the anxious
-period of Reconstruction,--that it embraces nothing less than the
-Abolition of Slavery, and all the steps by which this transcendent
-measure was promoted and consummated, also the various efforts for the
-establishment of Equal Rights, especially in the court-room and at the
-ballot-box, thus helping the fulfilment of the promises originally
-made in the Declaration of Independence,--that it embraces, besides,
-all the infinite questions of taxation, finance, railroads, business
-and foreign relations, including many important treaties, among which
-was that for the acquisition of the Russian possessions in North
-America,--and considering, further, how these transactions belong to
-the history of our country, where they are already read, I content
-myself with remarking that in all of them I have borne a part, I trust
-not unworthy of the honored Commonwealth whose representative I am; and
-here I invite your scrutiny and candid judgment.
-
-Possibly some of the frequent criticism to which I have been exposed is
-already dulled by time or answered by events. A venerable statesman,
-eminent in the profession, once rebuked me for the term _Equality
-before the Law_, which I had taken from the French, as expressing more
-precisely than the Declaration of Independence that equality in rights
-which is all that constitutions or laws can secure. My learned critic
-had never met this term in the Common Law, or in the English language,
-and therefore he did not like the innovation. In the same spirit other
-efforts have been encountered, often with virulence, especially those
-two fundamentals of Reconstruction,--first, the power of Congress over
-the Rebel States, whether as territories, or provinces, or as States
-having no republican government, or, according to the language of
-President Lincoln, “out of their proper practical relation with the
-Union,”[265] and, secondly, the necessity of lifting the freedman into
-Equal Rights, civil and political, so as to make him a part of the body
-politic. Who can forget the clamor at these two propositions? All this
-has happily ceased, except as an echo from Rebels and their allies,
-whose leading part is a protest against the power of Congress and the
-equal rights of the freedman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Though formal criticism has tardily died out, there is sometimes a
-warning against men of “one idea,” with a finger-point at myself. Here
-I meet my accuser face to face. What duty have I failed to perform? Let
-it be specified. What interest have I neglected? Has it been finance?
-The “Globe” will show my earnest and elaborate effort at the beginning
-of the war, warning against an inconvertible currency, and a similar
-effort made recently to secure the return to specie payments. Has it
-been taxation, or commerce, or railroads, or business in any of its
-forms, or foreign relations, with which, as Chairman of the Senate
-Committee on this subject, I have been particularly connected? On all
-of these I refer to the record. What, then, have I neglected? It is
-true, that, while bearing these things in mind and neglecting none,
-I felt it a supreme duty to warn my country against the perils from
-Slavery, and to insist upon irreversible guaranties for the security of
-all, especially those freedmen whom we could not consent to sacrifice
-without the most shameful ingratitude. As the urgency was great, I
-also was urgent. In season and out of season, at all times, in all
-places, here at home and in the Senate, I insisted upon the abolition
-of Slavery, and the completion of this great work by the removal of its
-whole brood of inequalities, so that it should not reappear in another
-form. But my earnestness and constancy only imperfectly represented
-the cause. There could be no excess,--nothing too strong. The Republic
-was menaced; where was the limit to patriotic duty? Human Rights were
-in jeopardy; who that had a heart to feel could be indifferent? Nobody
-could do too much. This was not possible. No wisdom too great, no voice
-too eloquent, no courage too persevering. Of course, I claim no merit
-for effort in this behalf; but I appeal to you, my fellow-citizens,
-that the time for reproach on this account is past. We must be
-“practical,” says the critic. Very well. Here we agree. But, pray, who
-has been “practical”? Is it those laggards, who, after clinging to
-Slavery, then denied the power of Congress, and next scouted the equal
-rights of the freedman? Permit me to say that the “practical” statesman
-foresees the future and provides for it.
-
-Whoever does anything with his whole heart makes it for the time his
-“one idea.” Every discoverer, every inventor, every poet, every artist,
-every orator, every general, every statesman, is absorbed in his work;
-and he succeeds just in proportion as for the time it becomes his
-“one idea.” The occasion must not be unworthy or petty; but the more
-complete the self-dedication, the more effective is the result. I know
-no better instance of “one idea” pursued to a triumphant end than when
-our candidate, after planning his campaign, announced that he meant “to
-fight it out on this line, if it took all summer.” Here was no occasion
-for reproach, except from Rebels, who would have been glad to see him
-fail in that singleness of idea which gave him the victory. There are
-other places where the same singleness is needed and the idea is not
-less lofty. The Senate Chamber has its battles also; and the conflict
-embraces the whole country. Personally, I have nothing to regret,
-except my own inadequacy. I would have done more, if I could. Call it
-“one idea.” That idea is nothing less than country, with all that is
-contained in that inspiring word, and with the infinite vista of the
-same blessings for all mankind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-From these allusions, suggested by my own personal relations, I come
-directly to the issues of this canvass. Others have presented them so
-fully that there is less need of any minute exposition on my part, even
-if the heralds of triumph did not announce the certain result. But you
-will bear with me while I state briefly what is to be decided. This may
-be seen in general or in detail.
-
-Speaking generally, you are to decide on the means for the final
-suppression of the Rebellion, and the establishment of security for
-the future. Shall the Rebellion which you have subdued on the bloody
-field be permitted to assert its power again, or shall it be trampled
-out, so that its infamous pretensions shall disappear forever? These
-general questions involve the whole issue. If you sympathize with the
-Rebellion, or decline to take security against its recurrence, then
-vote for Seymour and Blair. I need not add, that, if you are in earnest
-against the Rebellion, and seek just safeguards for the Republic, then
-vote for Grant and Colfax. The case is too plain for argument.
-
-It may be put more precisely still: _Shall the men who saved the
-Republic continue to rule it, or shall it be handed over to Rebels and
-their allies?_ Such is the simple issue, stripped of all hypocritical
-guise; for here, as in other days, the real question is concealed by
-the enemy. The plausible terms of Law and Constitution, with even the
-pretence of generosity, now employed to rehabilitate the Rebellion, are
-unmasked by the witty touch of “Hudibras,” whose words are as pointed
-now as under Charles the Second:--
-
- “What’s liberty of conscience,
- I’ th’ natural and genuine sense?
- ’Tis to restore, with more security,
- Rebellion to its ancient purity.”[266]
-
-On the one side are loyal multitudes, and the generous freedmen
-who bared themselves to danger as our allies, with Grant still at
-their head; and on the other are Rebels, under the name of the
-Democratic Party, all dripping with blood from innumerable fields of
-slaughter where loyal men gasped away life,--from Fort Pillow, from
-Andersonville, from pirate decks,--hurrying, with Seymour at their
-head, to govern the Republic in the name of the Lost Cause. Not so
-fast, ye men of blood! Stand back! They who encountered you before will
-encounter you again.
-
-I would not make this statement too strong. I wish to keep within
-bounds. But the facts are too patent to admit of doubt. Yes, it is the
-old Democracy, which, after giving to the Rebellion its denationalizing
-pretension of State Rights, and all its wicked leaders, from Davis to
-Forrest and Semmes,--after thwarting every measure for its suppression
-as “unconstitutional,” from the Proclamation of Emancipation to
-the firing of a gun or the condemnation of Vallandigham,--after
-interfering with enlistments also as “unconstitutional,”--after
-provoking sympathetic riots,--after holding up “blue lights” for
-the guidance of the enemy,--after hanging upon the country like a
-paralysis,--and after, finally, under the lead of Seymour, declaring
-the war a “failure,”--this same Democracy, still under the lead of
-Seymour, champions the Lost Cause. Under the pretence of restoring
-Rebels to rights, it seeks to restore them to power; and this is the
-very question on which you are to vote. The Tories at the end of
-the Revolution were more moderate. They did not insist upon instant
-restoration to rights forfeited by treason; nor did they bring forward
-a candidate against Washington. This is reserved for the Tories of our
-day.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All this is general. Descending to details, we find that the issue now
-presented reappears in other questions. Of these none is more important
-than that of the Reconstruction Acts, which have been openly assailed
-as “unconstitutional, revolutionary, and void.”[267] In nothing more
-than in this declaration, associated with the letter of its candidate,
-do we behold the audacity of the Rebel Party. Even while professing
-allegiance and asking your vote, they proclaim war in a new form.
-Instead of _Secession_ maintained by arms, it is now _Nullification_
-maintained by arms. In no other way can we interpret the party
-platform, and the programme of Mr. Blair, when, with customary
-frankness, he calls upon the President “to declare these Acts null
-and void, compel the army to undo its usurpations at the South, and
-disperse the carpet-bag State governments.”[268] Here is Nullification
-with a vengeance,--that very Nullification which, in a much milder
-type, made Andrew Jackson threaten to hang its authors high as Haman.
-Secession is declared to be settled by the war; but Nullification is
-openly recognized. What is the difference between the two? The answer
-is plain. Secession is war out of the Union; Nullification is war in
-the Union. And this is the open menace of the Rebel Party.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Reconstruction Acts err from what they fail to do rather than from
-what they do. They do too little rather than too much. They should have
-secured a piece of land to the landless freedman, whose unrewarded toil
-has mingled for generations in the soil; and they should have secured
-a system of common schools open to all. In these demands, as in every
-other measure of Reconstruction, I would do nothing in severity or
-triumph, nothing to punish or humble. Nor is it only in justice to the
-freedman, who has a bill against his former master for unpaid wages,
-and also against the country for an infinite debt, but it is for the
-good of all constituting the community, including the former master.
-Nothing can be truer than that under such influences society will be
-improved, character will be elevated, and the general resources will be
-enlarged. Only in this way will the Barbarism of Slavery be banished,
-and a true civilization organized in its place. Our simple object is
-expressed in the words of Holy Writ: “Let us build these cities, and
-make about them walls and towers, gates and bars, while the land is
-yet before us.”[269] By contributing to this work, by laboring for its
-accomplishment, by sending it our God-speed, we perform a service at
-once of the highest charity and the highest patriotism, which hereafter
-the children of the South, emancipated from error, will rejoice to
-recognize. With Human Rights under a permanent safeguard, there can
-be no limit to prosperity. As under this sunshine the land yields
-its increase and the gardens bloom with beauty, while commerce and
-manufactures enjoy a new life, they will confess that we did well for
-them, and will hail with pride the increased glory of the Republic. If,
-as in ancient Rome, we demanded the heads of senators and orators,--if,
-as in England, we took the life and estate of all traitors,--if, as in
-Germany, we fatigued the sword with slaughter, and cried “havoc,”--if,
-as in France, we set up guillotines, and worked them until the blood
-stood in puddles beneath,--if, as in all these historic countries, we
-acted in pitiless vengeance,--if in anything we have done or attempted
-there was one deed of vengeance,--then we, too, might deserve a
-chastening censure. But all that we have done, next after the safety
-of the Republic, is for the good of those who were our enemies, and
-who despitefully used us. Never before was clemency so sublime; never
-before was a rebel people surrounded by beneficence so comprehensive.
-Great as was the Republic in arms, it is greater still in the majesty
-of its charity.
-
-So far as the Reconstruction Acts have been assailed, I am ready to
-defend them against all comers. And I repel at the outset every charge
-or suggestion of harshness. They are not harsh, unless it is harsh to
-give every man his due. If they are harsh, then is beneficence harsh,
-then is charity harsh. It is only by outraging every principle of
-justice, stifling every sympathy with Human Rights, and discarding
-common sense, and, still further, by forgetting all the sacred
-obligations of country, that we can submit to see political power in
-the hands of Rebels. No judgment is too terrible for us, if we consent
-to the sacrifice. For the sake of the freedman, for the sake of his
-former master, for the sake of all, and for the sake of the Republic,
-this must not be. Therefore were the Reconstruction Acts adopted by
-immense majorities in both Houses of Congress as the guaranty of peace.
-The aspiration of our candidate was in every line and word, “Let us
-have peace.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two questions are presented by the enemies of these Acts: first, on the
-Power of Congress; and, secondly, on the Equal Rights of the Freedman.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Too often have I asserted the plenary power of Congress with arguments
-that have never been answered, to feel it necessary now to occupy
-time on this head. The case may be proved in so many ways that it is
-difficult to know which to select. Whether the power is derived from
-the necessity of the case, because the Rebel States were without
-governments, which is the reason assigned by Chief Justice Marshall
-for the jurisdiction of Congress over the Territories,--or from the
-universal rights of war, following the subjection of belligerents
-on land,--or from the obligation of the United States to guaranty
-a republican government to each State,--or from the Constitutional
-Amendment abolishing Slavery, with its supplementary clause conferring
-upon Congress power to enforce this abolition,--whether the power is
-derived from one or all of these bountiful sources, it is clear that it
-exists. As well say that the power over the Territories, the war power,
-the guaranty power, and the power to enforce the abolition of Slavery,
-do not exist; as well say that the Constitution itself does not exist.
-
-If any confirmation of this irresistible conclusion were needed, it
-might be found in the practical admissions of Andrew Johnson, who,
-while perversely usurping the power of Reconstruction, did it in the
-name of the Nation. In the prosecution of this usurpation, he summoned
-conventions of delegates made eligible by his proclamation, and chosen
-by electors invested by him with the right of suffrage; and through
-these conventions, to which he gave the law by telegraphic wire,
-he assumed to institute local governments. Thus has Andrew Johnson
-testified to the power of the Nation over Reconstruction, while, with
-an absurdity of pretension which history will condemn even more than
-any contemporary judgment, he assumed that he was the Nation. His
-usurpation has been overthrown, but his testimony to the power of the
-Nation remains. When the Nation speaks, it is by Congress,--as the
-Roman Republic spoke by its Senate and people, _Senatus Populusque
-Romanus_, in whose name went forth those great decrees which ruled the
-world.
-
-In considering the constitutionality of the Reconstruction Acts,
-there is a distinction, recognized by repeated judgments of the
-Supreme Court, which has not been sufficiently regarded, even by our
-friends. The Rebel Party, especially in their platform at New York,
-forget it entirely. They tell us that the Reconstruction Acts are
-“unconstitutional, revolutionary, and void,” and Wade Hampton boasts
-that he prompted this declaration. I have already exhibited the
-power of Congress in four different sources; but beyond these is the
-principle, _that Congress, in the exercise of political powers, cannot
-be questioned_. So says the Supreme Court. Thus it has been decided,
-in general terms, “that the action of _the political branches_ of the
-Government in a matter that belongs to them is conclusive.”[270] And
-in the famous case of _Luther_ v. _Borden_, it is announced, that,
-where the National Government interferes with the domestic concerns
-of a State, “the Constitution of the United States, as far as it has
-provided for an emergency of this kind, _has treated the subject as
-political in its nature, and placed the power in the hands of that
-department_”; and it is further added, that “its decision is binding
-on every other department of Government, and could not be questioned
-in a judicial tribunal.”[271] In the face of these peremptory words,
-it is difficult to see what headway can be made in contesting the
-validity of the Reconstruction Acts, except by arms. If ever a question
-was political, it is this. It is political in every aspect, whether
-regarded as springing from the necessity of the case, from the rights
-of war, from the obligation to guaranty a republican government, or
-from the power to enforce the abolition of Slavery. Never before was
-any question presented so completely political. Reconstruction is as
-political as the war, or as any of the means for its conduct. It is
-political from beginning to end. It is nothing, if not political.
-Therefore, by unassailable precedents under the Constitution, are these
-Acts fixed and secured so that no court can touch them,--nothing but
-the war which Mr. Blair has menaced.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Equal Rights conferred upon the freedman are all placed under
-this safeguard. Congress has done this great act of justice, and,
-thank God, it cannot be undone. It has already taken its place in the
-immortal covenants of history, and become a part of the harmonies of
-the universe. As well attempt to undo the Declaration of Independence,
-or suspend the law of gravitation. This cannot be. The bloody horrors
-of San Domingo, where France undertook to cancel Emancipation, testify
-with a voice of wail that a race once lifted from Slavery cannot be
-again degraded. Human Rights, when at last obtained, cannot be wrested
-back without a conflict in which God will rage against the oppressor.
-
-But I do not content myself with showing the essential stability of
-this measure of Reconstruction. I defend it in all respects,--not
-only as an act of essential justice, without which our Nation would
-be a deformity, but as an irresistible necessity, for the sake of
-that security without which peace is impossible. It is enough that
-justice commanded it; but the public exigency left no opportunity
-for any fine-spun system, with educational or pecuniary conditions,
-even if this were consistent with the fundamental principle that “all
-just government stands only on the consent of the governed.” As the
-strong arms of this despised race had been needed for the safety of
-the Republic, so were their votes needed now. The cause was the same.
-Without them loyal governments would fail. They could not be organized.
-To enfranchise those only who could read and write or pay a certain
-tax was not enough. They were too few. All the loyal are needed at the
-ballot-box to counterbalance the disloyal.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was at this time, and under this pressure, that conditions,
-educational or pecuniary, were seen to be inadmissible; and many,
-considering the question in the light of principle, were led to ask,
-if, under any circumstances, such conditions are just. Surely an
-unlettered Unionist is better than a Rebel, however learned or wise,
-and on all practical questions will vote more nearly right. If there
-is to be exclusion, let it be of the disloyal, and not of the loyal.
-Nobody can place the value of education too high; but is it just
-to make it the prerequisite to any right of citizenship? There are
-many, whose only school has been the rough world, in whom character
-is developed to a rare degree. There are freedmen unable to read or
-write who are excellent in all respects. If willing to reject such
-persons as allies, can you justly exclude them from participation in
-the Government? Can you justly exclude any good citizen from such
-participation?
-
-It is recorded of the English statesman, Charles James Fox, that, after
-voting at a contested election, and finding his coachman, who had
-driven him to the polls, voting the other way, he protested pleasantly
-that the coachman should have told him in advance how he was to
-vote, that the two might have paired off and stayed at home. Here is
-Fox at the polls neutralized by his coachman. A similar incident is
-told of Judge Story, here in Cambridge. Both stories have been used
-to discredit suffrage by the people. They have not this effect on
-my mind. On the contrary, I find in them a beautiful illustration
-of that Equality before the Law which is the promise of republican
-institutions. At the ballot-box the humblest citizen is the equal of
-the great statesman or the great judge. If this seems unreasonable, it
-must not be forgotten that the eminent citizen exercises an influence
-which is not confined to his vote. It extends with his fame or
-position, so that, though he has only a single vote, there are many,
-perhaps multitudes, swayed by his example. This is the sufficient
-compensation for talent and education exerted for the public weal,
-without denying to anybody his vote. The common man may counterbalance
-the vote of the great statesman or great judge, but he cannot
-counterbalance this influence. The common man has nothing but his vote.
-Who would rob him of this?
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus far I have shown the Reconstruction Acts to be constitutional,
-natural, and valid, in contradiction to the Rebel platform, asserting
-them to be “unconstitutional, revolutionary, and void.” But these Acts
-may be seen in other aspects. I have shown what they accomplish. See
-now what they prevent; and here is another series of questions, every
-one of which is an issue on which you are to vote.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Are you ready for the revival of Slavery? I put this question plainly;
-for this is involved in the irreversibility of the Reconstruction
-Acts. Let these be overthrown or abandoned, and I know no adequate
-safeguard against an outrageous oppression of the freedman, which
-will be Slavery under another name. The original type, as received
-from Africa and perpetuated here, might not appear; but this is not
-the only form of the hateful wrong. Not to speak of peonage, as it
-existed in Mexico, there is a denial of rights, with exclusion from
-all participation in the Government and subjection to oppressive
-restraints, which of itself is a most direful slavery, under which the
-wretched bondman smarts as beneath the lash. And such a slavery has
-been deliberately planned by the Rebels. It would be organized, if
-they again had power. Of this there can be no doubt. The evidence is
-explicit and authentic.
-
-I have here a Congressional document, containing the cruel legislation
-of the Rebel States immediately after the close of the Rebellion,
-under the inspiration of the Johnson governments.[272] Here are its
-diabolical statutes, fashioned in the spirit of Slavery, with all that
-heartlessness which gave to Slavery its distinctive character. The
-emancipated African, shut out from all participation in the Government,
-despoiled of the ballot, was enmeshed in a web of laws which left him
-no better than a fly in the toils of a spider. If he moved away from
-his place of work, he was caught as a “vagrant”; if he sought work
-as a mechanic or by the job, he was constrained by the requirement
-of a “license”; if he complained of a white man, he was subjected to
-the most cunning impediments; if he bought arms for self-defence, he
-was a violator of law;--and thus, wherever he went, or whatever he
-attempted, he was a perpetual victim. In Mississippi he could not
-“rent or lease any lands or tenements except in incorporated towns or
-cities,” thus keeping him a serf attached to the soil of his master.
-Looking at these provisions critically, it appears, that, while
-pretending to regulate vagrants, apprentices, licenses, and civil
-rights, the freedman was degraded to the most abject condition; and
-then, under a pretence for the public peace, he was shut out from
-opportunities of knowledge, and also from keeping arms, while he was
-subjected to odious and exceptional punishments, as the pillory, the
-stocks, the whipping-post, and sale for fine and costs. Behind all
-these was violence, assassination, murder, with the Ku-Klux-Klan
-constituting the lawless police of this new system. The whole picture
-is too horrible; but it is true as horrible. In the face of this
-unanswerable evidence, who will say that it was not proposed to revive
-Slavery? To call such a condition Liberty is preposterous. If not a
-slave of the old type, the freedman was a slave of a new type, invented
-by his unrepentant master as the substitute for what he had surrendered
-to the power of the Nation. Beginning with a caste as offensive and
-irreligious as that of Hindostan, and adding to it the pretensions of
-an oligarchy in government, the representatives of the old system were
-preparing to trample upon an oppressed race. The soul sickens at the
-thought.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With all this indubitable record staring us in the eyes, with the daily
-report of inconceivable outrage darkening the air, with wrong in every
-form let loose upon the long-suffering freedman, General Lee breaks the
-respectable silence of his parole to deny that “the Southern people
-are hostile to the negroes, and would oppress them, if in their power
-to do it.” The report, he asserts, is “entirely unfounded,”--that
-is the phrase,--“entirely unfounded”; and then he dwells on the old
-patriarchal relation, with the habit from childhood of “looking upon
-them with kindness” (witness the history of Slavery in its authentic
-instances!); and then he insists that “the change in the relations of
-the two races has wrought no change in feelings towards them,” that
-“without their labor the land of the South would be comparatively
-unproductive, and therefore _self-interest would prompt the whites
-of the South to extend to the negroes care and protection_.” Here
-is the threadbare pretension with which we were so familiar through
-all the dreary days of the old Barbarism, now brought forward by the
-Generalissimo of the Rebellion to vindicate the new,--and all this with
-an unabashed effrontery, which shows, that, in surrendering his sword,
-he did not surrender that insensibility to justice and humanity which
-is the distinctive character of the slave-master. The freedman does not
-need the “care and protection” of any such person. He needs the rights
-of an American citizen; and you are to declare by your votes if he
-shall have them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The opposition to the Reconstruction Acts manifests itself in an
-inconceivable brutality, kindred to that of Slavery, and fit prelude
-to the revival of this odious wrong. Shall this continue? Outrage in
-every form is directed against loyal persons, without distinction of
-color. It is enough that a man is a patriot for Rebels to make war upon
-him. Insulted, abused, and despoiled of everything, he is murdered on
-the highway, on the railway, or, it may be, in his own house. Nowhere
-is he safe. The terrible atrocity of these acts is aggravated by the
-rallying cries of the murderers. If the victim is black, then it is a
-“war of races”; if white, then he is nothing but a “carpet-bagger”;
-and so, whether black or white, he is a victim. History has few scenes
-of equal guilt. Persecution in all its untold cruelties, ending in
-martyrdom, rages over a wide-spread land.
-
-If there be a “war of races,” as is the apologetic defence of the
-murderers, then it is war declared and carried on by whites. The
-other race is inoffensive and makes no war, asking only its rights.
-The whole pretension of a “war of races” is an invention to cover the
-brutality of the oppressors. Not less wicked is the loud-mouthed attack
-on immigrants, whom Rebels choose to call “carpet-baggers,”--that is,
-American citizens, who, in the exercise of the rights of citizenship,
-carry to the South the blood, the capital, and the ideas of the North.
-This term of reproach does not belong to the Northerner alone. The
-carpet-bag is the symbol of our whole population: there is nobody who
-is not a “carpet-bagger,” or at least the descendant of one. Constantly
-the country opens its arms to welcome “carpet-baggers” from foreign
-lands. And yet the cry ascends that “carpet-baggers” are to be driven
-from the South. Here permit me to say, that, if anybody is driven from
-anywhere, it will not be the loyal citizen, whether old or new.
-
-On all this you are to vote. It will be for you to determine if there
-shall be peace between the two races, and if American citizens shall
-enjoy everywhere within the jurisdiction of the Republic all the rights
-of citizenship, free from harm or menace, and with the liberty of
-uttering their freest thoughts.
-
-There is another issue at this election. It is with regard to the
-unpatriotic, denationalizing pretensions of State Rights. In their
-name was the Rebellion begun, and now in their name is every measure
-of Reconstruction opposed. Important as are the functions of a State
-in the administration of local government, especially in resisting an
-overbearing centralization, they must not be exalted above the Nation
-in its own appropriate sphere. Great as is the magic of a State, there
-is to my mind a greater magic in the Nation. The true patriot would not
-consent to see the sacrifice of the Nation more than the true mother
-before King Solomon would consent to see the sacrifice of her child.
-It is as a Nation--all together making one--that we have a place at
-the council-board of the world, to excite the pride of the patriot and
-the respect of foreign powers. It is as a Nation that we can do all
-that becomes a civilized government; and “who dares do more is none.”
-But all this will be changed, just in proportion as any State claims
-for itself a sovereignty which belongs to all, and reduces the Nation
-within its borders to be little more than a tenant-at-will,--just
-in proportion as the National Unity is assailed or called in
-question,--just in proportion as the Nation ceases to be a complete
-and harmonious body, in which each State performs its ancillary part,
-as hand or foot to the natural body. There is an irresistible protest
-against such a sacrifice, which comes from the very heart of our
-history. It was in the name of “the good people of these Colonies,”
-called “one people,” that our fathers put forth the Declaration of
-Independence, with its preamble of Unity, and its dedication of the new
-Nation to Human Rights. And now it is for us, their children, to keep
-this Unity, and to perform all the national promises thus announced.
-The Nation is solemnly pledged to guard its Unity, and to make Human
-Rights coextensive with its boundaries. Nor can it allow any pretension
-of State Rights to interfere with this commanding duty.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is still another issue, which is subordinate to Reconstruction
-and dependent upon it, so, indeed, as to be a part of it. I refer to
-the Financial Question, with the menace of Repudiation in different
-forms. Let the Reconstruction Acts be maintained in peace, in other
-words, let peace be established in the Rebel States, and the menace
-of Repudiation will disappear from the scene,--none so poor to do
-it reverence. If it find any acceptance now, it is only in that
-revolutionary spirit which assails all the guaranties of peace.
-Repudiation of the Reconstruction Acts, with all their securities for
-Equal Rights, is naturally followed by repudiation of the National
-Debt. The Acts and the Debt are parts of one system, being the means
-and price of peace. So strongly am I convinced of the potency of this
-influence, that I do not doubt the entire practicability of specie
-payments on the fourth of July next after the inauguration of General
-Grant.
-
-Nay, more, it is my conviction, not only that we _can_ have specie
-payments at that time, but that we _ought_ to have them. If we can,
-we ought; for this is nothing but the honest payment of what we owe.
-A failure to pay may be excused, but never justified. Our failure
-was originally sanctioned only under the urgency of war; but this
-sanction cannot extend beyond the urgency. It is sometimes said that
-necessity renders an action just, and Latin authority is quoted: _Id
-enim justissimum quod necessarium_. But it is none the less untrue.
-Necessity may excuse an action not in itself just, but it is without
-the force to render it just; for justice is immutable. The taking of
-the property of another under the instigation of famine is excused,
-and so is the taking of the property of citizens by the Government
-during war,--in both cases from necessity. But as the necessity ceases,
-the obligations of justice revive. Necessity has no rights, but only
-privileges, which disappear with the exigency. Therefore do I say that
-the time has passed when the Nation can be excused for refusing to
-pay according to its promise. But it is vain to expect this important
-change from a political party which emblazons Repudiation on its
-banners.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is in two conspicuous forms that Repudiation flaunts: first, in
-the barefaced proposition to tax the bonds, contrary to the contract
-at the time the money was lent; and the other, not less barefaced, to
-pay interest-bearing bonds with greenbacks, or, in other words, mere
-promises to pay without interest.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The exemption from taxation was a part of the original obligation,
-having, of course, a positive value, which entered into the price of
-the bond at the time of subscription. This additional price was taken
-from the pocket of the subscriber and transferred to the National
-Treasury, where it has been used for the public advantage. It is so
-much property to the credit of the bond-holder, which it is gravely
-proposed to confiscate. Rebel property you will not confiscate; but you
-are considering how to confiscate that of the loyal citizen. Taxation
-of the bonds is confiscation.
-
-The whole case can be stated with perfect simplicity. To tax the
-bonds is to break the contract _because you have the power_. It is an
-imitation of the Roman governor, a lieutenant of Cæsar, who, after
-an agreement by the people of Gaul to pay a certain subsidy monthly,
-arbitrarily changed the number of months to fourteen. The subtraction
-from the interest by taxation is kindred in dishonesty to the increase
-of the Gaulish subsidy by adding to the months. Of course, in private
-contracts between merchant and merchant no such thing could be done.
-But there can be no rule of good faith binding on private individuals
-which is not binding on the Nation, while there are exceptional reasons
-for extraordinary scrupulousness on the part of the Nation. As the
-transaction is vast, and especially as the Nation is conspicuous, what
-is done becomes an example to the world which history cannot forget.
-A Nation cannot afford to do a mean thing. There is another reason,
-founded on the helpless condition of the creditor, who has no power to
-enforce his claim, whether of principal or interest. It was Charles
-James Fox who once exclaimed against a proposition kindred to that now
-made: “Oh, no, no! His claims are doubly binding who trusts to the
-rectitude of another.” This is only according to an admitted principle
-in the Laws of War, constraining the stronger power to the best of
-faith in dealing with a weaker power, because the latter is without the
-capacity to redress a wrong. This benign principle, borrowed from the
-Laws of War, cannot be out of place in the Laws of Peace; and I invoke
-it now as a sufficient protection against taxation of the bonds, even
-if common sense in its plainest lessons, and the rule of right in its
-most imperious precepts, did not forbid this thing.
-
-The cheat of paying interest-bearing bonds in promises without interest
-is kindred in character to that of taxing the bonds. It is flat
-Repudiation. No subtlety of technicality, no ingenuity of citation, no
-skill in arranging texts of statutes, can make it anything else. It is
-so on the face, and it is so the more the transaction is examined. Here
-again I invoke that rule of conduct to a weaker party, and I insist,
-that, if, from any failure of explicitness excluding all contrary
-conclusion, there can be any reason for Repudiation, every such
-suggestion must be dismissed as the frightful well-spring of disastrous
-consequences impossible to estimate, while it is inconsistent with that
-Public Faith which is the supreme law.
-
-Elsewhere I have considered this question so fully,[273] that I content
-myself now with conclusions only. Do you covet the mines of Mexico and
-Peru, the profits of extended commerce, or the harvest of your own
-teeming fields? All these and more you will multiply infinitely, if
-you will keep the Public Faith inviolate. Do you seek stability in the
-currency, with the assurance of solid business, so that extravagance
-and gambling speculations shall cease? This, too, you will have through
-the Public Faith. Just in proportion as this is discredited, the Nation
-is degraded and impoverished. If nobody had breathed Repudiation,
-we should all be richer, and the national debt would be at a lower
-interest, saving to the Nation millions of dollars annually. Talk of
-taxation; here is an annual tax of millions imposed by these praters of
-Repudiation.
-
-Careless of all the teachings of history, you are exhorted to pay the
-national debt in greenbacks, knowing that this can be done only by
-creating successive batches, counted by hundreds of millions, which
-will bring our currency to the condition of Continental money, when a
-night’s lodging cost a thousand dollars, or the condition of the French
-_assignats_, the paper currency of the Revolution, which was increased
-to a fearful amount, precisely as it is now proposed to increase ours,
-until the story of Continental money was repeated. Talk of clipping
-the coin, or enfeebling it with alloy, as in mediæval times; talk of
-the disgraceful frauds of French monarchs, who, one after another in
-long succession, debased their money and swore the officers of the Mint
-to conceal the debasement; talk of persistent reductions in England,
-from Edward the First to Elizabeth, until coin was only the half of
-itself; talk of unhappy Africa, where Mungo Park found that a gallon
-of rum, which was the unit of value, was half water;--talk of all
-these; you have them on a colossal scale in the cheat of paying bonds
-with greenbacks. If not taught by our own memorable experience, when
-Continental money, which was the currency of the time, was lost, like
-the river Rhine at its mouth, in an enormous outstretched quicksand,
-then be taught by the experience of another country. Authentic history
-discloses the condition to which France was reduced. Carlyle, in his
-picturesque work on the Revolution, says: “There is, so to speak, no
-trade whatever, for the time being. _Assignats_, long sinking, emitted
-in such quantities, sink now with an alacrity beyond parallel.” The
-hackney-coachman on the street, when asked his fare, replied, “Six
-thousand livres.”[274] And still the _assignats_ sunk, until at last
-the nation was a pauper. The Directory, invested for the time with
-supreme power, on repairing to the palace of the Luxembourg, found it
-without a single article of furniture. Borrowing from the door-keeper
-a rickety table, an inkstand, and a sheet of letter-paper, they
-draughted their first official message, announcing the new government.
-There was not a solitary piece of coin in the Treasury; but there
-was a printing-press at command. _Assignats_ were fabricated in the
-night, and sent forth in the morning wet from the press.[275] At last
-they ended in nothing,--but not until a great and generous people was
-enveloped in bankruptcy and every family was a sufferer. Bankruptcy
-has its tragedies hardly inferior to those which throb beneath the
-“sceptred pall.”
-
-Similar misconduct among us must result in similar consequences, with
-all the tragedies of bankruptcy. Not a bank, not a corporation, not
-an institution of charity, which would not suffer,--each sweeping
-multitudes into the abyss which it could not avoid. Business would
-be disorganized, values would be uncertain; nobody would know that
-the paper in his pocket to-day would buy a dinner to-morrow. There is
-no limit to the depreciation of inconvertible paper. Down, down it
-descends, as the plummet, to the bottom, or up, up, as the bubble in
-the air, until, whether down or up, it disappears. It is hard to think
-of the poor, or of those who depend on daily wages, under the trials of
-this condition. The rich may, for the time, live from their abundance;
-but the less favored class can have no such refuge. Therefore, for the
-poor, and for all who labor, do I now plead, when I ask that you shall
-not hearken to this painful proposition.
-
-I plead, also, for the business of the country. So long as the currency
-continues in its present uncertainty, it cannot answer the demands
-of business. It is a diseased limb, no better than what is known in
-India as a “Cochin leg,” or an excrescence not unlike the pendulous
-goitre which is the pitiful sight of an Alpine village. But it must
-be uncertain, unless we have peace. Therefore, for the sake of the
-currency, do I unite with our candidate in his longing. Business must
-be emancipated. How often are we told by the lawyers, in a saying
-handed down from antiquity, that “a wretched servitude exists where the
-law is uncertain”! But this is not true of the law only. Nothing short
-of that servitude which denies God-given rights can be more wretched
-than the servitude of an uncertain currency. And now that, by the
-blessing of God, we are banishing that terrible wrong which was so long
-the curse and shame of our Nation, let us apply ourselves to this other
-servitude, whose yoke we are all condemned to bear in daily life.
-
-Looking into the travels of Marco Polo in the thirteenth century, you
-will find that he encountered in China paper money on a large scale,
-being an inconvertible currency standing on the credit of the Grand
-Khan, not unlike our greenbacks. Describing the celestial city of
-Kin-sai, the famous traveller says, “The inhabitants are idolaters,
-and they use paper money”; and then describing another celestial city,
-Ta-pin-zu, he says, “The inhabitants worship idols, and use paper
-money.”[276] I know not if Marco Polo intended by this association
-to suggest any dependence of paper money upon the worship of idols.
-It is enough that he puts them together. To my mind they are equally
-forbidden by the Ten Commandments. If one Commandment enjoins upon us
-not to worship any graven image, does not another say expressly, “Thou
-shalt not steal”?
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is another consideration, which I have reserved for the last, and
-which I would call an issue in the pending election. It is nothing less
-than the good name of the Republic, and its character as an example
-to the Nations. All this is directly in question. If you are true
-to the great principles of Equal Rights, declared by our fathers as
-the foundation of just government,--if you stand by the freedman and
-maintain him in well-earned citizenship,--if you require full payment
-of the national debt in coin, principal and interest, at the pleasure
-of the holder, so that the Republic shall have the crown of perfect
-honesty, as also of perfect freedom,--I do not doubt that it will
-exercise a far-reaching sway. Nothing captivates more than the example
-of virtue,--not even the example of vice. _By this sign conquer_: by
-fidelity to declared principles, by the performance of all promises,
-by a good name. Then will American history supply the long-sought
-definition of a Republic, and our Western star will illumine the
-Nations.
-
-Reverse the picture, let the Rebel Party prevail, and what do we
-behold? The bonds of the Nation repudiated, and the Equal Rights of the
-freedman, which are nothing but bonds of the Nation, repudiated also.
-Alas! the example of the Republic is lost, and our Western star is
-quenched in darkness. But this cannot be without a shock, as when our
-first parents tasted the forbidden fruit:--
-
- “Earth felt the wound; and Nature from her seat,
- Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe
- That all was lost.”
-
-The shock will begin at home; but it will spread wherever there are
-hearts to thrill with anguish. The struggling people in foreign lands,
-now turned to us with hope, will sink in despair as they observe the
-disastrous eclipse.
-
-I would not seem too confident in the destinies of my country; but
-I cannot doubt, that, if only true to herself, there is nothing too
-vast for her peaceful ambition. Here again I catch the aspiration of
-our leader in war, “Let us have peace.” Out of peace will spring all
-else. Abroad there will be welcome and acceptance, with the might
-of our example constantly increasing. At home there will be safety
-and opportunity for all within our borders, with freedom of speech,
-freedom of the press, freedom of travel, and the equal rights of
-citizenship, like the rights of the national creditor, all under the
-perpetual safeguard of that Public Faith which is the golden cord of
-the Republic. Let despots break promises, but not our Republic. A
-Republic is where every man has his due. Equality of rights is the
-standing promise of Nature to man, and the Republic has succeeded to
-this promise.
-
-In harmony with the promise of Nature is the promise of our fathers,
-recorded in the Declaration of Independence, to which the Republic has
-succeeded also. It is the twofold promise, first, that all are equal in
-rights, and, secondly, that just government stands only on the consent
-of the governed,--being the two great political commandments on which
-hang all laws and constitutions. Keep these truly, and you will keep
-all. Write them in your statutes; write them in your hearts. _This
-is the great and only final settlement of all existing questions._
-Under its kindly influence the past Rebellion will disappear, alike in
-its principles and its passions; future Rebellion will be impossible;
-and there will be a peace never to be disturbed. To this sublime
-consecration of the Republic let me aspire. With nothing less can I be
-content.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] _Ante_, Vol. I. pp. 314, 315.
-
-[2] Sermo CCXCIX. § 6: Opera, ed. Benedict., (Paris, 1836-39,) Tom. V.
-col. 1785.
-
-[3] History of the World, Book V. ch. I: Works, (Oxford, 1829,) Vol.
-VI. p. 4.
-
-[4] Of Reformation touching Church Discipline in England, Book II.:
-Works, (London, 1851,) Vol. III. p. 55.
-
-[5] Essay upon the Original and Nature of Government: Miscellanea, Part
-I.: Works, (London, 1720,) Vol. I. p. 100.
-
-[6] “La totalité des personnes nées ou naturalisées dans un pays, et
-vivant sous un même gouvernement.”
-
-[7] Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ed. Milman, (London, 1846,)
-Ch. II. Vol. I. p. 37.
-
-[8] See his Essay, as amplified in the successive editions, variously
-entitled, “The National Polity is the Normal Type of Modern Government:
-A Fragment”; “Nationalism: A Fragment of Political Science”; and
-“Fragments of Political Science on Nationalism and Inter-Nationalism”:
-the first two without date,--the last, New York, 1868.
-
-[9] Menenius Agrippa. Livii Hist. Lib. II. c. 32.
-
-[10] Journal of the House of Representatives, p. 133, October 24, 1765.
-Hutchinson’s History of Massachusetts, Vol. III. p. 472.
-
-[11] Hazard’s Historical Collections, Vol. II. p. 2. Palfrey’s History
-of New England, Vol. I. p. 624.
-
-[12] Winthrop, History of New England, ed. Savage, Vol. II. p. 100.
-
-[13] Ibid., p. 160.
-
-[14] Plan of Union: Franklin’s Works, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. pp. 36,
-seqq.
-
-[15] Bancroft, History of the United States, Vol. IV. p. 126.
-
-[16] Franklin to Governor Shirley, December 22, 1754: London Chronicle,
-Feb. 6-8, 1766, Vol. XIX. p. 133; London Magazine, Feb. 1766, Vol.
-XXXV. p. 95. See also Franklin’s Works, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. p. 66.
-
-[17] Wells’s Life of Samuel Adams, Vol. II. pp. 90, 94.
-
-[18] Ibid., p. 94.
-
-[19] Journals of Congress, October 14, 1774, Vol. I. pp. 28, 29.
-
-[20] The Federalist, ed. J. C. Hamilton, Historical Notice, pp. xii,
-xiv, lix.
-
-[21] Wordsworth, The Excursion, Book IV. 138, 139.
-
-[22] Letter to Jefferson, November 12, 1813: Works, Vol. X. p. 79.
-
-[23] Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates from several of the
-New England States, held at Boston, August 3-9, 1780: edited from an
-original MS. Record in the New York State Library, with an Introduction
-and Notes, by Franklin B. Hough, Albany, 1867, pp. 50, 51.
-
-[24] Address and Recommendations to the States by the United States in
-Congress assembled, (Philadelphia, 1783,) p. 9. Journal of Congress,
-April 26, 1783, Vol. VIII. pp. 194, seqq.
-
-[25] Writings of Washington, ed. Sparks, Vol. VIII. pp. 567, 568,
-Appendix.
-
-[26] Ibid., pp. 441, 443.
-
-[27] Ibid., pp. 504, 505.
-
-[28] Resolution of Congress, October 10, 1780: Journal, Vol. VI. p. 215.
-
-[29] The Federalist, ed. J. C. Hamilton, Historical Notice, pp. xxii,
-lviii.
-
-[30] Ibid., p. xxiv.
-
-[31] Resolutions, July 21, 1782: Hamilton’s Works, ed. J. C. Hamilton,
-Vol. II. pp. 201-204.
-
-[32] Journal, February 21, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 17.
-
-[33] Sketches of American Policy, (Hartford, 1785,) Part IV. See also
-Introduction to Debates in the Federal Convention: Madison Papers, Vol.
-II. p. 708.
-
-[34] Life, by his Son, William Jay, Vol. I. pp. 249, 250. See also
-Letter to John Lowell, May 10, 1785: Ibid., p. 190.
-
-[35] See, _ante_, p. 274.
-
-[36] Letter to Edmund Randolph, April 8, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II.
-pp. 631, 632.
-
-[37] Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. IX. pp. 187, 188.
-
-[38] Letter to John Jay, March 10, 1787: Life of Jay, by his Son, Vol.
-I. p. 259.
-
-[39] Debates, May 30, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II. p. 748.
-
-[40] Debates, July 7th: Ibid., p. 1049.
-
-[41] Debates, July 5th: Ibid., p. 1030.
-
-[42] Debates, June 19, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 904, 905.
-
-[43] Debates, June 7th: Ibid., p. 817.
-
-[44] Debates, June 19th: Ibid., p. 907.
-
-[45] Debates, June 29th: Ibid., p. 995.
-
-[46] Debates, June 30th: Ibid., p. 1010; see also p. 1011.
-
-[47] March 16, 1785: Journal, Vol. X. p. 79.
-
-[48] Debates, June 25th: Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 946, 950.
-
-[49] Journal of Congress, September 28, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 165.
-
-[50] Works of Daniel Webster, Vol. III. p. 474.
-
-[51] Elliot’s Debates, (2d edit.,) Vol. III. p. 29.
-
-[52] Elliot’s Debates, Vol. III. p. 22.
-
-[53] Ibid., p. 44.
-
-[54] Hamilton’s History of the National Flag of the United States, p.
-55.
-
-[55] Ibid., pp. 65, 66.
-
-[56] Hamilton’s History of the National Flag, p. 30.
-
-[57] Ibid., p. 110.
-
-[58] For the original of these devices see the Pennsylvania Gazette,
-May 9, 1754; copies of the others are presented in Hamilton’s History
-of the National Flag, Plate II.
-
-[59] Hamilton’s History of the National Flag, pp. 72-79.
-
-[60] The Thracians: Herodotus, Lib. V. c. 3.
-
-[61] Dr. Francis Lieber, who narrated the incident to Mr. Sumner.
-
-[62] Locke, Essay concerning Human Understanding, Book III. ch. 2, § 8.
-
-[63] Cratylus, 389 A.
-
-[64] Diary of John Adams: Works, Vol. II. p. 367.
-
-[65] Journal, June 17, 1775, Vol. I. p. 122.
-
-[66] Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. p. 491, Appendix.
-
-[67] Letter to the President of Congress, December 20, 1776: Ibid.,
-Vol. IV. p. 236.
-
-[68] See, _ante_, p. 31.
-
-[69] Journal of Congress, September 28, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 165.
-
-[70] Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. XII. p. 218.
-
-[71] Isaiah, xl. 26.
-
-[72] Revelation, iii. 12.
-
-[73] Job, xxxviii. 35.
-
-[74] Geographica, Lib. IV. cap. 1, §§ 2, 14.
-
-[75] Marlow, Edward the Second, Act V. Sc. 1.
-
-[76] Proclamation, December 10, 1832: Executive Documents, 22d Cong. 2d
-Sess., H. of R., No. 45, p. 85.
-
-[77] Speech in the Senate, in Reply to Mr. Simmons, of Rhode Island,
-February 20, 1847: Works, Vol. IV. pp. 358, 357.
-
-[78] Section 24.
-
-[79] Address at the Consecration of the National Cemetery at
-Gettysburg, November 19, 1863: McPherson’s Political History of the
-United States during the Rebellion, p. 606.
-
-[80] From a toast by Charles P. Sumner at the State Celebration of the
-Fiftieth Anniversary of American Independence, in the Doric Hall of the
-State House in Boston, July 4, 1826.
-
-[81] Note to § 776, Vol. I. pp. 433, 434, 3d edit.
-
-[82] Act to prescribe an Oath of Office, July 2, 1862: Statutes at
-Large, Vol. XII. p. 502.
-
-[83] Pleas of the Crown, Vol. I. p. 484.
-
-[84] 3 Institutes, p. 139.
-
-[85] Criminal Law, Vol. I. § 652.
-
-[86] Ibid., § 655.
-
-[87] Statutes at Large, Vol. I. p. 112.
-
-[88] Catilina, Cap. XXXIX.
-
-[89] Bramston, The Art of Politics, 162-165. See, _ante_, Vol. VI. p.
-350; Vol. XI. p. 6
-
-[90] View of the Constitution, (Philadelphia, 1825,) Chap. XXI. p. 206.
-
-[91] Commentaries on the Constitution, § 775, Vol. II. p. 247.
-
-[92] Second edition (Philadelphia, 1829).
-
-[93] See, _post_, p. 93.
-
-[94] Madison Papers, Vol. III. pp. 1572, 1573.
-
-[95] Elliot’s Debates, (2d edit.,) Vol. III. p. 498.
-
-[96] See, _ante_, Vol. XIV. pp. 15, seqq.
-
-[97] Lex Parliamentaria Americana: Elements of the Law and Practice of
-Legislative Assemblies in the United States, (2d edit.,) § 302.
-
-[98] Trial of Judge Peck, Appendix, p. 499.
-
-[99] 4 Institutes, pp. 14, 15.
-
-[100] Commentaries, Vol. I. p. 181.
-
-[101] Speech on Conciliation with America, March 22, 1775: Works,
-(Boston, 1866-67,) Vol. II. p. 125. Besides the importations into
-the Colonies from England, where, according to Lowndes, no less than
-six editions had been published prior to the date of this speech, an
-edition was printed in Philadelphia in 1771-72, with a subscription, as
-appears by the list accompanying it, of nearly sixteen hundred copies.
-
-[102] Lords’ Standing Orders: May’s Parliamentary Practice, (5th
-edit.,) p. 221.
-
-[103] May, Parliamentary Practice, Ibid.
-
-[104] Ibid.
-
-[105] Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 288.
-
-[106] Report from the Committee appointed to inspect the Lords’
-Journals, Appendix, No. I. (Extract from Foster’s Crown Law): Burke’s
-Works, (Boston, 1866-67,) Vol. XI. p. 126.
-
-[107] Ibid., p. 129, note.
-
-[108] Ibid., p. 132.
-
-[109] Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit., London, 1856,) Vol. I. p.
-15, note.
-
-[110] Ibid., p. 15.
-
-[111] Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. I. pp. 14, 15.
-
-[112] Ibid., Vol. II. p. 229.
-
-[113] Ibid.
-
-[114] Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. III. p. 156.
-
-[115] Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. III. p. 270.
-
-[116] Ibid., p. 281.
-
-[117] History of the Rebellion, (Oxford, 1826,) Book III., Vol. I. p.
-381.
-
-[118] Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. IV. p. 68.
-
-[119] Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. IV. p. 145.
-
-[120] Ibid., p. 139.
-
-[121] Ibid., p. 147.
-
-[122] Campbell. Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. V. p. 46.
-
-[123] Ibid., p. 102.
-
-[124] Ibid., p. 106.
-
-[125] Ibid., pp. 109, 114.
-
-[126] Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. V. p. 207.
-
-[127] Ibid., p. 257.
-
-[128] Ibid., p. 259.
-
-[129] Ibid., p. 269.
-
-[130] Ibid., p. 377.
-
-[131] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XVI. col. 768.
-
-[132] Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. VI. p. 94.
-
-[133] Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. VI. p. 316.
-
-[134] Ibid., Vol. I. p. 15, note.
-
-[135] Twiss, Life of Eldon, Vol. I. p. 319.
-
-[136] Congressional Debates, 19th Cong. 1st Sess., col. 759, 760, May
-18, 1826.
-
-[137] June 7, 1826.
-
-[138] June 27, 29, 1826.
-
-[139] Onslow, No. I.: National Intelligencer, June 27, 1826.
-
-[140] Ibid.
-
-[141] D’Ewes’s Journals, p. 683.
-
-[142] Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 294.
-
-[143] Ibid., § 300.
-
-[144] Hansard’s Parliamentary History, April 15, 1640, Vol. II. col.
-535.
-
-[145] Hatsell’s Precedents, (London, 1818,) Vol. II. p. 242.
-
-[146] Hansard’s Parliamentary History, Vol. XXXVI. col. 915.
-
-[147] Barclay’s Digest of the Rules of the House of Representatives,
-&c., p. 44.
-
-[148] Barclay’s Digest, p. 114.
-
-[149] Ibid.
-
-[150] Cushing, Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 306.
-
-[151] Proceedings on the Impeachment of William Blount, p. 28.
-
-[152] Commentaries, (2d edit.,) § 803, Vol. I. p. 560.
-
-[153] Annals of Congress, 5th Cong., July 8, 1797, col. 44.
-
-[154] See, _ante_, Vol. VIII. pp. 12, 13: Expulsion of Trusten Polk.
-
-[155] Wooddeson, Lectures, Vol. II. p. 602.
-
-[156] Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren
-Hastings, ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 4.
-
-[157] Ibid., pp. 183, seqq.
-
-[158] Constitutional History of England, (2d edit.,) Chap. XII., Vol.
-II. p. 554.
-
-[159] No. LXV.
-
-[160] View of the Constitution, (2d edit.,) p. 211.
-
-[161] Commentaries, (2d edit.,) Vol. I. §§ 746, 764.
-
-[162] History of the Constitution, pp. 260, 261.
-
-[163] Speech in the House of Representatives, June 17, 1789, on the
-Bill for establishing the Department of Foreign Affairs: Annals of
-Congress, 1st Cong. 1st Sess., col. 498.
-
-[164] Speech at St. Louis, September 8, 1866: McPherson’s Political
-History of the United States during Reconstruction, p. 140.
-
-[165] Rolls of Parliament, Vol. III. p. 244, § 7,--cited in Report from
-the Committee of the House of Commons appointed to inspect the Lords’
-Journals, April 30, 1794: Burke’s Works, (Boston, 1866-67,) Vol. XI. p.
-11.
-
-[166] Report from the Committee to inspect the Lords’ Journals: Burke’s
-Works, Vol. XI. p. 12.
-
-[167] 4 Institutes, p. 15. Burke, Vol. XI. p. 13.
-
-[168] Crown Law, Discourse IV., pp. 389, 390. Burke, Vol. XI. p. 28.
-
-[169] Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 13.
-
-[170] Lords’ Journals, Vol. IV. p. 133. Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 14.
-
-[171] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 467. Lords’ Journals, March
-14, 1709-10, Vol. XIX. p. 107.
-
-[172] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 471.
-
-[173] Ibid., col. 473. Lords’ Journals, March 23, 1709-10, Vol. XIX. p.
-121.
-
-[174] Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. pp. 19, 20.
-
-[175] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 877.
-
-[176] Ibid., col. 883, 884.
-
-[177] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 885.
-
-[178] Ibid., col. 886.
-
-[179] Ibid., col. 887.
-
-[180] Lords’ Journals, March 19, 1715-16, Vol. XX. p. 316.
-
-[181] Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren
-Hastings, ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 10.
-
-[182] The Federalist, No. LXV.
-
-[183] Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 60.
-
-[184] Burke’s Works, Vol. XI., p. 64.
-
-[185] Ibid.
-
-[186] Rationale of Judicial Evidence, Book IX. Part I. Ch. 3: Works,
-ed. Bowring, (Edinburgh, 1843,) Vol. VII. p. 338.
-
-[187] Omychund _v._ Barker, 1 Atkyns, R., 49.
-
-[188] Mayor of Hull _v._ Horner, Cowper, R., 108.
-
-[189] Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 63.
-
-[190] Fortescue, De Laudibus Legum Angliæ, Cap. XLII.
-
-[191] Commentaries, Vol. II. p. 94.
-
-[192] Blackstone, Commentaries, Vol. IV. p. 286.
-
-[193] Speech on the Lords’ Amendments to the Bill for the Regulation of
-Trials in Cases of Treason, December 11, 1691: Hansard’s Parliamentary
-History, Vol. V. col. 678.
-
-[194] Secretary Seward to Provisional Governor Marvin of Florida,
-September 12, 1865: McPherson’s Political History of the United States
-during Reconstruction, p. 25.
-
-[195] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. III. col. 1421.
-
-[196] Coleridge.
-
-[197] Statutes at Large, Vol. XIV. pp. 430-432.
-
-[198] Section 1.
-
-[199] Aldridge _v._ Williams, 3 Howard, R., 24.
-
-[200] See, _ante_, p. 147.
-
-[201] Bacon, Upon the Statute of Uses, Introductory Discourse: Works,
-ed. Spedding, (Boston, 1864,) Vol. XIV. p. 285.
-
-[202] Statutes at Large, Vol. I. p. 415.
-
-[203] Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. p. 656.
-
-[204] Bill to repeal the 1st and 2d Sections of an Act to limit the
-Term of Office of certain Officers therein named. See Congressional
-Debates, 23d Cong. 2d Sess., 1834-35, col. 361, 418-491, 495-539,
-552-571, 576. Ibid., 24th Cong. 1st Sess., 1835-36, col. 52, 367.
-
-[205] Act of February 25, 1863, Sec. 1: Statutes at Large, Vol. XII.
-pp. 665, 666.
-
-[206] Sec. 5: Statutes at Large, Vol. XIV. p. 92.
-
-[207] Howell’s State Trials, Vol. IV. col. 1070.
-
-[208] Life, by Roger North, (London, 1826,) Vol. I. p. 20.
-
-[209] 5 Wheaton, R., 291, seqq.
-
-[210] 1 Cranch, R., 137, seqq.
-
-[211] Speech of Sir James Marriott, Admiralty Judge, in the House of
-Commons, March 15, 1782: Hansard’s Parliamentary History, Vol. XXII.
-col. 1184.
-
-[212] _Ante_, pp. 148, seqq.
-
-[213] Commentaries, Vol. II. p. 94.
-
-[214] Ibid., Vol. III. p. 43.
-
-[215] Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren
-Hastings, ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 11.
-
-[216] Preface to Shakespeare: Works, (Oxford, 1825,) Vol. V. p. 118.
-
-[217] History of the Rebellion, (Oxford, 1826,) Vol. IV. pp. 91, 92.
-
-[218] Act of March 6, 1820: Statutes at Large, Vol. III. p. 548.
-
-[219] Works, Vol. III. pp. 263, 264.
-
-[220] Ibid., p. 264.
-
-[221] Argument in the Case of Jones _v._ Vanzandt, pp. 62, 63.
-
-[222] Debates in the Federal Convention, May 30, 1787: Madison Papers,
-Vol. II. p. 751.
-
-[223] Ibid.
-
-[224] Ibid.
-
-[225] Ibid., p. 752.
-
-[226] Debates, June 11th: Ibid., p. 841.
-
-[227] Debates, June 29th: Madison Papers, Vol. II. p. 995.
-
-[228] Debates, June 8th: Ibid., p. 826.
-
-[229] Debates, June 19th: Ibid., p. 902.
-
-[230] No. XLIII. § 8.
-
-[231] Commentaries on the Constitution, (2d edit.,) Vol. I. § 694.
-
-[232] Elliot’s Debates, Vol. III. p. 367.
-
-[233] The Federalist, No. LIV.
-
-[234] Debates in the Federal Convention, June 29, 1787: Madison Papers,
-Vol. II. p. 993.
-
-[235] Deuteronomy, xxvii. 17.
-
-[236] Act of February 25, 1862: Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. pp.
-345-348.
-
-[237] Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. p. 532.
-
-[238] Speech in the Senate, February 13, 1862: _ante_, Vol. VI. p. 343.
-
-[239] Quæstiones Juris Publici, tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24, p. 182.
-
-[240] Bynkershoek, Quæst. Jur. Pub., tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24,
-p. 185.
-
-[241] Ibid.
-
-[242] Halleck, International Law, Ch. XII. § 29, p. 310.
-
-[243] Wheaton, Elements of International Law, ed. Lawrence, (Boston,
-1863,) p. 528, note.
-
-[244] Bynkershoek, Quæst. Jur. Pub., tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24,
-p. 188, note.
-
-[245] International Law, Ch. XII. § 11, p. 297.
-
-[246] De Jure Belli ac Pacis, Lib. III. Cap. II. § V. 2.
-
-[247] Elements of International Law, ed. Lawrence, (Boston, 1863,) Part
-IV. Ch. I. § 9, p. 529.
-
-[248] Commentaries upon International Law, Part IX. Ch. II. § 19, Vol.
-III. pp. 23, 24.
-
-[249] Wheaton’s Elements of International Law, ed. Dana, p. 370, note.
-
-[250] Le Droit des Gens, Liv. III. Ch. 4, § 63.
-
-[251] International Law, Ch. XII. § 16, p. 302.
-
-[252] De Jure Belli ac Pacis, Lib. III. Cap. II. § VII. 2.
-
-[253] Mr. Webster to Mr. Fox, April 24, 1841: Works, Vol. VI. p. 253.
-See also Phillimore, International Law, Part IX. Ch. III. § 38, Vol.
-III. p. 53.
-
-[254] International Law, Ch. XII. § 10, p. 296.
-
-[255] Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, during an Excursion in
-Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803.
-
-[256] Alison, History of Europe, (Edinburgh, 1843,) Ch. XXXVII. Vol. V.
-pp. 113, 114.
-
-[257] Mémorial de Sainte-Hélène, Tom. VII. pp. 32, 33. Alison, Vol. V.
-p. 114.
-
-[258] Junot, Mme., Duchesse d’Abrantès, Mémoires sur Napoléon, Tom. VI.
-pp. 398-403. Alison, Vol. V. p. 115, note.
-
-[259] Congressional Globe, 40th Cong. 2d Sess., Part V. p. 4331.
-
-[260] Works, Vol. IV. pp. 78-80.
-
-[261] Works, Vol. IV. p. 78.
-
-[262] Paradise Lost, Book III. 437-439.
-
-[263] Miscellaneous Works, (London, 1851,) p. 170.
-
-[264] Walckenaër, in the Biographie Universelle, Tom. XXXV. p. 222,
-art. Polo.
-
-[265] Speech on Victory and Reconstruction, April 11, 1865: McPherson’s
-Political History of the United States during the Rebellion, p. 609.
-
-[266] Hudibras, Part III. Canto I. 1303-6.
-
-[267] Resolutions of the National Democratic Convention, July,
-1868: McPherson’s Political History of the United States during
-Reconstruction, p. 368.
-
-[268] Letter of F. P. Blair to Col. James O. Brodhead, June 30,
-1868: McPherson’s Political History of the United States during
-Reconstruction, p. 381.
-
-[269] 2 Chronicles, xiv. 7.
-
-[270] Williams _v._ Suffolk Insurance Co.: 13 Peters, R., 420.
-
-[271] 7 Howard, R., 42.
-
-[272] Laws in relation to Freedmen: Executive Documents, 39th Cong. 2d
-Sess., Senate, No. 6, pp. 170, seqq.
-
-[273] Speech on Financial Reconstruction, _ante_, pp. 445, seqq.
-
-[274] Carlyle’s French Revolution, (New York, 1867,) Book IX. Ch. 4.
-
-[275] Thiers, Histoire de la Révolution Française, (Paris, 1837,) Tom.
-VIII. p. 15: Directoire, Chap. I.
-
-[276] Travels of Marco Polo, ed. Marsden, (London, 1818,) pp. 353, 354,
-521, 547.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Charles Sumner; His Complete Works; Volume
-16 (of 20), by Charles Sumner
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Charles Sumner; His Complete Works; Volume 16 (of 20)
-
-Author: Charles Sumner
-
-Editor: George Frisbie Hoar
-
-Release Date: October 9, 2015 [EBook #50167]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CHARLES SUMNER ***
-
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-
-
-Produced by Mark C. Orton and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
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-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 596px;">
-<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="596" height="600" alt="Edwin M. Stanton" />
-<p class="caption"><small>Eng<sup>d</sup>. by A. H. Ritchie</small></p>
-<p class="caption">EDWIN M. STANTON</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<h1 style="visibility: hidden;">Charles Sumner; his complete works, volume 16 (of 20)</h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="650" alt="Cover page" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1877,<br />
-<small>BY</small><br />
-FRANCIS V. BALCH, <span class="smcap">Executor</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1900,<br />
-<small>BY</small><br />
-LEE AND SHEPARD.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Statesman Edition.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Limited to One Thousand Copies.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Of which this is</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/issuenumber.jpg" width="100" height="21" alt="No. 320" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center">Norwood Press:<br />
-<span class="smcap">Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS OF VOLUME XVI.</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents" class="contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td><td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#EQUAL_RIGHTS_WHETHER_POLITICAL_OR_CIVIL"><span class="smcap">Equal Rights, whether Political or Civil, by Act of
-Congress.</span> Letter to the Border State Convention at
-Baltimore, September 8, 1867</a></td><td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#ARE_WE_A_NATION"><span class="smcap">Are We a Nation?</span> Address before the New York Young
-Men’s Republican Union, at the Cooper Institute, Tuesday
-Evening, November 19, 1867</a></td><td class="tdr">3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#CONSTANT_DISTRUST_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"><span class="smcap">Constant Distrust of the President.</span> Remarks in the
-Senate, on the Final Adjournment, November 26, 1867</a></td><td class="tdr">66</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#THE_FOURTEENTH_AMENDMENT_WITHDRAWAL_OF"><span class="smcap">The Fourteenth Amendment: Withdrawal of Assent
-by a State.</span> Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolutions
-of the Legislature of Ohio rescinding its former Resolution
-in Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, January
-31, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#LOYALTY_IN_THE_SENATE_ADMISSION_OF_A"><span class="smcap">Loyalty in the Senate: Admission of a Senator.</span> Remarks
-in the Senate, on the Resolution to admit Philip
-F. Thomas as Senator from Maryland, February 13, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">73</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#INTERNATIONAL_COPYRIGHT"><span class="smcap">International Copyright.</span> Letter to a Committee in New
-York, on this Subject, February 17, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">86</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#THE_IMPEACHMENT_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"><span class="smcap">The Impeachment of the President. The Right of the
-President of the Senate pro Tem. to vote.</span> Remarks
-in the Senate, on the Question of the Competency
-of Mr. Wade, Senator from Ohio, then President of the
-Senate pro Tem., to vote on the Impeachment of President
-Johnson, March 5, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">88</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#THE_CHIEF_JUSTICE_PRESIDING_IN_THE_SENATE"><span class="smcap">The Chief Justice, presiding in the Senate, cannot
-rule or vote.</span> Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment
-of Andrew Johnson, President of the United States,
-March 31, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">98</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#EXPULSION_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"><span class="smcap">Expulsion of the President.</span> Opinion in the Case of the
-Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, President of the
-United States, May 26, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">134</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#CONSTITUTIONAL_RESPONSIBILITY_OF_SENATORS_FOR"><span class="smcap">Constitutional Responsibility of Senators for their
-Votes in Cases of Impeachment.</span> Resolutions in the
-Senate, June 3, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">227</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#VALIDITY_AND_NECESSITY_OF_FUNDAMENTAL"><span class="smcap">Validity and Necessity of Fundamental Conditions on
-States.</span> Speech in the Senate, June 10, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">230</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#ELIGIBILITY_OF_A_COLORED_CITIZEN_TO_CONGRESS"><span class="smcap">Eligibility of a Colored Citizen to Congress.</span> Letter to
-an Inquirer at Norfolk, Va., June 22, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">255</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#INDEPENDENCE_AND_THOSE_WHO_SAVED_THE"><span class="smcap">Independence, and those who saved the Original Work.</span>
-Letter on the Soldiers’ Monument at North Weymouth,
-Mass., July 2, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">256</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#COLORED_SENATORS_THEIR_IMPORTANCE_IN_SETTLING"><span class="smcap">Colored Senators,&mdash;their Importance in settling the
-Question of Equal Rights.</span> Letter to an Inquirer in
-South Carolina, July 3, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">257</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#FINANCIAL_RECONSTRUCTION_THROUGH_PUBLIC"><span class="smcap">Financial Reconstruction through Public Faith and
-Specie Payments.</span> Speech in the Senate, on the Bill to
-fund the National Debt, July 11, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">259</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#NO_REPRISALS_ON_INNOCENT_PERSONS"><span class="smcap">No Reprisals on Innocent Persons.</span> Speech in the Senate,
-on the Bill concerning the Rights of American Citizens,
-July 18, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">297</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#THE_CHINESE_EMBASSY_AND_OUR_RELATIONS"><span class="smcap">The Chinese Embassy, and our Relations with China.</span>
-Speech at the Banquet by the City of Boston to the
-Chinese Embassy, August 21, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">318</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#THE_REBEL_PARTY"><span class="smcap">The Rebel Party.</span> Speech at the Flag-Raising of the Grant
-and Colfax Club, in Ward Six, Boston, on the Evening
-of September 14, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">326</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#ENFRANCHISEMENT_IN_MISSOURI_WHY_WAIT"><span class="smcap">Enfranchisement in Missouri: Why wait?</span> Letter to a
-Citizen of St. Louis, October 3, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">331</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging"><a href="#ISSUES_AT_THE_PRESIDENTIAL_ELECTION"><span class="smcap">Issues at the Presidential Election.</span> Speech at the City
-Hall, Cambridge, October 29, 1868</a></td><td class="tdr">333</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="EQUAL_RIGHTS_WHETHER_POLITICAL_OR_CIVIL" id="EQUAL_RIGHTS_WHETHER_POLITICAL_OR_CIVIL"></a>EQUAL RIGHTS, WHETHER POLITICAL OR CIVIL,
-BY ACT OF CONGRESS.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter to the Border State Convention at Baltimore, September
-8, 1867.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>September 12, 1867, Tennessee, Delaware, Maryland, Missouri,
-Kentucky, and the District of Columbia were fully represented in
-what was called “the Border State Convention,” which assembled
-in the Front Street Theatre, Baltimore. The object, in the language
-of the call, was “to advance the cause of manhood suffrage, and to
-demand of Congress the passage of the Sumner-Wilson bill.” The
-following letter from Mr. Sumner was read to the Convention.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, September 8, 1867.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">DEAR SIR,&mdash;I shall not be able to be with you
-at your Convention in Baltimore, according to
-the invitation with which you have honored me. I
-ask you to accept my best wishes.</p>
-
-<p>Congress will leave undone what it ought to do,
-if it fails to provide promptly for the establishment
-of Equal Rights, whether political or civil, everywhere
-throughout the Union. This is a solemn duty, not to
-be shirked or postponed.</p>
-
-<p>The idea is intolerable, that any State, under any
-pretension of State Rights, can set up <i>a political oligarchy</i>
-within its borders, and then call itself a republican
-government. I insist with all my soul that such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
-a government must be rejected, as inconsistent with
-the requirements of the Declaration of Independence.</p>
-
-<p class="sig">Faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="sig2"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>A letter from Hon. Henry Wilson stated: “At the last session I
-offered an amendment, on the 17th of July, allowing all, without distinction
-of color, to vote and hold office, making no distinction in
-rights or privileges.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="ARE_WE_A_NATION" id="ARE_WE_A_NATION"></a>ARE WE A NATION?</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Address before the New York Young Men’s Republican Union,
-at the Cooper Institute, Tuesday Evening, November 19, 1867.</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote medium">
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of
-Israel, … and they shall be no more two nations.… Neither shall
-they defile themselves any more with their idols, nor with their detestable
-things, nor with any of their transgressions.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ezekiel</span>, xxxvii. 22, 23.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>In these days their union is so entire and perfect that they are not
-only joined together in bonds of friendship and alliance, but even make
-use of the same laws, the same weights, coins, and measures, the same
-magistrates, counsellors, and judges: so that the inhabitants of this whole
-tract of Greece seem in all respects to form but one single city, except
-only that they are not enclosed within the circuit of the same walls;
-in every other point, both through the whole republic and in every
-separate state, we find the most exact resemblance and conformity.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Polybius</span>,
-<i>General History</i>, tr. Hampton, (London, 1756,) Vol. I. pp.
-147, 148.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>We represent the people,&mdash;we are a Nation. To vote by States will
-keep up colonial distinctions.… The more a man aims at serving America,
-the more he serves his colony. I am not pleading the cause of
-Pennsylvania; I consider myself a citizen of America.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Benjamin Rush</span>,
-<i>Speech in the Continental Congress, July, 1776</i>: Bancroft, History of the
-United States, Vol. IX. p. 54.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>It is my first wish to see the United States assume and merit the character
-of <i>one great Nation</i>, whose territory is divided into different States
-merely for more convenient government and the more easy and prompt administration
-of justice,&mdash;just as our several States are divided into counties
-and townships for the like purposes. Until this be done, the chain
-which holds us together will be too feeble to bear much opposition or
-exertion, and we shall be daily mortified by seeing the links of it giving
-way and calling for repair, one after another.&mdash;<span class="smcap">John Jay</span>, <i>Letter to John
-Lowell, May 10, 1785</i>: Life, by William Jay, Vol. I. p. 190.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>He took this occasion to repeat, that, notwithstanding his solicitude
-to establish a National Government, he never would agree to abolish the
-State Governments or render them absolutely insignificant. They were
-as necessary as the General Government, and he would be equally careful
-to preserve them.&mdash;<span class="smcap">George Mason</span>, <i>Speech in the Constitutional Convention,
-June 20, 1787</i>: Debates, Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 914, 915.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>Whether the Constitution be good or bad, the present clause clearly discovers
-that it is a National Government, and no longer a Confederation:
-I mean that clause which gives the first hint of the General Government
-laying direct taxes.&mdash;<span class="smcap">George Mason</span>, <i>Speech in the Virginia Convention
-to ratify the Constitution, June 4, 1788</i>: Elliot’s Debates, (2d edit.,)
-Vol. III. p. 29.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>The Declaration of Independence having provided for the <i>national</i> character
-and the <i>national</i> powers, it remained in some mode to provide for
-the character and powers of the States individually, as a consequence of
-the dissolution of the colonial system. Accordingly the people of each
-State set themselves to work, under a recommendation from Congress,
-to erect a local government for themselves; but in no instance did the
-people of any State attempt to incorporate into their local system any
-of those attributes of national authority which the Declaration of Independence
-had asserted in favor of the United States.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Alexander
-James Dallas</span>, <i>Argument in the Case of Michael Bright and others, in
-the Circuit Court of the United States, April 28, 1809</i>: Life and Writings,
-p. 104.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>Hence, while the sovereignty resides inherently and inalienably in the
-people, it is a perversion of language to denominate the State, as a body
-politic or government, sovereign and independent.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 100.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>America has chosen to be, in many respects and to many purposes, a
-Nation; and for all these purposes her government is complete, to all
-these objects it is competent. The people have declared, that, in the exercise
-of all powers given for these objects, it is supreme. It can, then,
-in effecting these objects, legitimately control all individuals or governments
-within the American territory. The Constitution and laws of a
-State, so far as they are repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the
-United States, are absolutely void. These States are constituent parts
-of the United States; they are members of one great empire.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Chief
-Justice Marshall</span>, <i>Cohens</i> v. <i>Virginia</i>, Wheaton, Rep., Vol. VI. p. 414.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>This Address was prepared as a lecture, and was delivered on a
-lecture-tour reaching as far as Milwaukee, Dubuque, and St. Louis.
-On its delivery in New York, Dr. Francis Lieber was in the chair.
-It became the subject of various local notice and discussion.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of Nationality had prevailed with Mr. Sumner from the
-beginning of his public life. In his appeal to Mr. Webster before
-the Whig State Convention, as early as September 23, 1846, while
-calling on the eminent Senator and orator to become <i>Defender of Humanity</i>,
-he recognized his received title, <i>Defender of the Constitution</i>,
-as justly earned by the vigor, argumentation, and eloquence with
-which he had “upheld the Union and that interpretation of the Constitution
-which makes us a Nation.”<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> And from that time he had
-always insisted that we were a Nation,&mdash;believing, that, while many
-things were justly left to local government, for which the States are the
-natural organs, yet the great principles of Unity and Human Rights
-should be placed under central guardianship, so as to be everywhere
-the same; and this he considered the essence of the Nation.&mdash;The
-word “Federal” Mr. Sumner habitually rejected for “National.”
-Courts and officers under the United States Government he called
-“National.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>ADDRESS.</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. PRESIDENT,&mdash;At the close of a bloody Rebellion,
-instigated by hostility to the sacred principles
-of the Declaration of Independence, and inaugurated
-in the name of State Rights, it becomes us now
-to do our best that these sacred principles shall not
-again be called in question, and that State Rights shall
-not again disturb the national repose. One terrible war
-is more than enough; and since, after struggle, peril, and
-sacrifice, where every household has been a sufferer, we
-are at last victorious, it is not too much to insist on
-all possible safeguards for the future. The whole case
-must be settled now. The constant duel between the
-Nation and the States must cease. The National Unity
-must be assured,&mdash;in the only way which is practical
-and honest,&mdash;through the principles declared by our
-fathers and inwoven into the national life.</p>
-
-<p>In one word, the Declaration of Independence must
-be recognized as a fundamental law, and State Rights,
-in all their denationalizing pretensions, must be trampled
-out forever, to the end that we may be, in reality
-as in name, a Nation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Are we a Nation? Such is the question I now propose,
-believing that the whole case is involved in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-answer. Are we a Nation? Then must we have that
-essential, indestructible unity belonging to a Nation,
-with all those central, pervasive, impartial powers which
-minister to the national life; then must we have that
-central, necessary authority inherent in just government,
-to protect the citizen in all the rights of citizenship;
-and then must we have that other central, inalienable
-prerogative of providing for all the promises solemnly
-made when we first claimed our place as a Nation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Words are sometimes things; and I cannot doubt
-that our country would gain in strength and our people
-in comprehensive patriotism, if we discarded language
-which in itself implies certain weakness and possible
-disunion. Pardon me, if I confess that I have
-never reconciled myself to the use of the word “Federal”
-instead of “National.” To my mind, our government
-is not Federal, but National; our Constitution is
-not Federal, but National; our courts under the Constitution
-are not Federal, but National; our army is
-not Federal, but National. There is one instance where
-this misnomer does not occur. The debt of our country
-is always <i>National</i>,&mdash;perhaps because this term
-promises in advance additional security to the anxious
-creditor. “Liberty” and “Equality” are more than dollars
-and cents; they should be National also, and enjoy
-the same security.</p>
-
-<p>During the imbecility of the Confederation, which
-was nothing but a league or <i>fœdus</i>, the government
-was naturally called Federal. This was its proper designation.
-Any other would have been out of place,
-although even then Washington liked to speak of the
-Nation. In summoning the Convention which framed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-the National Constitution, the States all spoke of the
-existing government as “Federal.” But after the adoption
-of the National Constitution, completing our organization
-as one people, the designation was inappropriate.
-It should have been changed. If not then, it
-must be now. New capacities require a new name. The
-word Saviour did not originally exist in the Latin; but
-St. Augustine, who wrote in this language, boldly used
-it, saying there was no occasion for it until after the
-Saviour was born.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> If among us in the earlier day
-there was no occasion for the word Nation, there is
-now. A Nation is born.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The word Nation is suggestive beyond any definition
-of the dictionary. It awakens an echo second only to
-that of Country. It is a word of unity and power. It
-brings to mind intelligent masses enjoying the advantage
-of organization, for whom there is a Law of Nations,&mdash;as
-there is a Law of Nature,&mdash;each nation
-being a unit. Sometimes uttered vaguely, it is simply
-an intensive, as in the familiar exaggeration, “only a
-<i>nation</i> louder”; but even here the word furnishes a
-measure of vastness. In ordinary usage, it implies an
-aggregation of human beings who have reached such
-advanced stage of political development that they are
-no longer a tribe of Nomads, like our Indians,&mdash;no
-longer a mere colony, city, principality, or state,&mdash;but
-they are one people, throbbing with a common life,
-occupying a common territory, rejoicing in a common
-history, sharing in common trials, and securing to each
-the protection of the common power. We have heard,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-also, that a Nation is a people with the consciousness
-of Human Rights. Well spoke Louis the Fifteenth of
-France, when this word first resounded in his ears:
-“What means it? I am king; is there any king but
-me?” The monarch did not know that the Nation
-was more than king, all of which his successor learned
-among the earliest lessons of the Revolution, as this
-word became the inspiration and voice of France.</p>
-
-<p>The ancients had but one word for State and City;
-nor did they use the word Nation as it is latterly
-used. Derived from the Latin <i>nascor</i> and <i>natus</i>, signifying
-“to be born” and “being born,” it was originally
-applied to a race or people of common descent and
-language, but seems to have had no reference to a
-common government. In the latter sense it is modern.
-Originally ethnological, it is now political. The
-French Communists have popularized the kindred word
-“Solidarity,” denoting a community of interests, which
-is an element of nationality. There is the solidarity
-of nations together, and also the solidarity of a people
-constituting one nation, being those who, according to
-a familiar phrase, are “all in one bottom.”</p>
-
-<p>England early became a Nation; and this word seems
-to have assumed there a corresponding meaning. Sir
-Walter Raleigh, courtier of Queen Elizabeth, and victim
-of James the First, who was a master of our language,
-in speaking of the people of England, calls them
-“our Nation.”<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> John Milton was filled with the same
-sentiment, when, addressing England and Scotland, he
-says: “Go on, both hand in hand, <i>O Nations</i>, never to
-be disunited! be the praise and the heroic song of all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
-posterity!”<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> In the time of Charles the Second, Sir
-William Temple furnished a precise definition, which
-foreshadows the definition of our day. According to
-this accomplished writer and diplomatist, a Nation was
-“a great number of families, derived from the same
-blood, born in the same country, and <i>living under the
-same government and civil constitutions</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> Here is the
-political element. Johnson, in his Dictionary, follows
-Temple substantially, calling it “a people distinguished
-from another people, generally by their language, original,
-<i>or government</i>.” Our own Webster, the lexicographer,
-calls it “the body of inhabitants of a country <i>united
-under the same government</i>”; Worcester, “a people born
-in the same country and <i>living under the same government</i>”;
-the French Dictionary of the Academy, “the
-totality of persons born or naturalized in a country and
-<i>living under the same government</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Of these definitions,
-those of Webster and the French Academy are
-the best; and of the two, that of Webster the most
-compact.</p>
-
-<p>These definitions all end in the idea of unity under
-one government. They contemplate political unity,
-rather than unity of blood or language. Undoubted
-nations exist without the latter. Various accents of
-speech and various types of manhood, with the great
-distinction of color, which we encounter daily, show
-that there is no such unity here. But this is not required.
-If the inhabitants are of one blood and one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
-language, the unity is more complete; but the essential
-condition is one sovereignty, involving, of course,
-one citizenship. In this sense Gibbon employs the
-word, when, describing the people of Italy,&mdash;all of
-whom were recognized as Roman citizens,&mdash;he says:
-“From the foot of the Alps to the extremity of Calabria,
-all the natives of Italy were born citizens of
-Rome. Their partial distinctions were obliterated, and
-they insensibly <i>coalesced into one great Nation</i>, united
-by language, manners, and <i>civil institutions</i>, and equal
-to the weight of a powerful empire.”<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> Here dominion
-proceeding originally from conquest is consecrated by
-concession of citizenship, and the great historian hails
-the coalesced people as Nation.</p>
-
-<p>One of our ablest writers of History and Constitutional
-Law, Professor Lieber, of Columbia College, New
-York, has discussed this question with learning and
-power.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> According to this eminent authority, Nation
-is something more than a word. It denotes that polity
-which is the normal type of government at the present
-advanced stage of civilization, and to which all
-people tend just in proportion to enlightenment and
-enfranchisement. The learned Professor does not hesitate
-to say that such a polity is naturally dedicated
-to the maintenance of all the rights of the citizen as
-its practical end and object. It is easy to see that the
-Nation, thus defined, must possess elements of perpetuity.
-It is not a quicksand, or mere agglomeration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-of particles, liable to disappear, but a solid, infrangible
-crystallization, against which winds and rains beat in
-vain.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Opposed to this prevailing tendency is the earlier
-propensity to local sovereignty, which is so gratifying
-to petty pride and ambition. This propensity, assuming
-various forms in different ages and countries,
-according to the degree of development, has always
-been a species of egotism. When the barbarous islanders
-of the Pacific imagined themselves the whole world,
-they furnished an illustration of this egotism in its
-primitive form. Its latest manifestation has been in
-State pretensions. But here a distinction must be observed.
-For purposes of local self-government, and to
-secure its educational and political blessings, the States
-are of unquestioned value. This is their true function,
-to be praised and vindicated always. But <i>local sovereignty</i>,
-whether in the name of State or prince, is
-out of place and incongruous under a government truly
-national. It is entirely inconsistent with the idea of
-Nation. Perhaps its essential absurdity in such a government
-was never better illustrated than by the homely
-apologue of the ancient Roman,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> which so wrought upon
-the secessionists of his day that they at once returned
-to their allegiance. According to this successful orator,
-the different members of the human body once murmured
-against the “belly,” which was pictured very
-much as our National Government has been, and they
-severally refused all further coöperation. The hands
-would not carry food to the mouth; nor would the
-mouth receive it, if carried; nor would the teeth perform<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-their office. The rebellion began; but each member
-soon found that its own welfare was bound up inseparably
-with the rest, and especially that in weakening
-the “belly” it weakened every part. Such is the
-discord of State pretensions. How unlike that unity
-of which the human form, with heaven-directed countenance,
-is the perfect type, where every part has its
-function, and all are in obedience to the divine mandate
-which created man in the image of God! And
-such is the Nation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Would you know the incalculable mischief of State
-pretensions? The American continent furnishes three
-different examples, each worthy of extended contemplation.
-There are, first, our Indians, aborigines of the
-soil, split into tribes, possessing a barbarous independence,
-but through this perverse influence kept in constant
-strife, with small chance of improvement. Each
-chief is a representative of State pretensions. Turning
-the back upon union, they turn the back upon civilization
-itself. There is, next, our neighbor republic,
-Mexico, where Nature is bountiful in vain, and climate
-lends an unavailing charm, while twenty-three States,
-unwilling to recognize the national power, set up their
-disorganizing pretensions, and chaos becomes chronic.
-The story is full of darkness and tragedy. The other
-instance is our own, where sacrifices of all kinds, public
-and private, rise up in blood before us. Civil war,
-wasted treasure, debt, wounds, and death are the witnesses.
-With wailing voice all these cry out against
-the deadly enemy lurking in State pretensions. But
-this wail is heard from the beginning of history, saddening
-its pages from generation to generation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In ancient times the City-State was the highest type,
-as in Greece, where every city was a State, proud of
-its miniature sovereignty. The natural consequences
-ensued. Alliances, leagues, and confederations were ineffectual
-against State pretensions. The parts failed to
-recognize the whole and its natural supremacy. Amidst
-all the triumphs of genius and the splendors of art,
-there was no national life, and Greece died. From her
-venerable sepulchre, with ever-burning funeral lamps,
-where was buried so much of mortal beauty, there is
-a constant voice of warning, which sounds across continent
-and ocean, echoing “Beware!”</p>
-
-<p>Rome also was a City-State. If it assumed at any
-time the national form, it was only because the conquering
-republic took to itself all other communities
-and melted them in its fiery crucible. But this dominion
-was of force, ending in universal empire, where the
-consent of the governed was of little account. How incalculably
-different from a well-ordered Nation, where
-all is natural, and the people are knit together in self-imposed
-bonds!</p>
-
-<p>Then came the colossal power of Charlemagne, under
-whom peoples and provinces were accumulated into
-one incongruous mass. Here again was universal empire,
-but there was no Nation.</p>
-
-<p>Legend and song have depicted the paladins that
-surrounded Charlemagne, fighting his battles and constituting
-his court. They were the beginning of that
-Feudal System which was the next form that Europe
-assumed. The whole country was parcelled among
-chieftains under the various names of Duke, Count,
-and Baron, each of whom held a district, great or small,
-where, asserting a local sovereignty, he revelled in State<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-pretensions; and yet they all professed a common allegiance.
-Guizot was the first to remark that Feudalism,
-taken as a whole, was a confederation, which he
-boldly likens to what he calls the federal system of the
-United States. It is true that Feudalism was essentially
-federal, where each principality exercised a disturbing
-influence, and unity was impossible; but I utterly deny
-that our country can fall into any such category, unless
-it succumbs at last to the dogma of State pretensions,
-which was the essential element of the feudal confederation.</p>
-
-<p>Feudalism was not a government; it was only a system.
-During its prevalence, the Nation was unknown.
-Wherever its influence subsided, the Nation began to
-appear; and now, wherever its influence still lingers on
-earth, there the yearnings for national life, instinctive
-in the popular heart, are for the time suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>Curiously enough, Sweden and Hungary were not
-brought within the sphere of Feudalism, and these two
-outlying lands, left free to natural impulses, revealed
-themselves at an early day as Nations. When the European
-continent was weakened by anarchy, they were
-already strong in national life, with an influence beyond
-their population or means.</p>
-
-<p>Feudalism has left its traces in England; but it was
-never sufficiently strong in that sea-girt land to resist
-the natural tendencies to unity, partly from its insular
-position, and partly from the character of its people.
-At an early day the seven-headed Heptarchy was
-changed into one kingdom; but a transformation not
-less important occurred when the feudal lords were absorbed
-into the government, of which they became a
-component part, and the people were represented in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-a central Parliament, which legislated for the whole
-country, with Magna Charta as the supreme law. Then
-was England a Nation; and just in proportion as the
-national life increased has her sway been felt in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>France was less prompt to undergo this change, for
-Feudalism found here its favorite home. That compact
-country, so formed for unity, was the victim of State
-pretensions. It was divided and subdivided. North
-and South, speaking the same language, were separated
-by a difference of dialect. Then came the great provinces,
-Normandy, Brittany, Burgundy, Provence, Languedoc,
-and Gascony, with constant menace of resistance
-and nullification, while smaller fiefs shared the
-prevailing turbulence. A French barony was an “autonomic
-government,” with a moated town, in contrast
-with an English barony, which was merged in the Kingdom.
-Slowly these denationalizing pretensions were
-subdued; but at last the flag of the French monarchy,&mdash;the
-most beautiful invention of heraldry,&mdash;with
-lilies of gold on a field of azure, and angelic supporters,
-waved over a united people. From that time France
-has been a Nation, filled with a common life, burning
-with a common patriotism, and quickened by a common
-glory. To an Arab chieftain, who, in barbaric
-simplicity, asked the number of tribes there, a Frenchman
-promptly replied, “We are all one tribe.”</p>
-
-<p>Spain also triumphed over State pretensions. The
-Moors were driven from Granada. Castile and Aragon
-were united under Ferdinand and Isabella. Feudalism
-was overcome. Strong in the national unity, her kings
-became lords of the earth. The name of Spain was
-exalted, and her language was carried to the uttermost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
-parts of the sea. For her Columbus sailed; for her
-Cortes and Pizarro conquered. But these adventurous
-spirits could have done little, had they not been filled
-with the exuberance of her national life.</p>
-
-<p>Italy has been less happy. The pretensions of Feudalism
-here commingled with the pretensions of City-States.
-Petty princes and petty republics, restless with
-local sovereignty, constituted together a perpetual discord.
-That beauty which one of her poets calls a “fatal
-gift” tempted the foreigner. Disunited Italy became
-an easy prey. Genius strove in the bitterness of despair,
-while this exquisite land, where History adds to
-the charms of Nature and gilds anew the golden fields,
-sank at last to become, in the audacious phrase of Napoleon,
-simply a geographical name. A checker-board
-of separate States, it was little else. It had a place
-on the map, as in the memory, but no place in the
-present. It performed no national part. It did nothing
-for imitation or remembrance. Thus it continued,
-a fearful example to mankind. Meanwhile the sentiment
-of Nationality began to stir. At last it broke
-forth like the pent-up lava from its own Vesuvius, and
-Garibaldi was its conductor. Separate States, renouncing
-local pretensions, became greater still as parts of
-the great whole, and Italy stood forth a Nation, to testify
-against the intolerable jargon of State pretensions. All
-hail to this heroic revival, where dissevered parts have
-been brought together, as were those of the ancient
-Deity, and shaped anew into a form of beauty and
-power!</p>
-
-<p>But Germany is the most instructive example. Here,
-from generation to generation, have State pretensions
-triumphed, perversely postponing that National Unity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-which is the longing of the German heart. Stretching
-from the Baltic to the Adriatic and the Alps, penetrated
-by great rivers, possessing an harmonious expanse
-of territory, speaking one language, filled with
-the same intellectual life, and enjoying a common name,
-which has been historic from the days of Tacitus, Germany,
-like France, seems formed for unity. Martin Luther
-addressed one of his grand letters <i>An die Deutsche
-Nation</i> (To the German Nation); and these words are
-always touching to Germans as the image of what they
-desire so much. Thus far the great longing has failed.
-Even the Empire, where all were gathered under one
-imperial head, was only a variegated patchwork of
-States. Feudalism, in its most extravagant pretensions,
-still prevails. Confederation takes the place of Nationality,
-and this vast country, with all its elements of
-unity, is only a discordant conglomerate. North and
-South are inharmonious, Prussia and Austria representing
-two opposite sections. Other divisions have been
-more perplexing. Not to speak of Circles, or groups,
-each with a diet of its own, which once existed, I mention
-simply the later division into thirty-nine States,
-differing in government and in extent, being monarchies,
-principalities, dukedoms, and free cities, all proportionately
-represented in a general council or diet,
-and proportionately bound to the common defence, but
-every one filled with State egotism. So complete was
-this disjunction, and such its intolerable pretensions,
-that internal commerce, the life-blood of the Nation,
-was strangled. Down to a recent day, each diminutive
-state had its own custom-house, where the traveller
-was compelled to exhibit his passport and submit
-to local levies. This universal obstruction slowly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-yielded to a Zollverein, or Customs-Union, under which
-these barriers were obliterated and customs were collected
-on the external frontiers. Here was the first
-triumph of Unity. Meanwhile the perpetual strife between
-Prussia and Austria broke out in terrible battle.
-Prussia has succeeded in absorbing several of the
-smaller states. But the darling passion of the German
-heart is still unsatisfied. Not in fact, but in aspiration
-only, is Germany one nation. Patriot Poetry takes up
-the voice, and, scorning the claims of individual states,
-principalities, and cities, scorning also the larger claims
-of Prussia and Austria alike, exclaims, in the spirit of
-a true Nationality:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent2">“That is the German’s fatherland</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Where Germans all as brothers glow;</div>
-<div class="verse indent5">That is the land;</div>
-<div class="verse">All Germany’s thy fatherland.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">God grant that the day may soon dawn when all Germany
-shall be one!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Confessing the necessity of a true national life, we
-have considered what is a Nation, and how the word
-itself implies indestructible unity under one government
-with common rights of citizenship; and then we
-have seen how this idea has grown with the growth
-of civilization, slowly conquering the adverse pretensions
-of States, until at last even Italy became one
-nation, while Germany was left still struggling for the
-same victory. And now I come again to the question
-with which I began.</p>
-
-<p>Are we a Nation? Surely we are not a City-State,
-like Athens and early Rome in antiquity, or like Florence
-and Frankfort in modern times; nor, whatever
-the extent of our territory, are we an Empire cemented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-by conquest, like that of later Rome, or like that of
-Charlemagne; nor are we a Feudal Confederation, with
-territory parcelled among local pretenders; nor are we
-a Confederation in any just sense. From the first settlement
-of the country down to the present time, whether
-in the long annals of the Colonies or since the Colonies
-were changed into States, there has been but one authentic
-voice: now breaking forth in organized effort
-for Union; now swelling in that majestic utterance of
-a united people, the Declaration of Independence; now
-sounding in the scarcely less majestic utterance of the
-same united people, the opening words of the National
-Constitution; and then again leaping from the hearts
-of patriots. All these, at different times and in various
-tones, testify that we are one people, under one sovereignty,
-vitalized and elevated by a dedication to Human
-Rights.</p>
-
-<p>There is a distinction for a long time recognized
-by German writers, and denoted by the opposite terms
-<i>Staatenbund</i> and <i>Bundesstaat</i>,&mdash;the former being “a
-league of states,” and the latter “a state formed by a
-league.” In the former the separate states are visibly
-distinct; in the latter they are lost in unity. And
-such is the plain condition of our republic.</p>
-
-<p>Of the present thirty-seven States only thirteen
-were originally Colonies; three are offsets from some
-of these; all the rest have been founded on territory
-which was the common property of the people of the
-United States, and at their own request they have been
-received into the fellowship of government and citizenship.
-If on any ground one of the original Thirteen
-might renounce its obligations to the Union, it would
-not follow that one of the new States, occupying the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-common territory, could do likewise. It is little short
-of madness to attribute such a denationalizing prerogative
-to any State, whether new or old. For better or
-worse, we are all bound together in one indissoluble
-bond. The National Union is a knot which in an evil
-hour the sword may cut, but which no mortal power
-can unloose without the common consent.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From the earliest landing, this knot has been tying
-tighter and tighter. Two ways it promptly showed itself:
-first, in the common claim of the rights of British
-subjects; and, secondly, in the common rights of
-citizenship coextensive with the Colonies, and the consequent
-rights of every Colony in every other Colony.</p>
-
-<p>The Colonies were settled separately, under different
-names, and each had its own local government. But
-no local government in any Colony was allowed to restrict
-the rights, liberties, and immunities of British
-subjects. This was often declared. Above all charters
-or local laws were the imprescriptible safeguards
-of Magna Charta, which were common to all the inhabitants.
-On one occasion, the Legislature of Massachusetts
-reminded the king’s governor of these safeguards
-in memorable words: “We hope we may without
-offence put your Excellency in mind of that most
-grievous sentence of excommunication solemnly denounced
-by the Church in the name of the sacred Trinity,
-in the presence of King Henry the Third and the
-estates of the realm, <i>against all those who should make
-statutes, or observe them, being made, contrary to the liberties
-of Magna Charta</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Massachusetts spoke for all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-the Colonies. Enjoyment of common rights was a common
-bond, constituting an element of nationality. As
-these rights grew more important, the common bond
-grew stronger.</p>
-
-<p>The rights of citizenship in the Colonies were derived
-from common relations to the mother country. No Colonist
-could be an alien in any other Colony. As British
-subject he had the freedom of every Colony, with
-the right of making his home there, and of inheriting
-lands. Among all the Colonies there was a common
-and interchangeable citizenship, or <i>inter-citizenship</i>.
-The very rule of the Constitution then began,
-that “the citizens of each State shall be entitled to
-all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several
-States.” Here was another element of nationality.
-If not at that time fellow-citizens, all were at least
-fellow-subjects. Fellowship had begun. Thus in the
-earliest days, even before Independence, were the Colonists
-one people, with one sovereignty, afterwards renounced.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Efforts for a common government on this side of the
-ocean soon showed themselves. The Pilgrims landed at
-Plymouth in 1620. As early as 1643, only twenty-three
-years later, there was a confederation under the name
-of “The United Colonies of New England,” formed primarily
-for the common defence; and here is the first
-stage of nationality on this continent. In the preamble
-to the Articles the parties declare: “We, therefore,
-do conceive it our bounden duty without delay to enter
-into a present consociation amongst ourselves for mutual
-help and strength in all our future concernments,
-that, as in nation and religion, so in other respects, <i>we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
-be and continue One</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> Better words could not mark
-the beginning of a nation. A distinguished character
-of the time, recording the difficulties encountered by
-the Articles, says: “But, being all desirous of union and
-studious of peace, they readily yielded each to other
-in such things as tended to common utility, etc., so as
-in some two or three meetings <i>they lovingly accorded</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-Encouraged by “loving accord,” another proposition was
-brought forward in Massachusetts, “for all the English
-within the United Colonies <i>to enter into a civil agreement
-for the maintenance of religion and our civil liberties</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-More than a century elapsed before this aspiration
-was fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Colonies grew in population and power.
-No longer merely scattered settlements, they began to
-act a part in history. Anxious especially against French
-domination, already existing in Canada and extending
-along the Lakes to the Mississippi, they came together
-in Congress at Albany, in 1754, to take measures for the
-common defence. Delegates were present from seven
-Colonies, being all north of the Potomac. Here the
-genius of Benjamin Franklin prevailed. A plan from
-this master mind provided for what was called a “General
-Government,” administered by a “President-General
-and Grand Council,” where each Colony should have
-representatives in proportion to its contributions,&mdash;Massachusetts
-and Virginia having seven each, while
-New York had only four; and the first meeting of
-the “General Government” was to be at Philadelphia.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-Local jealousy and pretension were then too strong for
-such a Union: and it found no greater favor in England;
-for there Union was “dreaded as the keystone of
-Independence.”<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> In defending this plan, Franklin, who
-had not yet entered into the idea of Independence, did
-not hesitate to say that he looked upon the Colonies “as
-so many counties gained to Great Britain,”<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>&mdash;employing
-an illustration which most forcibly suggested actual
-Unity. Though this experiment failed, it revealed the
-longing for one Cisatlantic government, and showed
-how under other auspices it might be accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>Little more than ten years elapsed before the same
-yearning for common life appeared again in the Colonial
-Congress at New York, convened in 1765, on the
-recommendation of Massachusetts, to arrest the tyranny
-of the Stamp Act and assaults upon the common liberties.
-Nine Colonies, after deliberation, united in a
-Declaration of Rights common to all. Here was the
-inspiration of James Otis, the youthful orator of Freedom,
-whose tongue of flame had already flashed the cry,
-“Taxation without representation is tyranny,” and that
-other cry, worthy of perpetual memory, “Equality and
-the power of the whole, without distinction of color.”
-These were voices that heralded our Nation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The mother country persisted; and in the same proportion
-the Colonies were aroused to the necessity of
-union. Meanwhile that inflexible Republican, Samuel
-Adams, of Massachusetts, brooding on the perils to Liberty,
-conceived the idea of what he called “a Congress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-of American States,” out of whose deliberations should
-come what he boldly proclaimed “an American Commonwealth,”<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>&mdash;not
-several commonwealths, not Thirteen,
-but One. Here, in a single brilliant flash, was
-revealed the image of National Unity, while the word
-“Commonwealth” denoted the common weal which all
-should share. The declared object of this burning patriot
-was “to answer the great purpose of preserving
-our liberties,”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>&mdash;meaning, of course, the liberties of all.
-Better words could not be chosen to describe a republican
-government. This was in 1773. Every Colony,
-catching the echo, stirred with national life. Delegates
-were appointed, and in 1774 a Congress called “Continental,”
-with a representation from twelve Colonies, was
-organized at Philadelphia, and undertook to speak in
-the name of “the good people” of the Colonies. Here
-was a national act. In the Declaration of Rights which
-it put forth,&mdash;fit precursor of the Declaration of Independence,&mdash;it
-grandly claims, that, by the immutable
-laws of Nature, the principles of the English Constitution,
-and the several Charters, all the inhabitants are
-“entitled to life, liberty, and property,” and then announces
-“that the foundation of English liberty and
-of all free government is <i>a right in the people to participate
-in their legislative council</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> Here was a claim
-of popular rights as a first principle of government.
-Proceeding from a Congress of all, such a claim marks
-yet another stage of national life.</p>
-
-<p>The next year witnessed a second Continental Congress,
-also at Philadelphia, which entered upon a mightier
-career. Proceeding at once to exercise national powers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-this great Congress undertook to put the Colonies
-in a state of defence, authorized the raising of troops,
-framed rules for the government of the army, commenced
-the equipment of armed vessels, and commissioned
-George Washington as “general and commander-in-chief
-of the army of the United Colonies, and of all
-the forces now raised or to be raised by them, and of
-all others who shall voluntarily offer their service and
-join the said army, for the defence of American liberty.”
-Here were national acts, which history cannot forget,
-and their object was nothing less than American liberty.
-It was American liberty which Washington was
-commissioned to defend. Under these inspirations was
-our Nation born. The time had now come.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Independence was declared. Here was an act which,
-from beginning to end, in every particular and all its
-inspirations, was National, stamping upon the whole
-people Unity in the support of Human Rights. It was
-done “in the name and by authority of the good people
-of these Colonies,” called at the beginning “one people,”
-and it was entitled “Declaration by the Representatives
-of the United States of America in Congress assembled,”
-without a word of separate sovereignty. As a
-National act it has two distinct features: first, a severance
-of the relations between the “United Colonies”
-and the mother country; and, secondly, a declaration of
-self-evident truths on which the severance was justified
-and the new Nation founded. It is the “United Colonies”
-that are declared free and independent States;
-and this act is justified by the sublime declaration that
-all men are created equal, with certain inalienable rights,
-and that to secure these rights governments are instituted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-among men, deriving their just powers from the
-consent of the governed. Here was that “American
-Commonwealth,” the image of National Unity, dedicated
-to Human Rights, which had enchanted the vision of
-the early patriot seeking new safeguards for Liberty.
-Here was a new Nation, with new promises and covenants,
-never before made. The constituent authority
-was “the People.” The rights it promised and covenanted
-were the Equal Rights of All; not the rights
-of Englishmen, but the rights of Man. On this account
-our Declaration has its great meaning in history; on
-this account our nation became at once a source of
-light to the world. Well might the sun have stood
-still on that day to witness a kindred luminary ascending
-into the sky!</p>
-
-<p>In this sudden transformation where was the sovereignty?
-It was declared that the <i>United</i> Colonies
-are and <i>of right</i> ought to be free and independent
-States. It was never declared that the <i>separate</i> Colonies
-were so <i>of right</i>. Plainly they never were so <i>in
-fact</i>. Therefore there was no separate sovereignty either
-of right or in fact. The sovereignty anterior to Independence
-was in the mother country; afterwards it was
-in the people of the United States, who took the place
-of the mother country. As the original sovereignty was
-undivided, so also was that sovereignty of the people
-which became its substitute. If authority were needed
-for this irresistible conclusion, I might find it in the
-work of the great commentator, Mr. Justice Story, and
-in that powerful discourse of John Quincy Adams entitled
-“The Jubilee of the Constitution,” in both of
-which the sovereignty is accorded to the People, and
-not to the States. Nor should I forget that rarest political<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
-genius, Alexander Hamilton, who, regarding these
-things as a contemporary, declared most triumphantly
-that “the Union had complete sovereignty”; that “the
-Declaration of Independence was the fundamental constitution
-of every State”; and, finally, that “the union
-and independence of these States are blended and incorporated
-in one and the same act.”<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Such was the
-great beginning of national life.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A beautiful meditative poet, whose words are often
-most instructive, confesses that we may reach heights
-we cannot hold:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“And the most difficult of tasks to keep</div>
-<div class="verse">Heights which the soul is competent to gain.”<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our nation found it so. Only a few days after the
-great Declaration in the name of “the People,” Articles
-of Confederation were brought forward in the name of
-“the States.” Evidently these were drawn before the
-Declaration, and they were in the handwriting of John
-Dickinson, then a delegate from Pennsylvania, whom
-the eldest Adams calls “the bell-wether of the aristocratical
-flock,”<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> and who had been the orator against
-the Declaration. Not unnaturally, an opponent of the
-Declaration favored a system which forgot the constituent
-sovereignty of the people, and made haste to establish
-the pretensions of States. These Articles were not
-readily adopted. There was hesitation in Congress, and
-then hesitation among the States. At last, on the 1st
-of March, 1781, Maryland gave a tardy adhesion, and
-this shadow of a government began. It was a pitiful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-sight. The Declaration was sacrificed. Instead of “one
-people,” we were nothing but “a league” of States; and
-our nation, instead of drawing its quickening life from
-“the good people,” drew it from a combination of “artificial
-bodies”; instead of recognizing the constituent
-sovereignty of the people, by whose voice Independence
-was declared, it recognized only the pretended
-sovereignty of States; and, to complete the humiliating
-transformation, the national name was called “the
-style,” being a term which denotes sometimes title and
-sometimes copartnership, instead of unchangeable unity.
-Such an apostasy could not succeed.</p>
-
-<p>Even before the adoption of this denationalizing
-framework, its failure had begun. The Confederation
-became at once a byword and a sorrow. It was not
-fit for war or peace. It accomplished nothing national.
-It arrested all the national activities. Each
-State played the part of the feudal chieftain, selfishly
-absorbing power and denying it to the Nation. Money
-could not be collected even for national purposes. Commerce
-could not be regulated. Justice could not be
-administered. Rights could not be assured. Congress
-was without coercive power, and could act only through
-the local sovereignty. National unity was impossible,
-and in its stead was a many-headed pretension. The
-country was lapsing into chaos.</p>
-
-<p>From Boston, which was the early home of the Revolution,
-had already proceeded a cry for Nationality. A
-convention of delegates from Massachusetts, Connecticut,
-and New Hampshire, with Thomas Cushing as
-President, assembled at Boston in August, 1780, where,
-among other things, it was recommended “that the
-Union of these States be fixed in a more solid and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-permanent manner, that the powers of Congress be more
-clearly ascertained and defined, and that the important
-<i>national</i> concerns of the United States be <i>under the
-superintendency and direction of one supreme head</i>,” and
-the word <i>Nation</i> is adopted as the natural expression
-for our unity.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> But the time had not yet come for
-this fulfilment.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In the prevailing darkness, two voices made themselves
-heard, both speaking for National Unity on the
-foundation of Human Rights. The singular accord between
-the two, not only in sentiment, but also in language,
-and in date of utterance, attests concert. One
-voice was that of Congress, in an Address and Recommendations
-to the States on the close of the war, bearing
-date 18th April, 1783, where, urging “effectual provision”
-for the war debts, as demanded alike by national
-honor, and the honor of the cause in which they had
-been contracted, it was said, in words worthy of companionship
-with the immortal Declaration: “Let it be
-remembered that it has ever been the pride and boast
-of America that <i>the rights for which she contended were
-the rights of Human Nature</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> The other voice was
-that of Washington, in a general order, also bearing
-date 18th April, 1783, announcing the close of the war,
-where, after declaring his “rapture” in the prospect before
-the country, he says: “Happy, thrice happy, shall
-they be pronounced hereafter who have contributed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-anything, who have performed the meanest office, in
-erecting this stupendous fabric of Freedom and Empire
-on the broad basis of Independency, <i>who have assisted
-in protecting the rights of Human Nature</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> This appeal
-was followed by a circular letter to the Governors,
-where, after announcing that it is for the United States
-to determine “whether they will be respectable and
-prosperous or contemptible and miserable <i>as a Nation</i>,”
-Washington proceeds to name first among the things
-essential to national well-being, if not even to national
-existence, what he calls “an indissoluble union of the
-States under one federal head”; and he adds, that
-there must be a forgetfulness of “local prejudices and
-policies,” and that “Liberty” must be at the foundation
-of the whole structure.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> Soon afterwards appearing before
-Congress to surrender the trust committed to him
-as commander-in-chief, he hailed the United States as a
-“Nation,” and “our dearest country,”<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>&mdash;thus embracing
-the whole in his heart, as for seven years he had
-defended the whole by his prudence and valor.</p>
-
-<p>An incident of a different character attested the consciousness
-of National Unity. The vast outlying territory,
-unsettled at the beginning of the war, and wrested
-from the British crown by the common blood and treasure,
-was claimed as a common property, subject to the
-disposition of Congress for the general good. One by
-one, the States yielded their individual claims. The
-cession of Virginia comprehended all that grand region
-northwest of the Ohio, fertile and rich beyond imagination,
-where are now prosperous States rejoicing in the
-Union. All these cessions were on the condition that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-the lands should “be disposed of for the common benefit
-of the United States, and be settled and formed into
-distinct <i>republican States</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> Here was a National act,
-with the promise of republican government, which was
-the forerunner of the guaranty of a republican government
-in the National Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>The best men, in their longing for national unity, all
-concurred in the necessity of immediate action to save
-the country. Foremost in time, as in genius, was Alexander
-Hamilton, who was prompt to insist that Congress
-should have “complete sovereignty, except as to
-that part of internal police which relates to the rights
-of property and life among individuals and to raising
-money by internal taxes”; and still further, in words
-which harmonized with the Declaration of Independence,
-that “the fabric of the American empire ought to
-rest on the solid basis of the consent of the people.”<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
-In kindred spirit, Schuyler announced “the necessity
-of <i>a supreme and coercive power</i> in the government of
-these States.”<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Hamilton and Schuyler were both of
-New York, which, with such representatives, took the
-lead in solemn resolutions, which, after declaring that
-“the situation of these States is in a peculiar manner
-critical,” and that “the present system exposes the common
-cause to a precarious issue,” concluded with a call
-for “a general convention of the States, specially authorized
-to revise and amend the Confederation.”<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> The
-movement ended in the National Convention. Other
-States followed, and Congress recommended it as “the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
-most probable means of establishing in these States a
-firm National Government.”<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Meantime, Noah Webster,
-whom you know so well as author of the popular
-Dictionary, in an essay on the situation, published at
-the time, proposed a new system of government, which
-should act directly on the individual citizens, and by
-which Congress should be invested with full powers of
-legislation within its sphere, and for carrying its laws
-into effect.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> But this proposition involved nothing less
-than a National Government with supreme powers, to
-which the States should be subordinate.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here I mention three illustrious characters, who at
-this time lent the weight of their great names to the
-national cause,&mdash;Jay, Madison, and Washington,&mdash;each
-in his way without a peer. I content myself with a few
-words from each. John Jay, writing to John Adams,
-at the time our minister in London, under date of 4th
-May, 1786, says: “One of the first wishes of my heart”
-is “to see the people of America become <i>One Nation in
-every respect</i>; for, as to the separate Legislatures, I would
-have them considered, with relation to the Confederacy,
-<i>in the same light in which counties stand</i> to the State of
-which they are parts, viz., merely as districts to facilitate
-the purposes of domestic order and good government.”<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-Even in this strong view Jay was not alone.
-Franklin had already led in likening the colonies to “so
-many counties.”<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> Madison’s desires were differently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-expressed. After declaring against “an individual independence
-of the States,” on the one side, and “a
-consolidation of the States into one simple republic,”
-on the other side, he sought what he called a “middle
-ground,” which, if varying from that of Jay, was
-essentially national. He would have “<i>a due supremacy
-of the National authority</i>, and leave in force the local
-authorities so far as they can be subordinately useful.”<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-Here is the definition of a Nation. Washington, in a
-letter to Jay, dated 1st August, 1786, stated the whole
-case with his accustomed authority. Insisting upon the
-importance of “a coercive power,” he pleads for national
-life: “I do not conceive we can exist long as <i>a Nation</i>
-without having lodged somewhere a power which will
-pervade the whole Union in <i>as energetic a manner as
-the authority of the State governments extends over the
-several States</i>.” He then adds: “To be fearful of investing
-Congress, constituted as that body is, with <i>ample
-authorities for National purposes</i>, appears to me the
-very climax of popular absurdity and madness.”<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> Such
-were the longings of patriots, all filled with a passion
-for country. But Washington went still further, when,
-on another occasion, he denounced State sovereignty as
-“bantling,” and even “monster.”<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Constituent Convention, often called Federal, better
-called National, assembled at Philadelphia in May,
-1787. It was a memorable body, whose deliberations
-have made an epoch in the history of government. Jefferson<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-and John Adams were at the time abroad in the
-foreign service of the country, Samuel Adams was in
-service at home in Massachusetts, and Jay in New
-York; but Washington, Franklin, Hamilton, Madison,
-Gouverneur Morris, George Mason, Wilson, Ellsworth,
-and Sherman appeared among its members. Washington,
-by their unanimous voice, became President; and,
-according to the rules of the Convention, on adjournment,
-every member stood in his place until the President
-had passed him. Here is a glimpse of that august
-body which Art may yet picture. Who would not be
-glad to look upon Franklin, Hamilton, and Madison
-standing in their places while Washington passed?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the first day after the adoption of the rules, Edmund
-Randolph, of Virginia, opened the great business.
-He began by announcing that the “Confederation” produced
-no security against foreign invasion; that the
-“Federal Government” could not suppress quarrels or
-rebellion; that the “Federal Government” could not
-defend itself against encroachments from the States;
-and then, insisting that the remedy must be found in
-“the republican principle,” concluded with a series of
-propositions for a National Government, with a “National”
-Legislature in two branches, a “National” Executive,
-and a “National” Judiciary, the whole crowned
-by the guaranty of a republican government in each
-State. This series of propositions was followed the next
-day by a simple statement in the form of a resolution,
-where, after setting forth the insufficiency of “a union
-of the States merely Federal,” or of “treaties among the
-States as individual sovereignties,” it was declared “that
-<i>a National Government ought to be established</i>, consisting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-of a supreme legislative, executive, and judiciary.” Better
-words could not have been chosen to express the
-prevailing aspiration for national life. After ample debate,
-the resolution in this form was adopted. At a
-later stage, in seeming deference to mistaken sensibilities,
-the word “National” gave place to the term
-“the government of the United States”; but this term
-equally denoted National Unity, although it did not use
-the words. The whole clause afterwards found a noble
-substitute in the Preamble to the Constitution, which is
-the annunciation of a National Government proceeding
-directly from the People, like the Declaration of Independence
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning to the end of its debates, the Convention
-breathed the same patriotic fervor. Amidst all
-difference in details, and above the persistent and sinister
-contest for the equal representation of the States,
-great and small, the sentiment of Unity found constant
-utterance. I have already mentioned Madison and
-Hamilton, who wished a National Government; but
-others were not less decided. Gouverneur Morris began
-early by explaining the difference between “Federal”
-and “National.” The former implied “a mere
-compact, resting on the good faith of the parties”;
-the latter had “a complete and compulsive operation.”<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-Constantly this impassioned statesman protested against
-State pretensions, insisting that the States were originally
-“nothing more than colonial corporations,”<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> and
-exclaiming, “We cannot annihilate, but we may perhaps
-take out the teeth of the serpents.”<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> Wilson
-was a different character,&mdash;gentle by nature, but informed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
-by studies in jurisprudence and by the education
-brought from his Scottish home. He was for a
-National Government, and did not think it inconsistent
-with the “lesser jurisdictions” of States, which he would
-preserve;<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> he would not “extinguish these planets,” but
-keep them “within their proper orbits for subordinate
-purposes.”<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> He was too much of a jurist to admit,
-“that, when the Colonies became independent of Great
-Britain, they became independent also of each other,”
-and he insisted that they became independent, “not
-individually, but unitedly.”<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> Elbridge Gerry, of Massachusetts,
-was as strong on this point as Gouverneur
-Morris, insisting that “we never were independent
-States, were not such now, and never could be, even
-on the principles of the Confederation.”<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> Rufus King,
-also of Massachusetts, touched a higher key, when he
-wished that “every man in America” should be “secured
-in all his rights,” and that these should not
-be “sacrificed to the phantom of State sovereignty.”<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
-Good words, worthy of him who in the Continental
-Congress moved the prohibition of Slavery in the national
-territories.<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> And Charles Pinckney, of South
-Carolina, said, in other words of precious significance,
-that “every freeman has a right to <i>the same protection
-and security</i>,” and then again, that “equality is the
-leading feature of the United States.”<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> Under such
-influences the Constitution was adopted by the Convention.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is needless to dwell on its features, all so well
-known; but there are certain points not to be disregarded
-now. There is especially the beginning. Next
-after the opening words of the Declaration of Independence,
-the opening words of the Constitution are
-the grandest in history. They sound like a majestic
-overture, fit prelude to the transcendent harmonies of
-National life on a theatre of unexampled proportions.
-Though familiar, they cannot be too often repeated; for
-they are in themselves an assurance of popular rights
-and an epitome of National duties: “<i>We, the people of
-the United States</i>, in order to form a more perfect Union,
-establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide
-for the common defence, promote the general welfare,
-and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our
-posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for
-the United States of America.” Thus by the people
-of the United States was the Constitution ordained and
-established; not by the States, nor even by the people
-of the several States, but by <i>the people of the United
-States</i> in aggregate individuality. Nor is it a league,
-alliance, agreement, compact, or confederation; but it
-is a Constitution, which in itself denotes an indivisible
-unity under one supreme law, permanent in character;
-and this Constitution, thus ordained and established,
-has for its declared purposes nothing less than liberty,
-justice, domestic tranquillity, the common defence, the
-general welfare, and a more perfect union, all essentially
-National, and to be maintained by the National
-arm. The work thus begun was completed by three further
-provisions: first, the lofty requirement that “the
-United States shall guaranty to every State in this
-Union a republican form of government,”&mdash;thus subjecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
-the States to the presiding judgment of the
-Nation, which is left to determine the definition of a
-republican government; secondly, the practical investiture
-of Congress with authority “to make all laws
-which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into
-execution all the powers vested by this Constitution in
-the Government of the United States, or in any department
-or officer thereof,”&mdash;thus assuring the maintenance
-of the National Government, and the execution
-of its powers through a faithful Congress chosen by the
-people; and, thirdly, the imperial declaration, that “this
-Constitution, and the laws of the United States which
-shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all treaties
-made or which shall be made under the authority of
-the United States, shall be <i>the supreme law of the land</i>,
-and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby,
-<i>anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the
-contrary notwithstanding</i>,”&mdash;thus forever fixing the supremacy
-of the National Government on a pinnacle
-above all local laws and constitutions. And thus did
-our country again assume the character and obligations
-of a Nation. Its first awakening was in the Declaration
-of Independence; its second was in the National
-Constitution.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On its adoption, the Constitution was transmitted to
-Congress with a letter from Washington, where, among
-other things, it is said that “in all our deliberations
-we kept steadily in our view that which appears to us
-the greatest interest of every true American, <i>the consolidation
-of our Union</i>, in which is involved our prosperity,
-felicity, safety, perhaps our National existence.”<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
-Enough that this letter is signed “George Washington”;
-but it was not merely the expression of his individual
-sentiments. It was unanimously adopted by the Convention,
-on the report of the committee that made the
-final draught of the Constitution itself, so that it must
-be considered as belonging to this great transaction. By
-its light the Constitution must be read. If anybody is
-disposed to set up the denationalizing pretensions of
-States under the National Constitution, let him bear in
-mind this explicit declaration, that, throughout all the
-deliberations of the Convention, the one object kept
-steadily in view was <i>the consolidation of our Union</i>.
-Such is the unanimous testimony of the Convention,
-authenticated by George Washington.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution was discussed next in the States.
-It was vindicated as creating a National Government,
-and it was opposed also on this very ground. Thus
-from opposite quarters comes the concurring testimony.
-In Connecticut, Mr. Johnson, who had been chairman
-of the committee that reported the final draught, said,
-in reply to inquiries of his constituents, that the Convention
-had “gone upon entirely new ground: they
-have formed <i>one new Nation</i> out of the individual
-States.”<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> George Mason, of Virginia, proclaimed at
-home that “the Confederation of the States was entirely
-changed into <i>one consolidated government</i>,”&mdash;that
-it was “a <i>National</i> government, and no longer a Confederation.”<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
-Patrick Henry, in his vigorous opposition,
-testified to the completeness with which the work
-had been accomplished. Inquiring by what authority
-the Convention assumed to make such a government,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-he exclaimed: “That this is a consolidated government
-is demonstrably clear.… Give me leave to demand,
-What right had they to say, <i>We, the people</i>?… Who
-authorized them to speak the language of <i>We, the people</i>,
-instead of <i>We, the States</i>?… If the States be not
-the agents of this compact, it must be one great consolidated
-National government of the people of all the
-States.”<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> Then again the same fervid orator declared,
-with infinite point, “The question turns, Sir, on that
-poor little thing, the expression, <i>We, the people</i>, instead
-of <i>the States</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> Patrick Henry was right. The question
-did turn on that grand expression, <i>We, the people</i>,
-in the very frontispiece of the Constitution, filling the
-whole with life-giving power; and so long as it stands
-there, the denationalizing pretensions of States must
-shrink into littleness. Originally “one people” during
-colonial days, we have been unalterably fixed in this
-condition by two National acts: first, the Declaration
-of Independence, and then again, the National Constitution.
-Thus is doubly assured the original unity in
-which we were born.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Other tokens of Nationality, like the air we breathe,
-are so common that they hardly attract attention; but
-each has a character of its own. They belong to the
-“unities” of our nation.</p>
-
-<p>1. There is the National Flag. He must be cold
-indeed, who can look upon its folds rippling in the
-breeze without pride of country. If in a foreign land
-the flag is companionship, and country itself, with all
-its endearments, who, as he sees it, can think of a State
-merely? Whose eyes, once fastened upon its radiant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
-trophies, can fail to recognize the image of the whole
-Nation? It has been called “a floating piece of poetry”;
-and yet I know not if it have an intrinsic beauty beyond
-other ensigns. Its highest beauty is in what it
-symbolizes. It is because it represents all, that all gaze
-at it with delight and reverence. It is a piece of bunting
-lifted in the air; but it speaks sublimely, and every
-part has a voice. Its stripes of alternate red and white
-proclaim the original <i>union</i> of thirteen States to maintain
-the Declaration of Independence. Its stars of white
-on a field of blue proclaim that <i>union</i> of States constituting
-our national constellation, which receives a new
-star with every new State. The two together signify
-Union, past and present. The very colors have a language,
-officially recognized by our fathers. White is
-for purity; red, for valor; blue, for justice. And all
-together, bunting, stripes, stars, and colors, blazing in
-the sky, make the flag of our country, to be cherished
-by all our hearts, to be upheld by all our hands.</p>
-
-<p>Not at once did this ensign come into being. Its
-first beginning was in the camp before Boston, and it
-was announced by Washington in these words: “The
-day which gave being to the new army, we hoisted the
-<i>Union flag</i>, in compliment to the United Colonies.”<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
-The National forces and the National flag began together.
-Shortly afterwards, amidst the acclamations of
-the people, a fleet of five sail left Philadelphia, according
-to the language of the time, “under the display of
-a <i>Union flag</i> with thirteen stripes.”<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> This was probably
-the same flag, not yet matured into its present
-form. In its corner, where are now the stars, were the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-crosses of St. George and St. Andrew, red and white,
-originally representing England and Scotland, and when
-conjoined, after the union of those two countries, known
-as “the Union.” To these were added thirteen stripes,
-alternate red and white, and the whole was hailed at
-the time as the Great Union Flag. The States, represented
-by the stripes, were in subordination to the National
-Unity, represented by the two crosses. But this
-form did not continue long. By a resolution adopted
-14th June, 1777, and made public 3d September, 1777,
-Congress determined “that the flag of the thirteen United
-States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that
-<i>the union</i> be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing
-a new constellation.”<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> Here the crosses of St.
-George and St. Andrew gave place to white stars in a
-blue field; the familiar symbol of British union gave
-place to another symbol of union peculiar to ourselves;
-and this completed the national flag, which a little later
-floated at the surrender of Burgoyne. Long afterward,
-in 1818, it was provided by Congress that a star be
-added on the admission of a new State, “to take effect
-on the fourth day of July next succeeding such admission.”<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-Thus, in every respect, and at each stage of its
-history, the National Flag testifies to the National Unity.
-The whole outstretched, indivisible country is seated in
-its folds.</p>
-
-<p>There is a curious episode of the national flag, which
-is not without value. As far back as 1754, Franklin,
-while attempting a union of the Colonies, pictured the
-principal ones in a wood-cut under the device of a
-snake divided into eight parts marked with their initials,
-and under the disjointed whole the admonitory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
-motto, “<i>Join or die</i>,”&mdash;thus indicating the paramount
-necessity of Union. In the heats of the Revolutionary
-discussion, a similar representation of all the Thirteen
-Colonies was adopted as the head-piece of newspapers,
-and was painted on banners; but when the Union was
-accomplished, the divisions and initials were dropped,
-and the snake was exhibited whole, coiled in conscious
-power, with thirteen rattles, and under it another admonitory
-motto, “<i>Don’t tread on me</i>,”&mdash;being a warning
-to the mother country.<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> This flag was yellow, and it
-became the early standard of the Revolutionary navy,
-being for the first time hoisted by Paul Jones with his
-own hands. It had a further lesson. A half-formed additional
-rattle was said by Franklin “to represent the
-province of Canada,” and the wise man added, that “the
-rattles are united together so as never to be separated
-but by breaking them to pieces.” Thus the snake at
-one time pictured the necessity of Union, and at another
-time its indissoluble bond.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> But these symbols
-were all in harmony with the national flag, which, from
-its first appearance, in all its forms, pictured the common
-cause.</p>
-
-<p>2. There is next the National Motto, as it appears
-on the national seal and on the national money. A
-common seal and common money are signs of National
-Unity. In each the supreme sovereignty of the Nation
-is manifest. The first is like the national flag, and
-stands for the Nation, especially in treaties with foreign
-powers. The second is a national convenience, if not necessity,
-taking its distinctive character from the Nation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-so that everywhere it is a representative of the Nation.
-Each has the same familiar motto, <i>E pluribus unum</i>,&mdash;“From
-many one.” Its history attests its significance.</p>
-
-<p>On the 4th of July, 1776, the very day of Independence,
-Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas
-Jefferson were appointed a committee to prepare a device
-for a great seal. They were of the identical committee
-that had reported the Declaration of Independence
-itself. Their report on the seal was made 20th
-August, 1776; and here we first meet the national
-motto, in such entire harmony with the Declaration,
-making us “one people.” Questions of detail intervened,
-and no conclusion was reached until 20th June,
-1782, when the present seal was adopted, being the
-American bald eagle, with the olive-branch in one talon
-and a bundle of thirteen arrows in the other, and in his
-beak a scroll, bearing the inscription, <i>E pluribus unum</i>.
-Familiar as these Latin words have become,&mdash;so that
-they haunt the memory of manhood, youth, and childhood
-alike,&mdash;it is not always considered how completely
-and simply they tell the story of our national
-life. Out of Many Colonies was formed One Nation.
-Former differences were merged in this unity. No
-longer Many, they were One. The Nation by its
-chosen motto repeats perpetually, “We are One”; and
-the Constitution echoes back, “We, the people of the
-United States.”</p>
-
-<p>3. There is next the National Name, which of itself
-implies National Unity. The States are not merely
-allied, associated, coalesced, confederated, but they are
-<i>United</i>, and the Constitution, formed to secure a more
-perfect union, is “for the <i>United</i> States of America,”
-which term was used as the common name of the
-Nation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A regret has been sometimes expressed by patriots
-and by poets, that some single term was not originally
-adopted, which of itself should exclude every denationalizing
-pretension, and be a talisman for the heart to
-cherish and for the tongue to utter,&mdash;as when Nelson
-gave his great watchword at Trafalgar, “<i>England</i> expects
-every man to do his duty.” Occasionally it is
-proposed to call the country <i>Columbia</i>, and thus restore
-to the great discoverer at least part of the honor taken
-from him when the continent was misnamed <i>America</i>.
-<i>Alleghania</i> has also been proposed; but this word is
-too obviously a mere invention, besides its unwelcome
-suggestion of Alligator. Another proposition has been
-<i>Vinland</i>, being the name originally given by the Northmen,
-four centuries before Christopher Columbus. Professor
-Lieber, on one occasion, called the nation <i>Freeland</i>,
-a name to which it will soon be entitled. Even
-as a bond of union, such a name would not be without
-value. As long ago as Herodotus, it was said of a certain
-people,<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> that they would have been the most powerful
-in the world, if they had been united; but this was
-impossible, from the want among themselves of a common
-name.</p>
-
-<p>Forgetting that the actual name implies Unity, and,
-when we consider its place in the preamble of the National
-Constitution, that it implies Nationality also, the
-partisans of State pretensions argue from it against even
-the idea of country; and here I have a curious and
-authentic illustration. In reply to an inquirer,<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> who
-wished a single name, Mr. Calhoun exclaimed: “Not at
-all; we have no name because we ought to have none;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-we are only States united, and have no country.” Alas,
-if it be so!&mdash;if this well-loved land, for which so many
-have lived, for which so many have died, is not our
-country! But this strange utterance shows how completely
-the poison of these pretensions had destroyed
-the common sense, as well as the patriotism, of this
-much-mistaken man.</p>
-
-<p>Names may be given by sovereign power to new
-discoveries or settlements; but, as a general rule, they
-grow out of the soil, they are autochthonous. Even
-Augustus, when ruling the Roman world, confessed that
-he could not make a new word,<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> and Plato tells us that
-“a creator of names is the rarest of human creatures.”<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
-Reflecting on these things, we may appreciate something
-of the difficulty in the way of a new name at
-the formation of the National Constitution. As this
-was little more than a transcript of prevailing ideas
-and institutions, it was natural to take the name used
-in the Declaration of Independence.</p>
-
-<p>And yet it must not be forgotten that there was
-a name of different character which was much employed.
-Congress was called “Continental,” the army
-“Continental,” the money “Continental,”&mdash;a term certainly
-of unity, as well as vastness. But there was
-still another national designation, accepted at home
-and abroad. Our country was called “America,” and
-we were called “Americans.” Here was a natural, unsought,
-and instinctive name,&mdash;a growth, and not a
-creation,&mdash;implying national unity and predominance,
-if not exclusive power, on the continent. It was used
-not occasionally or casually, but constantly,&mdash;not merely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
-in newspapers, but in official documents. Not an address
-of Congress, not a military order, not a speech,
-which does not contain this term, at once so expansive
-and so unifying. At the opening of the first Continental
-Congress, Patrick Henry, in a different mood from
-that of a later day, announced the national unity under
-this very name. Declaring the boundaries of the several
-Colonies effaced, and the distinctions between Virginians,
-Pennsylvanians, New-Yorkers, and New-Englanders
-as no more, he exclaimed, in words of comprehensive
-patriotism, “I am not a Virginian, but an <i>American</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-Congress took up the strain, and commissioned
-Washington as commander-in-chief of the armies “for
-the defence of <i>American</i> liberty”;<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> and Washington
-himself, in his first general order at Cambridge, assuming
-his great command, announced that the armies were
-“for the support and defence of the liberties of <i>America</i>;<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>
-and in a letter to Congress, just before the Battle
-of Trenton, he declared that he had labored “to discourage
-all kinds of local attachments and distinctions of
-country, <i>denominating the whole by the greater name of
-American</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> Then at the close of the war, in its immortal
-Address, fit supplement to the Declaration of
-Independence, Congress said: “Let it be remembered
-that it has ever been the pride and boast of <i>America</i>
-that the rights for which she contended were the rights
-of Human Nature.”<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> Washington again, in his letter to
-Congress communicating the National Constitution, says,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
-in other words, which, like those of Congress, cannot be
-too often quoted, that “the <i>consolidation of our Union</i>”
-is “the greatest interest of <i>every true American</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> Afterwards,
-in his Farewell Address, which from beginning
-to end is one persuasive appeal for nationality, after
-enjoining upon his fellow-citizens that “<i>unity of government</i>
-which constitutes them <i>one people</i>,” he gives to
-them a national name, and this was his legacy: “<i>The
-name of American, which belongs to you in your national
-capacity</i>, must always exalt the just pride of patriotism
-more than any appellation derived from local discriminations.”<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>
-Thus did Washington put aside those baneful
-pretensions under which the country has suffered,
-even to the extent of adopting a National Name, which,
-like the Union itself, should have a solid coercive
-power.</p>
-
-<p>It is not impossible that in the lapse of time history
-will vindicate the name adopted by Washington,
-which may grow with the Republic, until it becomes
-the natural designation of one country. Our fathers
-used this term more wisely than they knew; but they
-acted under Providential guidance. Is it not said of
-the stars, that God “calleth them all by names, by the
-greatness of His might”?<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> Is it not declared also that
-He will make him who overcometh a pillar in the temple,
-and give to him a “new name”?<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> So, as our stars
-multiply, and the nation overcometh its adversaries, persuading
-all to its declared principles, everywhere on the
-continent, it will become a pillar in the temple, and the
-name of the continent itself will be needed to declare
-alike its unity and its power.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4. To these “unities,” derived from history and the
-heart of the people, may be added another, where Nature
-is the great teacher. I refer to the geographical position
-and configuration of our country, if not of the whole
-continent, marking it for one nation. Unity is written
-upon it by the Almighty hand. In this respect it differs
-much from Europe, where, for generations, seas,
-rivers, and mountains kept people apart, who had else,
-“like kindred drops, been mingled into one.” There is
-no reason why they should not commingle here. Nature
-in every form is propitious. Facility of intercourse,
-not less than common advantage, leads to unity:
-both these are ours. Here are navigable rivers, numerous
-and famous, being so many highways of travel, and
-a chain of lakes, each an inland sea. Then there is an
-unexampled extent of country adapted to railways; and
-do not forget that with the railway is the telegraph,
-using the lightning as its messenger, so that the interrogatory
-to Job is answered, “Canst thou send lightnings
-that they may go?”<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> The country is one open
-expanse, from the frozen Arctic to the warm waters of
-the Gulf, and from the Atlantic to the Rocky Mountains,&mdash;and
-there already science supplies the means of
-overcoming this barrier, which in other days would have
-marked international boundaries. The Pacific Railway
-will neutralize these mountains, and complete the geographical
-unity of the continent. The slender wire of
-the telegraph, when once extended, is an indissoluble
-tie; the railway is an iron band. But these depend
-upon opportunities which Nature supplies, so that Nature
-herself is one of the guardians of our nation.</p>
-
-<p>He has studied history poorly, and human nature no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-better, who imagines that this broad compacted country
-can be parcelled into different nationalities. Where
-will you run the thread of partition? By what river?
-Along what mountain? On what line of latitude or
-longitude? Impossible. No line of longitude or latitude,
-no mountain, no river, can become the demarcation.
-Every State has rights in every other State. The
-whole country has a title, which it will never renounce,
-in every part, whether the voluminous Mississippi as
-it pours to the sea, or that same sea as it chafes upon
-our coast. As well might we of the East attempt to
-shut you of the West from the ocean as you attempt
-to shut us from the Mississippi. The ocean will always
-be yours as it is ours, and the Mississippi will always
-be ours as it is yours.</p>
-
-<p>Our country was planned by Providence for a united
-and homogeneous people. Apparent differences harmonize.
-Even climate, passing through all gradations from
-North to South, is so tempered as to present an easy
-uniformity from the Atlantic to the Rocky Mountains.
-Unmeasured supplies of all kinds, mineral and agricultural,
-are at hand,&mdash;the richest ores and the most golden
-crops, with the largest coal-fields of the world below
-and the largest corn-fields of the world above. Strabo
-said of ancient Gaul, that, by its structure, with its vast
-plains and considerable rivers, it was destined to become
-the theatre of a great civilization.<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> But the structure
-of our country is more auspicious. Our plains are
-vaster and our rivers more considerable, furnishing a
-theatre grander than any imagined by the Greek geographer.
-It is this theatre, thus appointed by Nature,
-which is now open for the good of mankind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here I stop, to review the field over which we have
-passed, and to gather its harvest into one sheaf. Beginning
-with the infancy of the Colonies, we have seen
-how, with different names and governments, they were
-all under <i>one sovereignty</i>, with common and interchangeable
-rights of citizenship, so that no British subject in
-one Colony could be made an alien in any other Colony;
-how, even at the beginning, longings for a common
-life began, showing themselves in “loving accord”; how
-Franklin regarded the Colonies “as so many counties”;
-how the longings increased, until, under the pressure
-of the mother country, they broke forth in aspiration
-for “an American Commonwealth”; how they were at
-last organized in a Congress, called, from its comprehensive
-character, “Continental”; how, in the exercise
-of powers derived from “the good people,” and in their
-name, the Continental Congress put forth the Declaration
-of Independence, by which the sovereignty of the
-mother country was forever renounced, and we were
-made “one people,” solemnly dedicated to Human
-Rights, and thus became a Nation; how the undivided
-sovereignty of all was substituted for the undivided
-sovereignty of the mother country, embracing all the
-States as the other sovereignty had embraced all the
-Colonies; how, according to Franklin, the States were
-locked together, “so as never to be separated, but by
-breaking them to pieces”; how in an evil hour the Confederation
-was formed in deference to denationalizing
-pretensions of the States; how the longings for national
-life continued, and found utterance in Congress, in
-Washington, and in patriot compeers; how Jay wished
-the States should be like “counties”; how “Washington
-denounced State sovereignty as “bantling” and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-“monster”; how at last a National Convention assembled,
-with Washington as President, where it was voted
-that “a National Government ought to be established”;
-how in this spirit, after ample debate, the National
-Constitution was formed, with its preamble beginning
-“We, the people,” with its guaranty of a republican
-government to all the States, with its investiture of
-Congress with all needful powers for the maintenance
-of the Government, and with its assertion of supremacy
-over State constitutions and laws; how this Constitution
-was commended by Washington in the name
-of the Convention as “the consolidation of our Union”;
-how it was vindicated and opposed as creating a National
-Government; how on its adoption we again
-became a Nation; then how our nationality has been
-symbolized in the National Flag, the National Motto,
-and the National Name; and, lastly, how Nature, in the
-geographical position and configuration of the country,
-has supplied the means of National Unity, and written
-her everlasting guaranty. And thus do I bind the
-whole together into one conclusion, saying to all, We
-are a Nation.</p>
-
-<p>Nor is this all. Side by side with the growth of
-National Unity was a constant dedication to Human
-Rights, which showed itself not only in the Declaration
-of Independence, with its promises and covenants,
-but in the constant claim of the rights of Magna Charta,
-the earlier cries of Otis, the assertion by the first Continental
-Congress of the right of the people “to participate
-in their legislative council,” the commission of
-Washington as commander-in-chief “for the defence of
-American liberty,” and the first general order of Washington,
-on taking command of his forces, where he rallies<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-them to this cause; also in the later proclamation of
-Congress, at the close of the Revolution, that the rights
-contended for had been “the rights of Human Nature,”
-and the farewell general order of Washington, on the
-same occasion, where the contest is characterized in the
-same way: so that Human Rights were the beginning
-and end of the war, while the nation, as it grew into
-being, was quickened by these everlasting principles,
-and its faith was plighted to their support.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As a Nation, with a place in the family of nations,
-we have the powers of a nation, with corresponding
-responsibilities. Whether we regard these powers as
-naturally inhering in the nation, or as conferred upon
-it by those two title-deeds, the Declaration of Independence
-and the National Constitution, the conclusion
-is the same. From Nature, and also from its title-deeds,
-our nation must have all needful powers: first,
-for the national defence, foremost among which is the
-power to uphold and defend the national unity; secondly,
-for the safeguard of the citizen in all his rights
-of citizenship, foremost among which is equality, the
-first of rights, so that, as all owe equal allegiance, all
-shall enjoy equal protection; and, thirdly, for the support
-and maintenance of all the promises made by the
-nation, especially at its birth, being baptismal vows
-which cannot be disowned. These three powers are
-essentially national. They belong to our nation by the
-very law of its being and the terms of its creation.
-They cannot be neglected or abandoned. Every person,
-no matter what his birth, condition, or color, who
-can raise the cry, “I am an American citizen,” has a
-right to require at the hands of the nation, that it shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-do its utmost, by all its central powers, to uphold the
-national unity, to protect the citizen in the rights of
-citizenship, and to perform the original promises of the
-nation. Failure here is apostasy and bankruptcy combined.</p>
-
-<p>It is vain to say that these requirements are not
-expressly set down in the National Constitution. By
-a law existing before this title-deed, they belong to the
-essential conditions of national life. If not positively
-nominated in the Constitution, they are there in substance;
-and this is enough. Every word, from “We,
-the people,” to the signature, “George Washington,” is
-instinct with national life, and there is not a single
-expression taking from the National Government any
-inherent power. From this “nothing” in the Constitution
-there can come nothing adverse. But there has
-always been a positive injunction on the nation to
-guaranty “a republican form of government” to all the
-States; and who can doubt, that, in the execution of
-this guaranty, the nation may exercise all these powers,
-and provide especially for the protection of the citizen
-in all the rights of citizenship? There are also recent
-Amendments, abolishing slavery, and expressly securing
-“the privileges and immunities of citizens” against the
-pretensions of States. Then there is the Declaration
-of Independence itself, which is the earlier title-deed.
-By that sacred instrument we were declared “one people,”
-with liberty and equality for all, and then, fixing
-forever the rights of citizenship, it was announced that
-all just government was derived only from “the consent
-of the governed.” Come weal or woe, that great
-Declaration must stand forever. Other things may fail,
-but this cannot fail. It is immortal as the nation itself.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
-It is part of the nation, and the part most worthy of
-immortality. By it the National Constitution must be
-interpreted; or rather, the two together are the Constitution,&mdash;as
-Magna Charta and the Bill of Rights together
-are the British Constitution. By the Declaration
-our nation was born and its vital principles were
-announced; by the Constitution the nation was born
-again and supplied with the machinery of government.
-The two together are our National Scriptures, each being
-a Testament.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Against this conclusion there has been from the beginning
-one perpetual pretension in the name of States.
-The same spirit which has been so hostile to national
-unity in other countries, which made each feudal chief
-a petty sovereign, which for a long time convulsed
-France, which for centuries divided Italy, and which,
-unhappily, still divides Germany, has appeared among
-us. Assuming that communities never “sovereign”
-while colonies, and independent only by the national
-power, had in some way, by some sudden hocus-pocus,
-leaped into local sovereignty, and forgetting also that
-two sovereignties cannot coexist in the same place, as,
-according to the early dramatist,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Two kings in England cannot reign at once,”<a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">the States insisted upon sovereign powers justly belonging
-to the Nation. Long ago the duel began. The partisans
-of State pretensions, plausibly professing to <i>decentralize</i>
-the Government, have done everything possible
-to <i>denationalize</i> it. In the name of self-government,
-they have organized local lordships hostile to Human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
-Rights; in the name of the States, they have sacrificed
-the Nation.</p>
-
-<p>This pretension, constantly showing itself, has broken
-out on three principal occasions. The first was in the
-effort of Nullification, which occurred in 1832, where, under
-the lead of Mr. Calhoun, South Carolina attempted
-to nullify the Revenue Acts of Congress, or, in other
-words, to declare them void within her limits. After
-encountering the matchless argument of Daniel Webster,
-enforced by his best eloquence, Nullification was
-blasted by the thunderbolt of Andrew Jackson, who, in
-his Proclamation, as President, thus exposed it, even in
-the form of Secession, which it assumed at a later day:
-“Each State, having expressly parted with so many
-powers as to constitute jointly with the other States <i>a
-single nation</i>, cannot from that period possess any right
-to secede, because such secession does not break a
-league, but destroys the unity of a nation.”<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a> The pretension
-next showed itself in the Rebellion; and now
-that the Rebellion is crushed, it reappears in still another
-form, by insisting that each State at its own will
-may disregard the universal rights of the citizen, and
-apply a discrimination according to its own local prejudices,&mdash;thus
-within its borders nullifying the primal
-truths of the Declaration of Independence. Here again
-do State pretensions, in their anarchical egotism, interfere
-with the National Unity.</p>
-
-<p>The pretensions of States have found their ablest and
-frankest upholder in John C. Calhoun. I take a single
-instance, on account of its explicitness. In reply to a
-Northern Senator, the defender of Slavery said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Now let me tell the Senator that the doctrines which
-we advocate are the result of the fullest and most careful
-examination of our system of government, and that our conviction
-that we constitute <i>an Union, and not a Nation</i>, is as
-strong and as sincere as that of the Senator or any other in
-the opposite opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are as devoted to the Union as any portion of the
-American people (I use the phrase as meaning the people
-of the Union); but we see in a national consolidated government
-evils innumerable to us. Admit us to be a Nation
-and not an Union, and where would we stand? <i>We are in
-the minority.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Evidently, in that minority he saw the doom of
-Slavery.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Local self-government, whether in the town, county,
-or State, is of incalculable advantage, supplying the
-opportunities of political education, and also a local
-administration adapted precisely to local wants. On
-this account the system has been admired by travellers
-from abroad, who have found in our “town meetings”
-the nurseries of the Republic, and have delighted
-in local exemption from central supervisorship. De
-Tocqueville, who journeyed here, has recorded his authoritative
-praise,&mdash;and Laboulaye, who has visited us
-only in his remarkable studies, unites with De Tocqueville.
-Against that exacting centralization, absorbing
-everything, of which Paris is the example, I oppose
-the American system of self-government, which leaves
-the people to themselves, subject only to the paramount
-conditions of national life. But these conditions cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
-be sacrificed. No local claim of self-government
-can for a moment interfere with the supremacy of the
-Nation, in the maintenance of Human Rights.</p>
-
-<p>According to the wisdom of Plutarch, we must shun
-those pestilent persons who would “carry trifles to
-the highest magistrate,” and, in the same spirit, reject
-that pestilent supervisorship which asserts a regulating
-power over local affairs, and thus becomes a giant intermeddler.
-Let these be decided at home, in the States,
-counties, and towns to which they belong. Such is
-the genius of our institutions. This is the precious
-principle of self-government, which is at once educator
-and agency. In the former character, it is an omnipresent
-schoolmaster; in the latter, it is a suit of chain-armor,
-which, from flexibility, is adapted to the body
-of the nation, so that the limbs are free. Each locality
-has its own way in matters peculiar to itself. But
-the rights of all must be placed under the protection
-of all; nor can there be any difference in different
-parts of the country. Here the rule must be uniform,
-and it must be sustained by the central power radiating
-to every part of the various empire. This is according
-to the divine Cosmos, which in all its spaces
-is pervaded by one universal law. It is the rule of
-Almighty Beneficence, which, while leaving human
-beings to the activities of daily life and the consciousness
-of free-will, subjects all to the same commanding
-principles. Such centralization is the highest civilization,
-for it approaches the nearest to the heavenly
-example. Call it imperialism, if you please: it is simply
-the imperialism of the Declaration of Independence,
-with all its promises fulfilled. It is rendering unto
-Cæsar the things that are Cæsar’s. Already by central<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
-power Slavery has been abolished. Already by
-central power all have been assured in the equality of
-<i>civil</i> rights.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent8">“Two truths are told,</div>
-<div class="verse">As happy prologues to the swelling act</div>
-<div class="verse">Of the imperial theme.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">It remains now that by central power all should be
-assured in the equality of <i>political</i> rights. This does
-not involve necessarily what is sometimes called the
-“regulation” of the suffrage by the National Government,
-although this would be best. It simply requires
-the abolition of any discrimination among citizens, inconsistent
-with Equal Rights. If not by Act of Congress,
-let it be by a new Amendment of the Constitution;
-but it must be at once. Until this is done, we
-leave undone what ought to be done, and, in pitiable
-failure to perform a national duty, justify the saying
-that “there is no health in us.” The preposterous pretension,
-that color, whether of the hair or of the skin,
-or that any other unchangeable circumstance of natural
-condition may be made the “qualification” of a voter,
-cannot be tolerated. It is shocking to the moral sense,
-and degrading to the understanding.</p>
-
-<p>As in the Nation there can be but one sovereignty,
-so there can be but one citizenship. The unity of sovereignty
-finds its counterpart and complement in the
-unity of citizenship, and the two together are the tokens
-of a united people. Thus are the essential conditions
-of national life all resolved into three,&mdash;<i>one sovereignty,
-one citizenship, one people</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I conclude as I began. The late Rebellion against
-the nation was in the name of State Rights; therefore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-State Rights in their denationalizing pretensions must
-be overthrown. It proceeded from hostility to the
-sacred principles of the Declaration of Independence;
-therefore must these sacred principles be vindicated in
-spirit and in letter, so that hereafter they shall be a
-supreme law, coëqual with the Constitution, in whose
-illumination the Constitution must be read, and they
-shall supply the final definition of a Republic for guidance
-at home and for example to mankind.</p>
-
-<p>In this great change we follow Nature and obey her
-mandate. By irresistible law, water everywhere seeks
-its level, and finds it; and so, by law as irresistible, man
-seeks the level of every other man in rights, and will
-find it. Human passions and human institutions are
-unavailing to arrest it, as Nature is stronger than man,
-and the Creator is mightier than the creature. The recognition
-of this law is essential to the national cause;
-for so you will work with Nature rather than against it,
-and at the same time in harmony with the Declaration
-of Independence. Here I borrow a word from Locke,
-who, in his Essay “Of the Conduct of the Understanding,”
-says, that, in dealing with propositions, we must
-always examine upon what they “bottom.”<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> Now, in
-dealing with the Rebellion, we find, that, though in the
-name of State Rights, it “bottomed” on opposition to
-National Law and open denial of the self-evident truths
-declared by our fathers, especially of that central truth
-which Abraham Lincoln, at Gettysburg, in the most
-touching speech of all history, thus announces: “Four-score
-and seven years ago, our fathers brought forth
-upon this continent a new Nation, conceived in Liberty,
-and dedicated to the proposition that <i>all men are created<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
-Equal</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> Slavery was “bottomed” on the direct
-opposite; and so was the Rebellion, from beginning to
-end. Therefore we must encounter this denial. We
-do not extinguish Slavery, we do not trample out the
-Rebellion, until the vital truth declared by our fathers
-is established, and Nature in her law is obeyed. To
-complete the good work, this is necessary. Liberty is
-won: Equality must be won also. In England there
-is Liberty without Equality; in France, Equality without
-Liberty. The two together must be ours. This
-final victory will be the greatest of the war; it will
-be the consummation of all other victories. Here must
-we plant the national standard. To this championship
-I summon you. Go forth, victors in so many
-fields, and gather now the highest palm of all. The
-victory of ideas is grander far than any victory of
-blood. What battle ever did so much for humanity
-as the Sermon on Mars Hill? What battle ever did
-so much as the Declaration of Independence? But Sermon
-and Declaration are one, and it is your glorious
-part to assure the National Unity on this adamantine
-base.</p>
-
-<p>All hail to the Republic, redeemed and regenerated,
-One and Indivisible! Nullification and Secession are
-already, like the extinct monsters of a former geological
-period, to be seen only in the museum of History.
-With their extinction must disappear the captious, litigious,
-and disturbing spirit engendered by State pretensions.
-The whole face of the country will be transformed.
-There will be concord for discord, smiles for
-frowns. There will be a new consciousness of national<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-life, with a corresponding glow. The soul will dilate
-with the assured unity of the Republic, and all will feel
-the glory of its citizenship. Since that of Rome, nothing
-so commanding. Local jealousies and geographical
-distinctions will be lost in the attractions of a common
-country. Then, indeed, there will be no North,
-no South, no East, no West; but there will be One
-Nation. No single point of the compass, but the whole
-horizon, will receive our regard. Not the Southern Cross
-flaming with beauty, not even the North Star, long time
-guide of the mariner and refuge to the flying bondman,
-but the whole star-spread firmament, will be our
-worship and delight.</p>
-
-<p>As the Nation stands confessed in undivided sovereignty,
-the States will not cease their appropriate functions.
-Interlocked, interlaced, and harmonized, they will
-be congenial parts of the mighty whole, with Liberty
-and Equality the recognized birthright of all, and no
-local pretension to interfere against the universal law.
-There will be a sphere alike for the States and Nation.
-Local self-government, which is the pride of our institutions,
-will be reconciled with the national supremacy
-in maintenance of human rights, and the two together
-will constitute the elemental principles of the Republic.
-The States will exercise a minute jurisdiction required
-for the convenience of all; the Nation will exercise that
-other paramount jurisdiction required for the protection
-of all. The reconciliation&mdash;God bless the word!&mdash;thus
-begun will embrace the people, who, forgetting
-past differences, will feel more than ever that they are
-One, and it will invigorate the still growing Republic,
-whose original root was little more than an acorn, so
-that it will find new strength to resist the shock of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
-tempest or time, while it overarches the continent with
-its generous shade. Such, at least, is the aspiration in
-which all may unite.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Firm like the oak may our blest nation rise,</div>
-<div class="verse">No less distinguished for its strength than size;</div>
-<div class="verse">The unequal branches emulous unite</div>
-<div class="verse">To shield and grace the trunk’s majestic height;</div>
-<div class="verse">Through long succeeding years and centuries live,</div>
-<div class="verse">No vigor losing from the aid they give!”<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONSTANT_DISTRUST_OF_THE_PRESIDENT" id="CONSTANT_DISTRUST_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"></a>CONSTANT DISTRUST OF THE PRESIDENT.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Remarks in the Senate, on the Final Adjournment, November
-26, 1867.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>Thursday, November 21st, Congress reassembled, pursuant to the
-resolution adopted July 20th. According to existing law, the regular
-session would commence on the first Monday of December.</p>
-
-<p>November 26th, Mr. Grimes, of Iowa, moved the adjournment of
-the two Houses on Monday, December 2d, at half past eleven o’clock,
-<span class="smcapuc">A. M.</span> Mr. Sumner suggested “twelve o’clock,” remarking,&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">I question whether we should leave even the
-break of half an hour between the two sessions.
-The point is just this: Will you leave to the President
-one half-hour within which he may take advantage of
-the absence of Congress, and issue commissions which
-would perhaps run&mdash;I do not decide the point now,
-but which, I say, might run to the last day of the next
-session?&mdash;that may be midsummer or autumn. I take
-it that an appointment during that interim of half an
-hour might possibly be valid to the last day of the next
-session of Congress.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Edmunds</span> [of Vermont]. But the law takes no notice
-of parts of a day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> That is a technicality. Why open the
-question?</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Grimes, following the suggestion, altered his motion to “twelve
-o’clock.” A debate ensued, in which Mr. Sherman, of Ohio, Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
-Fessenden, of Maine, and Mr. Trumbull, of Illinois, took part. Mr.
-Sumner followed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I hope that what we do will be for the welfare of
-the country, and with no reference to mere rumors or
-reports. There I agree with my friend; but then I do
-not agree with him, when he says, Give the President
-another chance. We have been giving him chances,
-and we cannot act now without taking into consideration
-his character and position, which have become
-matters of history. I would speak with proper delicacy,
-with proper reserve, but I must speak under the
-responsibility of a Senator. A large portion of our country
-believe the President a wicked man, of evil thoughts
-and unpatriotic purposes, in spirit and conduct the successor
-of Jefferson Davis, through whom the Rebellion
-is revived. Such are the sentiments of a large portion
-of our people.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Dixon</span> [of Connecticut]. I desire to ask the Senator
-if that is the opinion of a majority of the American
-people, in his judgment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> It is unquestionably the opinion of
-a large portion of the people of the United States;
-whether a majority or not the future may disclose. I
-will not anticipate any such judgment. I speak now
-with reference to what is before us. The question is,
-whether we shall give him another opportunity. I say,
-No. And here I act on no floating rumor, to which
-the Senator from Illinois refers; I act with reference
-to the character of the chief magistrate, displayed in
-his public conduct. It seems to me that it will be
-something like rashness, if the Senate concede to him
-another occasion to practise on the country in carrying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-out his policy, as we know he has practised in times
-past. We must stop the way. We should not give
-him a day; we should not give him five minutes,&mdash;I
-am ready to say that,&mdash;not five minutes, for the
-chance of illegitimate power. I will not allow him
-to exercise it, and then take my chance hereafter of
-applying the corrective.</p>
-
-<p>And that brings me to the exact point as to whether
-the present session should expire precisely when the
-coming session begins. I see no reason why it should
-not. I see no reason why we should interpose the
-buffer even of five minutes. Let one session come close
-upon the other, and then we shall exclude every possibility
-of evil consequences. In France, during the
-old monarchy, when the king died, the moment the
-breath was out of his body the reign of his successor
-began, so that the cry, “The king is dead,” was followed
-instantly by another cry, “Long live the king!” Now
-I know not why, when this session expires, we may
-not at the same time announce its expiration and announce
-a new session.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The resolution was agreed to, and Congress adjourned accordingly.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="THE_FOURTEENTH_AMENDMENT_WITHDRAWAL_OF" id="THE_FOURTEENTH_AMENDMENT_WITHDRAWAL_OF"></a>THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT: WITHDRAWAL OF
-ASSENT BY A STATE.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolutions of the Legislature
-of Ohio rescinding its former Resolution in Ratification of
-the Fourteenth Amendment, January 31, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">The resolutions from the Legislature of Ohio are so
-important in character, and so wholly without precedent,
-I believe, in our history, that I think they justify
-remark even by a Senator who has not the honor
-of any special association with that State.</p>
-
-<p>It seems to me very clear that the authors of these
-resolutions have accomplished nothing except to exhibit
-their own blind prejudices. By the Constitution
-of the United States, a State may give its assent to a
-Constitutional Amendment. There is no provision for
-any withdrawal of such assent, when once given. The
-assent of the State, once given, is final. A State, I do
-not hesitate to say, can no more withdraw such assent
-than it can withdraw from the Union; and on the latter
-proposition I believe there is now a universal accord.</p>
-
-<p>But, happily, Sir, this extraordinary effort of an accidental
-Legislature is absolutely impotent. The Amendment
-in question is already a part of the Constitution
-of the United States, and in full vigor, even without
-the assent of Ohio. By a report from the Secretary of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-State it appears that there is official evidence of the
-assent of the Legislatures of Connecticut, New Hampshire,
-Tennessee, New Jersey, Oregon, Vermont, New
-York, Illinois, West Virginia, Kansas, Nevada, Missouri,
-Indiana, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania,
-Michigan, Massachusetts, and Nebraska,&mdash;being
-twenty in all, without Ohio. To these now we may
-add Iowa, which has given its assent very recently,
-and also Maine, which has notoriously given its assent,
-although I understand it has not been officially communicated
-to the Department of State,&mdash;making, therefore,
-twenty-two States, even without Ohio. Twenty-two
-States are more than three fourths of the Loyal
-States, or, in other words, of those States that at this
-moment have Legislatures. The full requirement of the
-Constitution is therefore met.</p>
-
-<p>This Amendment was originally proposed by a vote
-of two thirds of Congress, composed of the representatives
-of the Loyal States. It has now been ratified by
-the Legislatures of three fourths of the Loyal States,
-being the same States which originally proposed it
-through their representatives in Congress. The States
-that are competent to propose a Constitutional Amendment
-are competent to adopt it. Both things have been
-done. The required majority in Congress have proposed
-it; the required majority of States have adopted
-it. Therefore, I say, this resolution of the Legislature
-of Ohio is <i>brutum fulmen</i>,&mdash;impotent as words without
-force. It can have no practical effect, except to
-disclose the character of its authors. As such it may
-be dismissed to the limbo of things lost on earth.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>Mr. Johnson, of Maryland, followed with some remarks, to which
-Mr. Sumner replied:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. President</span>,&mdash;I wish to remind the Senator from
-Maryland of the exact words of the Constitution, which
-were not, it seems to me, in his mind when he spoke.
-An Amendment, when proposed, “shall be valid to all
-intents and purposes as part of this Constitution, when
-ratified by the Legislatures of three fourths of the several
-States.” It does not say, “when ratified by three
-fourths of the several States,” but “by the ‘Legislatures’
-of three fourths of the several States.” Now,
-if there are States without Legislatures, they can have
-no voice in the ratification. Apply this practically.
-Three fourths of the actual Legislatures of this Union
-have ratified the proposed Amendment, and I insist, on
-the text of the Constitution, and also on the reason of
-the case, that such ratification is complete. But I am
-unwilling that this argument should stand merely on
-my words. I introduce here the authority of the best
-living text-writer on the jurisprudence of our country,
-who has treated this very point in a manner which
-leaves no opportunity for reply. I refer to the book
-of Mr. Bishop on the Criminal Law, who, in one of his
-notes,<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> considers whether the Amendment of the Constitution
-abolishing Slavery had been at the time he wrote
-adopted in a constitutional manner. Of course the very
-question which we are now discussing with reference to
-the Fourteenth Amendment arises also on the Amendment
-prohibiting Slavery. They are both in the same
-predicament. If the Fourteenth Amendment is not now
-a part of the Constitution of the United States, then
-the Amendment prohibiting Slavery is not a part of the
-Constitution of the United States. They both stand on
-the same bottom; they were both proposed by Congress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
-in the same way,&mdash;that is, by a vote of two thirds of
-the representatives of the Loyal States; and they have
-both been ratified by the votes of three fourths of the
-States having Legislatures. I send to the Chair the
-work of Mr. Bishop, and I ask the Secretary to be good
-enough to read what I have marked.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The Secretary read the note above cited.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="LOYALTY_IN_THE_SENATE_ADMISSION_OF_A" id="LOYALTY_IN_THE_SENATE_ADMISSION_OF_A"></a>LOYALTY IN THE SENATE: ADMISSION OF A
-SENATOR.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolution to admit Philip F.
-Thomas as Senator from Maryland, February 13, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>February 13th, the question of the admission of Hon. Philip F.
-Thomas, Senator-elect from Maryland, charged with disloyalty, coming
-up for consideration, on a resolution of Hon. Reverdy Johnson,
-of that State, that said Thomas “be admitted to his seat on his
-taking the oaths prescribed by the Constitution and laws of the United
-States,” Mr. Sumner moved the following substitute:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That Philip F. Thomas, Senator-elect from Maryland, cannot be admitted
-to take the oaths of office required by the Constitution and laws,
-inasmuch as he allowed his minor son to leave the paternal house to
-serve as a Rebel soldier, and gave him at the time one hundred dollars
-in money, all of which was ‘aid,’ ‘countenance,’ or ‘encouragement’ to the
-Rebellion, which he was forbidden to give; and further, inasmuch as in
-forbearing to disclose and make known the treason of his son to the President,
-or other proper authorities, according to the requirement of the
-statute in such cases, he was guilty of misprision of treason as defined
-by existing law.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Sumner said:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">A great debate on the question how loyalty shall
-be secured in the Rebel States is for the time
-silenced in order to consider how loyalty shall be
-secured in this Chamber. Everywhere in the Rebel
-States disloyal persons are struggling for power; and
-now at the door of the Senate we witness a similar
-struggle. If disloyalty cannot be shut out of this Chamber,
-how can we hope to overcome it elsewhere?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>More than once at other times I have discussed the
-question of loyalty in the Senate. But this was anterior
-to the adoption of the Fourteenth Constitutional
-Amendment. The case is plainer now than then, inasmuch
-as there is now an explicit text requiring loyalty
-as a “qualification.” Formerly we were left to something
-in the nature of inference; now the requirement
-is plain as language can make it.</p>
-
-<p>By the new Amendment it is provided that “no person
-shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress,
-… who, having previously taken an oath, as a member
-of Congress, or as an officer of the United States,
-… to support the Constitution of the United States,
-shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against
-the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies
-thereof.”</p>
-
-<p>These words are precisely applicable to the present
-case. They lay down a rule from which there is no
-appeal; and this rule is not merely in the statutes, but
-in the Constitution. It is the plain declaration that
-loyalty is a requirement in a Senator and Representative.
-If we do not apply it to ourselves now, it is difficult
-to see with what consistency we can apply it to
-others. Your course here will affect the meaning of
-this Constitutional Amendment, if not its validity for
-the future.</p>
-
-<p>I do not stop to argue the question if that Amendment
-is now a part of the Constitution; for I would
-not unnecessarily occupy your time, nor direct attention
-from the case which you are to decide. For the
-present I content myself with two remarks: first, the
-Amendment has already been adopted by three fourths
-of the States that took part in proposing it, and this is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-enough, for the spirit of the Constitution is thus satisfied;
-and, secondly, it has already been adopted by
-“the <i>Legislatures</i> of three fourths of the several States”
-which have Legislatures, thus complying with the letter
-of the Constitution. Therefore, by the spirit of the
-Constitution, and also by its letter, this Amendment is
-now a part of the Constitution, binding on all of us.
-As such I invoke its application to this case. In face
-of this positive, peremptory requirement, it is impossible
-to see how loyalty can be other than a “qualification.”
-In denying it, you practically set aside this Amendment.</p>
-
-<p>But, even without this Amendment, I cannot doubt
-that the original text is sufficiently clear and explicit.
-It is nowhere said in the Constitution that certain
-specified requirements, and none others, shall be “qualifications”
-of Senators. This word “qualifications,”
-which plays such a part in this case, occurs in another
-connection, where it is provided that “each House shall
-be the judge of the elections, returns, and <i>qualifications</i>
-of its own members.” What these “qualifications” may
-be is to be found elsewhere. Searching the Constitution
-from beginning to end, we find three “qualifications,”
-which come under the head of <i>form</i>, being (1.)
-age, (2.) citizenship, and (3.) inhabitancy in the State.
-But behind and above these is another “qualification,”
-which is of <i>substance</i>, in contradiction to <i>form</i> only. So
-supreme is this, that it is placed under the safeguard of
-an oath. This is loyalty. It is easy to see how infinitely
-more important is this than either of the others,&mdash;than
-age, than citizenship, or than inhabitancy in
-the State. A Senator failing in either of these would
-be incompetent by the letter of the Constitution; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-the Republic might not suffer from his presence. On
-the other hand, a Senator failing in loyalty is a public
-enemy, whose presence in this council-chamber would
-be a certain peril to the Republic.</p>
-
-<p>It is vain to say that loyalty is not declared to be
-a “qualification.” I deny it. Loyalty is made a “qualification”
-in the Amendment to the Constitution; and
-then again in the original text, when, in the most solemn
-way possible, it is distinguished and guarded by
-an oath. Men are familiarly said to “qualify,” when
-they take the oath of office; and thus the language of
-common life furnishes an authentic interpretation of
-the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>But no man can be allowed to take the oath as Senator,
-when, on the evidence before the Senate, he is not
-competent. If it appear that he is not of sufficient
-age, or of the required citizenship or inhabitancy, he
-cannot be allowed to go to that desk. Especially if it
-appear that he fails in the all-important “qualification”
-of loyalty, he cannot be allowed to go to that desk. A
-false oath, taken with our knowledge, would compromise
-the Senate. We who consent will become parties
-to the falsehood; we shall be parties in the offence.
-It is futile to say that the oath is one of purgation only,
-and that it is for him who takes it to determine on his
-conscience if he can take it. The Senate cannot forget
-the evidence; nor can its responsibility in the case be
-swallowed up in any process of individual purgation.
-On the evidence we must judge, and act accordingly.
-The “open sesame” of this Chamber must be something
-more than the oath of a suspected applicant.</p>
-
-<p>According to Lord Coke, “an infidel cannot be sworn”
-as a witness. This was an early rule, which has since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-been softened in our courts. But, under the Constitution
-of the United States and existing statutes, a <i>political
-infidel</i> cannot be sworn as a Senator. Whatever
-may be his inclination or motive, he must not be allowed
-to approach your desk. The country has a right
-to expect that all who enter here shall have a sure and
-well-founded loyalty, above all question or suspicion.
-And such, I insist, is the rule of the Constitution and
-of Congress.</p>
-
-<p>As if to place the question beyond all doubt, Congress
-by positive enactment requires that every Senator,
-before admission to his seat, shall swear that he
-has “voluntarily given no aid, countenance, counsel, or
-encouragement to persons engaged in armed hostility”
-to the United States.<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> Here is little more than an interpretation
-of the Constitution. The conclusion is plain.
-No person who has voluntarily given even “countenance”
-or “encouragement” to another engaged in the
-Rebellion can be allowed to take that oath.</p>
-
-<p>After this statement of the rule, the question arises,
-if Philip F. Thomas can be permitted to take the oath
-at your desk, or, in other words, to “qualify” as a Senator
-of the United States. Is he competent? This is
-a question of evidence.</p>
-
-<p>The ample discussion of the facts in this case, and
-their singular plainness, supersede the necessity of all
-details. The atmosphere about Mr. Thomas and his
-acts are harmonious. From the beginning we find
-him enveloped in coldness and indifference while his
-country was in peril. Observing him more closely, we
-are shocked by two acts of positive disloyalty, one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-which is the natural prelude of the other. The first
-muttering of the Rebellion found him a member of the
-Cabinet of Mr. Buchanan; but when this uncertain
-President proposed the succor of our troops at Charleston,
-already menaced with war, Mr. Thomas withdrew
-from the patriotic service. He resigned his seat, following
-the lead of Cobb, Thompson, and Floyd. A
-man is known by the company he keeps. His company
-at this time were traitors, and the act they united
-in doing was essentially disloyal. As the Rebellion assumed
-the front of war, they all abandoned their posts:
-some to join the Rebellion and mingle with its armies;
-Mr. Thomas, more prudently, to watch the course of
-events in Maryland, ready to lift his arm also, if his
-State pronounced the word. This concerted desertion
-was in itself a conspiracy against the Government; and
-in the case of Mr. Thomas, who was Secretary of the
-Treasury, it was a blow at the national credit, which
-it was his special duty to guard. It was an act of disloyalty
-to be blasted by indignant history, even if your
-judgment fails now. And this was the first stage in
-this record.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the war rages. Armies are marshalled;
-battles ensue; Washington itself is beleaguered; the
-Republic trembles with peril. But Mr. Thomas continues
-in the seclusion of his home, enveloped in the
-same disloyal atmosphere, and refusing always the oath
-of allegiance. At last, in 1863, an only son arrives at
-the age of eighteen. Though still a minor, he is already
-of the military age. Naturally filled with the sentiments
-of his father’s fireside, he seeks to maintain them
-by military service. He is like his father, but with
-the ardor of youth instead of the caution of years. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-avows his purpose to enlist in the Rebel army, thus
-to levy war against his country, and adhere to its enemies.
-All this was treason,&mdash;plain, palpable, unquestionable,
-downright treason. Instead of detaining his
-son,&mdash;instead of keeping him back,&mdash;instead of interposing
-a paternal veto,&mdash;instead of laying hands gently
-upon him,&mdash;instead of denouncing him to the magistrate,&mdash;all
-of which the father might have done,&mdash;he
-deliberately lets him go, and then, to cap the climax of
-criminal complicity, furnishes the means for his journey
-and his equipment. He gives one hundred dollars. The
-father is not rich, and yet he gives this considerable
-sum. Few soldiers started with such ample allowance.
-Thus it stands: the father, who has already deserted
-his post in the Cabinet, and has refused to take the
-oath of allegiance to his country, contributes a soldier
-to the Rebellion, and that soldier is his only son; to
-complete and assure the great contribution, he contributes
-a sum of money also. If all this accumulated disloyalty,
-beginning in a total renunciation of every patriotic
-duty, and finally consummated by an act of flagrant,
-unblushing enormity, is not “aid and comfort”
-or “countenance” or “encouragement” to the Rebellion,
-it is difficult to say what can be. There must be
-new dictionaries for these familiar words, and they must
-receive a definition down to this day unknown. They
-must be treated as thread or gossamer, when they should
-be links of iron.</p>
-
-<p>On an occasion like the present, where the moral
-guilt is so patent, I hesitate to employ technical language.
-The simplest phrase is the best. But the law
-supplies language of its own. Regarding the act of Mr.
-Thomas in the mildest light, it was “misprision of treason,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-according to every definition of that crime which
-can be found in the books. Lord Hale, whose authority,
-in stating the rules of Criminal Law, is of the highest
-character, says, under this head: “Every man is bound
-to use all possible lawful means to prevent a felony, as
-well as to take the felon; and if he doth not, he is liable
-to a fine and imprisonment.”<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> Lord Coke, another
-eminent authority, says: “If any be present when a
-man is slain, and omit to apprehend the slayer, it is a
-misprision.”<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> The same rule is, of course, applicable to
-treason. Mr. Bishop, who in his remarkable work on
-the Criminal Law has compressed the result of all the
-authorities, says: “Misprision of felony is a criminal
-neglect, either to prevent a felony from being committed
-by another, or to bring to justice a person known to
-be guilty of felony. Misprision of treason is the same
-of treason.”<a name="FNanchor_85_85" id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> Then again he says, citing Hawkins,
-Blackstone, East, and Russell, all familiar names in our
-courts, each an oracle:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The doctrine of misprision, as now understood, may be
-stated as follows: To make a man liable for a crime committed
-through the physical volition of another, his own will
-must in some degree concur in or contribute to the crime.
-<i>But when it is treason or felony, and he stands by while it
-is done, without using the means in his power to prevent it,
-though his will concurs not in it,&mdash;or when he knows of its
-having been in his absence committed, but neither makes disclosure
-of it to the authorities nor does anything to bring the
-offender to punishment</i>,&mdash;the law holds him guilty of a breach
-of the duty due from every man to the community wherein
-he dwells and the government which protects him.”<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I adduce these authorities in order to show, that, by
-the Common Law, as illustrated by some of its best
-names, Mr. Thomas is beyond all question an offender.
-Clearly he did not use “the means in his power” to
-prevent the treason of his son, nor did he “make disclosure
-of it to the authorities,” according to the received
-rule of law.</p>
-
-<p>But the statutes of the United States leave us no
-room for doubt or indulgence. According to the precise
-text, the present case is anticipated and provided
-for. The Statute of Crimes, adopted in 1790, at the
-beginning of the National Government, after declaring
-the punishment of treason, proceeds to declare the punishment
-of “misprision of treason,” as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That, if <i>any person or persons, having knowledge of the
-commission of any of the treasons aforesaid, shall conceal and
-not as soon as may be disclose and make known the same</i> to
-the President of the United States or some one of the Judges
-thereof, or to the President or Governor of a particular State
-or some one of the Judges or Justices thereof, <i>such person or
-persons, on conviction, shall be adjudged guilty of misprision
-of treason</i>, and shall be imprisoned not exceeding seven years,
-and fined not exceeding one thousand dollars.”<a name="FNanchor_87_87" id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Apply these plain words to the present case. Nobody
-can doubt that Mr. Thomas had “knowledge” of
-the treason of his son, and, having this knowledge,
-failed to “disclose and make known the same” to the
-President of the United States or the other proper authorities.
-Abraham Lincoln was at the time President.
-There is no pretence that the father communicated the
-crime of the son to this patriot magistrate, or to any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
-other loyal officer by whom he could have been arrested.
-Therefore, beyond all question, on the facts of
-the case, the father is guilty under the statute, and
-liable to seven years of imprisonment and a fine of
-one thousand dollars. And now, instead of seven years
-of imprisonment and a fine of one thousand dollars, it
-is proposed to give him six years of trust and honor as
-a Senator of the United States, with an annual allowance
-of five thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>According to the old law, the indictment against Mr.
-Thomas would allege, that, “not having the fear of God
-before his eyes, but being moved and seduced by the
-instigation of the Devil,” he perpetrated his crime. And
-now, with this crime unatoned for, he comes here to
-ask your support and countenance. We are to forget all
-that he did, “moved and seduced” by evil instigation,
-and welcome him to this Chamber, instead of handing
-him over to judgment.</p>
-
-<p>It is treating this case with a levity which it is hard
-to pardon, when Senators argue that the father was not
-under obligations to exercise all the paternal power in
-restraint of his son, or at least in denouncing him to
-the proper authorities. What is patriotism, what is
-the sacred comprehensive charity of country, if a father
-can be blameless after such a license to his son? The
-country was another mother to this son, and he went
-away to strike this mother on the bosom. There is a
-case in antiquity which illustrates the solemn duty of
-the father at least to detain the son. I quote from Sallust.
-This remarkable writer, in his history of the Catilinarian
-conspiracy, tells us that there were many not
-enlisted in the conspiracy who went out to join Catiline;
-that among these was Aulus Fulvius, the son of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
-Senator; and the historian adds, without comment, that
-the father, when his son was brought back, ordered him
-to be slain: “<i>Fuere tamen extra conjurationem complures,
-qui ad Catilinam profecti sunt: in his A. Fulvius,
-Senatoris filius; quem retractum ex itinere parens necari
-jussit</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> Humanity rejects the barbarous exercise of the
-paternal power according to the Roman Law; but patriotism
-may find even in this example a lesson of paternal
-duty. The American father should not have slain
-his son, but he should have kept him from joining the
-enemies of his country. This requirement of duty was
-none the less strong because not enforced by death. I
-utter not only the rule of patriotism, but the rule of
-law, when I say that it was positive and peremptory.
-I will not admit that an American citizen can be blameless
-who dismisses a son from the paternal roof with
-money in his purse, to make war upon his country. All
-that the son did afterward, all that the son sought to do,
-became the act of the father who sent him forth on his
-parricidal errand. The father’s treason was continued
-and protracted in the treason of the son.</p>
-
-<p>In making this contribution to the Rebellion, the act
-of the father was enhanced by his eminent position.
-He had held a seat in the Cabinet, binding him more
-than any common citizen to the most watchful allegiance,
-and giving to what he did peculiar importance.
-A soldier contributed to the Rebellion by such a person
-was a startling event. It was aid and comfort,
-countenance and encouragement, of far-reaching significance.
-It was a hostile act, directly injurious to his
-country, and of evil example, the influence of which no
-man can measure. How many others were weakened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-in loyalty by this parricidal act who can tell? When
-the citizen who has enjoyed public trust and been a
-“pillar of State” gives way, others about him must fall
-likewise. So great a parricide must cause other parricides.</p>
-
-<p>And now this father, who gave a son to the Rebellion,
-comes into this sanctuary of the Constitution,
-where loyalty is the first condition of admission, and
-asks for a seat. <i>Immo in Senatum venit.</i> Is there not
-hardihood in the application? Of course, he cannot be
-admitted without your act having an influence proportioned
-to the importance of the position. It will be felt
-everywhere throughout the country. Admit him, and
-you will unloose the bonds of loyalty and give a new
-license to the Rebellion in its protracted struggle. On
-the contrary, if you send him away, you will furnish a
-warning to the disloyal, and teach a lesson of patriotism
-which will thrill the hearts of good citizens now
-anxiously watching for peace and reconciliation through
-the triumph of loyalty.</p>
-
-<p>I speak this positively, because on this case I see no
-doubt. The facts are indisputable, and over all towers
-one supreme act of parricide, for which there can be no
-excuse or apology. A soldier was contributed to the
-enemies of his country. There is no question of motive.
-The parricidal act was complete, and it explains
-itself. There is no doubt that it was done. In the
-presence of such an act, so absolutely criminal, there
-can be no room for inquiry as to the motive. All this
-I put aside and look only at the transcendent fact, in
-which all pretence of innocence is so entirely lost and
-absorbed that it cannot be seen. As well seek to find
-a motive, if a son struck at the bosom of his mother.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
-The law supplies the motive, when it says, in its ancient
-phrase, “moved and seduced by the instigation of the
-Devil.”</p>
-
-<p>Some there are who doubt the motive of the father,
-and claim for him now the benefit of that doubt. Even
-if the motive of this criminal act were in question, as I
-insist that it cannot be, then do I say, that, in a case
-like this, when disloyalty is to be shut out of this
-Chamber, I give the benefit of doubt to my country.</p>
-
-<p>There is another voice which sometimes reaches me.
-We are told, that, if the applicant be disloyal, then we
-may expel him. For myself, I prefer to take no such
-risk. Viewing the case as I do, I have no right to
-take any such risk. Disloyalty must be met at the
-door, and not allowed to enter in. The old verses, more
-than once repeated in our public discussions, are applicable
-now,&mdash;never more so:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“I hear a lion in the lobby roar:</div>
-<div class="verse">Say, Mr. Speaker, shall we shut the door,</div>
-<div class="verse">And keep him there? or shall we let him in,</div>
-<div class="verse">To try if we can turn him out again?”<a name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>February 19th, after a debate of several days, Mr. Thomas was declared
-“not entitled to take the oath of office, or to hold a seat, as a
-Senator of the United States,”&mdash;Yeas 27, Nays 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="INTERNATIONAL_COPYRIGHT" id="INTERNATIONAL_COPYRIGHT"></a>INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter to a Committee in New York, on this Subject, February
-17, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>From time to time International Copyright has occupied attention,
-and Mr. Sumner has often in correspondence expressed himself with
-regard to it. The following letter, in answer to an inquiry, was published
-by a New York committee of the following gentlemen: George
-P. Putnam, S. Irenæus Prime, Henry Ivison, James Parton, Egbert
-Hasard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Senate Chamber</span>, February 17, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MY DEAR SIR,&mdash;Pardon my delay. There are
-two ways of dealing with the question of International
-Copyright,&mdash;one by the treaty power, and the
-other by reciprocal legislation.</p>
-
-<p>I have always thought that the former was the easier,
-but at the present moment the House of Representatives
-is not disposed to concede much to the treaty
-power.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Everett, while Secretary of State, negotiated a
-treaty on this subject with Great Britain, which was
-submitted to the Senate, reported by the Committee on
-Foreign Relations, considered in the Senate, and finally
-left on the table, without any definitive vote.</p>
-
-<p>I shall send you a copy of this treaty, which, I believe,
-has never seen the light.</p>
-
-<p>I have always been in favor of an International Copyright,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-as justice to authors and a new stage in the unity
-of nations. Perhaps the condition of public affairs at
-this time, the preoccupation of the public mind, the
-imminence of the Presidential election, and also the
-alienation from England, may present temporary obstacles.
-But I am sanguine that at last the victory will
-be won. If authors should have a copyright anywhere,
-they should have it everywhere within the limits of civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Accept my best wishes, and believe me, dear Sir,</p>
-
-<p class="sig">Faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="sig2"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent medium"><span class="smcap">James Parton, Esq.</span>, Secretary of the Committee.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="THE_IMPEACHMENT_OF_THE_PRESIDENT" id="THE_IMPEACHMENT_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"></a>THE IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT.<br />
-<small>THE RIGHT OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE PRO
-TEM. TO VOTE.</small></h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Remarks in the Senate, on the Question of the Competency
-of Mr. Wade, Senator from Ohio, then President of the
-Senate pro Tem., to vote on the Impeachment of President
-Johnson, March 5, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. PRESIDENT,&mdash;I shall not attempt to follow
-learned Senators in the question whether this is
-a Senate or a Court. That question, to my mind, is
-simply one of language, and not of substance. Our
-powers at this moment are under the Constitution of
-the United States; nor can we add to them a tittle
-by calling ourselves a Court or calling ourselves a Senate.
-There they are in the Constitution. Search its
-text and you will find them. The Constitution has
-not given us a name, but it has given us powers; and
-those we are now to exercise. The Senate has the
-sole power to try impeachments. No matter for the
-name, Sir. I hope that I do not use an illustration
-too familiar, when I remind you that a rose under any
-other name has all those qualities which make it the
-first of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>I should not at this time have entered into this discussion,
-if I had not listened to objections on the other
-side which seem to me founded, I will not say in error,
-for that would be bold when we are discussing a question
-of so much novelty, but I will say founded in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
-reading of history which I have not been able to verify.
-Senator after Senator on the other side, all distinguished
-by ability and learning, have informed us that the Constitution
-intended to prevent a person who might become
-President from presiding at the trial of the President.
-I would ask learned Senators who have announced
-this proposition, where they find it in the
-Constitution. The Constitution says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“When the President of the United States is tried, the
-Chief Justice shall preside.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This is all; and yet on this simple text the superstructure
-of Senators has been reared.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution does not proceed to say why the
-Chief Justice shall preside; not at all; nothing of the
-kind. Senators supply the reason, and then undertake to
-apply it to the actual President of the Senate. Where,
-Sir, do they find the reason? They cannot find the
-reason which they now assign in any of the contemporary
-authorities illustrating the Constitution; they cannot
-find it in the debates of the National Convention
-reported by Madison, or in any of the debates in the
-States at that time; nor can they find it in the “Federalist.”
-When does that reason first come on the scene?
-Others may be more fortunate than I; but I have not
-been able to find it earlier than 1825, nearly forty years
-after the formation of the Constitution, in the Commentaries
-of William Rawle. We all know the character
-of this work,&mdash;one of great respectability, and
-which most of us in our early days have read and
-studied. How does he speak of it? As follows:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Vice-President, being the President of the Senate,
-presides on the trial, except when the President of the
-United States is tried. As the Vice-President succeeds to
-the functions and emoluments of the President of the United
-States, whenever a vacancy happens in the latter office, it
-would be inconsistent with the implied purity of a judge
-that a person under a probable bias of such a nature should
-participate in the trial, and it would follow that he should
-wholly retire from the court.”<a name="FNanchor_90_90" id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Those are the words of a commentator on the Constitution.
-They next appear eight years later, in the
-Commentaries of Mr. Justice Story. After citing the
-provision, “When the President of the United States
-is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside,” the learned
-commentator proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The reason of this clause has been already adverted to.
-It was to preclude the Vice-President, who might be supposed
-to have a natural desire to succeed to the office, from
-being instrumental in procuring the conviction of the Chief
-Magistrate.”<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And he cites in his note “Rawle on the Constitution,
-ch. 22, p. 216,”<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> being the very passage that I have
-just read. Here is the first appearance of this reason,
-which is now made to play so important a part, being
-treated even as a text of the Constitution itself. At
-least I have not been able to meet it at an earlier day.</p>
-
-<p>If you repair to the contemporary authorities, including
-the original debates, you will find no such reason
-assigned,&mdash;nothing like it,&mdash;not even any suggestion
-of it. On the contrary, you will find Mr. Madison, in
-the Virginia Convention, making a statement which explains
-in the most satisfactory manner the requirement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-of the Constitution.<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> No better authority could be cited.
-Any reason supplied by him anterior to the adoption of
-the Constitution must be of more weight than any <i>ex
-post facto</i> imagination or invention of learned commentators.</p>
-
-<p>If we trust to the lights of history, the reason for the
-introduction of this clause in the Constitution was because
-the framers of the Constitution contemplated the
-possibility of the suspension of the President from the
-exercise of his powers, in which event the Vice-President
-could not be in your chair, Sir. If the President
-were suspended, the Vice-President would be in his
-place. The reports will verify what I say. If you refer
-to the debates of the National Convention, under the
-date of Friday, September 14, 1787, you will find the
-following entry, which I read now by way of introduction
-to what follows at a later date, on the authority of
-Mr. Madison himself.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Mr. Rutledge and Mr. Gouverneur Morris moved ‘that
-persons impeached be suspended from their offices until they
-be tried and acquitted.’</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Mr. Madison.</span> The President is made too dependent
-already on the Legislature by the power of one branch to
-try him in consequence of an impeachment by the other.
-This intermediate suspension will put him in the power of
-one branch only. They can at any moment, in order to
-make way for the functions of another who will be more
-favorable to their views, vote a temporary removal of the
-existing magistrate.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. King concurred in the opposition to the amendment.”<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>e proposition was rejected by the decisive vote of
-eight States in the negative to three in the affirmative.
-We all see, in reading it now, that it was rejected on
-good grounds. It would obviously be improper to confer
-upon the other branch of Congress the power, by
-its own vote, to bring about a suspension of the Chief
-Magistrate. But it did not follow, because the Convention
-rejected the proposition that a suspension could
-take place on a simple vote of the House of Representatives,
-that therefore the President could not be suspended.
-When the Senate was declared to have the
-sole power to try impeachments, it was by necessary
-implication invested with the power, incident to every
-court, and known historically to belong to the English
-court of impeachment, from which ours was borrowed,
-of suspending the party accused. All this was apparent
-at the time, if possible, more clearly than now.
-It was so clear, that it furnishes an all-sufficient reason
-for the provision that the Chief Justice should preside
-on the trial of the President, without resorting to
-the later reason which has been put forward in this
-debate.</p>
-
-<p>But we are not driven to speculate on this question.
-While the Constitution was under discussion in the
-Virginia Convention, George Mason objected to some
-of the powers conferred upon the President, especially
-the pardoning power. This was on June 18, 1788, and
-will be found under that date in the reports of the Virginia
-Convention. This earnest opponent of the Constitution
-said that the President might “pardon crimes
-which were advised by himself,” and thus further his
-own ambitious schemes. This brought forward Mr.
-Madison, who had sat, as we all know, throughout the
-debates of the National Convention, and had recorded
-its proceedings, and who, of all persons, was the mo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>st
-competent to testify at that time as to the intention of
-the framers. What said this eminent authority? I
-give you his words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There is one security in this case to which gentlemen
-may not have adverted. If the President be connected in
-any suspicious manner with any person, and there be grounds
-to believe he will shelter him, the House of Representatives
-can impeach him; they”&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">evidently referring to the Senate, or the Senate in connection
-with the House&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“can remove him, if found guilty; <i>they can suspend him,
-when suspected</i>, and the power will devolve on the Vice-President.”<a name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mark well these words,&mdash;“they can suspend him,
-when suspected.” If only suspected, the President can
-be suspended. What next? “And his power will
-devolve on the Vice-President.” In which event, of
-course, the Vice-President would be occupied elsewhere
-than in this Chamber.</p>
-
-<p>Those were the words of James Madison, spoken in
-debate in the Virginia Convention. Taken in connection
-with the earlier passage in the National Convention,
-they seem to leave little doubt with regard to the
-intention of the framers of the Constitution. They were
-unwilling to give to the other House alone the power
-of suspension; but they saw, that, when they authorized
-the Senate to try impeachments, they gave to it
-the power of suspension, if it should choose to exercise
-it; and the suspension of the President necessarily involved
-the withdrawal of the Vice-President from this
-Chamber, and the duty of supplying his place.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I submit, then, on the contemporary testimony, that
-the special reason why the Chief Justice is called to
-preside, when the President is on trial, is less what
-learned Senators have assigned than because the Vice-President
-under certain circumstances would not be
-able to be present. It was to provide for such a contingency,
-being nothing less than his necessary absence
-in the discharge of the high duties of Chief Magistrate,
-that a substitute was necessary, and he was
-found in the Chief Justice. All this was reasonable.
-It would have been unreasonable not to make such a
-provision.</p>
-
-<p>But this is not all. There is an incident, immediately
-after the adoption of the Constitution, which is
-in harmony with this authentic history. The House
-of Representatives at an early day acted on the interpretation
-of the Constitution given by Mr. Madison.
-The first impeachment, as we all know, was of William
-Blount, a Senator, and in impeaching him the House
-of Representatives demanded that he should “be sequestered
-from his seat in the Senate.” This was in
-1797. The Senate did not comply with this demand;
-but the demand nevertheless exists in the history of
-your Government, and it illustrates the interpretation
-which was given at that time to the powers of the
-Senate. The language employed, that the person impeached
-should be “sequestered,” is the traditional language
-of the British Constitution, constantly used, and
-familiar to our fathers. In employing it, the House
-of Representatives gave their early testimony that the
-Senate could suspend from his functions any person
-impeached before them; and thus the House of Representatives
-unite with Madison in supplying a sufficient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-reason for the provision that on the trial of the President
-the Chief Justice shall preside.</p>
-
-<p>In abandoning the reason which I have thus traced
-to contemporary authority, you launch upon an uncertain
-sea. You may think the reason assigned by the
-commentators to be satisfactory. It may please your
-taste; but it cannot be accepted as an authentic statement.
-If the original propositions were before me, I
-should listen to any such suggestion with the greatest
-respect. I do not mean to say now, that, as a general
-rule, it has not much in its favor; but I insist, that, so
-far as we are informed, the reason of the commentators
-was an afterthought, and that there was another reason
-which sufficiently explains the rule now under consideration.</p>
-
-<p>I respectfully submit, Sir, that you cannot proceed in
-the interpretation of this text upon the theory adopted
-by the learned Senators over the way. You must take
-the text as it is. You cannot go behind it; you cannot
-extend it. Here it is: “When the President of
-the United States is tried, the Chief Justice shall preside.”
-That is the whole, Sir. “The Chief Justice shall
-preside.” No reason is assigned. Can you assign a reason?
-Can you supply a reason? Especially can you
-supply one which is not sustained by the authentic
-contemporary history of the Constitution, and particularly
-when you have authentic contemporary history
-which supplies another reason? Unless I am much
-mistaken, this disposes of the objection, proceeding
-from so many Senators, that the Senator from Ohio
-cannot take the oath because he may possibly succeed
-to the President now impeached at your bar. He may
-vote or not, as he pleases; and there is no authorit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>y in
-the Constitution, or any of its contemporary expounders,
-to criticize him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>This is all, Sir, I have to say at this time on this
-head. There were other remarks made by Senators
-over the way to which I might reply. There was one
-that fell from my learned friend, the Senator from Maryland,
-[Mr. <span class="smcap">Johnson</span>,] in which he alluded to myself.
-He represented me as having cited many authorities
-from the House of Lords, tending to show, in the case
-of Mr. Stockton, that this person at the time was not
-entitled to vote on the question of his seat. The Senator
-does not remember that debate, I think, as well
-as I do. The point which I tried to present to the
-Senate, and which, I believe, was affirmed by a vote
-of the body, was simply this: that a man cannot sit
-as a judge in his own case. That was all,&mdash;at least
-so far as I recollect; and I submitted that Mr. Stockton
-at that time was a judge undertaking to sit in his
-own case.<a name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> Pray, Sir, what is the pertinency of this
-citation? Is it applicable at all to the Senator from
-Ohio? Is his case under consideration? Is he impeached
-at the bar of the Senate? Is he in any way
-called in question? Is he to answer for himself? Not
-at all. How, then, does the principle of law, that no
-man shall sit as a judge in his own case, apply to him?
-How does the action of the Senate in the case of Mr.
-Stockton apply to him? Not at all. The two cases
-are as wide as the poles asunder. One has nothing to
-do with the other.</p>
-
-<p>Something has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> said of the “interest” of the Senator
-from Ohio on the present occasion. “Interest”!
-This is the word used. We are reminded that in a
-certain event the Senator may become President, and
-that on this account he is under peculiar temptations,
-which may swerve him from justice. The Senator from
-Maryland went so far as to remind us of the large salary
-to which he might succeed,&mdash;not less than twenty-five
-thousand dollars a year,&mdash;and thus added a pecuniary
-temptation to the other disturbing forces. Is not
-all this very technical? Does it not forget the character
-of this great proceeding? Sir, we are a Senate, and
-not a Court of <i>Nisi Prius</i>. This is not a case of assault
-and battery, but a trial involving the destinies of
-this Republic. I doubt if the question of “interest” is
-properly raised. I speak with all respect for others,
-but I submit that it is inapplicable. It does not belong
-here. Every Senator has his vote, to be given on his
-conscience. If there be any “interest” to sway him,
-it must be that of justice, and the safety of the country.
-Against these all else is nothing. The Senator from
-Ohio, whose vote is now in question, can see nothing
-but those transcendent interests by the side of which
-office, power, and money are of small account. Put in
-one scale these interests, so dear to the heart of the
-patriot, and in the other all the personal temptations
-which have been imagined, and I cannot doubt, that, if
-the Senator from Ohio holds these scales, the latter will
-kick the beam.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="THE_CHIEF_JUSTICE_PRESIDING_IN_THE_SENATE" id="THE_CHIEF_JUSTICE_PRESIDING_IN_THE_SENATE"></a>THE CHIEF JUSTICE, PRESIDING IN THE SENATE,
-CANNOT RULE OR VOTE.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson,
-President of the United States, March 31, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>In the course of this trial there was an important claim of power
-by the Chief Justice, as presiding officer of the Senate, on which at
-the time Mr. Sumner expressed his opinion to the Senate, when it
-withdrew for consultation. As this claim was calculated in certain
-contingencies to affect the course of proceedings, possibly the final
-judgment, and as it might hereafter be drawn into a precedent, Mr.
-Sumner was unwilling to lose this opportunity of recording his reasons
-against it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">In determining the relations of the Chief Justice to
-the trial of the President, we must look, first, to
-the National Constitution; for it is solely by virtue of
-the National Constitution that this eminent magistrate
-is transported from his own natural field to another,
-where he is for the time an exotic. The Chief Justice
-in his own court is at home; but it is equally clear,
-that, when he comes into the Senate, he is a stranger.
-Though justly received with welcome and honor, he
-cannot expect membership, or anything beyond the powers
-derived directly from the National Constitution, by
-virtue of which he temporarily occupies the Chair.</p>
-
-<p>Repairing to our authoritative text, we find the only
-applicable words:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Senate shall have the sole power to try all impeachments.…
-When the President of the United States
-is tried, the Chief Justice shall <i>preside</i>: and no person shall
-be convicted without the concurrence of two thirds of the
-members present.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This is all. The Chief Justice shall <i>preside</i>, but subject
-to two limitations specifically declared. First, the
-trial is to be by the Senate <i>solely</i>, and nobody else,&mdash;thus
-carefully excluding the presiding officer from all
-participation, except so far as is implied in the power
-to preside; and, secondly, judgment of conviction can
-be only by a vote of “two thirds of <i>the members present</i>,”&mdash;thus
-again excluding the presiding officer, unless
-it is assumed that he is a member of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>On the face of this text it is difficult to find ambiguity.
-Nobody questions that the Chief Justice must
-preside. Can anybody question that the trial must be
-by the Senate solely, and nobody else? To change this
-requirement is to fly in the face of the National Constitution.
-Can anybody question that the judgment of
-conviction must be by votes of “members present,” and
-nobody else? Now, since the Chief Justice is not a
-“member” of the Senate, it is plain that he is positively
-excluded from vote on the final question. It
-only remains that he should “preside.” And here the
-question recurs as to the meaning of this familiar term.</p>
-
-<p>The person who presides is simply, according to the
-language of our Rules, “presiding officer,” and this designation
-is the equivalent or synonym of speaker, and
-also of prolocutor, each of which signifies somebody
-who speaks for the house. It is not implied that he
-votes with the house, much less that he decides for the
-house, but only that he is the voice of the house,&mdash;its
-speaker. What the house has to say it says through
-him; but, except as organ of the house, he is silent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
-unless also a member, when to his powers as presiding
-officer he superadds the powers of a member also. From
-this brief statement it appears at once how limited his
-functions must be.</p>
-
-<p>Here I might stop; but, since this question has assumed
-unexpected importance, I am induced to go further.
-It is easy to show that the language of the National
-Constitution, if seen in the light of English parliamentary
-history, must have an interpretation identical
-with its natural import.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is clearer than this. If language employed
-in the National Constitution had already, at the time
-of its formation, received a definite meaning, it must
-be interpreted accordingly. Thus, when the Constitution
-secures “trial by jury,” it secures that institution
-as defined by antecedent English law. So, also, when
-it declares that the judicial power shall extend to “all
-cases in law and equity” arising under the National
-Constitution, it recognizes the distinction between law
-and equity peculiar to English law. Courts of Common
-Law and Courts of Equity are all implied in this language;
-and since there is no further definition of their
-powers, we must ascertain them in England. Cushing,
-in determining the rules of proceeding in our American
-Legislatures, says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Such was the practice of the two Houses of the British
-Parliament when our ancestors emigrated; … and such has
-continued to be, and now is, the practice in that body.”<a name="FNanchor_97_97" id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This resource has been most persuasively presented
-by Mr. Wirt, in his remarkable argument on the impeachment
-of Judge Peck, where he vindicates and expounds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
-the true rule of interpretation.</p>
-
-<p>According to this eminent authority, what he calls
-“the English archetypes” were the models for the
-framers of the National Constitution. The courts were
-fashioned after these “archetypes.” They were instituted
-according to “the English <i>originals</i>, to which they
-were manifestly referred by the Constitution itself.”<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a>
-Here again I quote the words of Mr. Wirt.</p>
-
-<p>All this is precisely applicable to that part of the
-National Constitution under consideration. In essential
-features it was borrowed from England. There is
-its original, its model, its archetype. Therefore to England
-we go.</p>
-
-<p>Not only to England must we go, but also to Parliamentary
-Law, as recognized in England at the adoption
-of the National Constitution. The powers of a
-presiding officer, where not specifically declared, must
-be found in Parliamentary Law. The very term <i>preside</i>
-is parliamentary. It belongs to the technicalities
-of this branch of law, as much as <i>indict</i> belongs to the
-technicalities of the Common Law. In determining the
-signification of this term, it will be of little avail to
-show some local usage, or, perhaps, some decision of
-a court. The usage or decision of a Parliament must
-be shown. Against this all vague speculation or divination
-of reason is futile. I will not encumber this
-discussion by superfluous authorities. Insisting that
-this question must be determined by Parliamentary
-Law, I content myself with adducing the often cited
-words of Lord Coke:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“And as every court of justice hath laws and customs for
-its direction, some by the Common Law, some by the Civil
-and Canon Law, some by peculiar laws and customs, etc., so
-the High Court of Parliament <i>suis propriis legibus et consuetudinibus
-subsistit</i>. It is <i>lex et consuetudo Parliamenti</i>, that
-all weighty matters in any Parliament, moved concerning the
-peers of the realm, or commons in Parliament assembled,
-<i>ought to be determined and adjudged and discussed by the
-course of the Parliament</i>, and not by the Civil Law, nor yet
-by the common laws of this realm used in more inferior
-courts.”<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is the true rule. To “the course of the Parliament”
-we must resort. In “the course of the Parliament”
-we must find all the powers of a presiding officer,
-and all that is implied in the authority to preside.
-“The Chief Justice shall preside.” Such is the Constitution.
-Nothing is specified with regard to his powers;
-nothing is said. What was intended is left to inference
-from the language employed, which must be interpreted
-according to “the course of the Parliament,” precisely
-as what was intended by trial by jury is ascertained
-from the Common Law. In the latter case we go to
-the Common Law; in the former case we go to “the
-course of the Parliament.” You may as well turn away
-from the Common Law in the one as from “the course
-of the Parliament” in the other. In determining “the
-course of the Parliament” we resort to the summary of
-text-writers, and, better still, to the authentic instances
-of history.</p>
-
-<p>Something has been said in this discussion with regard
-to the example of Lord Erskine, who presided at
-the impeachment of Lord Melville. This was in 1806,
-during the short-lived ministry of Fox, when Erskine
-was Chancellor. It is by misapprehension that this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>instance
-is supposed to sustain the present assumption.
-When seen in its true light, it is found in harmony
-with the general rule. Erskine had at the time two
-characters. He was Lord Chancellor, and in this capacity
-presiding officer of the House of Lords, without
-the right to rule or vote, or even to speak. Besides
-being Chancellor, he was also a member of the House
-of Lords, with all the rights of other members. As we
-advance in this inquiry, it will be seen that again and
-again it has been practically decided, that, whatever the
-powers of a presiding officer who is actually a member,
-a presiding officer who is not a member cannot rule or
-vote, or even speak. In this statement I anticipate the
-argument. I do it at this stage only to put aside the
-suggestion founded on the instance of Lord Chancellor
-Erskine.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I begin with the most familiar authority,&mdash;I mean
-the eminent writer and judge, Sir William Blackstone.
-In his Commentaries, where is found, in elegant form,
-the complete body of English law, you have this whole
-matter stated in a few suggestive words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Speaker of the House of Lords, <i>if a Lord of Parliament</i>,
-may give his opinion or argue any question in the
-House.”<a name="FNanchor_100_100" id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>If not a Lord of Parliament, he could not give his
-opinion or argue any question. This is in accordance
-with all the authorities and unbroken usage; but it has
-peculiar value at this moment, because it is the text
-of Blackstone. This work was the guide-book of our
-fathers. It first appeared in 1765-69, the very period
-when the controversy with the mother country was f<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>ervid;
-and it is an unquestionable fact of history that it
-was read in the Colonies with peculiar interest. Burke,
-in one of his masterly orations, portraying the character
-of our fathers, says: “I hear that they have sold nearly
-as many of Blackstone’s Commentaries in America as
-in England.”<a name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> Nothing is clearer than that they knew
-it well.</p>
-
-<p>The framers of the National Constitution had it before
-them constantly. It was their most familiar work.
-It was to them as Bowditch’s Navigator is to the mariner
-in our day. They looked to it for guidance on the
-sea they were traversing. When they undertook to
-provide that the Chief Justice, who was not a member
-of the Senate, should preside at the impeachment of
-the President, they knew well that he could have no
-power to “give his opinion or argue any question in
-the House,” for Blackstone had instructed them explicitly
-on this head. They knew that he was simply
-a presiding officer, according to the immemorial usage
-of the upper House in England, with such powers as
-belong to a presiding officer who is not a member of
-the House, and none other.</p>
-
-<p>The powers of the presiding officer of the House of
-Lords are illustrated by authority and precedents, all in
-harmony with the statement of Blackstone. Ordinarily
-the Keeper of the Great Seal is the presiding officer; but,
-unless a member of the body, he can do little more than
-put the question. Any other person, as a Chief Justice,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-may be delegated by royal commission. According to
-the rules of the House, even if a peer, he cannot speak
-without quitting the woolsack, which is the Chair, and
-moving “to his own place as a peer.”<a name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> The right of
-speech belongs to him as a member, but he cannot exercise
-it without leaving his place as presiding officer.
-So is he circumscribed.</p>
-
-<p>A late writer on Parliamentary Law, whose work is
-a satisfactory guide, thus sententiously sums up the
-law and usage:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The position of the Speaker of the House of Lords is
-somewhat anomalous; for, though he is the president of a
-deliberative assembly, he is invested with no more authority
-than any other member; and if not himself a member, his
-office is limited to the putting of questions and other formal
-proceedings.”<a name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This statement is in obvious harmony with that of
-Blackstone; so that there is no difference between the
-writer who is our guide to-day and the learned commentator
-who was the guide of our fathers.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. May goes still further, and lets us know that it
-is only as a member of the House that the presiding
-officer can address it, even on points of order:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Upon points of order, the Speaker, if a peer, may address
-the House; but, as his opinion is liable to be questioned,
-like that of any other peer, he does not often exercise
-his right.”<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>us, even if a peer, even if a member of the upper
-House, the presiding officer cannot rule a point of
-order, nor address the House upon it, except as any
-other member; and what he says is open to question,
-like the utterance of any other member. Such
-is the conclusion of the most approved English authority.</p>
-
-<p>American writers on Parliamentary Law concur with
-English. Cushing, who has done so much to illustrate
-the whole subject, says of the presiding officer of the
-Lords, that he “is invested with no more authority for
-the preservation of order than any other member; and
-if not himself a member, his office is limited to the putting
-of questions and other formal proceedings; … if
-he is a peer, he may address the House and participate
-in the debates as a member.” He then says again: “If
-a peer, he votes with the other members; if not, he does
-not vote at all.” And he adds: “There is no casting
-vote in the Lords.”<a name="FNanchor_105_105" id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> This statement was made long
-after the adoption of the National Constitution, and
-anterior to the present controversy.</p>
-
-<p>There are occasions when the Lords have a presiding
-officer called a Lord High Steward. This is on the trial
-of a peer, whether upon impeachment or indictment.
-Here the same rule is stated by Edmund Burke, in his
-masterly Report to the House of Commons on the impeachment
-of Warren Hastings:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Every peer present at the trial (and every temporal peer
-hath a right to be present in every part of the proceeding)
-voteth upon every question of law and fact, and the question
-is carried by the major vote,&mdash;the High Steward himself
-voting merely as a peer and member of that court,
-in common with the rest of the peers, and in no other
-right.”<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In another place, the Report, quoting the Commons’
-Journal, says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That the Lord High Steward was but as a Speaker, or
-<i>Chairman</i>, for the more orderly proceeding at the trials.”<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And then again:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The appointment of him doth not alter the nature of
-the court, which still remaineth the Court of the Peers in
-Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The name of Burke gives to this illustration additional
-authority and interest. It is not difficult to see
-how he would have decided the present question.</p>
-
-<p>In our day there have been instances of the Lord
-Chancellor as presiding officer without being a peer.
-Brougham took his seat on the 22d November, 1830,
-before his patent as a peer had been made out, and
-during this interval his energies were suppressed in the
-simple duty of presiding officer and nothing else. The
-same was the case with that eminent lawyer, Sir Edward
-Sugden, who sat as presiding officer on the 4th
-March, 1852, although still a commoner; and it was
-also the case with Sir Frederick Thesiger, who sat as
-presiding officer on the 1st March, 1858, although still
-a commoner. These instances attest the prevalence of
-the early rule down to our day. Even Brougham, who
-never shrank from speech or from the exercise of power,
-was constrained to bow before its exigency. He sat as
-Lord Chancellor, and in that character put the question,
-but this was all, until he became a member of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-House. Lord Campbell expressly records, that, while
-his name appears in the entry of those present on the
-22d November, 1830, as <i>Henricus Brougham, Cancellarius</i>,
-“he had no right to debate and vote till the following
-day,” when the entry of his name and office
-appears as <i>Dominus Brougham et Vaux, Cancellarius</i>.<a name="FNanchor_109_109" id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p>
-
-<p>Passing from these examples of recent history, I return
-to the rule as known to our fathers at the adoption
-of the National Constitution. On this head the
-evidence is complete. It is found in the State Trials
-of England, in parliamentary history, and in the books
-of law; but it is nowhere better exhibited than in the
-Lives of the Chancellors, by Lord Campbell, himself a
-member of the House of Lords and a Chancellor, familiar
-with it historically and practically. He has stated
-the original rule, and in his work, which is as interesting
-as voluminous, has furnished constantly recurring
-illustrations of it. In the Introduction to his Lives,
-where he describes the office of Chancellor, he enunciates
-the rule:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Whether peer or commoner, the Chancellor is not, like
-the Speaker of the Commons, moderator of the proceedings
-of the House in which he seems to preside; he is not addressed
-in debate; he does not name the peer who is to
-be heard; he is not appealed to as an authority on points
-of order; and he may cheer the sentiments expressed by his
-colleagues in the ministry.”<a name="FNanchor_110_110" id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Existing rules of the Senate add to these powers;
-but such is the rule with regard to the presiding officer
-of the House of Lords, even when a peer. He is not
-appealed to on points of order. If a commoner, his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-power is still less.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“If he be a commoner, notwithstanding a resolution of
-the House that he is to be proceeded against for any misconduct
-as if he were a peer, he has neither vote nor deliberative
-voice, and he can only put the question, and communicate
-the resolutions of the House according to the directions
-he receives.”<a name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In the early period of English history the Chancellors
-were often ecclesiastics, though generally commoners.
-Fortescue, Wolsey, and More were never peers.
-This also was the case with Sir Nicholas Bacon, father
-of Lord Bacon, who held the seals under Queen Elizabeth
-for twenty years, and was colleague in the cabinet
-of Burleigh. Lord Campbell remarks on his position as
-presiding officer of the House of Lords:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Not being a peer, he could not take a share in the Lords’
-debates; but, presiding as Speaker on the woolsack, he exercised
-a considerable influence on their deliberations.”<a name="FNanchor_112_112" id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Then again we are told:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Being a commoner, he could neither act as Lord Steward
-nor sit upon the trial of the Duke of Norfolk, who was the
-first who suffered for favoring Mary’s cause.”<a name="FNanchor_113_113" id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus early do we meet illustration of this rule, which
-constantly reappears in the annals of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>The successor of Sir Nicholas Bacon was Lord Chancellor
-Bromley; and here we find a record interesting
-at this moment. After presiding at the trial of Mary,
-Queen of Scots, the Lord Chancellor became ill and
-took to his bed. Under the circumstances, Sir Edmund<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-Anderson, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, was authorized
-by the Queen to act as a substitute for the
-Chancellor; and thus the Chief Justice became presiding
-officer of the House of Lords to the close of
-the session, without being a peer.</p>
-
-<p>Then came Sir Christopher Hatton, the favorite of
-Queen Elizabeth, and so famous as the dancing Chancellor,
-who presided in the House of Lords by virtue of
-his office, but never as peer. The same was the case
-with his successor, Sir John Puckering. He was followed
-by the exemplary Ellesmere, who was for many
-years Chancellor without being a peer, but finished his
-career by adding to his title as presiding officer the
-functions of a member. The greatest of all now followed.
-After much effort and solicitation, Bacon becomes
-Chancellor with a peerage; but it is recorded in
-the Lords’ Journals, that, when he spoke, he removed
-from the woolsack “to his seat as a peer,” thus attesting
-that he had no voice as presiding officer. At last,
-when the corruptions of this remarkable character began
-to overshadow the land, the Chief Justice of the King’s
-Bench, Sir James Ley, was designated by the King to
-act as Speaker of the House of Lords. Soon afterward
-Bacon fell. Meanwhile it is said that the Chief Justice
-“had very creditably performed the duties of Speaker
-of the House of Lords.”<a name="FNanchor_114_114" id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> In other words, according
-to the language of our Constitution, he had presided
-well.</p>
-
-<p>Then came Williams, Coventry, and Finch, as Lord
-Keepers. As the last absconded to avoid impeachment
-by the House of Commons, Littleton, Chief Justice of
-the Common Pleas, “was placed on the woolsack as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-Speaker.”<a name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> At a later time he received the Great Seal as
-Lord Keeper. This promotion was followed by a peerage,
-at the prompting of no less a person than the Earl
-of Strafford, “who thought he might be more useful, if
-permitted to take part in the proceedings of the House
-as a peer, than if he could only put the question as
-Speaker.”<a name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> Clarendon says, that, as a peer, he could
-have done Strafford “notable service.”<a name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> But the timid
-peer did not render the expected service.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the period of Civil War, when one Great
-Seal was with the King and another was with Parliament.
-Meanwhile the Earl of Manchester was appointed
-Speaker of the upper House, and as such took
-his place on the woolsack. As a peer he had all the
-privileges of a member of the House over which he presided.
-Charles the Second, during his exile, appointed
-Hyde, afterward Earl of Clarendon, as Chancellor; but
-the monarch was for the time without a Court and
-without a Parliament. On the Restoration, in 1660,
-the Chancellor at once entered upon all his duties,
-judicial and parliamentary; and it is recorded, that,
-“though still a commoner, holding the Great Seal, he
-took his place on the woolsack as Speaker by prescription.”<a name="FNanchor_118_118" id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a>
-A year later the commoner was raised to the
-peerage, thus becoming more than presiding officer.
-During illness from the gout the place of the Chancellor
-as presiding officer was sometimes supplied by
-Sir Orlando Bridgeman, Chief Justice of the Common
-Pleas, who on these occasions was presiding officer, and
-nothing more. Lord Campbell says he “frequently sa<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>t
-Speaker in the House of Lords,”<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a>&mdash;meaning that he
-presided.</p>
-
-<p>On the disgrace of Lord Clarendon, the disposal of
-the Great Seal was the occasion of perplexity. The
-historian informs us, that, “after many doubts and conflicting
-plans among the King’s male and female advisers,
-it was put into the hands of a grave Common-Law
-judge,”<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> being none other than the Chief Justice
-of the Common Pleas, who had already presided in the
-absence of Lord Clarendon; but he was never raised
-to the peerage. Then comes another explanation of the
-precise relation of such an official to the House. Lord
-Campbell expressly remarks, that, “never being created
-a peer, his only duty in the House of Lords was to put
-the question, and to address the two Houses in explanation
-of the royal will on the assembling of Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a>
-Here is the constantly recurring definition
-of the term <i>preside</i>.</p>
-
-<p>For some time afterward there seems to have been
-little embarrassment. Nottingham, who did so much
-for Equity, Shaftesbury, who did so little, Guilford, so
-famous through contemporary biography, and Jeffreys,
-so justly infamous,&mdash;successively heads of the law,&mdash;were
-all peers. But at the Revolution of 1688 there
-was an interregnum, which again brought into relief
-the relations between the upper House and its presiding
-officer. James, on his flight, dropped the Great
-Seal into the Thames. There was, therefore, no presiding
-officer for the Lords. To supply this want, the
-Lords, at the meeting of the Convention Parliament,
-chose one of their own number, the Marquis of H<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>alifax,
-as Speaker, and, in the exercise of the power inherent
-in them, they continued to reëlect him day by
-day. During this period he was strictly President <i>pro
-tempore</i>. At last, Sir Robert Atkyns, Chief Baron of the
-Exchequer, a commoner, took his seat upon the woolsack
-as Speaker, appointed by the Crown. Here, again,
-we learn that “serious inconvenience was experienced
-from the occupier of the woolsack not being a member
-of the House.”<a name="FNanchor_122_122" id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> At last, in 1693, the Great Seal was
-handed to Sir John Somers, Lord Keeper; and here is
-another authentic illustration of the rule. Although
-official head of the English law, and already exalted
-for his ability and varied knowledge, this great man,
-one of the saviours of constitutional liberty in England,
-was for some time merely presiding officer. The historian
-records, that, “while he remained a commoner,
-he presided on the woolsack only as Speaker”;<a name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> that
-he “had only, as Speaker, to put the question, …
-taking no part in debate.”<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> This is more worthy of
-notice because Somers was recognized as a consummate
-orator. At last, according to the historian, “there
-was a strong desire that he should take part in the debates,
-and, to enable him, the King pressed his acceptance
-of a peerage, which, after some further delay, he
-did, and he was afterward known as Lord Somers.<a name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the vicissitudes of public life this great character
-was dismissed from office, and a successor was found in
-an inferior person, Sir Nathan Wright, who was created
-Lord Keeper without a peerage. For the five years of
-his official life it is recorded that he occupied the
-woolsack, “merely putting the question, and having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-no influence over the proceedings.”<a name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> Thus he presided.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the polished Cowper, at first without a
-peerage, but after a short time created a member of the
-House. Here again the historian records, that, while he
-remained a commoner, “he took his place on the woolsack
-as Speaker of the House of Lords, and without a
-right to debate or vote.”<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> It appears, that, “not being
-permitted to share in the debates in the House of Lords,
-he amused himself by taking notes of the speeches on
-the opposite sides.”<a name="FNanchor_128_128" id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> Afterward, even when a peer,
-and, as Chancellor, presiding at the impeachment of
-Sacheverell, Lord Cowper did not interfere further than
-by saying, “Gentlemen of the House of Commons,” or
-“Gentlemen, you that are counsel for the prisoner may
-proceed.”<a name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a></p>
-
-<p>Harcourt followed Cowper as Keeper of the Great
-Seal, but he was not immediately raised to the peerage.
-It is recorded that during one year he had “only
-to sit as Speaker,”<a name="FNanchor_130_130" id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a>&mdash;that is, only to preside. Afterwards,
-as peer, he became a member. On the accession
-of George the First, Harcourt, in turn, gave place to
-Cowper, who was again made Chancellor. To him succeeded
-the Earl of Macclesfield, with all the rights of
-membership.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Macclesfield, being impeached of high crimes
-and misdemeanors as Chancellor, Sir Peter King, at the
-time Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, was made
-presiding officer of the upper House, with only the limited
-powers belonging to a presiding officer who is not
-a member of the body. Here the record is complete.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-Turn to the trial and you will see it all. It was he
-who gave directions to the managers, and also to the
-counsel,&mdash;who put the question, and afterward pronounced
-the sentence; but he acted always as presiding
-officer and nothing else. I do not perceive that he
-made any rulings during the progress of the trial. He
-was Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, acting as President
-<i>pro tempore</i>. The report, describing the opening
-of the proceedings, says that the articles of impeachment,
-with the answer and replication, were read “by
-direction of the Lord Chief Justice King, Speaker of
-the House of Lords.”<a name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> Another definition of the term
-<i>preside</i>.</p>
-
-<p>All this is compendiously described by Lord Campbell:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Sir Peter, not being a peer, of course had no deliberative
-voice, but, during the trial, as the organ of the House of
-Peers, he regulated the procedure without any special vote,
-intimating to the managers and to the counsel for the defendant
-when they were to speak and to adduce their evidence.
-After the verdict of <i>Guilty</i>, he ordered the Black
-Rod to produce his prisoner at the bar; and the Speaker
-of the House of Commons having demanded judgment, he,
-in good taste, abstaining from making any comment, dryly,
-but solemnly and impressively, pronounced the sentence
-which the House had agreed upon.”<a name="FNanchor_132_132" id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This proceeding was in 1725. At this time, Benjamin
-Franklin, the printer-boy, was actually in London.
-It is difficult to imagine that this precocious character,
-whose observation in public affairs was as remarkable
-as in philosophy, should have passed eighteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
-months in London at this very period without noting
-this remarkable trial and the manner in which it was
-conducted. Thus, early in life, he saw that a Chief Justice
-might preside at an impeachment without being a
-member of the House of Lords or exercising any of the
-powers which belong to membership.</p>
-
-<p>Besides his eminence as Chief Justice, King was the
-nephew of the great thinker who has exercised such influence
-on English and American opinion, John Locke.
-Shortly after presiding at the impeachment as Chief
-Justice, he became Chancellor with a peerage.</p>
-
-<p>He was followed in his high post by Talbot and
-Hardwicke, each with a peerage. Jumping the long
-period of their successful administrations, when the
-presiding officer was also a member of the upper House,
-I come to another instance where the position of the
-presiding officer was peculiarly apparent,&mdash;and this,
-too, when Benjamin Franklin was in London, as agent
-for Pennsylvania. I refer to Sir Robert Henley, who
-became Lord Keeper in 1757, without a peerage. The
-King, George the Second, did not like him, and therefore,
-while consenting to place him at the head of the
-law, declined to make him a member of the House
-over which he was to preside. At last, in 1760, the
-necessities of the public service constrained his elevation
-to the peerage, and soon afterward George the
-Third, who succeeded to the throne without the animosities
-of his grandfather, created him Chancellor and
-Earl of Northington.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly three years, Henley, while still a commoner,
-was presiding officer. During this considerable
-period he was without voice or vote. The historian
-remarks, that, “if there had been any debates, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>he was
-precluded from taking part in them.”<a name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> In another
-place he pictures the defenceless condition of the unhappy
-magistrate with regard to his own decisions in
-the court below, when heard on appeal:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Lord Keeper Henley, till raised to the peerage, used to
-complain bitterly of being obliged to put the question for
-the reversal of his own decrees, without being permitted to
-say a word in support of them.”<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Lord Eldon, in his Anecdote Book, furnishes another
-statement of this case:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“When Sir Robert Henley was Keeper of the Great Seal,
-and presided in the House of Lords as Lord Keeper, he could
-not enter into debate as a Chancellor being a peer does; and
-therefore, when there was an appeal from his judgments in
-the Court of Chancery, and the law Lords then in the House
-moved to reverse his judgments, … the Lord Keeper could
-not state the grounds of his opinions given in judgment, and
-support his decisions.”<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And thus for nearly three years this commoner presided.</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks after Henley first took his place as
-presiding officer, Franklin arrived in London for the
-second time, and continued there, a busy observer, until
-after the Judge was created a peer. Even if he had
-been ignorant of parliamentary usage, or had forgotten
-what passed at the trial of Lord Macclesfield, he could
-not have failed to note that the House of Lords had for
-its presiding officer an eminent judge, who, not being a
-member, could take no part in its proceedings beyond<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
-putting the question.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward, in 1770, there was a different arrangement.
-Owing to difficulty in finding a proper person
-as Chancellor, the Great Seal was put in commission,
-and Lord Mansfield, Chief Justice of England, was persuaded
-to act as presiding officer. Curiously enough,
-Franklin was again in England, on his third visit, and
-remained through the service of Lord Mansfield in this
-capacity. Thus this illustrious American, afterward a
-member of the Convention that framed the National
-Constitution, had at two different times seen the House
-of Lords with a presiding officer who, not being a member
-of the body, could only put the question, and then
-again with another presiding officer who, being a member
-of the body, could vote and speak, as well as put
-the question.</p>
-
-<p>But Franklin was not the only member of the National
-Convention to whom these precedents were known.
-One or more had been educated at the Temple; others
-were accomplished lawyers, familiar with the courts of
-the mother country. I have already mentioned that
-Blackstone’s Commentaries, where the general rule is
-clearly stated, was as well known in the Colonies as in
-the mother country. Besides, our fathers were not ignorant
-of the history of England, which, down to the
-Declaration of Independence, had been their history.
-The English law was also theirs. Not a case in its
-books which did not belong to them as well as to the
-frequenters of Westminster Hall. The State Trials, involving
-principles of Constitutional Law, and embodying
-these very precedents, were all known. At least
-four editions had appeared several years before the
-adoption of the National Constitution. I cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> err in
-supposing that all these were authoritative guides at the
-time, and that the National Constitution was fashioned
-in all the various lights, historical and judicial, which
-they furnished.</p>
-
-<p>The conclusion is irresistible, that the National Constitution,
-when providing a presiding officer for the trial
-of the President of the United States, used the term
-<i>preside</i> in the sense already acquired in Parliamentary
-Law, and did not intend any different signification;
-that our fathers knew perfectly well the parliamentary
-distinction between a presiding officer a member of the
-House and a presiding officer not a member; that, in
-constituting the Chief Justice presiding officer for a
-special temporary purpose, they had in view similar instances
-in the mother country, when the Lord Keeper,
-Chief Justice, or other judicial personage, had been appointed
-to preside over the House of Lords, of which
-he was not a member, as our Chief Justice is appointed
-to preside over the Senate, of which he is not a member;
-that they found in this constantly recurring example
-an apt precedent for their guidance; that they
-followed this precedent to all intents and purposes,
-using received parliamentary language, “the Chief Justice
-shall preside,” and nothing more; that, according
-to this precedent, they never intended to invest the
-Chief Justice, President <i>pro tempore</i> of the Senate,
-with any other powers than those of a presiding officer
-not a member of the body; and that these powers,
-exemplified in an unbroken series of instances extending
-over centuries, under different kings and through
-various administrations, were simply to put the question
-and to direct generally the conduct of business,
-without undertaking in any way, by voice or vote, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-determine any question, preliminary, interlocutory, or
-final.</p>
-
-<p>In stating this conclusion I present simply the result
-of the authorities. It is not I who speak; it is
-the authorities. My own judgment may be imperfect;
-but here is a mass of testimony, concurring and
-cumulative, without a single exception, which cannot
-err.</p>
-
-<p>Plainly and unmistakably, the provision in our Constitution
-authorizing the Chief Justice to <i>preside</i> in the
-Senate, of which he is not a member, was modelled on
-the English original. This, according to the language
-of Mr. Wirt, was the “archetype” our fathers followed.
-As such it was embodied in the National Constitution,
-as if the text expressly declared that the Chief Justice,
-when presiding in the Senate, had all the powers accorded
-by parliamentary usage to such a functionary
-when presiding in the upper House of Parliament without
-being a member thereof. In saying that he shall
-“preside” the Constitution confers no powers of membership,
-and by the well-defined term employed limits
-him to those precise functions sanctioned at the time
-by immemorial usage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Thus far I have considered this provision in the light
-of authorities already known and recognized at the adoption
-of the National Constitution. This is enough; for
-it is by these authorities that its meaning must be determined.
-You cannot reject these without setting at
-defiance a fixed rule of interpretation, and resorting instead
-to vague inference or mere imagination, quickened,
-perhaps, by your desires. Mere imagination and
-vague inference, quickened, perhaps, by your desir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>es,
-are out of place when Parliamentary Law is beyond all
-question.</p>
-
-<p>Pardon me, if I protract this argument by an additional
-illustration, derived from our own Congressional
-history. This is found under the parallel provision of
-the National Constitution relating to the Vice-President,
-which, after much debate in another generation,
-received authoritative interpretation: “The Vice-President
-of the United States shall be <i>President of the Senate</i>,
-but shall have no vote, unless they be equally divided.”
-In other words, the Vice-President, like the
-Chief Justice, shall <i>preside</i> in the Senate, but, unlike
-the Chief Justice, with a casting vote. His general powers
-are all implied in the provision that he shall preside.</p>
-
-<p>No question has occurred with regard to the vote of
-the Vice-President, for this is expressly regulated by
-the National Constitution. But the other powers of
-the Vice-President, when presiding in the Senate, are
-left to Parliamentary Law and express rules. Some of
-the latter were settled at an early day. From the rules
-of the Senate at the beginning it appears, that, independent
-of his casting vote, nothing was originally recognized
-as belonging to a <i>presiding</i> Vice-President beyond
-his power to occupy the chair. All else was determined
-by the rules. For instance, Senators, when
-speaking, are to address the Chair. This rule, which
-seems to us so superfluous, was adopted 16th April,
-1789, early in the session of the first Congress, in order
-to change the existing Parliamentary Law, under which
-a member of the upper House of Parliament habitually
-addresses his associates, and never the Chair. Down to
-this day, in England, a peer rising to speak says, “<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>My
-Lords,” and never “My Lord Chancellor,” although the
-latter <i>presides</i>. Another rule, adopted at the same date,
-has a similar origin. By Parliamentary Law, in the
-upper House of Parliament, when two members rise at
-the same time, the House, by their cry, indicate who
-shall speak. This was set aside by a positive rule of
-the Senate that in such a case “the President shall
-name the person to speak.” The Parliamentary Law,
-that the presiding officer, whether a member or not a
-member, shall put the question, was reinforced by an
-express rule that “all questions shall be put by the
-President of the Senate.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the rules originally provided, that, when a
-member is called to order, “the President shall determine
-whether he is in order or not,” they failed to declare
-by whom the call to order should be made. There
-was nothing conferring this power upon the presiding
-officer, while by Parliamentary Law in the upper House
-of Parliament no presiding officer, <i>as such</i>, could call
-to order, whatever he might do as member. The powers
-of the presiding officer in the Senate were left in
-this uncertainty, but the small number of Senators and
-the prevailing courtesy prevented trouble. At last, in
-the lapse of time, the number increased, and debates assumed
-a more animated character. Meanwhile, in 1825,
-Mr. Calhoun became Vice-President. This ingenious
-person, severely logical, and enjoying at the time the
-confidence of the country to a rare degree, insisted, that,
-as presiding officer, he had no power but to carry into
-effect the rules adopted by the body, and that therefore,
-in the absence of any rule on the subject, he was
-not empowered to call a Senator to order for words
-spoken in debate. His conclusion was given as fol<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>lows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Chair had no power beyond the rules of the Senate.
-It would stand in the light of a usurper, were it to attempt
-to exercise such a power. It was too high a power for the
-Chair.… The Chair would never assume any power not
-vested in it, but would ever show firmness in exercising
-those powers that were vested in the Chair.”<a name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The question with regard to the powers of the Chair
-was transferred from the Senate Chamber to the public
-press, where it was discussed with memorable ability.
-An article in the “National Journal,”<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> under the signature
-of “Patrick Henry,” attributed to John Quincy
-Adams, at the time President, assumed that the powers
-of the Vice-President, in calling to order, were not derived
-from the Senate, but that they came strictly from
-the National Constitution itself, which authorizes him
-to preside, and that in their exercise the Vice-President
-was wholly independent of the Senate. To this
-assumption Mr. Calhoun replied in the “National Intelligencer,”
-in two articles,<a name="FNanchor_138_138" id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> under the signature of
-“Onslow,” where he shows an ability not unworthy of
-the eminent parliamentarian whose name he for the
-time adopted. The point in issue was not unlike that
-now before us. It was insisted, on the one side, that
-certain powers were inherent in the Vice-President as
-presiding officer, precisely as it is now insisted that
-certain powers are inherent in the Chief-Justice when
-he becomes presiding officer. Mr. Calhoun replied in
-words applicable to the present occasion:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I affirm, that, as a presiding officer, the Vice-President
-has no inherent power whatever, unless that of doing what
-the Senate may prescribe by its rules be such a power.
-There are, indeed, inherent powers; but they are in the <i>body</i>,
-and not in the <i>officer</i>. He is a mere agent to execute the
-will of the former. He can exercise no power which he does
-not hold by delegation, either express or implied.”<a name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Then again, in reply to an illustration that had been
-employed, he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There is not the least analogy between the rights and
-duties of a judge and those of a presiding officer in a deliberative
-assembly. The analogy is altogether the other way.
-It is between the Court and the House.”<a name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to answer this reasoning. Unless
-all the precedents, in unbroken series, are set aside,
-a presiding officer not a member of the Senate has no
-inherent power except to occupy the Chair and to put
-the question. All else must be derived from grant in
-the Constitution or in the rules of the body. In the
-absence of any such grant, we must be contented to
-observe the mandates of the <i>Lex Parliamentaria</i>. The
-objections of Mr. Calhoun brought to light the feeble
-powers of our presiding officer, and a remedy was forthwith
-applied by amendment of the rules, making it his
-duty to call to order. To his general power as presiding
-officer was superadded, by express rule, a further
-power not existing by Parliamentary Law; and such is
-the rule of the Senate at this day.</p>
-
-<p>I turn away from this Vice-Presidential episode, contenting
-myself with reminding you how clearly it shows,
-that, independently of the rules of the Senate, the presiding
-officer <i>as such</i> had small powers; that he could
-do very little more than put the question and direct<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
-the Secretary; and, in short, that our fathers, in the
-interpretation of his powers, had tacitly recognized the
-time-honored and prevailing usage of Parliament, which
-in itself is a commanding law. But a Chief Justice,
-when presiding in the Senate, is not less under this
-commanding law than the Vice-President.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Thus far I have confined myself to the Parliamentary
-Law governing the upper House of Parliament and
-of Congress. Further illustration is found in the position
-of the Speaker, whether in the House of Commons
-or the House of Representatives. One cardinal distinction
-is to be noted at the outset, by which, in both
-countries, he is distinguished from the presiding officer
-of the upper House: the Speaker is always a member
-of the House. As a member he has a constituency
-which is represented through him; and here is another
-difference. The presiding officer of the upper House
-has no constituency; therefore his only duty is <i>to preside</i>,
-unless some other function be superadded by the
-National Constitution or the rules of the body.</p>
-
-<p>All the authorities make the Speaker merely the organ
-of the House, except so far as his representative
-capacity is recognized. In the Commons he can vote
-only when the House is equally divided; in our House
-of Representatives his name is sometimes called, although
-there is no tie; but in each case he votes in
-his representative capacity, and not as Speaker. In the
-time of Queen Elizabeth it was insisted, that, because
-he was “one out of our own number, and <i>not a stranger</i>,
-therefore he hath a voice.” But Sir Walter Raleigh replied,
-that the Speaker “was foreclosed of his voice <i>by
-taking that place</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> The latter opinion, which has <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>been
-since overruled, attests the disposition at that early day
-to limit his powers.</p>
-
-<p>Cushing, in his elaborate work, brings together numerous
-illustrations, and gives the essence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The presiding officer, though entitled on all occasions to
-be treated with the greatest attention and respect by the individual
-members, because the power and dignity and honor
-of the assembly are officially embodied in his person, is yet
-but the servant of the House to declare its will and to obey
-implicitly all its commands.”<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
-
-<p>“The duties of a presiding officer are of such a nature,
-and require him to possess so entirely and exclusively the
-confidence of the assembly, that, with certain exceptions,
-which will presently be mentioned, he is not allowed to exercise
-any other functions than those which properly belong
-to his office; <i>that is to say, he is excluded from submitting
-propositions to the assembly, from participating in its deliberations,
-and from voting</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At an early day an English Speaker vividly characterized
-his relations to the House, when he describes
-himself as “one of themselves to be the mouth, indeed
-the servant, of all the rest.”<a name="FNanchor_144_144" id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> This character appears
-in the memorable incident, when King Charles in his
-madness entered the Commons, and, going directly to
-the Speaker, asked for the five members he wished
-to arrest. Speaker Lenthall answered in ready words,
-revealing the function of the presiding officer: “May
-it please your Majesty, I have neither eyes to see nor
-tongue to speak, <i>in this place</i>, but as the House is
-pleased to direct me, whose servant I am <i>here</i>.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span><a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> This
-reply was as good in law as in patriotism. Different
-words were employed by Sir William Scott, afterward
-Lord Stowell, when, in 1802, on moving the election of
-Mr. Speaker Abbot, he declared that a Speaker must
-add “to a jealous affection for the privileges of the
-House an awful sense of its duties.”<a name="FNanchor_146_146" id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> But the early
-Speaker and the great Judge did not differ. Both attest
-that the Speaker, when in the Chair, is only the organ
-of the House, and nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>Passing from the Speaker to the Clerk, we find still
-another illustration, showing that the word <i>preside</i>, under
-which the Chief Justice derives all his powers, has
-received an authoritative interpretation in the rules of
-the House of Representatives, and the commentaries
-thereon. I cite from Barclay’s Digest.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Under the authority contained in the Manual, and the
-usage of the House, the Clerk <i>presided</i> over its deliberations
-while there was no Speaker, but simply put questions,
-and, where specially authorized, preserved order, not, however,
-undertaking to decide questions of order.”<a name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In another place, after stating that in several Congresses
-there was a failure to elect a Speaker for several
-days, that in the twenty-sixth Congress there was
-a failure for eleven days, that in the thirty-first Congress
-there was a failure for nearly a month, that in
-the thirty-fourth and thirty-sixth Congresses respectively
-there was a failure for not less than two months,
-the author says:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“During the three last-named periods, while the House
-was without a Speaker, the Clerk <i>presided</i> over its deliberations;
-not, however, exercising the functions of Speaker
-to the extent of deciding questions of order, but, as in the
-case of other questions, putting them to the House for its
-decision.”<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This limited power of the Clerk is described in a
-marginal note of the author,&mdash;“Clerk <i>presides</i>.” The
-author then proceeds:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“To relieve future Houses of some of the difficulties which
-grew out of the very limited power of the Clerk as <i>a presiding
-officer</i>, the House of the thirty-sixth Congress adopted the
-present 146th and 147th rules, which provide, that, ‘pending
-the election of a Speaker, the Clerk shall preserve order and
-decorum, and shall decide all questions of order that may
-arise, subject to appeal to the House.’”<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>From this impartial statement we have a practical
-definition of the word <i>preside</i>. It is difficult to see
-how it can have a different signification in the National
-Constitution. The word is the same in the two
-cases, and it must have substantially the same meaning,
-whether it concern a Clerk or a Chief Justice. Nobody
-ever supposed that a <i>presiding</i> Clerk could rule or
-vote. Can a <i>presiding</i> Chief Justice?</p>
-
-<p>The claim of a presiding Chief Justice becomes still
-more questionable when it is considered how positively
-the Constitution declares that “the Senate shall have
-the <i>sole</i> power to try all impeachments,” and, still further,
-that conviction can be only by “the concurrence
-of two thirds of <i>the members present</i>.” These two provisions
-accord powers to <i>the Senate solely</i>. If a presiding
-Chief Justice can rule or vote, the Senate has not
-“the sole power to try”; for ruling and voting, even
-on interlocutory questions, may determine the tria<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>l. A
-vote to postpone, to withdraw, even to adjourn, might,
-under peculiar circumstances, exercise a decisive influence.
-A vote for a protracted adjournment might defeat
-the trial. Notoriously such votes are among the
-devices of parliamentary opposition. In doing anything
-like this, a presiding Chief Justice makes himself
-<i>a trier</i>, and, if he votes on the final judgment, he
-makes himself <i>a member of the Senate</i>. But he cannot
-be either.</p>
-
-<p>It is only a casting vote that thus far the presiding
-Chief Justice has assumed to give. But he has the
-same power to vote always as to vote when the Senate
-is equally divided. No such power in either case is
-found in the National Constitution or in Parliamentary
-Law. By the National Constitution he presides, and
-nothing more, while by Parliamentary Law there is no
-casting vote where the presiding officer is not a member
-of the body. Nor does there seem to be any difference
-between a casting vote on an interlocutory question
-and a casting vote on the final question. The
-former is determined by a majority, and the latter by
-two thirds; but it has been decided in our country,
-that, “if the assembly, on a division, stands exactly one
-third to two thirds, there is then occasion for the giving
-of a casting vote, because the presiding officer can
-then, by giving his vote, decide the question either
-way.”<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> This statement reveals still further how inconsistent
-is the claim of the presiding Chief Justice
-with the positive requirement of the National Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>I would not keep out of sight any consideration<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-which seems in any quarter to throw light on this
-claim; and therefore I take time to mention an analogy
-which has been invoked. The exceptional provision
-in the Constitution, under which the Vice-President
-has a casting vote on ordinary occasions, is taken
-from its place in another clause and applied to the
-Chief Justice. It is gravely argued that the Chief Justice
-is a substitute for the Vice-President, and, as the
-latter, by express grant, has a casting vote on ordinary
-occasions, therefore the Chief Justice has such when
-presiding on an impeachment. To this argument there
-are two obvious objections: first, there is no language
-giving a casting vote to the Chief Justice, and, in the
-absence of express grant, it is impossible to imply it
-in opposition to the prevailing rule of Parliamentary
-Law; and, secondly, it is by no means clear that the
-Vice-President has a casting vote, when called to preside
-on an impeachment. On ordinary occasions, in the
-business of the Senate, the grant is explicit; but it does
-not follow that this grant can be extended to embrace
-an impeachment, in face of positive provisions by which
-the power to <i>try</i> and <i>vote</i> is confined to <i>Senators</i>. According
-to the undoubted rule of interpretation, <i>Ut res
-magis valeat quam pereat</i>, the casting vote of the Vice-President
-must be subject to this curtailment. Therefore,
-if the Chief Justice is regarded as a substitute for
-the Vice-President, it will be only to find himself again
-within the same limitations.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I cannot bring this survey to an end without an expression
-of deep regret that I find myself constrained
-to differ from the Chief Justice. In faithful fellowship
-for long years, we have striven together for the establishment
-of Liberty and Equality as the fundamental<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-law of this Republic. I know his fidelity, and revere
-his services; but not on this account can I hesitate the
-less, when I find him claiming in this Chamber an important
-power which, in my judgment, is three times
-denied in the National Constitution: first, when it is
-declared that the Senate alone shall <i>try</i> impeachments;
-secondly, when it is declared that only <i>members</i> shall
-convict; and, thirdly, when it is declared that the Chief
-Justice shall <i>preside</i>, and nothing more,&mdash;thus conferring
-upon him those powers only which by Parliamentary
-Law belong to a presiding officer not a member of
-the body. In the face of such a claim, so entirely without
-example, and of such possible consequences, I cannot
-be silent. Reluctantly and painfully I offer this
-respectful protest.</p>
-
-<p>There is a familiar saying of jurisprudence, that it
-is the part of a good judge to amplify his jurisdiction:
-<i>Boni judicis est ampliare jurisdictionem</i>. This maxim,
-borrowed from the horn-books, was originally established
-for the sake of justice and humanity, that they might
-not fail; but it has never been extended to other exercises
-of authority. On the contrary, all accepted maxims
-are against such assumption in other cases. Never
-has it been said that it is the part of a good presiding
-officer to amplify his power; and there is at least one
-obvious reason: a presiding officer is only an <i>agent</i>, acting
-always in presence of his <i>principal</i>. Whatever the
-promptings of the present moment, such an amplification
-can find no sanction in the National Constitution,
-or in that Parliamentary Law from which there is no
-appeal.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, w<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>hich way soever we turn,&mdash;whether to the
-National Constitution, or to Parliamentary Law, as illustrated
-in England or the United States,&mdash;we are
-brought to conclude that the Chief Justice in the Senate
-Chamber is not in any respect Chief Justice, but
-only presiding officer; that he has no judicial powers,
-or, in other words, powers <i>to try</i>, but only the powers
-of a presiding officer not a member of the body. According
-to the injunction of the Constitution, he can
-<i>preside</i>, but this is all, unless other powers are superadded
-by concession of the Senate, subject always to
-the constitutional limitation that the Senate alone can
-<i>try</i>, and, therefore, alone can rule or vote on questions
-which enter into the trial. The function of a presiding
-officer may be narrow, but it must not be disparaged.
-For a succession of generations, great men in the law,
-Chancellors and Chief Justices, have not disdained to
-discharge it. Out of the long and famous list I mention
-one name of surpassing authority: Somers, the illustrious
-defender of constitutional liberty, unequalled in
-debate as in judgment, exercised this function without
-claiming other power. He was satisfied to preside.
-Such an example is not unworthy of us. If the present
-question could be determined by sentiments of personal
-regard, I should gladly say that our Chief Justice
-is needed to the Senate more than the Senate is needed
-to him. But the National Constitution, which has regulated
-the duties of all, leaves us no alternative. We
-are the Senate; he is the presiding officer,&mdash;although,
-whether in the Court Room or the Senate Chamber, he
-is always the most exalted servant of the law. This
-character he cannot lose by change of seat. As such
-he lends to this historic occasion the dignity of his
-presence and the authority of his example. Sitting in
-that Chair, he can do much to smooth the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-business, and to fill the Chamber with the spirit of justice.
-Under the rules of the Senate, he can become its
-organ,&mdash;but nothing more.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="EXPULSION_OF_THE_PRESIDENT" id="EXPULSION_OF_THE_PRESIDENT"></a>EXPULSION OF THE PRESIDENT.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson,
-President of the United States, May 26, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">I voted against the rule of the Senate allowing
-opinions to be filed in this proceeding, and regretted
-its adoption. With some hesitation I now take
-advantage of the opportunity, if not the invitation, it
-affords. Voting “Guilty” on all the articles, I feel that
-there is little need of explanation or apology. Such a
-vote is its own best defender. But I follow the example
-of others.</p>
-
-<h3>BATTLE WITH SLAVERY.</h3>
-
-<p>This is one of the last great battles with Slavery.
-Driven from these legislative chambers, driven from the
-field of war, this monstrous power has found refuge in
-the Executive Mansion, where, in utter disregard of Constitution
-and law, it seeks to exercise its ancient domineering
-sway. All this is very plain. Nobody can question
-it. Andrew Johnson is the impersonation of the
-tyrannical Slave Power. In him it lives again. He is
-lineal successor of John C. Calhoun and Jefferson Davis,
-and he gathers about him the same supporters. Original
-partisans of Slavery, North and South, habitual compromisers
-of great principles, maligners of the Declaration
-of Independence, politicians without heart, lawyers for
-whom a technicality is everything, and a promiscu<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>ous
-company who at every stage of the battle have set their
-faces against Equal Rights,&mdash;these are his allies. It is
-the old troop of Slavery, with a few recruits, ready as
-of old for violence, cunning in device, and heartless in
-quibble. With the President at their head, they are
-now intrenched in the Executive Mansion.</p>
-
-<p>Not to dislodge them is to leave the country a prey
-to a most hateful tyranny. Especially is it to surrender
-the Unionists of the Rebel States to violence and
-bloodshed. Not a month, not a week, not a day should
-be lost. The safety of the Republic requires action at
-once. Innocent men must be rescued from sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>I would not in this judgment depart from the moderation
-proper to the occasion; but God forbid, that,
-when called to deal with so great an offender, I should
-affect a coldness I cannot feel! Slavery has been our
-worst enemy, assailing all, murdering our children, filling
-our homes with mourning, darkening the land with
-tragedy; and now it rears its crest anew, with Andrew
-Johnson as its representative. Through him it assumes
-once more to rule and impose its cruel law. The
-enormity of his conduct is aggravated by his barefaced
-treachery. He once declared himself the Moses of the
-colored race. Behold him now the Pharaoh! With
-such treachery in such a cause there can be no parley.
-Every sentiment, every conviction, every vow against
-Slavery must be directed against him. Pharaoh is at
-the bar of the Senate for judgment.</p>
-
-<p>The formal accusation is founded on recent transgressions,
-enumerated in articles of impeachment; but
-it is wrong to suppose that this is the whole case. It
-is very wrong to try this impeachment merely on these
-articles. It is unpardonable to higgle over words and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-phrases, when, for more than two years, the tyrannical
-pretensions in evidence before the Senate have been
-manifest, as I shall show, in terrible, heart-rending consequences.</p>
-
-<h3>IMPEACHMENT A POLITICAL PROCEEDING.</h3>
-
-<p>Before entering upon the formal accusation instituted
-by the House of Representatives of the United
-States in their own name and in the name of all the
-people thereof, it is important to understand the nature
-of the proceeding. And here on the threshold we
-encounter the effort of the apologists seeking in every
-way to confound this great constitutional trial with an
-ordinary case at <i>Nisi Prius</i>, and to win for the criminal
-President an Old Bailey acquittal, where on some quibble
-the prisoner is allowed to go without day. From
-beginning to end this has been painfully apparent, thus
-degrading the trial and baffling justice. Point by point
-has been pressed, sometimes by counsel and sometimes
-even by Senators, leaving the substantial merits untouched,
-as if, on a solemn occasion involving the safety
-of the Republic, there could be any other question.</p>
-
-<p>The first effort was to call the Senate, sitting for the
-trial of impeachment, a Court, and not a Senate. Ordinarily,
-names are of little consequence; but it cannot
-be doubted that this appellation has been made the
-starting-point for technicalities proverbial in courts.
-Constantly we have been reminded of what is called
-our judicial character, and of the supplementary oath
-we have taken, as if a Senator were not always under
-oath, and as if other things within the sphere of his duties
-were not equally judicial in character. Out of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
-plausible assumption has come that fine-spun thread
-which lawyers know so well how to weave.</p>
-
-<p>The whole mystification disappears, when we look at
-the National Constitution, which in no way speaks of
-impeachment as judicial, and in no way speaks of the
-Senate as a court. On the contrary, it uses positive
-language inconsistent with this assumption and all its
-pretended consequences. On this head there can be no
-doubt.</p>
-
-<p>By the National Constitution it is expressly provided
-that “<i>the judicial power</i> of the United States shall be
-vested in one Supreme Court and in such inferior courts
-as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish,”&mdash;thus
-positively excluding the Senate from
-any exercise of “the judicial power.” And yet this same
-Constitution provides that “the Senate shall have the
-sole power to try all impeachments.” In the face of
-these plain texts it is impossible not to conclude, that, in
-trying impeachments, Senators exercise a function which
-is not regarded by the National Constitution as “judicial,”
-or, in other words, as subject to the ordinary conditions
-of judicial power. Call it senatorial or political, it
-is a power by itself, and subject to its own conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Nor can any adverse conclusion be drawn from the
-unauthorized designation of “court” which has been
-foisted into our proceedings. This term is very expansive,
-and sometimes very insignificant. In Europe
-it means the household of a prince. In Massachusetts
-it is still applied to the Legislature of the State, which
-is known as the General Court. If applied to the Senate,
-it must be interpreted by the National Constitution,
-and cannot be made in any respect a source of
-power or a constraint.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to understand how this term, which
-plays such a part in present pretensions, obtained its
-vogue. It does not appear in English impeachments,
-although there is reason for it there which is not found
-here. From ancient times, Parliament, including both
-Houses, has been called a court, and the House of Lords
-is known as a court of appeal. The judgment on English
-impeachments embraces not merely removal from
-office, as under the National Constitution, but also punishment;
-and yet it does not appear that the Lords sitting
-on impeachments are called a court. They are not
-so called in any of the cases, from the first, in 1330,
-entitled simply, “Impeachment of Roger Mortimer, Earl
-of March, for Treason,” down to the last, in 1806, entitled,
-“Trial of the Right Honorable Henry Lord Viscount
-Melville, before the Lords’ House of Parliament in
-Westminster Hall, for High Crimes and Misdemeanors
-whereof he was accused in certain Articles of Impeachment.”
-In the historic case of Lord Bacon, we find, at
-the first stage, this title, “Proceedings in Parliament
-against Francis Bacon Lord Verulam,” and, after the
-impeachment was presented, the simple title, “Proceedings
-in the House of Lords.” Had this simplicity
-been followed among us, there would have been one
-source of misunderstanding the less.</p>
-
-<p>There is another provision of the National Constitution
-which testifies still further, and, if possible, more
-completely. It is the limitation of the judgment in
-cases of impeachment, making it political and nothing
-else. It is not punishment, but protection to the Republic.
-It is confined to removal from office and disqualification;
-but, as if aware that this was no punishment,
-the National Constitution further provides that this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-judgment shall be no impediment to indictment, trial,
-judgment, and punishment “according to law.” Thus
-again is the distinction declared between an impeachment
-and a proceeding “according to law.” The former,
-which is political, belongs to the Senate, which is a
-political body; the latter, which is judicial, belongs to
-the courts, which are judicial bodies. The Senate removes
-from office; the courts punish. I am not alone
-in drawing this distinction. It is well known to all
-who have studied the subject. Early in our history it
-was put forth by the distinguished Mr. Bayard, of Delaware,
-the father of Senators, in the case of Blount;<a name="FNanchor_151_151" id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a>
-and it is adopted by no less an authority than our highest
-commentator, Judge Story, who was as much disposed
-as anybody to amplify the judicial power. In
-speaking of this text, he says that impeachment “is
-not so much designed to punish an offender as <i>to secure
-the State against gross official misdemeanors</i>; it touches
-neither his person nor his property, <i>but simply divests
-him of his political capacity</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> All this seems forgotten
-by certain apologists on the present trial, who, assuming
-that impeachment was a proceeding “according
-to law,” have treated the Senate to the technicalities of
-the law, to say nothing of the law’s delay.</p>
-
-<p>Discerning the true character of impeachment under
-the National Constitution, we are constrained to confess
-that it is a political proceeding before a political
-body with political purposes; that it is founded on political
-offences, proper for the consideration of a political
-body, and subject to a political judgment only.
-Even in cases of treason and bribery, the judgment is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-political, and nothing more. If I were to sum up in
-one word the object of impeachment under the National
-Constitution, meaning what it has especially in
-view, with its practical limitation, I should say <i>expulsion
-from office</i>. The present question is, Shall Andrew
-Johnson, on the case before the Senate, be expelled
-from office?</p>
-
-<p>Expulsion from office is not unknown to our proceedings.
-By the National Constitution a Senator may be
-expelled with “the concurrence of two thirds,” precisely
-as a President may be expelled with “the concurrence
-of two thirds.” In each case the same exceptional vote
-of two thirds is required. Do not the two illustrate
-each other? From the nature of things, they are essentially
-similar in character,&mdash;except that on expulsion
-of the President the motion is made by the House of
-Representatives at the bar of the Senate, while on expulsion
-of a Senator the motion is made by a Senator.
-How can we require a technicality of proceeding in the
-one which is rejected in the other? If the Senate is a
-court, bound to judicial forms on the expulsion of the
-President, must it not be the same on the expulsion
-of a Senator? But nobody attributes to it any such
-strictness in the latter case. Numerous precedents attest
-how, in dealing with its own members, the Senate
-seeks substantial justice without reference to form. In
-the case of Blount, which is the first in our history, the
-expulsion was on the report of a committee, declaring
-him “guilty of a high misdemeanor, entirely inconsistent
-with his public trust and duty as a Senator.”<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> At
-least one Senator has been expelled on simple motion.<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a>
-Others have been expelled without any formal allegati<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>on
-or formal proof.</p>
-
-<p>According to another provision of the National Constitution,
-overriding both cases, “each House may determine
-the rules of its proceedings.” The Senate, on the
-expulsion of its own members, has already done this,
-and set an example of simplicity. But it has the same
-power over its rules of proceeding on the expulsion of
-the President; and there can be no reason for simplicity
-in the one case not equally applicable in the other.
-Technicality is as little consonant with the one as with
-the other. Each has for its object the public safety. For
-this the Senator is expelled; for this, also, the President
-is expelled. <i>Salus populi suprema lex.</i> The proceedings
-in each case must be in subordination to this rule.</p>
-
-<p>There is one formal difference, under the National
-Constitution, between the power to expel a Senator
-and the power to expel the President. The power to
-expel a Senator is unlimited in terms. The Senate may,
-“with the concurrence of two thirds, expel a member,”
-nothing being said of the offence; whereas the President
-can be expelled only for “treason, bribery, or <i>other
-high crimes and misdemeanors</i>.” A careful inquiry will
-show that under the latter words there is such a latitude
-as to leave little difference between the two cases.
-This brings us to the question of impeachable offences.</p>
-
-<h3>POLITICAL OFFENCES ARE IMPEACHABLE OFFENCES.</h3>
-
-<p>So much depends on the right understanding of this
-proceeding, that, even at the risk of protracting the discussion,
-I cannot hesitate to consider this branch of the
-subject, although what I have already said may render<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-it superfluous. What are impeachable offences has been
-much considered in this trial, and sometimes with very
-little appreciation of the question. Next to the mystification
-from calling the Senate a court has been that
-other mystification from not calling the transgressions
-of Andrew Johnson “impeachable offences.”</p>
-
-<p>It is sometimes boldly argued that there can be no
-impeachment under the National Constitution, unless
-for an offence defined and made indictable by Act of
-Congress, and therefore Andrew Johnson must go free,
-unless it can be shown that he is such an offender. But
-this argument mistakes the Constitution, and also mistakes
-the whole theory of impeachment.</p>
-
-<p>It mistakes the Constitution in attributing to it any
-such absurd limitation. The argument is this: Because
-in the National Constitution there are no Common-Law
-crimes, therefore there are no such crimes on which an
-impeachment can be maintained. But there are two
-answers: first, that the District of Columbia, where the
-President resides and exercises his functions, was once
-part of Maryland, where the Common Law prevailed;
-that, when it came under the national jurisdiction, it
-brought with it the whole body of the law of Maryland,
-including the Common Law; and that at this day
-the Common Law of crimes is still recognized here. But
-the second answer is stronger still. By the National
-Constitution, <i>expulsion from office</i> is “on impeachment
-for and conviction of treason, bribery, <i>or other high
-crimes and misdemeanors</i>”; and this, according to another
-clause of the Constitution, is “the supreme law
-of the land.” Now, when a constitutional provision can
-be executed without superadded legislation, it is absurd
-to suppose that such legislation is necessary. Here th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>e
-provision executes itself without reënactment; and as
-for definition of “treason” and “bribery” we resort to
-the Common Law, so for definition of “high crimes and
-misdemeanors” we resort to the Parliamentary Law and
-the instances of impeachment by which it is illustrated.
-Thus clearly the whole testimony of English history enters
-into this case with its authoritative law. From
-the earliest text-writer on this subject<a name="FNanchor_155_155" id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> we learn the
-undefined and expansive character of these offences;
-and these instances are in point now. Thus, where a
-Lord Chancellor has been thought to put the great seal
-to an ignominious treaty, a Lord Admiral to neglect the
-safeguard of the seas, an Ambassador to betray his trust,
-a Privy Councillor to propound dishonorable measures,
-a confidential adviser to obtain exorbitant grants or incompatible
-employments, or <i>where any magistrate has
-attempted to subvert the fundamental law or introduce
-arbitrary power</i>,&mdash;all these are high crimes and misdemeanors,
-according to these precedents, by which the
-National Constitution must be interpreted. How completely
-they cover the charges against Andrew Johnson,
-whether in the formal accusation or in the long antecedent
-transgressions to which I shall call attention as
-an essential part of the case, nobody can question.</p>
-
-<p>Broad as this definition may seem, it is in harmony
-with the declared opinions of the best minds that have
-been turned in this direction. Of these none so great
-as Edmund Burke, who, as manager on the impeachment
-of Warren Hastings, excited the admiration of
-all by varied stores of knowledge and philosophy, illumined
-by the rarest eloquence, marking an epoch of
-British history. Thus spoke the greatest genius that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-has ever explained the character of impeachment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is by this tribunal that statesmen who abuse their
-power are tried before statesmen and by statesmen, upon
-solid principles of State morality. <i>It is here that those who
-by an abuse of power have polluted the spirit of all laws can
-never hope for the least protection from any of its forms.</i> It
-is here that those who have refused to conform themselves
-to the protection of law can never hope to escape through
-any of its defects.”<a name="FNanchor_156_156" id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The value of this testimony is not diminished because
-the orator spoke as manager. By professional
-license an advocate may state opinions not his own,
-but a manager cannot. Appearing for the House of
-Representatives and all the people, he speaks with the
-responsibility of a judge, so that his words may be
-cited hereafter. Here I but follow the claim of Mr.
-Fox.<a name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> Therefore the words of Burke are as authoritative
-as beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>In different, but most sententious terms, Mr. Hallam,
-who is so great a light in constitutional history,
-thus exhibits the latitude of impeachment and its comprehensive
-grasp:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“A minister is answerable for <i>the justice, the honesty, the
-utility of all measures</i> emanating from the Crown, <i>as well as
-for their legality</i>; and thus the executive administration is,
-or ought to be, subordinate, in all great matters of policy, to
-the superintendence and virtual control of the two Houses
-of Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_158_158" id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>us, according to this excellent witness, even failure
-in justice, honesty, and utility, as well as in legality,
-may be the ground of impeachment; and the Administration
-should in all great matters of policy be
-subject to the two Houses of Parliament,&mdash;the House
-of Commons to impeach, and the House of Lords to
-try. Here again the case of Andrew Johnson is provided
-for.</p>
-
-<p>Our best American lights are similar, beginning with
-the “Federalist” itself, which teaches that impeachment
-is for “those offences which proceed from <i>the misconduct
-of public men</i>, or, in other words, from the abuse
-or violation of some public trust: they are of a nature
-which may with peculiar propriety be denominated <i>political</i>,
-as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately
-to the society itself.”<a name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> If ever injuries were
-done immediately to society itself, if ever there was
-an abuse or violation of public trust, if ever there was
-misconduct of a public man, all these are now before
-us in the case of Andrew Johnson. The “Federalist”
-has been echoed ever since by all who have spoken
-with knowledge and without prejudice. First came the
-respected commentator, William Rawle, who specifies
-among causes of impeachment “the fondness for the
-inordinate extension of power,” “the influence of party
-and of prejudice,” “the seductions of foreign states,”
-“the baser appetite for illegitimate emolument,” and
-“the involutions and varieties of vice, too many and too
-artful to be anticipated by positive law,” all resulting
-in what the commentator says are “not unaptly termed
-<i>political offences</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> And thus Rawle unites with the
-“Federalist” in stamping upon impeachable offences the
-epithet “political.” If in the present case there has
-been on the part of Andrew Johnson no base appetite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
-for illegitimate emolument and no yielding to foreign
-seductions, there has been most notoriously the influence
-of party and prejudice, also to an unprecedented
-degree an individual extension of power, and an involution
-and variety of vice impossible to be anticipated
-by positive law,&mdash;all of which, in gross or in detail, is
-impeachable. Here it is in gross. Then comes Story,
-who, writing with the combined testimony of English
-and American history before him, and moved only by
-a desire of truth, records his opinion with all the original
-emphasis of the “Federalist.” His words are like
-a judgment. The process of impeachment, according to
-him, is intended to reach “personal misconduct, or gross
-neglect, or usurpation, or habitual disregard of the public
-interests, in the discharge of the duties of <i>political
-office</i>”; and the commentator adds, that it “is to be
-exercised over offences which are committed by public
-men in violation of their public trust and duties,” that
-“the offences to which it is ordinarily applied are of
-a <i>political</i> character,” and that, strictly speaking, “the
-power partakes of a <i>political</i> character.”<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> Every word
-here is like an ægis for the present case. The later commentator,
-Curtis, is, if possible, more explicit even than
-Story. According to him, an impeachment “is not
-necessarily a trial for crime”; its purposes “lie wholly
-beyond the penalties of the statute or the customary
-law”; and this commentator does not hesitate to say
-that it is a proceeding “to ascertain <i>whether cause exists
-for removing a public officer from office</i>”; and he adds,
-that such cause of removal “may exist where no offence
-against positive law has been committed,&mdash;as where
-the individual has, from immorality, or imbecility, <i>or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
-maladministration, become unfit to exercise the office</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>
-Here again the power of the Senate over Andrew Johnson
-is vindicated so as to make all doubt or question
-absurd.</p>
-
-<p>I close this question of impeachable offences by asking
-you to consider that all the cases which have occurred
-in our history are in conformity with the rule
-which so many commentators have announced. The
-several trials of Pickering, Chase, Peck, and Humphreys
-exhibit its latitude in different forms. Official misconduct,
-including in the cases of Chase and Humphreys
-offensive utterances, constituted the high crimes and
-misdemeanors for which they were respectively arraigned.
-These are precedents. Add still further, that
-Madison, in debate on the power of removal, at the
-very beginning of our Government, said: “I contend
-that <i>the wanton removal of meritorious officers</i> would
-subject the President to impeachment and removal from
-his own high trust.”<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> But Andrew Johnson, standing
-before a crowd, said of meritorious officers that he
-would “kick them out,”<a name="FNanchor_164_164" id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> and forthwith proceeded to
-execute his foul-mouthed menace. How small was all
-that Madison imagined, how small was all that was
-spread out in the successive impeachments of our history,
-if gathered into one case, compared with the terrible
-mass now before us!</p>
-
-<p>From all these conc<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>urring authorities, English and
-American, it is plain that impeachment is a power
-broad as the National Constitution itself, and applicable
-to the President, Vice-President, and all civil
-officers through whom the Republic suffers or is in
-any way imperilled. Show me an act of evil example
-or influence committed by a President, and I show
-you an impeachable offence, great in proportion to the
-scale on which it is done, and the consequences menaced.
-The Republic must receive no detriment; and
-impeachment is a power by which this sovereign rule
-is maintained.</p>
-
-<h3>UNTECHNICAL FORM OF PROCEDURE.</h3>
-
-<p>The form of procedure has been noticed in considering
-the political character of impeachment; but it
-deserves further treatment by itself. Here we meet
-the same latitude. It is natural that the trial of political
-offences, before a political body, with a political
-judgment only, should have less of form than a trial at
-Common Law; and yet this obvious distinction is constantly
-disregarded. The authorities, whether English
-or American, do not leave the question open to doubt.</p>
-
-<p>An impeachment is not a technical proceeding, as
-at <i>Nisi Prius</i> or in a county court, where the rigid
-rules of the Common Law prevail. On the contrary, it
-is a proceeding according to Parliamentary Law, with
-rules of its own, unknown in ordinary courts. The
-formal statement and reduplication of words, constituting
-the stock-in-trade of so many lawyers, are exchanged
-for a broader manner, more consistent with
-the transactions of actual life. The precision of history
-and of common sense is enough, without the
-technical precision of an indictment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From time immemorial there has been a just distinction
-between proceedings in Parliament and proceedings
-in the ordinary courts of justice, which I
-insist shall not be abandoned. The distant reign of
-Richard the Second, beyond the misfortunes touching
-us so much in Shakespeare, supplies a presiding rule
-which has been a pole-star of Constitutional Law; nor
-is this in any vague, uncertain language, but in the
-most clear and explicit terms, illumined since by great
-lights of law.</p>
-
-<p>On what was called an appeal in Parliament, or
-impeachment, it has solemnly declared that the Lords
-were not of right obliged to proceed according to the
-course or rules of the Roman law or according to the
-law or usage of any of the inferior courts of Westminster
-Hall, but by the law and usage of Parliament,
-which was itself a court.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In this Parliament [in the 11th year of King Richard
-the Second, <span class="smcapuc">A. D.</span> 1387-88] all the Lords then present, spiritual
-as well as temporal, claimed as their franchise that the
-weighty matters moved in this Parliament, and which shall
-be moved in other Parliaments in future times, touching the
-peers of the land, shall be managed, adjudged, and discussed
-by the course of Parliament, and in no sort by the Law Civil,
-or by the common law of the land, used in the other lower
-courts of the kingdom.”<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Commons approved the proceedings, and it has
-been remarked, in an important official report, that
-“neither then nor ever since have they made any objection
-or protestation that the rule laid down by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
-Lords … ought not to be applied to the impeachments
-of commoners as well as peers.”<a name="FNanchor_166_166" id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> Accordingly
-Lord Coke declares, that “all weighty matters in any
-Parliament moved concerning the peers of the realm, or
-commoners in Parliament assembled, ought to be determined,
-and adjudged, and discussed by the course of
-the Parliament, and not by the Civil Law, nor yet by
-the common laws of this realm used in more inferior
-courts.” Then, founding on the precedent of 11th Richard
-the Second, he announces, that “judges ought not to
-give any opinion of <i>a matter of Parliament</i>, because it is
-not to be decided by the common laws, but <i>secundum
-legem et consuetudinem Parliamenti</i>”; and he adds, “So
-the judges in divers Parliaments have confessed.”<a name="FNanchor_167_167" id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<p>But impeachment is “a matter of Parliament,”
-whether in England or in the United States. It was
-so at the beginning, and has been ever since.</p>
-
-<p>Even anterior to Richard the Second the same conclusion
-was recognized, with illustrative particularity,
-as appears by the trial of those who murdered King
-Edward the Second, thus commented by an eminent
-writer on Criminal Law, who was also an experienced
-judge, Foster:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is well known, that, in parliamentary proceedings of
-this kind, it is and ever was sufficient that matters appear
-with proper light and certainty to a common understanding,
-without that <i>minute exactness</i> which is required in
-criminal proceedings in Westminster Hall.”<a name="FNanchor_168_168" id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>us early was the “minute exactness” of a criminal
-court discarded, while the proceedings were adapted
-to “a common understanding.” This becomes important,
-not only as a true rule of procedure, but as an
-answer to some of the apologists, especially the Senator
-from West Virginia [Mr. <span class="smcap">Van Winkle</span>], who makes
-technicality a rule and essential condition.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly by law and custom of Parliament we
-are to move; and here we meet rules of pleading and
-principles of evidence entirely different from those of
-the Common Law, but established and fortified by a long
-line of precedents. This stands forth in the famous
-“Report from the Committee of the House of Commons
-appointed to inspect the Lords’ Journals in relation to
-their Proceedings on the Trial of Warren Hastings,”
-which, beyond its official character, is enhanced as the
-production of Edmund Burke.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Your Committee do not find that any rules of pleading,
-as observed in the inferior courts, have ever obtained in the
-proceedings of the High Court of Parliament, in a cause or
-matter in which the whole procedure has been within their
-original jurisdiction. Nor does your Committee find that
-any demurrer or exception, as of false or erroneous pleading,
-hath been ever admitted to any impeachment in Parliament,
-as not coming within the form of the pleading.”<a name="FNanchor_169_169" id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This principle appears in the great trial of Strafford,
-16th Charles the First, 1640-41, stated by no less a
-person than Pym, on delivering a message of the Commons
-reducing the charges to more particularity: “Not
-that they are bound by this way of <i>special</i> charge; and
-therefore, as they have taken care in their House, upon
-protestation, that this shall be no prejudice to bind
-them from proceeding <i>upon generals</i> in other cases, and
-that they are not to be ruled by proceedings in other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
-courts, which protestation they have made for preservation
-of power of Parliaments, so they desire that the
-like care may be had in your Lordships’ House.”<a name="FNanchor_170_170" id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> In
-this broad language is a just rule applicable to the present
-case.</p>
-
-<p>The question came to formal judgment on the memorable
-trial of the Tory preacher, Sacheverell, March 10,
-1709-10, impeached for high crimes and misdemeanors,
-on account of two sermons in which he put forth the
-doctrines of Non-Resistance and denounced the Revolution
-of 1688, by which English liberty was saved. After
-argument on both sides, and questions propounded by
-the Lords, the judges delivered their opinion <i>seriatim</i>,
-that, by the law of England and the constant practice
-of Westminster Hall, “the particular words supposed
-to be criminal ought to be specified in indictments or
-informations.” And yet, in face of this familiar and
-indisputable rule of the Common Law, thus pointedly
-declared, the Lords solemnly resolved:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That, by the law and usage of Parliament, in prosecutions
-by impeachments for high crimes and misdemeanors,
-by writing or speaking, the particular words supposed to
-be criminal are not necessary to be expressly specified in
-such impeachments.”<a name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The respondent, being found guilty, moved in arrest
-of judgment:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That no entire clause, sentence, or expression, contained
-in either of his sermons or dedications, is particularly set
-forth in his impeachment, which he has already heard the
-judges declare to be necessary in all cases of indictments<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-or informations.”<a name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Lord Chancellor, denying the motion, communicated
-to the respondent the resolution already adopted
-after full debate and consideration, and added:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“So that, in their Lordships’ opinion, the law and usage
-of the High Court of Parliament being a part of the law
-of the land, and that usage not requiring the words should
-be <i>expressly specified</i> in impeachments, the answer of the
-judges, which related only to the course used in indictments
-and informations, does not in the least affect your case.”<a name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And so the judgment was allowed to stand.</p>
-
-<p>The substantial justice of this proceeding is seen,
-when it is considered that the whole of the libel had
-been read at length, so that the respondent had the
-benefit of anything which could be alleged in extenuation
-or exculpation, as if the libellous sermons had
-been entered <i>verbatim</i>. The Report already cited presents
-the practical conclusion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It was adjudged sufficient to state the crime generally
-in the impeachment. The libels were given in evidence;
-and it was not then thought of, that nothing should be
-given in evidence which was not specially charged in the
-impeachment.”<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The principle thus solemnly adjudged was ever afterwards
-asserted by the managers for the House of Commons
-in all its latitude, and with an energy, zeal, and
-earnestness proportioned to the magnitude of the interests
-involved,&mdash;as appeared conspicuously on the impeachment
-for high treason of the Lords who had taken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
-part in the Rebellion of 1715 to bring back the Stuarts.
-Lord Wintoun, after conviction, moved in arrest of judgment,
-and excepted against the impeachment for error,
-on account of the treason not being described with sufficient
-certainty,&mdash;the day on which the treason was
-committed not having been alleged. The learned counsel,
-arguing that Parliamentary Law was part of Common
-Law, submitted “whether there is not the same
-certainty required in one method of proceeding at the
-Common Law as in another.”<a name="FNanchor_175_175" id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> To this ingenious presentment,
-by which proceedings in Parliament were
-brought within the grasp of the Common Law, the able
-and distinguished managers replied with resolution, asserting
-the supremacy of Parliamentary Law. Walpole,
-afterwards the famous Prime Minister, began:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Those learned gentlemen seem to forget <i>in what court
-they are</i>. They have taken up so much of your Lordships’
-time in quoting of authorities and using arguments to show
-your Lordships what would quash an indictment in the
-courts below, that they seem to forget they are now in a
-court of Parliament and on an impeachment of the Commons
-of Great Britain.… I hope it will never be allowed
-here as a reason, that what quashes an indictment
-in the courts below will make insufficient an impeachment
-brought by the Commons of Great Britain.”<a name="FNanchor_176_176" id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Attorney-General supported Walpole:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I would take notice that we are upon an impeachment,
-and not upon an indictment. The courts below have set
-forms to themselves, which have prevailed for a long course
-of time, and thereby are become the forms by which those
-courts are to govern themselves; but it never was thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
-that the forms of those courts had any influence on the proceedings
-of Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Cowper, a brother of the Lord Chancellor of that
-name, said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“If the Commons, in preparing articles of impeachment,
-should govern themselves by precedents of indictments, in
-my humble opinion they would depart from the ancient,
-nay, the constant, usage and practice of Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_178_178" id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir William Thomson followed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The precedents in impeachments are not so <i>nice and precise
-in form</i> as in the inferior courts.”<a name="FNanchor_179_179" id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The judges, in answer to questions propounded, declared
-the necessity in indictments of mentioning “a
-certain day.” But the Lords, in conformity with ancient
-usage, set aside this technical objection, and announced:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That the impeachment is sufficiently certain in point
-of time, according to the forms of impeachments in Parliament.”<a name="FNanchor_180_180" id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus do authoritative precedents exhibit a usage of
-Parliament, or Parliamentary Law, unlike that of the
-Common Law, which on trials of impeachment seeks
-substantial justice, but is not “nice and precise in
-form.” If the proceedings are not absolutely according
-to the rule of reason, plainly the technicalities of
-the Common Law are out of place. It is enough, if
-they are clear to “a common understanding,” without
-the “minute exactness” of a criminal court. But t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>his
-is according to reason. A mere technicality, much
-more a quibble, often efficacious on a demurrer, is a
-wretched anachronism, when we are considering a question
-of political duty. Especially must this be so under
-the genius of republican institutions. The latitude established
-in England cannot be curtailed in the United
-States, and it becomes more essential in proportion to
-the elevation of the proceedings. Ascending into the
-region of history, the laws of history cannot be neglected.</p>
-
-<p>Even if the narrow rules and exclusions of the Common
-Law could be tolerated on the impeachment of an
-inferior functionary, they must be disclaimed on the
-trial of a chief magistrate, involving the public safety.
-The technicalities of law were invented for protection
-against power, not for the immunity of a usurper or
-tyrant. When set up for the safeguard of the weak,
-they are respectable, but on impeachments they are
-intolerable. Here again I cite Edmund Burke:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“God forbid that those who cannot defend themselves
-upon their merits and their actions may defend themselves
-behind those fences and intrenchments that are made to
-secure the liberty of the people, that power and the abusers
-of power should cover themselves by those things which
-were made to secure liberty!”<a name="FNanchor_181_181" id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Never was there a case where this principle was
-more applicable than now.</p>
-
-<p>The origin of impeachment in the National Constitution
-and contemporary authority vindicate this very
-latitude. In this light the proceeding was explained
-by the “Federalist,” in words which should be <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>a guide
-now:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>This can never be tied down by such strict rules</i>, either in
-the delineation of the offence by the prosecutors or in the
-construction of it by the judges, as in common cases serve to
-limit the discretion of courts in favor of personal security.”<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This article was by Alexander Hamilton, writing in
-concert with James Madison and John Jay. Thus, by
-the highest authority, at the adoption of the National
-Constitution, it is declared that impeachment “can
-never be tied down by strict rules,” and that this latitude
-is applicable to “the delineation of the offence,”
-meaning thereby the procedure or pleading, and also
-to “the construction of the offence,” in both of which
-cases the “discretion” of the Senate is enlarged beyond
-that of ordinary courts, and so the ancient Parliamentary
-Law is vindicated, and the Senate is recognized
-within its sphere.</p>
-
-<h3>RULES OF EVIDENCE.</h3>
-
-<p>From form of procedure I pass to rules of evidence;
-and here again the Senate must avoid technicalities,
-and not allow any artificial rule to shut out the truth.
-It would allow no such thing on the expulsion of a
-Senator. How allow it on the expulsion of a President?
-On this account I voted to admit all evidence
-offered during the trial,&mdash;believing, in the first place,
-that it ought to be heard and considered, and, in the
-second place, that, even if shut out from this Chamber,
-it could not be shut out from the public, or be shut
-out from history, both of which must be the ultimate
-judges. On the impeachment of Prince Polignac and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
-his colleagues of the French Cabinet, in 1830, for signing
-the ordinances which cost Charles the Tenth his
-throne, some forty witnesses were sworn, without objection,
-in a brief space of time, and no testimony was
-excluded. An examination of the two volumes entitled
-“Procès des Derniers Ministres de Charles X.” confirms
-what I say. This example, which commends itself to
-the enlightened reason, seems in harmony with declared
-principles of Parliamentary Law.</p>
-
-<p>As in pleadings, so in evidence, the Law of Parliament,
-and not the Common Law, is the guide of the
-Senate. In other courts the rules vary, as on trial by
-jury in the King’s Bench depositions are not received,
-while in Chancery just the reverse is the case. The
-Court of Parliament has its own rules. Here again I
-quote the famous Report:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“No doctrine or rule of law, much less the practice of
-any court, ought to have weight or authority in Parliament
-further than as such doctrine, rule, or practice is
-agreeable to the proceedings in Parliament, or hath received
-the sanction of approved precedent there, <i>or is founded on
-the immutable principles of substantial justice</i>, without which,
-your Committee readily agrees, no practice in any court, high
-or low, is proper or fit to be maintained.”<a name="FNanchor_183_183" id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The true rule was enunciated:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The Court of Parliament ought to be open with great
-facility to the production of all evidence, except that which
-the precedents of Parliament teach them authoritatively to
-reject, or which hath no sort of natural aptitude directly
-or circumstantially to prove the case.… The Lords ought
-<i>to enlarge, and not to contract, the rules of evidence</i>, according<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
-to the nature and difficulties of the case.”<a name="FNanchor_184_184" id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Its point appears in a single sentence:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“To refuse evidence is to refuse to hear the cause.”<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In striking harmony with this most reasonable conclusion
-is the well-known postulate of Jeremy Bentham,
-who gave so much thought to the Law of Evidence:
-“Evidence is the basis of justice: to exclude evidence
-is to exclude justice.”<a name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p>
-
-<p>The precedents of impeachment, including the trials
-of Strafford, Sacheverell, Macclesfield, and the Rebel
-Lords in 1715, and again in 1745, all illustrate the
-liberality of the proceedings, while the judgment of
-Lord Hardwicke, in concurrence with the rest of the
-judges, and with the support of the bar, announced,
-that “the judges and sages of the law have laid it
-down that there is but <i>one</i> general rule of evidence,&mdash;the
-best that the nature of the case will admit.”<a name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
-And this is the master rule governing all subordinate
-rules. In harmony with it is another announced by
-Lord Mansfield: “All evidence is according to the subject-matter
-to which it is applied.”<a name="FNanchor_188_188" id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> These two rules
-are expansive, and not narrow,&mdash;liberal, and not exclusive.
-They teach us to regard “the nature of the case”
-and “the subject-matter.” But the case is an impeachment,
-and the subject-matter is misbehavior in high
-office. Before us is no common delinquent, whose offence
-is against a neighbor, but the Chief Magistrate,
-who has done wrong to his country. One has injured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-an individual, the other has injured all. Here again
-I quote the Report:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The abuses stated in our impeachment are not those of
-mere individual, natural faculties, but the abuses of civil and
-political authority. The offence is that of one who has carried
-with him, in the perpetration of his crimes, whether of
-violence or of fraud, the whole force of the State.”<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In such a case there must be a latitude of evidence
-commensurate with the arraignment. And thus we are
-brought to the principle with which I began.</p>
-
-<p>There are other rules, which it is not too late to profit
-by. One relates to the burden of proof, and is calculated
-to have a practical bearing. Another relates to
-matters of which the Senate will take cognizance without
-any special proof, thus importing into the case unquestionable
-evidence explaining and aggravating the
-transgressions charged.</p>
-
-<p>1. Look carefully at the object of the trial. Primarily
-it is for the expulsion of the President from office.
-Its motive is not punishment, not vengeance, but the
-public safety. Nothing less could justify the ponderous
-proceeding. It will be for the criminal courts to
-award the punishment due to his offences. The Senate
-considers only how the safety of the people, which
-is the supreme law, can be best preserved; and to this
-end the ordinary rule of evidence is reversed. If on
-any point you entertain doubts, the benefit of those
-doubts must be given to your country; and this is the
-supreme law. When tried on indictment in the criminal
-courts, Andrew Johnson may justly claim the benefit
-of your doubts; but at the bar of the Senate, on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-question of expulsion from office, his vindication must
-be in every respect and on each charge beyond a doubt.
-He must show that his longer continuance in office is
-not inconsistent with the public safety,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent8">“Or at least so prove it,</div>
-<div class="verse">That the probation bear no hinge nor loop</div>
-<div class="verse">To hang a doubt on.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Anything short of this is to trifle with the Republic and
-its transcendent fortunes.</p>
-
-<p>It is by insisting upon doubts that the apologists of
-the President, at the bar and in the Senate, seek to save
-him. For myself, I see none such; but assuming that
-they exist, then should they be marshalled for our country.
-This is not a criminal trial, where the rule prevails.
-Better the escape of many guilty than that one
-innocent should suffer. This rule, so proper in its
-place, is not applicable to a proceeding for expulsion
-from office; and who will undertake to say that any
-claim of office can be set against the public safety?</p>
-
-<p>In this just rule of evidence I find little more than
-time-honored maxims of jurisprudence, requiring interpretation
-always in favor of Liberty. Early in the
-Common Law we were told that he is to be adjudged
-impious and cruel who does not favor Liberty: <i>Impius
-et crudelis judicandus est qui Libertati non favet</i>.<a name="FNanchor_190_190" id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> Blackstone,
-whose personal sympathies were with power, is
-constrained to confess that “the law is always ready
-to catch at anything in favor of Liberty.”<a name="FNanchor_191_191" id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> But Liberty
-and all else are contained in the public safety;
-they depend on the rescue of the country from a Presidential
-usurper. Therefore should we now, in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
-name of the law, “catch at anything” to save the Republic.</p>
-
-<p>2. There is another rule of evidence, which, though of
-common acceptance in the courts, has peculiar value in
-this case, where it must exercise a decisive influence.
-It is this: Courts will take judicial cognizance of certain
-matters without any special proof on the trial.
-Some of these are of general knowledge, and others
-are within the special knowledge of the court. Among
-these, according to express decision, are the frame of
-government, and the public officers administering it;
-the accession of the Chief Executive; the sitting of
-Congress, and its usual course of proceeding; the customary
-course of travel; the ebbs and flows of the tide;
-<i>also whatever ought to be generally known within the
-limits of the jurisdiction, including the history of the
-country</i>. Besides these matters of general knowledge,
-a court will take notice of its own records, the conduct
-of its own officers, and whatever passes in its own
-presence or under its own eyes. For all this I cite
-no authority; it is superfluous. I add a single illustration
-from the great English commentator: “If the
-contempt be committed in the face of the court, the
-offender may be instantly apprehended and imprisoned,
-at the discretion of the judges, without any further
-proof or examination.”<a name="FNanchor_192_192" id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a></p>
-
-<p>If this be the rule of courts, <i>a fortiori</i> it must be
-the rule of the Senate on impeachments; for we have
-seen, that, when sitting for this purpose, the Senate
-enjoys a latitude of its own. Its object is the Public
-Safety; and therefore no aid for the arrival at truth
-can be rejected, no gate can be closed. But here is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
-a gate opened by the sages of the law, and standing
-open always, to the end that justice may not fail.</p>
-
-<p>Applying this rule, it will be seen at once how it
-brings before the Senate, without any further evidence,
-a long catalogue of crime, affecting the character of the
-President beyond all possibility of defence, and serving
-to explain the later acts on which the impeachment
-is founded. It was in this Chamber, in the face
-of the Senate and the ministers of foreign powers, and
-surrounded by the gaze of thronged galleries, that Andrew
-Johnson exhibited himself in beastly intoxication
-while he took his oath of office as Vice-President; and
-all that he has done since is of record here. Much
-of it appears on our Journals. The rest is in authentic
-documents published by the order of the Senate. Never
-was record more complete.</p>
-
-<p>Here in the Senate we know officially how he made
-himself the attorney of Slavery, the usurper of legislative
-power, the violator of law, the patron of rebels,
-the helping hand of rebellion, the kicker from
-office of good citizens, the open bung-hole of the
-Treasury, the architect of the “Whiskey Ring,” the
-stumbling-block to all good laws by wanton vetoes
-and then by criminal hindrances: all these things are
-known here beyond question. To the apologists of the
-President, who set up the quibbling objection that they
-are not alleged in the Articles of Impeachment, I reply,
-that, even if excluded on this account from judgment,
-they may be treated as evidence. They are the
-reservoir from which to draw, in determining the true
-character of the later acts for which the President is
-arraigned, and especially the <i>intent</i> by which he was
-animated. If these latter were alone, without connecti<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>on
-with transgressions of the past, they would have
-remained unnoticed, impeachment would not have been
-ordered. It is because they are a prolongation of that
-wickedness under which the country has so long suffered,
-and spring from the same bloody fountain, that
-they are now presented for judgment. They are not
-alone; nor can they be faithfully considered without
-drawing upon the past. The story of the god Thor in
-Scandinavian mythology is revived, whose drinking-horn
-could not be drained by the strongest quaffer,
-for it communicated with the vast and inexhaustible
-ocean. Andrew Johnson is our god Thor, and these latter
-acts for which he stands impeached are the drinking-horn
-whose depths are unfathomable.</p>
-
-<h3>OUTLINE OF TRANSGRESSIONS.</h3>
-
-<p>From this review, showing how this proceeding is
-political in character, before a political body, and
-with a political judgment, being expulsion from office
-and nothing more,&mdash;then how the transgressions of
-the President, in protracted line, are embraced under
-“impeachable offences,”&mdash;then how the form of procedure
-is liberated from ordinary technicalities of law,&mdash;and,
-lastly, how unquestionable rules of evidence open
-the gates to overwhelming testimony,&mdash;I pass to the
-consideration of the testimony, and how the present impeachment
-became a necessity. I have already called
-it one of the last great battles with Slavery. See now
-how the battle began.</p>
-
-<p>Slavery in all its pretensions is a defiance of law;
-for it can have no law in its support. Whoso becomes
-its representative must act accordingly; and this is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> the
-transcendent crime of Andrew Johnson. For the sake
-of Slavery, and to uphold its original supporters in their
-endeavors to continue this wrong under another name,
-he has set at defiance the National Constitution and
-the laws of the land; and he has accompanied this unquestionable
-usurpation by brutalities and indecencies
-in office without precedent, unless we go back to the
-Roman emperor fiddling or the French monarch dancing
-among his minions. This usurpation, with its brutalities
-and indecencies, became manifest as long ago
-as the winter of 1866, when, being President, and
-bound by oath of office to preserve, protect, and defend
-the Constitution, and to take care that the laws
-are faithfully executed, he assumed legislative powers
-in the reconstruction of the Rebel States, and, in carrying
-forward this usurpation, nullified an Act of Congress,
-intended as the corner-stone of Reconstruction, by
-virtue of which Rebels are excluded from office under
-the National Government, and thereafter, in vindication
-of this misconduct, uttered a scandalous speech,
-in which he openly charged members of Congress with
-being assassins, and mentioned some by name. Plainly
-he should have been impeached and expelled at that
-early day. The case against him was complete. That
-great patriot of English history, Lord Somers, has likened
-impeachment to Goliath’s sword hanging in the Temple,
-to be taken down only when occasion required;<a name="FNanchor_193_193" id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a>
-but if ever there was occasion for its promptest vengeance,
-it was then. Had there been no failure at that
-time, we should be now by two years nearer to restoration
-of all kinds, whether political or financial. <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>So
-strong is my conviction of the fatal remissness of the
-impeaching body, that I think the Senate would do a
-duty in strict harmony with its constitutional place in
-the Government, and the analogies of judicial tribunals
-so often adduced, if it reprimanded the House of Representatives
-for this delay. Of course the Senate could
-not originate impeachment. It could not take down the
-sword of Goliath. It must wait on the House, as the
-court waits on the grand jury. But this waiting has cost
-the country more than can be told.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the President proceeded in transgression.
-There is nothing of usurpation he has not attempted.
-Beginning with assumption of all power in the Rebel
-States, he has shrunk from nothing in maintenance of
-this unparalleled assumption. This is a plain statement
-of fact. Timid at first, he grew bolder and
-bolder. He saw too well that his attempt to substitute
-himself for Congress in the work of Reconstruction
-was sheer usurpation, and therefore, by his Secretary
-of State, did not hesitate to announce that “it
-must be distinctly understood that the restoration will
-be <i>subject to the decision of Congress</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> On two separate
-occasions, in July and September, 1865, he confessed
-the power of Congress over the subject; but
-when Congress came together in December, the confessor
-of Congressional power found that he alone had
-this great prerogative. According to his new-fangled
-theory, Congress had nothing to do but admit the
-States with governments instituted through his will
-alone. It is difficult to measure the vastness of this
-usurpation, involving as it did a general nullifica<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>tion.
-Strafford was not bolder, when, speaking for Charles
-the First, he boasted that “the King’s little finger was
-heavier than the loins of the Law”;<a name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> but these words
-helped the proud minister to the scaffold. No monarch,
-no despot, no sultan, could claim more than an American
-President; for he claimed all. By his edict alone
-governments were organized, taxes levied, and even the
-franchises of the citizen determined.</p>
-
-<p>Had this assumption of power been incidental, for
-the exigency of the moment, as under pressure of war,
-and especially to serve human rights, to which before
-his elevation the President had professed such vociferous
-devotion, it might have been pardoned. It would
-have passed into the chapter of unauthorized acts which
-a patriot people had condoned. But it was the opposite
-in every particular. Beginning and continuing in
-usurpation, it was hateful beyond pardon, because it
-sacrificed Unionists, white and black, and was in the
-interest of the Rebellion, and of Rebels who had been
-in arms against their country.</p>
-
-<p>More than one person was appointed provisional governor
-who could not take the oath of office required
-by Act of Congress. Other persons in the same predicament
-were appointed in the revenue service. The
-effect of these appointments was disastrous. They were
-in the nature of notice to Rebels everywhere, that participation
-in the Rebellion was no bar to office. If one of
-their number could be appointed governor, if another
-could be appointed to a confidential position in the
-Treasury Department, there was nobody on the long
-list of blood who might not look for preferment. And
-thus all offices, from governor to constable, wer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>e handed
-over to disloyal scramble. Rebels crawled forth from
-their retreats. Men who had hardly ventured to expect
-life were candidates for office, and the Rebellion
-became strong again. The change was felt in all gradations
-of government, in States, counties, towns, and
-villages. Rebels found themselves in places of trust,
-while true-hearted Unionists, who had watched the
-coming of our flag and should have enjoyed its protecting
-power, were driven into hiding-places. All this
-was under the auspices of Andrew Johnson. It was he
-who animated the wicked crew. He was at the head
-of the work. Loyalty was persecuted. White and
-black, whose only offence was that they had been true
-to country, were insulted, abused, murdered. There
-was no safety for the loyal man except within the
-flash of our bayonets. The story is as authentic as
-hideous. More than two thousand murders have been
-reported in Texas alone since the surrender of Kirby
-Smith. In other States there was like carnival. Property,
-person, life, were all in jeopardy. Acts were done
-to “make a holiday in Hell.” At New Orleans was a
-fearful massacre, worse, considering the age and place,
-than that of St. Bartholomew, which darkens a century
-of France, or that of Glencoe, which has printed
-an ineffaceable stain upon one of the greatest reigns
-of English history. All this is directly traced to Andrew
-Johnson. The words of bitterness uttered at
-another time are justified, while Fire, Famine, and
-Slaughter shriek forth,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“He let me loose, and cried, Halloo!</div>
-<div class="verse">To him alone the praise is due.”<a name="FNanchor_196_196" id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>ACCUMULATION OF IMPEACHABLE OFFENCES.</h3>
-
-<p>This is nothing but the outline, derived from historic
-sources <i>which the Senate on this occasion is bound
-to recognize</i>. Other acts fall within the picture. The
-officers he appointed in defiance of law were paid also
-in the same defiance. Millions of property were turned
-over without consideration to railroad companies, whose
-special recommendation was participation in the Rebellion.
-The Freedmen’s Bureau, that sacred charity of
-the Republic, was despoiled of its possessions for the
-sake of Rebels, to whom their forfeited estates were
-given back after they had been vested by law in the
-United States. The proceeds of captured and abandoned
-property, lodged under law in the National
-Treasury, were ravished from their place of deposit and
-sacrificed. Rebels were allowed to fill the antechambers
-of the Executive Mansion and to enter into the
-counsels. The pardoning power was prostituted, and
-pardons were issued in lots to suit Rebels, thus grossly
-abusing that trust whose discreet exercise is so essential
-to the administration of justice. The powers of
-the Senate over appointments were trifled with and
-disregarded by reappointing persons already rejected,
-and by refusing to communicate the names of others
-appointed during the recess. The veto power, conferred
-by the National Constitution as a remedy for ill-considered
-legislation, was turned by him into a weapon
-of offence against Congress, and into an instrument to
-beat down the just opposition which his usurpation
-had aroused. The power of removal, so sparingly exercised
-by patriot Presidents, was seized as an engine
-of tyranny, and openly employed to maintain his wicked
-purposes, by the sacrifice of good citizens who would
-not be his tools. Incompetent and dishonest creatures,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
-recommended only by their echoes to his voice, were
-appointed to office, especially in the collection of the
-internal revenue, through whom a new organization,
-known as the “Whiskey Ring,” has been able to prevail
-over the Government, and to rob the Treasury of
-millions, at the cost of tax-paying citizens, whose burdens
-are thus increased. Laws enacted by Congress
-for the benefit of the colored race, including that great
-statute for the establishment of the Freedmen’s Bureau,
-and that other great statute for the establishment of
-Civil Rights, were first attacked by Presidential veto,
-and, when finally passed by requisite majority over the
-veto, were treated by him as little better than dead letter,
-while he boldly attempted to arrest a Constitutional
-Amendment by which the rights of citizens and
-the national debt were placed under the guaranty of
-irrepealable law. During these successive assumptions,
-usurpations, and tyrannies, utterly without precedent in
-our history, this deeply guilty man ventured upon public
-speeches, each an offence to good morals, where, lost
-to all shame, he appealed in coarse words to the coarse
-passions of the coarsest people, scattering firebrands of
-sedition, inflaming anew the rebel spirit, insulting good
-citizens, and, with regard to office-holders, announcing,
-in his own characteristic phrase, that he would “kick
-them out,”&mdash;the whole succession of speeches being,
-from their brutalities and indecencies, in the nature
-of a “criminal exposure of his person,” indictable at
-Common Law, for which no judgment can be too severe.
-Even this revolting transgression has additional
-aggravation, when it is considered, that, through these
-utterances, the cause of justice was imperilled, and the
-accursed demon of civil feud lashed again into vengeful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
-fury.</p>
-
-<p>All these things, from beginning to end, are plain
-facts, recorded in our annals, and known to all. And it
-is further recorded in our annals and known to all, that,
-through these enormities,&mdash;any one of which is ample
-for condemnation, while all together present an aggregation
-of crime,&mdash;untold calamities have been brought
-upon our country, disturbing business and finance, diminishing
-the national revenues, postponing specie payments,
-dishonoring the Declaration of Independence in
-its grandest truths, arresting the restoration of the
-Rebel States, reviving the dying Rebellion, and, instead
-of that peace and reconciliation so much longed
-for, sowing strife and wrong, whose natural fruit is violence
-and blood.</p>
-
-<h3>OPEN DEFIANCE OF CONGRESS.</h3>
-
-<p>For all these, or any one of them, Andrew Johnson
-should have been impeached and expelled from office.
-The case required a statement only, not an argument.
-Unhappily this was not done. As a petty substitute
-for the judgment which should have been pronounced,
-and as a bridle on Presidential tyranny in “kicking
-out of office,” Congress enacted a law known as the
-Tenure-of-Office Act, passed March 2, 1867, over his
-veto, by two thirds of both Houses.<a name="FNanchor_197_197" id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> And to prepare
-the way for impeachment, by removing scruples of
-technicality, its violation was expressly declared a high
-misdemeanor.</p>
-
-<p>The Presiden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>t began at once to chafe under its restraint.
-Recognizing the Act, and following its terms,
-he first suspended Mr. Stanton from office, and then, in
-anticipation of his restoration by the Senate, made the
-attempt to win General Grant into surrender of the department,
-so as to oust Mr. Stanton and render restoration
-by the Senate ineffectual. Meanwhile Sheridan in
-Louisiana, Pope in Alabama, and Sickles in South Carolina,
-who, as military commanders, were carrying into
-the pacification of these States the energies so brilliantly
-displayed in the war, were pursued by the same vindictive
-spirit. They were removed by the President,
-and Rebellion throughout that whole region clapped its
-hands. This was done in the exercise of his power as
-Commander-in-Chief. At last, in unappeased rage, he
-openly violated the Tenure-of-Office Act, so as to bring
-himself under its judgment, by defiant attempt to remove
-Mr. Stanton from the War Department without
-the consent of the Senate, and the appointment of Lorenzo
-Thomas, Adjutant-General of the United States,
-as Secretary of War <i>ad interim</i>.</p>
-
-<h3>IMPEACHMENT AT LAST.</h3>
-
-<p>The Grand Inquest of the nation, after sleeping on so
-many enormities, was awakened by this open defiance.
-The gauntlet was flung into its very chamber, and there
-it lay on the floor. The President, who had already
-claimed everything for the Executive with impunity,
-now rushed into conflict with Congress on the very
-ground selected in advance by the latter. The field
-was narrow, but sufficient. There was but one thing
-for the House of Representatives to do. Andrew Johnson
-must be impeached, or the Tenure-of-Office Act
-would become a dead letter, while his tyranny would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-receive a letter of license, and impeachment as a remedy
-for wrong-doing would be blotted from the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly it was resolved that the offender, whose
-crimes had so long escaped judgment, should be impeached.
-Once entered upon this work, the House of
-Representatives, after setting forth the removal of Mr.
-Stanton and the appointment of General Thomas in
-violation of law and Constitution, proceeded further to
-charge him in different forms with conspiracy wrongfully
-to obtain possession of the War Department; also
-with attempt to corrupt General Emory, and induce
-him to violate an Act of Congress; also with scandalous
-speeches, such as no President could be justified in
-making; concluding with a general Article setting forth
-attempts on his part to prevent the execution of certain
-Acts of Congress.</p>
-
-<p>Such is a simple narrative, which brings us to the Articles
-of Impeachment. Nothing I have said thus far is
-superfluous; for it shows the origin of this proceeding,
-and illustrates its moving cause. The Articles themselves
-are narrow, if not technical; but they are filled
-and broadened by the transgressions of the past, all of
-which enter into the present offences. The whole is an
-unbroken series, with a common life. As well separate
-the Siamese twins as separate the offences charged from
-that succession of antecedent crimes with which they
-are linked, any one of which is enough for judgment.
-The present springs from the past, and can be truly seen
-only in its light, which, in this case, is nothing less than
-“darkness visible.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT.</h3>
-
-<p>In entering upon the discussion of the Articles of
-Impeachment, I confess my regret that so great a cause,
-on which so much depends, should be presented on
-such narrow ground, although I cannot doubt that the
-whole past must be taken into consideration in determining
-the character of the acts alleged. If there has
-been a violation of law and Constitution, the apologists
-of the President then insist that all was done with good
-intentions. Here it is enough, if we point to the past,
-which thus becomes part of the case. But of this hereafter.
-It is unnecessary for me to take time in setting
-forth the Articles. The abstract is enough. They
-will naturally come under review before the close of
-the inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>Of the transactions embraced by the Articles, the
-removal of Mr. Stanton has unquestionably attracted
-most attention, although I cannot doubt that the scandalous
-harangues are as justly worthy of condemnation.
-But the former has been made the pivot of
-the impeachment,&mdash;so much so that the whole case
-seems to revolve on this transaction. Therefore I
-shall not err, if, following the Articles, I put this foremost.</p>
-
-<p>This transaction may be brought to the touchstone
-of the National Constitution, and also of the Tenure-of-Office
-Act. But since the allegation of violation of
-this Act has been so conspicuous, and this Act may be
-regarded as a Congressional interpretation of the power
-of removals under the National Constitution, I begin
-with the questions arising under it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>TENURE-OF-OFFICE ACT.</h3>
-
-<p>The general object of the Tenure-of-Office Act was to
-protect civil officers from removal without the advice
-and consent of the Senate; and it was made in express
-terms applicable to “every person holding any civil
-office to which he has been appointed by and with the
-advice and consent of the Senate.” To this provision,
-so broad in character, was appended a proviso:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>Provided</i>, That the Secretaries of State, of the Treasury,
-of War, of the Navy, and of the Interior, the Postmaster-General,
-and the Attorney-General, shall hold their
-offices respectively for and during the term of the President
-by whom they may have been appointed and for one month
-thereafter, subject to removal by and with the advice and
-consent of the Senate.”<a name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As this general protection from removal without the
-advice and consent of the Senate might be productive
-of embarrassment during the recess of the Senate, it
-was further provided, in a second section, that, during
-such recess, any person, except judges of the United
-States courts, may be suspended from office by the President
-on reasons assigned, which it is made his duty to
-report to the Senate within twenty days after its next
-meeting, and if the Senate concurs, then the President
-may remove the officer and appoint a successor; but if
-the Senate does not concur, then the suspended officer
-shall forthwith resume his functions.</p>
-
-<p>On this statute two questions arise: first, as to its
-constitutionality, and, secondly, as to its application to
-Mr. Stanton, so as to protect him from removal without
-the advice and consent of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible not to confess in ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>vance that both
-have been already practically settled. The statute was
-passed over the veto of the President by two thirds
-of both Houses, who thus solemnly united in declaring
-its constitutionality. Then came the suspension of
-Mr. Stanton, and his restoration to office by a triumphant
-vote of the Senate, being no less than thirty-five
-to six,&mdash;thus establishing not only the constitutionality
-of the statute, but also its protecting application
-to Mr. Stanton. And then came the resolution of the
-Senate, adopted, after protracted debate, on the 21st
-February, by a vote of twenty-eight to six, declaring,
-that, under the Constitution and laws of the United
-States, the President has no power to remove the Secretary
-of War and to designate any other officer to perform
-the duties of that office <i>ad interim</i>; thus for the
-third time affirming the constitutionality of the statute,
-and for the second time its protecting application
-to Mr. Stanton. There is no instance in our history
-where there has been such a succession of votes, with
-such large majorities, declaring the conclusions of the
-Senate, and fixing them beyond recall. “Thrice is he
-armed that hath his quarrel just”; but the Tenure-of-Office
-Act is armed <i>thrice</i>, by the votes of the Senate.
-The apologists of the President seem to say of these
-solemn votes, “Thrice the brinded cat hath mewed”;
-but such a threefold record cannot be treated with levity.</p>
-
-<p>The question of the constitutionality of this statute
-complicates itself with the power of removal under the
-National Constitution; but I shall not consider the latter
-question at this stage. It will naturally present itself
-when we consider the power of removal under the
-National Constitution, which has been claimed by the
-President. For the present I assume the constit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>utionality
-of the statute.</p>
-
-<h3>ITS APPLICATION TO MR. STANTON.</h3>
-
-<p>I come at once to the question of the application of
-the statute to Mr. Stanton, so as to protect him against
-removal without the consent of the Senate. And here
-I doubt if any question would have arisen but for the
-hasty words of the Senator from Ohio [Mr. <span class="smcap">Sherman</span>],
-so often quoted in this proceeding.</p>
-
-<p>Unquestionably the Senator from Ohio, when the report
-of the Conference Committee of the two Houses
-was under discussion, stated that the statute did not
-protect Mr. Stanton in his office; but this was the individual
-opinion of this eminent Senator, and nothing
-more. On hearing it, I cried from my seat, “The Senator
-must speak for himself”; for I held the opposite
-opinion. It was clear to my mind that the statute was
-intended to protect Mr. Stanton, and that it did protect
-him. The Senator from Oregon [Mr. <span class="smcap">Williams</span>], who
-was Chairman of the Conference Committee and conducted
-its deliberations, informs us that there was no
-suggestion in committee that the statute did not protect
-all of the President’s Cabinet, including, of course,
-Mr. Stanton. The debates in the House of Representatives
-are the same way. Without holding the scales
-to weigh any such conflicting opinions, I rest on the
-received rule of law, that they cannot be taken into account
-in determining the meaning of the statute. And
-here I quote the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
-United States, pronounced by Chief Justice Taney:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In expounding this law, <i>the judgment of the Court cannot
-in any degree be influenced by the construction placed upon
-it by individual members of Congress in the debate which took
-place on its passage</i>, nor by the motives or reasons assigned
-by them for supporting or opposing amendments that were
-offered. The law as it passed is the will of the majority of
-both Houses, and the only mode in which that will is spoken
-is in the Act itself; and we must gather their intention from
-the language there used, comparing it, when any ambiguity
-exists, with the laws upon the same subject, <i>and looking, if
-necessary, to the public history of the times in which it was
-passed</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_199_199" id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It is obvious to all acquainted with a legislative
-body that the rule thus authoritatively declared is the
-only one that could be safely applied. The Senate, in
-construing the present statute, must follow this rule.
-Therefore I repair to the statute, stopping for a moment
-to glance at the public history of the times, in
-order to understand its object.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen how the President, in carrying forward
-his usurpation in the interest of the Rebellion,
-trifled with the Senate in regard to appointments, and
-abused the traditional power of removal, openly threatening
-good citizens in office that he would “kick them
-out,” and filling all vacancies, from high to low, with
-creatures whose first promise was to sustain his barbarous
-policy. I do not stop to portray this outrage,
-constituting an impeachable offence, according to the
-declared opinion of Mr. Madison,<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> one of the strongest
-advocates of the Presidential power of removal. Congress,
-instead of adopting the remedy suggested by this
-father of the Constitution, and expelling the President
-by process of impeachment, attempted to wrest from him
-the power he was abusing. For this purpose the Tenure-o<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>f-Office
-Act was passed. It was deemed advisable to
-include the Cabinet officers within its protection; but,
-considering the intimate relations between them and
-the President, a proviso was appended, securing to the
-latter the right of choosing them in the first instance.
-Its object was, where the President finds himself, on
-accession to office, confronted by a hostile Senate, to
-assure this right of choice, without obliging him to
-keep the Cabinet of his predecessor; and accordingly
-it says to him, “Choose your own Cabinet, but expect
-to abide by your choice, unless you can obtain the consent
-of the Senate to a change.”</p>
-
-<p>Any other conclusion is flat absurdity. It begins by
-misconstruing the operative words of the proviso, that
-the Cabinet officers “shall hold their offices respectively
-for and during the term of the President by whom
-they may have been appointed.” On the face there is
-no ambiguity here. Only by going outside can any be
-found, and this disappears on a brief inquiry. At the
-date of the statute Andrew Johnson had been in office
-nearly two years. Some of his Cabinet were originally
-appointed by President Lincoln; others had been formally
-appointed by himself. But all were there equally
-by his approval and consent. One may do an act himself,
-or make it his own by ratifying it, when done by
-another. In law it is equally his act. Andrew Johnson
-did not originally appoint Mr. Stanton, Mr. Seward,
-or Mr. Welles, but he adopted their appointments; so
-that at the passage of the statute they stood on the
-same footing as if originally appointed by him. Practically,
-and in the sense of the statute, they were appointed
-by him. They were a Cabinet of his own
-choice, just as much as the Cabinet of his successor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>,
-duly appointed, will be of his own choice. If the
-statute compels the latter, as it clearly does, to abide
-by his choice, it is unreasonable to suppose that it is
-not equally obligatory on Andrew Johnson. Otherwise
-there is special immunity for the President
-whose misconduct rendered it necessary, and Congress
-is exhibited as legislating for some future unknown
-President, and not for Andrew Johnson, already too
-well known.</p>
-
-<p>Even the Presidential apologists do not question that
-the members of the Cabinet commissioned by Andrew
-Johnson are protected by the statute. How grossly
-unreasonable to suppose that Congress intended to
-make such a distinction among his Cabinet as to protect
-those whose support of his usurpation had gained
-the seats they enjoyed, while it exposed to his caprice
-a great citizen whose faithful services during the war
-had won the gratitude of his country, whose continuance
-in office was regarded as an assurance of public
-safety, and whose attempted removal has been felt as a
-national calamity! Clearly, then, it was the intention
-of the statute to protect the whole Cabinet, whether
-originally appointed by Andrew Johnson, or originally
-appointed by his predecessor and continued by him.</p>
-
-<p>I have no hesitation in saying that no other conclusion
-is possible without violence to the statute. I
-cannot forget, that, while we are permitted “to open
-the law upon doubts,” we are solemnly warned “not to
-open doubts upon the law.”<a name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> It is Lord Bacon who
-gives us this rule, whose obvious meaning is, that, where
-doubts do not exist, they should not be invented. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
-is only by this forbidden course that any question can
-be raised. If we look at the statute in its simplicity,
-its twofold object is apparent,&mdash;first, to prohibit removals,
-and, secondly, to limit certain terms of service.
-The prohibition to remove plainly applies to all;
-the limitation of service applies only to members of
-the Cabinet. I agree with the excellent Senator from
-Iowa [Mr. <span class="smcap">Harlan</span>], that this analysis removes all ambiguity.
-The pretension that any one of the Cabinet
-was left to the unchecked power of the President is
-irreconcilable with the concluding words of the proviso,
-which declare that they shall be “subject to removal
-by and with the advice and consent of the Senate,”&mdash;thus
-expressly excluding the prerogative of the
-President.</p>
-
-<p>Let us push this inquiry still further, by looking more
-particularly at the statute reduced to a skeleton, so that
-we may see its bones.</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Every person holding any civil office</i>, by and with
-the advice and consent of the Senate, is entitled to hold
-such office until a successor is appointed.</p>
-
-<p>2. If members of the Cabinet, <i>then during the term of
-the President by whom they have been appointed</i>, and one
-month thereafter, unless sooner removed by consent of
-the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Stanton obviously falls within the general class,
-“every person holding any civil office”; and he is entitled
-to the full benefit of the provision for their benefit.</p>
-
-<p>As obviously he falls within the sub-class, members
-of the Cabinet.</p>
-
-<p>Here his rights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span> are equally clear. It is in the discussions
-under this head that the ingenuity of lawyers has
-found amplest play, mainly turning upon what is meant
-by “term” in the statute. I glance for a moment at
-some of these theories.</p>
-
-<p>1. One pretension is, that, the “term” having expired
-with the life of President Lincoln, Mr. Stanton is retroactively
-legislated out of office on the 15th May,
-1865. As this is a penal statute, this construction
-makes it <i>ex post facto</i>, and therefore unconstitutional.
-It also makes Congress enact the absurdity that Mr.
-Stanton had for two years been holding office illegally;
-whereas he had been holding under the clearest legal
-title, which could no more be altered by legislation
-than black could be made white. A construction rendering
-the statute at once unconstitutional and absurd
-must be rejected.</p>
-
-<p>2. The quibble that would exclude Mr. Stanton from
-the protection of the statute, because he was appointed
-during the first “term” of President Lincoln, and the
-statute does not speak of “terms,” is hardly worthy of
-notice. It leads to the same absurd results as follow
-from the first supposition, enhanced by increasing the
-retroactive effect.</p>
-
-<p>3. Assuming that the statute does not terminate Mr.
-Stanton’s right a month after President Lincoln’s death,
-it is insisted that it must take effect at the earliest possible
-moment, and therefore on its passage. From this
-it follows that Mr. Stanton has been illegally in office
-since the 2d of March, 1867, and that both he and the
-President have been guilty of a violation of law, the
-former in exercising the duties of an office to which
-he had no right, and the latter for appointing him, or
-continuing him in office, without consent of the Senate,
-in violation of the Constitution and the statute in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
-question. This is another absurdity to be rejected.</p>
-
-<p>Assuming, as is easy, that it is President Lincoln’s
-“term,” we have the better theory, that it did not expire
-with his life, but continues until the 4th of March,
-1869, in which event Mr. Stanton is clearly entitled to
-hold until a month thereafter. This construction is entirely
-reasonable, and in harmony with the Constitution,
-and the legislation under it. I confess that it is one to
-which I have often inclined.</p>
-
-<p>This brings me back to the construction with which I
-began, and I find Andrew Johnson the President who
-appointed Mr. Stanton. To make this simple, it is only
-necessary to read “chosen” for “appointed” in the statute,&mdash;or,
-if you please, consider the continuance of Mr.
-Stanton in office, with the concurrence of the President,
-as a practical appointment, or equivalent thereto. Clearly
-Mr. Stanton was in office, when the statute passed, from
-the “choice” of the President. Otherwise he would
-have been removed. His continuance was like another
-commission. This carries out the intention of the framers
-of the statute, violates no sound canon of construction,
-and is entirely reasonable in every respect. Or, if
-preferred, we may consider the “term” that of President
-Lincoln, and then Mr. Stanton would be protected in
-office until one month after the 4th of March next.
-But whether the “term” be of Andrew Johnson or
-President Lincoln, he is equally protected.</p>
-
-<p>Great efforts have been made to show that Mr. Stanton
-does not come within the special protection of the
-proviso, without considering the irresistible consequence
-that he is then within the general protection of the statute,
-being “a person holding a civil office.” Turn him
-out of the proviso and he falls into the statute, unless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
-you are as imaginative as one of the apologists, who
-placed him in a sort of intermediate limbo, like a lost
-spirit floating in space, as in one of Flaxman’s Illustrations
-of Dante. But the imagination of this conception
-cannot make us insensible to its surpassing
-absurdity. It is utterly unreasonable, and every construction
-must be rejected which is inconsistent with
-common sense.</p>
-
-<h3>SUSPENSION OF MR. STANTON RECOGNIZED HIM AS PROTECTED
-BY THE STATUTE.</h3>
-
-<p>Here I might close this part of the case; but there is
-another illustration. In suspending Mr. Stanton from
-office, as long ago as August, the President himself recognized
-that he was protected by the statute. The facts
-are familiar. The President, in formal words, undertook
-to say that the suspension was by virtue of the Constitution;
-but this was a dishonest pretext, in harmony
-with so much in his career. Whatever he may say, his
-acts speak louder than his words. In notice of the suspension
-to the Secretary of the Treasury, and then again
-in a message to the Senate assigning his reasons for the
-suspension, both being according to requirements of the
-statute, he testified, that, in his judgment at that time,
-Mr. Stanton came within its protection. If not, why
-thus elaborately comply with its requirements? Why
-the notice to the Secretary of the Treasury? Why the
-message to the Senate? All this was novel and without
-example. Why write to General Grant of “being
-sustained” by the Senate? Approval or disapproval of
-the Senate could make no difference in the exercise of
-the power he now sets up. Approval could not confirm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
-the suspension; disapproval could not restore the suspended
-Secretary of War. In fine, why suspend at all?
-Why exercise the power of suspension, when the President
-sets up the power of removal? If Mr. Stanton was
-unfit for office and a thorn in his side, why not remove
-him at once? Why resort to this long and untried experiment
-merely to remove at last? There is but one
-answer. Beyond all question the President thought Mr.
-Stanton protected by the statute, and sought to remove
-him according to its provisions, beginning, therefore,
-with his suspension. Failing in this, he undertook to
-remove him in contravention of the statute, relying in
-justification on his pretension to judge of its constitutionality,
-or the pusillanimity of Congress, or something
-else “to turn up,” which should render justification unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>Clearly the suspension was made under the Tenure-of-Office
-Act, and can be justified in no other way. From
-this conclusion the following dilemma results: If Mr.
-Stanton was within the statute, by what right was he
-removed? If he was not, by what right was he suspended?
-The President may choose his horn. Either
-will be sufficient to convict.</p>
-
-<p>I should not proceed further under this head but for
-the new device which makes its appearance under the
-auspices of the Senator from Maine [Mr. <span class="smcap">Fessenden</span>],
-who tells us, that, “whether Mr. Stanton came under the
-first section of the statute or not, the President had a
-clear right to suspend him under the second.” Thus a
-statute intended as a bridle on the President gives the
-power to suspend Mr. Stanton, but fails to give him any
-protection. This statement would seem enough. The
-invention of the Senator is not less fallacious than th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>e
-pretext of the President. It is a device well calculated
-to help the President and to hurt Mr. Stanton, with
-those who regard devices more than the reason of the
-statute and its spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Study the statute in its reason and its spirit, and you
-cannot fail to see that the second section was intended
-merely as a pendant to the first, and was meant to
-apply to the cases included in the first, and none other.
-It was a sort of safety-valve, or contrivance to guard
-against possible evils from bad men who could not
-be removed during the recess of the Senate. There
-was no reason to suspend a person who could be removed.
-It is absurd to suppose that a President would
-resort to a dilatory and roundabout suspension, when
-the short cut of removal was open to him. Construing
-the statute by this plain reason, its second section
-must have precisely the same sphere of operation as the
-first. By the letter, Mr. Stanton falls within both; by
-the intention, it is the same. It is only by applying to
-the first section his own idea of the intention, and by
-availing himself of the letter of the second, that the
-Senator is able to limit the one and to enlarge the
-other, so as to exclude Mr. Stanton from the protection
-of the statute, and to include him in the part allowing
-suspensions. Applying either letter or spirit
-consistently, the case is plain.</p>
-
-<p>I turn for the present from the Tenure-of-Office Act,
-insisting that Mr. Stanton is within its protection, and,
-being so, that his removal was, under the circumstances,
-a high misdemeanor, aggravated by its defiant purpose
-and the long series of transgressions which preceded
-it, all showing a criminal intent. The apologies of the
-President will be considered hereafter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>SUBSTITUTION OF ADJUTANT-GENERAL THOMAS
-AD INTERIM.</h3>
-
-<p>The case of Mr. Stanton has two branches: first, his
-removal, and, secondly, the substitution of Adjutant-General
-Thomas as Secretary of War <i>ad interim</i>. As
-the former was contrary to positive statute, so also was
-the latter without support in any Act of Congress. For
-the present I content myself with the latter proposition,
-without opening the question of Presidential powers
-under the National Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>The offender rests his case on the Act of Congress
-of February 13, 1795, which empowers the President,
-“in case of <i>vacancy</i> in the office of Secretary of State,
-Secretary of the Treasury, or of the Secretary of the Department
-of War, … whereby they cannot perform the
-duties of their said respective offices, … to authorize
-any person or persons, at his discretion, to perform the
-duties of the said respective offices, until a successor be
-appointed, or such vacancy be filled”; and the supply of
-the vacancy is limited to six months.<a name="FNanchor_202_202" id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> Under this early
-statute the President defends himself by insisting that
-there was a “vacancy,” when, in fact, there was none.
-All this is in that unfailing spirit of prerogative which
-is his guide. Here is assumption of power. In fact,
-Mr. Stanton was at his office, quietly discharging its
-duties, when the President assumed that there was a
-“vacancy,” and forthwith sent the valiant Adjutant-General
-to enter upon possession. Assumption and
-commission were on a par. There is nothing in any
-law of the land to sanction either. Each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span> testifies
-against the offender.</p>
-
-<p>The hardihood of this proceeding becomes more apparent,
-when it is understood that this very statute of
-1795, on which the offender relies, was repealed by the
-statute of February 20, 1863,<a name="FNanchor_203_203" id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> passed in our own day,
-and freshly remembered. The latter statute, by necessary
-implication, obliterated the former. Such is the
-obvious intention, and I do not hesitate to say that
-any other construction leads into those absurdities
-which constitute the staple of the Presidential apologists.
-The object of Congress was to provide a substitute
-for previous statutes, restricting the number of
-vacancies which might be filled and the persons who
-might fill them. And this was done.</p>
-
-<p>As by the National Constitution all appointments
-must be with the advice and consent of the Senate,
-therefore any legislation in derogation thereof must be
-construed strictly; but the President insists that it
-shall be extended, even in face of the constitutional
-requirement. To such pretensions is he driven! The
-exception recognized by the National Constitution is
-only where a vacancy occurs during the recess of the
-Senate, when the President is authorized to appoint
-until he can obtain the consent of the Senate, and
-no longer. Obviously, cases may arise where sudden
-accident vacates the office, or where the incumbent is
-temporarily disabled. Here was the occasion for an
-<i>ad interim</i> appointment, and the repealing statute, embodying
-the whole law of the subject, was intended
-for such cases,&mdash;securing to the President time to select
-a successor, and also power to provide for a temporary
-disability. Such is the underlying principle,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-which it is for us to apply. The expiration of a commission,
-which ordinary care can foresee, is not one of
-the sudden emergencies for which provision must be
-made; and assuming that vacancies by removal were
-contemplated, which must be denied, it is plain that
-the delay required for the examination of the case
-would give time to select a successor, while removal
-without cause would never be made until a successor
-was ready.</p>
-
-<p>Look now at the actual facts, and you will see how
-little they come within the reason of an <i>ad interim</i>
-appointment. Evidently the President had resolved
-to remove Mr. Stanton last summer. Months elapsed,
-leaving his purpose without consummation till February.
-All the intervening time was his to select a successor,
-being a period longer than the longest fixed
-for the duration of an <i>ad interim</i> appointment by the
-very statutes under which he professed to act. In
-conversation with General Sherman, a month before
-the removal, he showed that he was then looking for
-a successor <i>ad interim</i>. Why not a permanent successor?
-It took him only a day to find Mr. Ewing.
-If, as there is reason to suppose, Mr. Ewing was already
-selected when Adjutant-General Thomas was
-pushed forward, why appoint the latter at all? Why
-not, in the usual way, transmit Mr. Ewing’s name as
-the successor? For the excellent reason, that the
-offender knew the Senate would not confirm him, and
-that therefore Mr. Stanton would remain in office;
-whereas through an <i>ad interim</i> appointment he might
-obtain possession of the War Department, which was
-his end and aim. The <i>ad interim</i> appointment of
-General Thomas was, therefore, an attempt to obtai<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>n
-possession of an office without the consent of the Senate,
-precisely because the offender knew that he could
-not obtain that consent. And all this was under pretext
-of an Act of Congress alike in letter and spirit
-inapplicable to the case.</p>
-
-<p>Thus does it appear, that, while Mr. Stanton was
-removed in violation of the Tenure-of-Office Act, Adjutant-General
-Thomas was appointed Secretary of War
-<i>ad interim</i> in equal derogation of the Acts of Congress
-regulating the subject.</p>
-
-<h3>REMOVAL AND SUBSTITUTION AD INTERIM A VIOLATION
-OF THE CONSTITUTION.</h3>
-
-<p>It remains to consider if the removal and substitution
-were not each in violation of the National Constitution.
-The case is new, for never until now could it
-arise. Assuming that the Tenure-of-Office Act does not
-protect Mr. Stanton, who is thus left afloat in the limbo
-between the body of the Act and the proviso, then the
-President is remitted to his prerogative under the National
-Constitution, and he must be judged accordingly,
-independently of statute. Finding the power of removal
-there, he may be justified; but not finding it there, he
-must bear the consequences. And here the Tenure-of-Office
-Act furnishes a living and practical construction
-of the National Constitution from which there is no
-appeal.</p>
-
-<p>From the Constitution it appears that the power of
-appointment is vested in the President and Senate conjointly,
-and that nothing is said of the power of removal,
-except in case of impeachment, when it is made
-by the Senate. Therefore the power of removal is <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>not
-express, but implied only, and must exist, if at all, as a
-necessary consequence of the power to appoint. But in
-whom? According to a familiar rule, the power which
-makes can unmake. Unless this rule be rejected, the
-power of removal must exist in the President and Senate
-conjointly; nor is there anything unreasonable in
-this conclusion. Removal can always be effected during
-the session of the Senate by the nomination and
-confirmation of a successor, while provision can be made
-for the recess by an Act of Congress. This conclusion
-would be irresistible, were the Senate always in session;
-but since it is not, and since cases may arise during the
-recess requiring the immediate exercise of this power, it
-has been argued that at least during the recess it must
-be in the President alone. From this position there has
-been a jump to the next, and it has been insisted, that,
-since, for the sake of public convenience, the power of
-removal exists in the President, he is at liberty to exercise
-it either during the recess or the session itself.
-Here is an obvious extension of the conclusion, which
-the premises do not warrant. The reason failing, the
-conclusion must fail. <i>Cessante ratione legis, cessat ipsa
-lex.</i> Especially must this be the case under the National
-Constitution. A power founded on implied necessity
-must fail when the necessity does not exist. The implication
-cannot be carried beyond the reason. Therefore
-the power of removal during the recess, doubtful
-at best, unless sanctioned by Act of Congress, cannot be
-extended to justify the exercise of that power while the
-Senate is in session, ready to act conjointly with the
-President.</p>
-
-<p>Against th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>is natural conclusion, we have the assumption
-that a contrary construction of the National Constitution
-was established after debate in 1789. I avoid
-all details with regard to this debate, cited and considered
-so often. I content myself by asking if at best it
-was anything but a Congressional construction of the
-National Constitution, and, as such, subject to be set
-aside by another voice from the same quarter. It was,
-moreover, a Congressional construction adopted during
-the administration of Washington, whose personal character
-must have influenced opinion largely; and it prevailed
-in the House of Representatives only after earnest
-debate by a majority of twelve, and in the Senate only
-by the casting vote of the Vice-President, John Adams,
-who, from position as well as principle, was not inclined
-to shear the President of any prerogative. Once
-adopted, and no strong necessity for a change occurring,
-it was allowed to go unaltered, but not unquestioned.
-Jurists like Kent and Story, statesmen like Webster,
-Clay, Calhoun, and Benton, recorded themselves adversely,
-and it was twice reversed by vote of the Senate.
-This was in 1835 and again in 1836, when a bill
-passed the Senate, introduced by Mr. Calhoun and sustained
-by the ablest statesmen of the time, practically
-denying the power of the President.<a name="FNanchor_204_204" id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> The Tenure-of-Office
-Act was heralded in 1863 by a statute making
-the Comptroller of the Currency removable “by and
-with the advice and consent of the Senate,”<a name="FNanchor_205_205" id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a>&mdash;thus, in
-this individual case, asserting for the Senate a check on
-the President; and then in 1866, by a more important<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
-measure, being the provision in the Army Appropriation
-Act,<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> that “no officer in the military or naval service
-shall in time of peace be dismissed from service, except
-upon and in pursuance of the sentence of a court-martial,”&mdash;thus
-putting another check on the President.
-Finally, this Congressional construction, born of a casting
-vote, and questioned ever since, has been overruled
-by another Congressional construction, twice adopted
-in both Houses, first by large majorities on the original
-passage of the Tenure-of-Office Act, and then by a
-vote of two thirds on the final passage of the same Act
-over the veto of the President,&mdash;and then again adopted
-by more than two thirds of the Senate, when the latter
-condemned the removal of Mr. Stanton: and all this
-in the light of experience, after ample debate, and with
-all the consequences before them. Such a Congressional
-construction must have a controlling influence, and
-the fact that it reversed the practice of eighty years
-and overcame the disposition to stand on the ancient
-ways would seem to increase rather than diminish its
-weight.</p>
-
-<p>Now mark the consequences. Originally, in 1789,
-there was a Congressional construction which in effect
-made the National Constitution read,&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“The President <i>shall have</i> the power of removal.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">For the next eighty years all removals were made under
-this construction. The Tenure-of-Office Act was a new
-Congressional construction, overruling the first, and entitled
-to equal, if not superior weight. By virtue of this
-Congressional construction the National Constitution
-now reads,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“The President <i>shall not have</i> the power of removal.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">It follows, then, that in removing Mr. Stanton the President
-violated the National Constitution as now construed.</p>
-
-<p>The dilemma is this: If the President can remove
-Mr. Stanton during the session of the Senate, without
-any power by statute, it is only by virtue of a prerogative
-vested in him by the National Constitution, which
-must necessarily override the Tenure-of-Office Act, as
-an unconstitutional effort to abridge it. If, on the other
-hand, this Act is constitutional, the prerogative of removal
-is not in the President, and he violated the National
-Constitution when he assumed to exercise it.</p>
-
-<p>The Tenure-of-Office Act cannot be treated otherwise
-than as constitutional,&mdash;certainly not in the Senate,
-where some among the apologists of the President voted
-for it. Therefore the prerogative of removal is not in
-the President. The long practice which grew up under
-a mere reading of the National Constitution has been
-declared erroneous. To this extent the National Constitution
-has been amended, and it is as absurd to plead
-the practice under the first reading, in order to justify
-an offence under the second, as to plead the existence of
-Slavery before the Constitutional Amendment, in order
-to justify this monstrosity now.</p>
-
-<p>Thus must we conclude that the offender has violated
-not only the Tenure-of-Office Act, but also the
-National Constitution; that, even assuming Mr. Stanton
-unprotected by the statute, the case is not ended;
-that this statute, if construed so as to exclude him,
-cannot be rejected as a Congressional construction of
-the National Constitution; and that, under this Congr<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>essional
-construction, which in value is second only
-to a Constitutional Amendment, the prerogative of removal
-without the consent of the Senate does not
-belong to the President. Of course the power of suspension
-under the National Constitution, which is only
-an incident of the larger pretension, must fall also.
-Therefore, in the defiant removal of Mr. Stanton, and
-also in the pretended suspension under the National
-Constitution with which the transaction began, the
-President violated the Constitution, and was guilty of
-an impeachable offence.</p>
-
-<p>And so, too, we must conclude, that, in the substitution
-of Lorenzo Thomas as Secretary of War <i>ad interim</i>,
-the offender violated not only the Acts of Congress
-for the supply of vacancies, but also the National
-Constitution. Knowing that he could not obtain possession
-of the office with the consent of the Senate,
-he sought to accomplish this purpose without that
-consent. Thus, under color of a statute, he practically
-set the National Constitution at defiance. Mark here
-the inconsistency. He violates the Tenure-of-Office
-Act, alleging that it is against the National Constitution,
-whose champion he professes to be, and then
-takes advantage of the Acts of Congress for the supply
-of vacancies to set aside this Constitution in one
-of its most important requirements; for all which he
-is justly charged with an impeachable offence.</p>
-
-<p>All this seems clear. Any other conclusion gives
-to the President the power under the National Constitution
-to vacate all national offices, and leaves the
-Republic the wretched victim of tyranny, with a ruler
-who is not even a constitutional monarch, but a king
-above all laws. It was solemnly alleged in the Charge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-against Charles the First of England, that, “being admitted
-King of England, and therein trusted with a
-limited power <i>to govern by and according to the laws
-of the land, and</i> <span class="smcapuc">NOT OTHERWISE</span>,” he nevertheless undertook
-“<i>to rule according to his will</i>, and to overthrow
-the rights and liberties of the people.”<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> These very
-words now declare the crime of Andrew Johnson.</p>
-
-<h3>THE APOLOGIES.</h3>
-
-<p>Here I might close; but the offender has found
-apologists, who plead his cause at the bar and in the
-Senate. The apologies are a strange compound, enlarging
-rather than diminishing the offences proved. There
-is, first, the Apology of Good Intentions; next, the Apology
-of making a case for the Supreme Court, being the
-Moot-Court Apology; and then, the Apology that the
-President may sit in judgment on the laws, and determine
-whether they shall be executed, which I call the
-Apology of Prerogative. Following these is a swarm of
-technicalities, devices, and quibbles, utterly unworthy
-of the Senate, and to be reprobated by all who love
-justice.</p>
-
-<h4>THE APOLOGY OF GOOD INTENTIONS.</h4>
-
-<p>I begin with the Apology of Good Intentions. In
-the light of all that has occurred, with the volume of
-history open before us, with the records of the Senate
-in our hands, and with the evidence at the bar not
-utterly forgotten, it is inconceivable that such an apology
-can be put forward. While making it, the apologist<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>s
-should be veiled, so that the derisive smile on
-their faces may not be observed by the Senate, to
-whose simplicity it is addressed. It is hard to treat
-this apology; but it belongs to the case, and therefore
-I deal with it.</p>
-
-<p>A mere technical violation of law, with no evil consequences,
-and without any claim of title, is followed
-by nominal damages only. If a person, without permission,
-steps on a field of grass belonging to another,
-he is a trespasser, and the law furnishes a familiar
-proceeding against him; but if he has done this accidentally,
-and without any real damage, it would be
-hard to pursue him, unless assertion of the title were
-thought important. But if the trespasser is an old
-offender, who from the beginning has broken fences,
-ruined trees, and trampled down the garden, and now
-defiantly comes upon the field of grass, insisting upon
-absolute ownership, then it is vain to set up the apology
-that very little damage is done. The antecedent
-transgressions, ending in claim of title, enter into the
-present trespass, and make it a question whether the
-rightful owner or the trespasser shall hold possession.
-Here the rightful owner is the people of the United
-States, and the trespasser is Andrew Johnson. Therefore
-in the name of the people is he impeached.</p>
-
-<p>This simple illustration opens the whole case. Mere
-technical violation of statute or of Constitution, without
-antecedents and without consequents, would not justify
-impeachment. All of us can recall such, even in the
-administration of Abraham Lincoln; and I cannot doubt,
-that, since this proceeding began, the Chief Justice violated
-the National Constitution when he undertook to
-give a casting vote, not being a member of the Senate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
-These were accidents, besides being innocuous. From
-violation of statute or of Constitution the law ordinarily
-infers evil intent, and, where such a case is submitted to
-judgment, it throws upon the violator the burden of exculpation.
-He must show that his conduct was innocent,&mdash;in
-other words, that it was without evil intent,
-or claim of title. In the present cause we have the denial
-of evil intent, with a claim of title.</p>
-
-<p>The question of intent raised by the offender cannot
-be considered narrowly. This is a trial of impeachment,
-and not a criminal case in a county court. It is a proceeding
-for expulsion from office on account of political
-offences, and not a suit at law. When the offender sets
-up good intentions, he challenges inquisition, according
-to the latitude of such proceeding. The whole past is
-unrolled by himself, and he cannot prevent the Senate
-from seeing it. By a commanding rule of evidence it is
-all before us without further proof. You cannot shut it
-out; you cannot refuse to look at it. And yet we have
-been seriously told that we must shut out from sight
-everything but the technical trespass. It only remains,
-that, imitating the ostrich, we should thrust our heads
-into the sand, and, not seeing danger, foolishly imagine
-it does not exist. This may do at <i>Nisi Prius</i>; it will
-not do in the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>To such extent has this ostrich pretension been carried,
-that we were solemnly admonished at the bar, and
-the paradox has found voice in the Senate, that we must
-judge the acts of Andrew Johnson “as if committed by
-George Washington.” Here is the paradox in length
-and breadth. I deny it. I scout it. On the contrary,
-I say that we must judge all these acts as if committed
-by Andrew Johnson, and nobody else. In other words,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
-we must see things as they are. As well insist that an
-act of guilt should be judged as the mistake of innocence.
-As well argue that the stab of the assassin
-should be treated as the cut of the surgeon.</p>
-
-<p>To the Apology of Good Intentions I oppose all that
-long unbroken series of transgressions, each with a voice
-to drown every pretext of innocence. I would not repeat
-what I have already said, but, in presence of this
-apology, it is my duty to remind the Senate how the
-career of this offender is compounded of falsehood and
-usurpation; how, beginning with promises to make treason
-odious, he soon installed it in authority; how, from
-declared sympathy with Unionists, white and black, he
-changed to be their persecutor; how in him are continued
-the worst elements of Slavery, an insensibility to
-right and a passion for power; how, in this spirit, he
-usurped great prerogatives not belonging to him; how,
-in the maintenance of this usurpation, he stuck at nothing;
-how he violated law; how he abused the pardoning
-power; how he prostituted the appointing power;
-how he wielded the power of removal to maintain his
-tyranny; how he sacrificed the Freedmen’s Bureau, and
-lifted up the Whiskey Ring; how he patronized massacre
-and bloodshed, and gave a license to the Ku-Klux-Klan;
-how, in madness, he entered into conflict with
-Congress, contesting its rightful power over the reconstruction
-of the Rebel States, and, when Congress would
-not succumb to his usurpation, how he thwarted and
-vilified it, expectorating foul-mouthed utterances which
-are a disgrace to human nature; how he so far triumphed
-in his wickedness that in nine States no Union
-man is safe and no murderer of a Union man can be
-punished; and, lastly,&mdash;for time fails, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span> not the
-long list of transgressions,&mdash;how he conspired against
-the patriot Secretary of War, because he found in that
-adamantine character an obstacle to his revolutionary
-career. And now, in the face of this terrible and indisputable
-record, entering into and filling this impeachment,
-I hear a voice saying that we must judge the
-acts in question “as if committed by George Washington.”
-The statement of this pretension is enough. I
-hand it over to the contempt it deserves.</p>
-
-<h4>THE MOOT-COURT APOLOGY.</h4>
-
-<p>Kindred to the Apology of Good Intentions, or, perhaps,
-a rib out of its side, is the Moot-Court Apology,
-which pretends that the President, in removing Mr.
-Stanton, only wished to make a case for the Supreme
-Court, and thus submit to this tribunal the constitutionality
-of the Tenure-of-Office Act.</p>
-
-<p>By this pretension the Supreme Court is converted
-into a moot-court to sit in judgment on Acts of Congress,
-and the President becomes what, in the time of
-Charles the Second, Lord Keeper Guilford said a good
-lawyer must be, “a put-case.”<a name="FNanchor_208_208" id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a> Even assuming, against
-evidence, that such was his purpose, it is hard to treat
-it without reprobation. The Supreme Court is not
-arbiter of Acts of Congress. If this pretension ever
-found favor, it was from the partisans of Slavery and
-State Rights, who, assured of the sympathy of the Court,
-sought in this way to complete an unjust triumph. The
-power claimed is tribunitial in character, being nothing
-less than a veto. Its nearest parallel in history is
-in the ancient Justicia of Aragon, who could set aside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
-even royal ordinances as unconstitutional. The National
-Constitution leaves no doubt as to the proper functions
-of the Supreme Court. It may hear and determine “all
-cases in law and equity arising under the Constitution,
-the laws of the United States, and treaties made under
-their authority”; but this is all. Its business is to decide
-“cases,”&mdash;not to sit in judgment on Acts of Congress
-and issue its tribunitial veto. If a “case” arises
-where a statute is said to clash with the National Constitution,
-it must be decided as any other case of conflict
-of laws. But nothing within the just powers of
-the Court can touch an Act of Congress, except incidentally,
-and then its judgment is binding only on the
-parties. The incidental reason assigned&mdash;as, for instance,
-that a statute is unconstitutional&mdash;does not
-bind anybody, not even the parties or the Court itself.
-Of course such incidental reason cannot bind
-Congress.</p>
-
-<p>On the evidence it is clear enough that the President
-had no honest purpose to make a case for the
-Supreme Court. He may have talked about it, but he
-was never in earnest. When asked by General Sherman
-“why lawyers could not make a case,” he said,
-in reply, “that it was found impossible, or a case could
-not be made up.” And so at each stage we find him
-practically discarding the idea. He issues the order of
-removal. Mr. Stanton disobeys. Here was exactly his
-opportunity. Instead of making the case by commencing
-the proper process, he tells Adjutant-General Thomas
-to “go on and take possession of the office”; and then,
-putting an end to this whole pretension of a case for
-the Court, he proceeds to treat the latter in every respect,
-whether of law or fact, as Secretary, welcomes him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
-to his Cabinet, invites him to present the business of
-his Department, and, so far from taking advantage of
-the opportunity he had professed to desire, denies its
-existence. How could he inquire by what authority
-Mr. Stanton assumed to hold the office of Secretary
-of War, when he denied, in fact, that he was holding
-it?</p>
-
-<p>Look a little further, and the reason of this indifference
-becomes apparent. The old writ of <i>Quo Warranto</i>
-was the only process by which a case could be
-made, and this only at the suit of the Attorney-General.
-Had the President made an order of removal,
-the Secretary would have been compelled to hold only
-by virtue of the law and the Constitution. In answer
-to the writ he would have pleaded this protection, and
-the Court must have decided the validity of the plea.
-Meanwhile he would have remained in office. Had he
-left, the process would have failed, and there was none
-other by which he could raise the question. The decision
-of the Supreme Court in <i>Wallace</i> v. <i>Anderson</i><a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a>
-would prevent resort to a <i>Quo Warranto</i> on his part,
-while the earlier case of <i>Marbury</i> v. <i>Madison</i><a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> would
-shut him out from a <i>Mandamus</i>. The apologists have
-not suggested any other remedy. It is clear, therefore,
-that Mr. Stanton’s possession of the office was a
-<i>sine qua non</i> to a case in the Supreme Court, and
-that this could be only by <i>Quo Warranto</i>. The local
-attorney employed by the President testifies that in
-such a case judgment could not be reached within a
-year. This was enough to render it impracticable;
-for, if commenced, it would leave the hated Secretary
-at his post for the remainder of the Presidential<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
-term. During the pendency of the proceeding Mr. Stanton
-would continue legitimate possessor of the office.
-Therefore the commencement of a case would defeat
-the Presidential passion for instant removal. True to
-his passion, he removed the Secretary, well knowing
-that in this way he prevented a case for the Court.</p>
-
-<p>Against this conclusion, where all the testimony is
-harmonized, we have certain fruitless conversations
-with his Cabinet, and an attempt to raise the question
-on <i>Habeas Corpus</i> after the arrest of Adjutant-General
-Thomas. Conversations, whose exclusion has
-given a handle to the apologists, which they do not
-fail to use, only show that the President made this
-question a subject of talk, and that, in the end, it became
-apparent that he could not make a case so as
-to remove Mr. Stanton during his term, and as this
-was his darling object, the whole idea was abandoned.
-The arrest of Adjutant-General Thomas seemed for a
-moment to furnish another chance; but it is enough
-to say of the futile attempt at that time, that it was
-not only after the removal of Mr. Stanton, but after
-impeachment had been voted by the House.</p>
-
-<p>Had the President been in earnest, it was very easy
-for him to make a case by proceeding against a simple
-postmaster; but this did not suit him. He was in
-earnest only to remove Mr. Stanton.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is clearer than that this Moot-Court Apology
-is a wretched pretension and afterthought. It is
-the subterfuge of a criminal to cover up his crime,&mdash;as
-if a surgeon had committed murder, and then set
-up the apology that it was an experiment in science.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4>THE APOLOGY OF PREROGATIVE.</h4>
-
-<p>Then comes the Apology of Prerogative, being nothing
-less than the intolerable pretension that the President
-can sit in judgment on Acts of Congress, and,
-in his discretion, refuse to execute them. This apology
-is in the nature of a claim of right. Let it be
-established, and, instead of a government of laws, which
-is the glory of a republic, we have only the government
-of a single man. Here is the one-man power
-with a vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, if the President can sit in judgment on
-the Tenure-of-Office Act, and set it aside as unconstitutional,
-there is no Act of Congress he may not treat
-in the same way. He may set aside the whole succession
-of statutes for the government of the army;
-and his interview with General Emory attests his willingness
-to venture in that direction. In the spirit of
-oppression which seems to govern him, he may set
-aside the great statute for the establishment of civil
-rights without distinction of color. But why confine
-myself to instances? The whole statute-book will be
-subject to his prerogative. Vain the requirement of
-the National Constitution, that the President “shall
-take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Vain
-that other requirement, that a bill approved by two
-thirds of both Houses over his veto “shall become a
-law.” His veto is perpetual; nor is it limited to any
-special enactment. It is as broad as the whole recorded
-legislation of the Republic. There is nothing
-it cannot hurry into that maelstrom ingulfing all.</p>
-
-<p>The President considers the statute unconstitutional,
-say the apologists. A mistake in judgment on such a
-question is not an impeachable offence, add the apologists.
-To which I reply, that it is not for mistake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-in judgment, but for usurpation in undertaking to exercise
-his judgment at all on such a question, that he
-is impeached; in other words, he is impeached for undertaking
-to set aside a statute. Whether the statute
-is constitutional or not is immaterial. The President,
-after the statute has become a law, is not the person
-to decide.</p>
-
-<p>Ingenuity seeks to perplex the question by putting
-impossible cases. For instance, suppose Congress should
-have lost its wits so far as to enact, in direct terms,
-that the President should not be commander-in-chief
-of the army and navy, or that he should not have the
-power to grant pardons; and suppose, still further, that
-Congress, in defiance of positive inhibition, should undertake
-to create “titles of nobility”; must not the
-President treat such enactments as unconstitutional?
-Of course he must; but such instances do not help
-the prerogative now claimed. Every such enactment
-would be on its face unconstitutional. It would be an
-act of unreasoning madness, which President as well
-as Court must disregard as if plain nonsense. Its unconstitutionality
-would be like an axiom, not to be
-questioned. No argument or authority is needed. It
-proves itself. Nor would the duty of disobedience be
-less obligatory, even if the enactment were sanctioned
-by the Supreme Court: and it is not more violent for
-me to suppose it sanctioned by the Supreme Court
-than for the apologists to suppose it sanctioned by
-Congress. The enactment would be a self-evident monstrosity,
-and therefore to be disobeyed, as if one of the
-Ten Commandments were reversed so as to read, “Thou
-shalt kill.” Such extreme cases serve no purpose. The
-National Constitution is the supreme law of the lan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>d,
-and the people will not allow its axiomatic requirements
-to be set aside. An illustration outside the
-limits of reason is of no value.</p>
-
-<p>In the cases supposed, the unconstitutionally of the
-enactment is axiomatic, excluding opinion or argument.
-It is matter of fact, and not matter of opinion. When
-the case is one on which there are two sides or two
-different views, it is then within the domain of argument.
-It is in no sense axiomatic. It is no longer
-matter of fact, but matter of opinion. When submitted
-to the Supreme Court, it is for their “opinion.”
-Without occupying time with refinements, I content
-myself with asserting that the judgment of the Court
-must be matter of opinion. One of the apologists has
-asserted that such a judgment is matter of fact, and,
-generally, that the constitutionality of a statute is
-matter of fact. I assert the contrary. When a bench
-of judges stands five to four, shall we say that the
-majority declare a “fact,” and the minority declare an
-“opinion”?</p>
-
-<p>Assuming, then, what I think will not be denied,
-that the constitutionality of a statute is matter of
-opinion, the question occurs, What opinion shall be
-regarded for the time as decisive? Clearly the opinion
-of Congress must control all executive officers, from
-the lowest to the President. According to a venerable
-maxim of jurisprudence, all public acts are presumed to
-be correct,&mdash;<i>Omnia rite acta præsumuntur</i>. A statute
-must be presumed constitutional, unless on its face the
-contrary; and no decision of any court is required in its
-favor. It is the law of the land, and must be obeyed
-as such. The maxim which presumes constitutionality
-is just as binding as the analogous maxim of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
-Criminal Law which presumes innocence. The President,
-reversing all this, presumes the statute unconstitutional,
-and acts accordingly. In the name of
-Prerogative he sets it aside.</p>
-
-<p>The apologists have been driven to invoke the authority
-of President Jackson, who asserted for himself
-the power to judge the constitutionality of an Act of
-Congress which in the course of legislation required
-his approval, although the question involved had been
-already adjudged by the Supreme Court. And he was
-clearly right. The Court itself would not be bound
-by its adjudication. How could it constrain another
-branch of the Government? But Andrew Jackson
-never put forth the pretension that it was within his
-prerogative to nullify a statute which had been passed
-over his veto in the way prescribed by the National
-Constitution. He was courageous, but there was no
-such unconstitutional audacity in his life.</p>
-
-<p>The apologists also summon to their aid those great
-instances where conscientious citizens have refused
-obedience to unjust laws. Such was the case of Hampden,
-who set an example for all time in refusing to
-pay ship-money. Such also was the case of many in
-our own country, who spurned the Fugitive Slave Bill.
-These exalted characters, on their conscience, refused
-to obey the law, and suffered accordingly. The early
-Christians were required by imperial mandate to strew
-grain on the altar of Jove. Though good citizens, they
-preferred to be martyrs. Such a refusal can be no apology
-for a President, who, in the name of prerogative,
-breaks the great oath to see that the laws are faithfully
-executed. Rather do these instances, in their
-moral grandeur, rebuke the offender.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here I turn from this Apology of Prerogative, regretting
-that I cannot say more to unfold its destructive
-character. If anything could aggravate the transgressions
-of Andrew Johnson, stretching in long line
-from the beginning of his administration, it would be
-the claim of right he sets up, under which the slenderest
-violation of law becomes a high crime and misdemeanor,
-to be pursued and judged by an indignant
-people. The supremacy of the laws must be preserved,
-or the liberties of all will suffer.</p>
-
-<h3>TECHNICALITIES AND QUIBBLES.</h3>
-
-<p>I now come upon that swarm of technicalities, devices,
-quirks, and quibbles, which from the beginning
-have infested this proceeding. It is hard to speak of
-such things without showing a contempt not entirely
-parliamentary. To say that they are petty and miserable
-is not enough. To say that they are utterly unworthy
-of this historic occasion is to treat them politely.
-They are nothing but parasitic insects, “vermin
-gendered in a lion’s mane,”&mdash;so nimble and numerous,
-that, to deal with them as they skip about, one must
-have the patience of the Italian peasant, who catches
-and kills, one by one, the diminutive animals that infest
-his person. The public has not forgotten the exhibition
-of “industrious fleas.” The Senate has witnessed
-the kindred exhibition of “industrious quibbles.”</p>
-
-<p>I can give specimens only, and out of many I take
-one which can never be forgotten. It is found in the
-Opinion of the Senator from West Virginia [Mr. <span class="smcap">Van
-Winkle</span>], which, from beginning to end, treats this impeachment
-as if it were a prosecution for sheep-stealing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
-in the police-court of Wheeling, and brings to the
-defence the unhesitating resources of a well-trained
-criminal lawyer. This famous Opinion, which is without
-parallel in the annals of jurisprudence, must always
-be admired as the marvel of technicality in a
-proceeding where technicality should not intrude. It
-stands by itself, solitary in originality. Others have
-been technical also, but the Senator from West Virginia
-is nothing else. Travelling from point to point,
-or rather seeing point after point skip before him, at
-last he lights upon one of the largest dimensions, which
-he boldly seizes and presents to the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>According to him, there is no allegation in the Articles
-that the order for the removal of Mr. Stanton was
-actually delivered to him, and, this being so, the Senator
-declares, that, “if there is evidence of a delivery
-to be found in the proceedings, it cannot be applicable
-to this Article, in which there is no charge or averment.”
-And this is gravely uttered on this transcendent
-occasion, when an indignant people has risen to
-demand judgment of a criminal ruler. The Article
-alleges that the order was “unlawfully issued,” and
-nobody doubts that its delivery was proved; but this
-is not enough, according to the Senator. I challenge
-history for another instance of equal absurdity in legal
-pretension. The case approaching it the closest is the
-famous extravagance of the Crown lawyer in the British
-Parliament, who, in reply to the argument of our
-fathers that they could not be taxed without representation,
-bravely insisted that they were represented,
-and sustained himself by declaring, that, under the
-Colonial charters, the lands were held in common socage
-as “of the manor of Greenwich in Kent,” and,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-as Greenwich was represented in Parliament, therefore
-the Colonies were represented there.<a name="FNanchor_211_211" id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> The pretension
-was perfect in form, but essentially absurd. The Senator
-from West Virginia outdoes even this climax of
-technicality. Other generations, as they read this great
-trial, with its accumulation of transgressions ending in
-the removal of Mr. Stanton, will note with wonder
-that a principal reason assigned for the verdict of Not
-Guilty was the failure of the Articles to allege that the
-order for removal was actually received, although there
-was a distinct allegation that it was “unlawfully issued,”
-with evidence that it was received, and no human
-being, not even the technical Senator, imagined that it
-was not. But how inconsistent with the Law of Impeachment
-already set forth,<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> which seeks substantial
-justice, and will not be arrested by any nice requirements!
-Lord Mansfield did not hesitate to condemn
-certain objections as “disgraceful subtilties.” What
-would he have said to the Senator from West Virginia?</p>
-
-<p>There is another invention, which has in its support
-some of the ablest of the apologists, like the
-Senator from Iowa [Mr. <span class="smcap">Grimes</span>], the Senator from
-Maine [Mr. <span class="smcap">Fessenden</span>], and the Senator from Illinois
-[Mr. <span class="smcap">Trumbull</span>]. It is said, that, as Mr. Stanton
-did not go out, therefore there was no removal, and
-therefore Andrew Johnson is not guilty. If the authority
-of names could change the unreal into the real,
-then this pretension might have weight. It is impossible
-that anything so essentially frivolous should b<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>e
-recognized in this proceeding. Such are the shifts of
-a cause to be defended only by shifts! Clearly the
-offence of the President was in the order “unlawfully
-issued,” and this was complete at the moment of its
-delivery. So far as depended upon him, Mr. Stanton
-was removed. This is the way in which the country
-saw the transaction, and the way also in which it will
-be recorded by history.</p>
-
-<p>But these same apologists, with curious inconsistency,
-when they come to consider the appointment of
-Adjutant-General Thomas, insist that there was vacancy
-in law, called by the Senator from Maine <i>legal</i>
-vacancy. But such vacancy could be only because
-there had been removal in law. There is no escape
-from this consequence. If there was removal in law,
-and there was no right to make it, the President was
-guilty of misdemeanor in law, and must take the consequences.</p>
-
-<p>It would be unprofitable to follow these inventions
-further. From these know all. In the face of Presidential
-pretensions inconsistent with constitutional liberty,
-the apologists have contributed their efforts to
-save the criminal by subtilties which can secure his
-acquittal in form only, as by a flaw in an indictment;
-and they have done this, knowing that he will be left
-in power to assert his prerogative, and that his acquittal
-will be a new letter of license. Nothing the skill
-of the lawyer could supply has been wanting. This
-learned profession lends to the criminal all the arts
-in which it excels, giving all to him and forgetting
-the Republic. Every doubt, every scruple, every technicality,
-every subtilty, every quibble, is arrayed on his
-side, when, by every rule of reason and patriotism, all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-should be arrayed on the side of our country. The
-Public Safety, which is the supreme law, is now imperilled.
-Are we not told by Blackstone that “the
-law is always ready to catch at anything in favor of
-Liberty”?<a name="FNanchor_213_213" id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> But these apologists catch at anything to
-save a usurper. In the early days of the Common Law
-there were technicalities in abundance, but they were
-for the maintenance of justice. On such was founded
-that extensive <i>ac etiam</i> jurisdiction of the King’s
-Bench, which gives occasion for the elegant Commentator
-to remark, that, however startling these may be
-at first to the student, “he will find them, upon further
-consideration, to be highly beneficial and useful.”<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>
-These generous fictions for the sake of justice must
-not be confounded with the devices by which justice
-is defeated.</p>
-
-<p>The trick of the apologists has been, by stringent
-application of technical rules, to shut out all except
-offences charged, and then, when stress was laid upon
-these offences, to cry out that at most they were only
-technical, and too trifling for impeachment. To satisfy
-lawyers, the House weakly declined to act on the
-bloody transgressions of two years, but sought to provide
-against the future. Like the Roman ambassadors,
-they traced a line about the offender, which he was not
-to pass except at peril. This was the line of law. At
-last he passed the line, openly, knowingly, defiantly;
-and now that he is arraigned, we are told that this
-plain offence is nothing, only a little technicality. One
-of the counsel at the bar, [Mr. <span class="smcap">Groesbeck</span>,] in a speech
-which showed how much feeling and talent could be
-given to a wrong side, exclaimed:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It almost shocks me to think that the President of the
-United States is to be dragged out of his office on these miserable
-little questions whether he could make an <i>ad interim</i>
-appointment for a single day.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Only by excluding the whole context and all its antecedents
-could the question be reduced to this trivial
-form; and yet, even thus reduced, it involved nothing
-less than the supremacy of the laws.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how such a question can be called
-“trifling.” Often a great cause is presented on a narrow
-issue: as when English liberty was argued on
-the claim of ship-money, which was a tax of a few
-shillings only. Behind this question, called trifling by
-the kingly apologists of that day, loftily stood the great
-cause of the People against Prerogative, being the same
-now pending before the Senate. That other cause, on
-which at a later day hung the destinies of this continent,
-was presented on a narrower issue still. There
-was a tax of threepence a pound on tea, which our
-fathers refused to pay. But behind this question, so
-trifling to the apologists of prerogative, as behind that
-of ship-money, stood loftily the same great cause. The
-first cost Charles the First his head. The second cost
-George the Third his colonies. If such a question can
-be disparaged as of small moment, then have the martyred
-dead in all times suffered in vain, then was the
-costly blood lavished for the suppression of our Rebellion
-an empty sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>Constantly we are admonished that we must confine
-ourselves to the Articles. Senators express a pious horror
-at looking outside the Articles, and insist upon directing
-attention to these only. Here the Senator from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
-Maine is very strong. It is “the specific offences
-charged,” and these only, that he sees. He will not
-look at anything else, although spread upon the record
-of the Senate, and filling the land with accumulated
-horrors. Of course such a system of exclusion sacrifices
-justice, belittles this trial, and forgets that essential latitude
-of inquiry which belongs to a political proceeding,
-having for its purpose expulsion from office only,
-and not punishment. It is easy, by looking at an object
-through the wrong end of an opera-glass, to find
-it dwarfed, contracted, and solitary. This is not the
-way to look at Nature; nor is it the way to look at
-Andrew Johnson. The great offender should be seen
-in the light of day, precisely as he is, nor more nor
-less, with nothing dwarfed, with no limits to the vision,
-and with all the immense background of thronging
-transgressions filling the horizon as far as eye can
-reach. The sight may ache; but how else can justice
-be done? A Senator who begins by turning these
-Articles into an inverted opera-glass takes the first step
-towards judgment of acquittal. Alas that the words
-of Burke are not true, when, asserting the comprehensive
-character of impeachment, he denied, that, under it,
-“they who have no hope at all in the justice of their
-cause can have any hope that by some subtilties of
-form, some mode of pleading, by something, in short,
-different from the merits of the cause, they may prevail.”<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a>
-The orator was right in thus indignantly dismissing
-all questions of pleading and all subtilties of
-form. This proceeding is of substance, and not of form.
-It is on the merits only that it can be judged.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> Anything
-short of this is the sacrifice of justice.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the case of this enormous criminal. Events
-belonging to history, enrolled in the records of the Senate,
-and familiar to the country, are deliberately shut
-out from view, while we are treated to legal niceties
-without end. The lawyers have made a painful record.
-Nothing ever occurred so much calculated to
-bring the profession into disrepute; for never before
-has been such a theatre where lawyers were actors.
-Their peculiarities have been exhibited. Here was a
-great question of justice, appealing to the highest sentiments,
-and involving the best interests of the country;
-but lawyers, instinctive for the dialectics of the
-profession, forgot everlasting truth, never to be forgotten
-with impunity. They started at once in full cry,
-and the quibble became to them what Dr. Johnson
-says it was to the great dramatist: “He follows it at
-all adventures; it is sure to lead him out of his way,
-and sure to ingulf him in the mire. It has some malignant
-power over his mind, and its fascinations are irresistible.…
-A quibble is the golden apple for which
-he will always turn aside from his career, or stoop from
-his elevation. A quibble, poor and barren as it is, gave
-him such delight that he was content to purchase it by
-the sacrifice of reason, propriety, and truth.”<a name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> In this
-Shakespearean spirit our lawyers have acted. They have
-pursued quibbles with the ardor of the great dramatist,
-and even now are chasing them through the Senate
-Chamber.</p>
-
-<p>Unhappily this is according to history, and our lawyers
-are not among the splendid exceptions. But there
-is reward for those who stand firm. Who does not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
-reverence the exalted magistrate of France, the Chancellor
-L’Hospital, who set the great example of rectitude
-and perfect justice? Who does not honor those
-lawyers of English history through whose toils Liberty
-was upheld? There was Selden, so wise and learned;
-Pym, so grand in statesmanship; Somers, who did so
-much to establish the best securities of the Constitution.
-Nor can I forget, at a later day, that greatest
-advocate, Erskine, who lent to the oppressed his wonderful
-eloquence; nor Mackintosh and Brougham, who
-carried into courts that enlarged intelligence and sympathetic
-nature which the profession of the law could
-not constrain. These are among the names that have
-already had their reward, above the artful crowd which
-in all times has come to the defence of prerogative.
-It is no new thing that we witness now. The lawyer
-in other days has been, as we know him, prone to the
-support of power, and ready with technical reasons.
-Whichever side he takes, he finds reasons plenty as
-pins. When free to choose, and not hired, his argument
-is the reflection of himself. All that he says is
-his own image. He takes sides on a law point according
-to his sentiments. Cultured in law, and with aptitude
-sharpened by its contests, too easily he finds a
-legal reason for an illegal judgment. Next to an outright
-mercenary, give me a lawyer to betray a great
-cause. Forms of law lend themselves to the betrayal.
-It is impossible to forget that the worst pretensions of
-prerogative, no matter how colossal, have been shouldered
-by lawyers. It was they who carried ship-money
-against the patriot exertions of Hampden; and in our
-country it was they who held up Slavery in all its
-terrible pretensions from beginning to end. What is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
-sometimes called “the legal mind” of Massachusetts,
-my own honored State, bent before the technical reasoning
-which justified the unutterable atrocities of the
-Fugitive Slave Bill, while the Supreme Court of the
-State adopted the crime from the bench. Alas that
-it should be so! When will lawyers and judges see
-that nothing short of justice can stand?</p>
-
-<h3>GUILTY ON ALL THE ARTICLES.</h3>
-
-<p>After this survey it is easy for me to declare how
-I shall vote. My duty is to vote, Guilty on all the
-Articles. If consistent with the rules of the Senate, I
-should vote, “Guilty of all, and infinitely more.”</p>
-
-<p>Not doubting that Mr. Stanton was protected by the
-Tenure-of-Office Act, and that he was believed to be
-so by the President, it is clear to me that the charges
-in the first and second Articles are sustained. These
-two go together. I have said already, in the course
-of this Opinion, that the appointment of Adjutant-General
-Thomas as Secretary of War <i>ad interim</i> was without
-authority of law, and under the circumstances a
-violation of the National Constitution. Accordingly
-the third Article is sustained.</p>
-
-<p>Then come what are called the Conspiracy Articles.
-Here also I am clear. Plainly there was an agreement
-between the President and Adjutant-General
-Thomas to obtain possession of the War Department,
-and prevent Mr. Stanton from continuing in office, and
-this embraced control of the mails and property belonging
-to the Department, all of which was contrary
-to the Tenure-of-Office Act. Intimidation and threats
-were certainly used by one of the conspirato<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>rs, and in
-the case of conspiracy the acts of one are the acts of
-all. The evidence that force was intended is considerable,
-and all this must be interpreted by the general
-character of the offender, his menacing speeches,
-and the long series of transgressions preceding the conspiracy.
-I cannot doubt that the conspiracy was to
-obtain possession of the War Department, peaceably, if
-possible, forcibly, if necessary. As such it was violation
-of law, demanding the judgment of the Senate.
-This disposes of the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh
-Articles.</p>
-
-<p>The eighth Article charges that Adjutant-General
-Thomas was appointed to obtain the control of moneys
-appropriated for the military service and the Department
-of War. All this would be incident to the
-control of the War Department. Controlling the latter,
-he would be able to wield the former. The evidence
-applicable to the one is also applicable to the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>The ninth Article opens a different question. This
-charges a wicked purpose to corrupt General Emory
-and draw him from his military duty. Not much
-passed between the President and the General; but
-it was enough to show the President playing the
-part of Iago. There was hypocritical profession of regard
-for the Constitution, while betraying it. Here
-again his past character explains his purpose beyond
-reasonable doubt.</p>
-
-<p>Then come the scandalous speeches, proved as set
-forth in the Articles, so that even the Senator from
-West Virginia [Mr. <span class="smcap">Van Winkle</span>] must admit that
-evidence and pleading concur. Here is no question
-of form. To my mind this is one of the strongest Articl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>es.
-On this alone, without anything else, I should
-deem it my duty to vote for expulsion from office. A
-young lieutenant, at the bottom of the ladder, if guilty
-of such things, would be cashiered promptly. A
-President, at the top of the ladder, with less excuse
-from the inexperience of early life, and with greater responsibility
-from the elevation he had reached, should
-be cashiered promptly also; and this is the object
-of impeachment. No person capable of such speeches
-should be allowed to govern this country. It is absurd
-to tolerate the idea. Besides being degraded, the
-country cannot be safe in such hands. The speeches
-are a revelation of himself, not materially different
-from well-known incidents; but they serve to exhibit
-him in his true character. They show him unfit for
-official trust. They were the utterances of a drunken
-man; and yet it does not appear that he was drunk.
-Now it is according to precedents of our history that
-a person disqualified by drunkenness shall be removed
-from office. This was the case of Pickering in 1804.
-But a sober man, whose conduct suggests drunkenness,
-is as bad at least as if he were drunk. Is he not
-worse? If without the explanation of drunkenness
-he makes such harangues, I cannot doubt that his unfitness
-for office becomes more evident, inasmuch as
-his deplorable condition is natural, and not abnormal.
-The drunken man has lucid intervals; but where is
-the assurance of a lucid interval for this perpetual
-offender? Derangement is with him the normal condition.</p>
-
-<p>It is astonishing to find that these infamous utterances,
-where ribaldry vies with blasphemy, have received
-a coat of varnish from the Senator from Maine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
-[Mr. <span class="smcap">Fessenden</span>], who pleads that they were not “official,”
-nor did they “violate the Constitution, or any provision
-of the Statute or Common Law, either in letter
-or spirit.” In presence of such apologies for revolting
-indecencies it is hard to preserve proper calmness. Were
-they not uttered? This is enough. The drunkenness of
-Andrew Johnson, when he took his oath as Vice-President,
-was not “official”; but who will say that it was
-not an impeachable offence? And who will say that
-these expectorations differ in vileness from that drunkenness?
-If they did not violate the National Constitution,
-or any provision of law, common or statute, as is
-apologetically alleged, I cannot doubt that they violated
-the spirit of all laws. And then we are further reminded
-by the apologist of that “freedom of speech” which is
-a constitutional right; and thus, in the name of a great
-right, we are to license utterances that shock the moral
-sense, and are a scandal to human nature. Spirit of
-John Milton! who pleaded so grandly for this great
-liberty, but would not allow it to be confounded with
-license, speak now to save this Republic from the shame
-of surrender to an insufferable pretension!</p>
-
-<p>The eleventh Article is the most comprehensive. In
-some respects it is an <i>omnium gatherum</i>. In one mass
-is the substance of other Articles, and something else
-beside. Here is an allegation of a speech by the President
-in which he denied that Congress was a Congress,
-and then, in pursuance of this denial, attempted to prevent
-the execution of the Tenure-of-Office Act, also of
-an important clause in the Army Appropriation Act,
-and also of the Reconstruction Act. Evidence followed,
-sustaining completely the compound allegation. The
-speech was made as set forth. The attempt to prevent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
-the execution of the Tenure-of-Office Act who can question?
-The attempt to corrupt General Emory is in
-evidence. The whole history of the country shows
-how earnest the President has been to arrest the Reconstruction
-Act, and generally the Congressional scheme
-of Reconstruction. The removal of Mr. Stanton was
-to be relieved of an impediment. I accept this Article
-in gross and in detail. It has been proved in all its
-parts.</p>
-
-<h3>CONCLUSION.</h3>
-
-<p>In the judgment which I now deliver I cannot hesitate.
-To my vision the path is clear as day. Never in
-history was there a great case more free from all just
-doubt. If Andrew Johnson is not guilty, then never
-was a political offender guilty; and if his acquittal is
-taken as a precedent, never can a political offender be
-found guilty. The proofs are mountainous. Therefore
-you are now determining whether impeachment shall
-continue a beneficent remedy in the National Constitution,
-or be blotted out forever, and the country handed
-over to the terrible process of revolution as its sole protection.
-If the milder process cannot be made effective
-now, when will it ever be? Under what influences? On
-what proofs? You wait for something. What? Is it
-usurpation? You have it before you, open, plain, insolent.
-Is it abuse of delegated power? That, too, you
-have in this offender, hardly less broad than the powers
-he has exercised. Is it violation of law? For more
-than two years he has set your laws at defiance; and
-when Congress, by special enactment, strove to constrain
-him, he broke forth in rebellion against the constitutional
-authority. Perhaps you ask still for something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-more. Is it a long catalogue of crime, where
-violence and corruption alternate, while loyal men are
-sacrificed and the Rebellion is lifted to its feet? That
-also is here.</p>
-
-<p>The apologists are prone to remind the Senate that
-they are acting under the obligation of an oath. So are
-the rest of us, even if we do not ostentatiously declare
-it. By this oath, which is the same for all, we are
-sworn to do “impartial justice.” It is justice, and this
-justice must be impartial. There must be no false
-weights, and no exclusion of proper weights. Therefore
-I cannot allow the jargon of lawyers on mere
-questions of form to sway the judgment against justice.
-Nor can I consent to shut out from view the long
-list of transgressions explaining and coloring the final
-act of defiance. To do so is not to render impartial justice,
-but to depart from this prescribed rule. The oath
-we have taken is poorly kept, if we forget the Public
-Safety in devices for the criminal. Above all else, now
-and forever, is that justice which “holds the scales of
-right with even hand.” In this sacred name, and in
-the name also of country, that great charity embracing
-so many other charities, I make this final protest
-against all questions of form at the expense of the Republic.</p>
-
-<p>Something also is said of the people, now watching
-our proceedings with patriotic solicitude, and it has
-been proclaimed that they are wrong to intrude their
-judgment. I do not think so. This is a political proceeding,
-which the people are as competent to decide
-as the Senate. They are the multitudinous jury, coming
-from no small vicinage, but from the whole country:
-for on this impeachment, involving the Public Safety,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
-the vicinage is the whole country. It is they who have
-sent us here, as their representatives, and in their name,
-to consult for the common weal. In nothing can we
-escape their judgment, least of all on a question like
-that before us. It is a mistake to suppose that the
-Senate only has heard the evidence. The people have
-heard it also, day by day, as it was delivered, and have
-carefully considered the case on its merits, properly dismissing
-all apologetic subtilties. It is for them to review
-what has been done. They are above the Senate,
-and will “rejudge its justice.” Thus it has been in
-other cases. The popular superstition which long surrounded
-the Supreme Court could not save that eminent
-tribunal from condemnation, amounting sometimes to
-execration, when, by an odious judgment, it undertook
-to uphold Slavery; and down to this day Congress has
-justly refused to place the bust of the Chief Justice
-pronouncing this judgment in the hall of the tribunal
-where he presided so long. His predecessors are all
-there in marble; no marble of Taney is there. The
-present trial, like that in the Supreme Court, is a battle
-with Slavery. Acquittal is another Dred Scott decision,
-and another chapter in the Barbarism of Slavery.
-How can Senators, discharging a political function only,
-expect that the voice of the people will be more tender
-for them than for a Chief Justice pronouncing judgment
-from the bench of the Supreme Court, in the exercise of
-judicial power? His fate we know. Nor learning, nor
-private virtues, nor venerable years could save him from
-justice. In the great pillory of history he stands, and
-there he must stand forever.</p>
-
-<p>The people cannot witness wi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>th indifference the abandonment
-of the great Secretary, who organized their
-armies against the Rebellion, and then organized victory.
-Following him gratefully through the trials of
-the war, they found new occasion for gratitude when
-he stood out alone against that wickedness which was
-lifted to power on the pistol of an assassin. During
-these latter days, while tyrannical prerogative invaded
-all, he has kept the bridge. When, at a similar crisis of
-English history, Hampden stood out against the power
-of the Crown, it is recorded by the contemporary historian,
-Clarendon, that “he grew the argument of all
-tongues; every man inquiring who and what he was,
-that durst at his own charge support the liberty and
-property of the kingdom, and rescue his country, as he
-thought, from being made a prey to the Court.”<a name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> Such
-things are also said with equal force of our Secretary.
-Nor is it forgotten that the Senate, by two solemn
-votes of more than two thirds, has twice instructed him
-to stay at the War Department, the President to the
-contrary notwithstanding. The people will not easily
-understand on what principle of Constitution, law, or
-morals, the Senate can twice instruct the Secretary to
-stay, and then, by another vote, deliberately surrender
-him a prey to Presidential tyranny. Talk of a somersault;
-talk of self-stultification: are not both here?
-God save me from participation in this disastrous
-wrong, and may He temper it kindly to our afflicted
-country!</p>
-
-<p>For myself, I cannot despair of the Republic. It is
-a life-boat, which wind and wave cannot sink; but it
-may suffer much and be beaten by storm. All this I
-clearly see before us, if you fail to displace an unfit
-commander, whose power is a peril and a shame.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alas for all the evil that must break upon the country,
-especially in the suffering South, as it goes forth
-that this bad man is confirmed in the prerogatives he
-has usurped!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for that peace and reconciliation, the longing of
-good men, now postponed!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for that security, so important to all, as the
-only foundation on which to build, politically or financially!
-This, too, is postponed. How can people found
-a government, or plant or buy, unless first secure?</p>
-
-<p>Alas for the Republic, degraded as never before,
-while the Whiskey Ring holds its orgy of corruption,
-and the Ku-Klux-Klan holds its orgy of blood!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for the hearts of the people, bruised to unutterable
-sadness, as they witness a cruel tyranny installed
-once more!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for that race so long oppressed, but at last redeemed
-from bondage, now plunged back into another
-hell of torment!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for the fresh graves already beginning to yawn,
-while violence, armed with your verdict, goes forth, like
-another Fury, and murder is quickened anew!</p>
-
-<p>Alas for the Unionists, white and black alike, who
-have trusted to our flag! You offer them a sacrifice to
-persecutors whose representative is before you for judgment.
-They are the last in my thoughts, as I pronounce
-that vote which is too feeble to save them from intolerable
-wrong and outrage. They are fellow-citizens of a
-common country, brethren of a common humanity, two
-commanding titles, both strong against the deed. I send
-them at this terrible moment the sympathy and fellowship
-of a heart that suffers with them. So just a cause
-cannot be lost. Meanwhile, may they find in themselves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
-and in the goodness of an overruling Providence,
-that refuge and protection which the Senate refuses to
-give!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONSTITUTIONAL_RESPONSIBILITY_OF_SENATORS_FOR" id="CONSTITUTIONAL_RESPONSIBILITY_OF_SENATORS_FOR"></a>CONSTITUTIONAL RESPONSIBILITY OF SENATORS FOR
-THEIR VOTES IN CASES OF IMPEACHMENT.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Resolutions in the Senate, June 3, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>June 3d, Mr. Sumner submitted the following Resolutions, which
-were read and ordered to be printed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">Whereas a pretension has been put forth to the
-effect that the vote of a Senator on an impeachment
-is so far different in character from his vote on
-any other question that the people have no right to
-criticize or consider it; and whereas such pretension, if
-not discountenanced, is calculated to impair that freedom
-of judgment which belongs to the people on all
-that is done by their representatives: Therefore, in order
-to remove all doubts on this question, and to declare
-the constitutional right of the people in cases of impeachment,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>1. <i>Resolved</i>, That, even assuming that the Senate is a
-Court in the exercise of judicial power, Senators cannot
-claim that their votes are exempt from the judgment of
-the people; that the Supreme Court, when it has undertaken
-to act on questions essentially political in character,
-has not escaped this judgment; that the decisions
-of this high tribunal in support of Slavery have been
-openly condemned; that the memorable utterance known
-as the Dred Scott decision was indignantly denounced
-and repudiated, while the Chief Justice who pronounced
-it became a mark for censure and rebuke; and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-plainly the votes of Senators on an impeachment cannot
-enjoy an immunity from popular judgment which has
-been denied to the Supreme Court, with Taney as Chief
-Justice.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Resolved</i>, That the Senate is not at any time a
-Court invested with judicial power, but that it is always
-a Senate with specific functions declared by the Constitution;
-that, according to express words, “the judicial
-power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme
-Court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress
-may from time to time ordain and establish,” while it is
-further provided that “the Senate shall have the sole
-power to try all impeachments,” thus positively making
-a distinction between the judicial power and the power
-to try impeachments; that the Senate, on an impeachment,
-does not exercise any portion of the judicial power,
-but another and different power, exclusively delegated
-to the Senate, having for its sole object removal from
-office and disqualification therefor; that, by the terms
-of the Constitution, there may be, after conviction on
-impeachment, a further trial and punishment “according
-to law,” thus making a discrimination between a
-proceeding by impeachment and a proceeding “according
-to law”; that the proceeding by impeachment is not
-“according to law,” and is not attended by legal punishment,
-but is of an opposite character, and from beginning
-to end political, being instituted by a political
-body on account of political offences, being conducted
-before another political body having political power
-only, and ending in a judgment which is political only;
-and therefore the vote of a Senator on impeachment,
-though different in form, is not different in responsibility,
-from his vote on any other political question;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-nor can any Senator, on such an occasion, claim immunity
-from that just accountability which the representative
-at all times owes to his constituents.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Resolved</i>, That Senators in all that they do are under
-the constant obligation of an oath, binding them to the
-strictest rectitude; that on an impeachment they take
-a further oath, according to the requirement of the Constitution,
-which says, Senators, when sitting to try impeachment,
-“shall be on oath or affirmation”; that this
-simple requirement was never intended to change the
-character of the Senate as a political body, and cannot
-have any such operation; and therefore Senators,
-whether before or after the supplementary oath, are
-equally responsible to the people for their votes,&mdash;it
-being the constitutional right of the people at all times
-to sit in judgment on their representatives.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="VALIDITY_AND_NECESSITY_OF_FUNDAMENTAL" id="VALIDITY_AND_NECESSITY_OF_FUNDAMENTAL"></a>VALIDITY AND NECESSITY OF FUNDAMENTAL
-CONDITIONS ON STATES.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech in the Senate, June 10, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The Senate having under consideration the bill to admit the States
-of North Carolina, South Carolina, Louisiana, Georgia, and Alabama to
-representation in Congress, Mr. Sumner said:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. PRESIDENT,&mdash;What I have to say to-day
-will be confined to a single topic. I shall speak
-of <i>the validity and necessity of fundamental conditions
-on the admission of States into the body of the Nation</i>,&mdash;passing
-in review objections founded on the asserted
-equality of States, and also on a misinterpretation of
-the power to determine the “qualifications” of electors,
-and that other power to make “regulations” for the
-election of certain officers. Here I shall encounter the
-familiar pretensions of another time, no longer put forth
-by defiant Slave-Masters, but retailed by conscientious
-Senators, who think they are supporting the Constitution,
-when they are only echoing the voice of Slavery.</p>
-
-<p>Fundamental conditions on the admission of States
-are older than our Constitution; for they appear in
-the Ordinance for the vast Territory of the Northwest,
-adopted anterior to the Constitution itself. In that
-Ordinance there are various conditions, of perpetual
-obligation, as articles of compact. Among these is the
-famous prohibition of Slavery. In the early days of our
-Nation nobody thought of questioning the validity of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-these conditions. Scattered efforts were made to carry
-Slavery into some portions of this region, and unquestionably
-there were sporadic cases, as in Massachusetts
-itself; but the Ordinance stood firm and unimpeached.</p>
-
-<p>One assurance of its authority will be found in the
-historic fact, that in 1820, on the admission of Missouri
-as a State of the Union, there was a further
-provision that in all territory of the United States
-north of 36° 30´ north latitude, “Slavery and involuntary
-servitude, otherwise than in the punishment of
-crimes, whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted,
-shall be and is hereby <span class="smcapuc">FOREVER</span> <i>prohibited</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a>
-This was the famous Missouri Compromise. Missouri
-was admitted as a State without any restriction of
-Slavery, but all the outlying territory west and north
-was subjected to this condition <i>forever</i>. It will be
-observed that the condition was in no respect temporary,
-but that it was “forever,”&mdash;thus outlasting any
-territorial government, and constituting a fundamental
-law, irrepealable through all time. Surely this condition,
-perpetual in form, would not have been introduced,
-had it been supposed to be inoperative,&mdash;had
-it been regarded as a sham, and not a reality. This
-statute, therefore, testifies to the judgment of Congress
-at that time.</p>
-
-<p>It was only at a later day, and at the demand of
-Slavery, that the validity of the great Ordinance of
-Freedom was called in question. Mr. Webster, in his
-memorable debate with Mr. Hayne in 1830, vindicated
-this measure in language worthy of the cause and of
-himself, giving to it a palm among the laws by which
-civilization has been advanced, and asserting its e<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>nduring
-character:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We are accustomed, Sir, to praise the lawgivers of antiquity;
-we help to perpetuate the fame of Solon and Lycurgus;
-but I doubt whether one single law of any lawgiver, ancient
-or modern, has produced effects of more distinct, marked, and
-lasting character than the Ordinance of 1787.… It fixed
-forever the character of the population in the vast regions
-northwest of the Ohio, by excluding from them involuntary
-servitude. It impressed on the soil itself, while it was yet a
-wilderness, an incapacity to sustain any other than freemen.
-<i>It laid the interdict against personal servitude in original
-compact, not only deeper than all local law, but deeper also
-than all local constitutions.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_219_219" id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Words of greater beauty and power cannot be found
-anywhere in the writings or speeches of our American
-orator. It would be difficult to declare the perpetual
-character of this original interdict more completely.
-The language is as picturesque as truthful. Deeper
-than all local law, deeper than all local constitutions,
-is this fundamental law; and such is its essential quality,
-that the soil which it protects cannot sustain any
-other than freemen. Of such a law the orator naturally
-proceeded to say:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“We see its consequences at this moment; and we shall
-never cease to see them, perhaps, while the Ohio shall flow.
-<i>It was a great and salutary measure of prevention.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_220_220" id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>In these last words the value of such a law is declared.
-It is for <i>prevention</i>, which is an essential object of all
-law. In this case it is the more important, as the evil
-to be prevented is the most comprehensive of all.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, on the authority of Mr. Webster, in ha<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>rmony
-with reason also, do I say, that this original
-condition was not only perpetual in character, but beneficent
-also. It was beneficence in perpetuity.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Chase, in his admirable argument before the Supreme
-Court of the United States, in the <i>Vanzandt</i> case,
-is hardly behind Mr. Webster in homage to this Ordinance,
-or in a sense of its binding character. In his
-opinion it is a compact of perpetual obligation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“I know not that history records a sublimer act than
-this. The United American States, having just brought their
-perilous struggle for freedom and independence to a successful
-issue, proceeded to declare the terms and conditions on
-which their vacant territory might be settled and organized
-into States; and these terms were, not tribute, not render
-of service, not subordination of any kind, but <i>the perpetual
-maintenance of the genuine principles of American Liberty,
-declared to be incompatible with Slavery</i>; and that these
-principles might be inviolably maintained, they were made
-<i>the articles of a solemn covenant</i> between the original States,
-then the proprietors of the territory and responsible for its
-future destiny, and the people and the States who were to
-occupy it. Every settler within the territory, by the very
-act of settlement, became a party to this <i>compact, bound
-by its perpetual obligations</i>, and entitled to the full benefit
-of its excellent provisions for himself and his posterity. No
-subsequent act of the original States could affect it, without
-his consent. <i>No act of his, nor of the people of the
-territory, nor of the States established within it, could affect
-it, without the consent of the original States.</i>”<a name="FNanchor_221_221" id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>According to these words, which I am sure would
-not be disowned by the present Chief Justice of the
-United States, the Ordinance is a sublime act, having
-for its object nothing less than <i>the perpetual m<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>aintenance
-of the genuine principles of American Liberty</i>. In
-form it is a compact, unalterable except by the consent
-of the parties, and therefore <i>forever</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If anything in our history is settled by original
-authority, supported by tradition and time, it is the
-binding character of the Ordinance for the Government
-of the Northwest Territory. Nobody presumed to call
-it in question, until at last Slavery flung down its
-challenge to everything that was settled for Freedom.
-The great Ordinance, with its prohibition of Slavery,
-was not left unassailed.</p>
-
-<p>All this makes a strange, eventful passage of history.
-The enlightened civilization of the age was beginning
-to be felt against Slavery, when its representatives
-turned madly round to confront the angel of
-light. The madness showed itself by degrees. Point
-by point it made itself manifest in Congress. The
-Slave-Masters forgot morals, history, and the Constitution.
-Their manifold pretensions resolved themselves
-into three, in which the others were absorbed: first,
-that Slavery, instead of an evil to be removed, was a
-blessing to be preserved; secondly, that the right of
-petition could not be exercised against Slavery; thirdly,
-that, in all that concerns Slavery, State Rights were
-everything, while National Rights were nothing. These
-three pretensions entered into Congress, like so many
-devils, and possessed it. The first broke forth in eulogies
-of Slavery, and even in blandishments for the
-Slave-Trade. The second broke forth in the “Atherton
-Gag,” under which the honest, earnest petitions from the
-national heart against Slavery, even in the District of
-Columbia, were tabled without reference, and the great
-Right of Petition, promised by the Constitution, became<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
-a dead letter. The third, beginning with the denial
-of the power of the Nation to affix upon new States
-the perpetual condition of Human Rights, broke forth
-in the denial of the power of the Nation over Slavery
-in the Territories or anywhere else, even within the
-national jurisdiction. These three pretensions all had
-a common origin, and one was as offensive and unreasonable
-as another. The praise of Slavery and the
-repudiation of the Right of Petition by the enraged
-Slave-Masters were not worse than the pretension of
-State Rights against the power of the Nation to prohibit
-Slavery in the national jurisdiction, or to affix
-righteous conditions upon new States.</p>
-
-<p>The first two pretensions have disappeared. These
-two devils have been cast out. Nobody dares to praise
-Slavery; nobody dares to deny the Right of Petition.
-The third pretension has disappeared only so far as it
-denied the power of the Nation over Slavery in the
-Territories; and we are still doomed to hear, in the
-name of State Rights, the old cry against conditions
-upon new States. This devil is not yet entirely cast
-out. Pardon me, if I insist upon putting the national
-rights over the Territories and the national rights over
-new States before their admission in the same category.
-These rights not only go together, but they are
-one and the same. They are not merely companion
-and cognate, but they are identical. The one is necessarily
-involved in the other. Prohibition in the Territories
-is prolonged in conditions upon new States.
-The Ordinance of 1787, which is the great example,
-asserts the <i>perpetuity</i> of all its prohibitions; and this
-is the rule alike of law and statesmanship. Vain were
-its prohibitions, if they fell dead in presence of State<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
-Rights. The pretension is too irrational. The Missouri
-Act takes up the rule asserted in the Ordinance,
-and declares that in certain Territories Slavery shall
-be prohibited <i>forever</i>. A territorial existence terminating
-in State Rights is a short-lived <i>forever</i>. Only
-by recognizing the power of the Nation over the States
-formed out of the Territory can this <i>forever</i> have a
-meaning above the prattle of childhood or the vaunt
-of Bombastes.</p>
-
-<p>The whole pretension against the proposed condition
-is in the name of State Rights; but it cannot be
-doubted that it may be traced directly to Slavery.
-Shall the pretension be allowed to prevail, now that
-Slavery has disappeared? The principal has fallen;
-why preserve the incident? The wrong guarded by
-this pretension has yielded; why should not the pretension
-yield also? Asserting, as I now do, the validity
-and necessity of the proposed condition, I would
-not seem indifferent to the rights of the States in those
-proper spheres appointed for them. Unquestionably
-States have rights under the Constitution, which we
-are bound to respect,&mdash;nay, more, which are a source
-of strength and advantage. It is through the States
-that the people everywhere govern themselves, and
-our Nation is saved from a central domination. Here
-is the appointed function of the States. They supply
-the machinery of local self-government for the convenience
-of life, while they ward off the attempts of
-an absorbing imperialism. <i>But there can be no State
-Rights against Human Rights.</i> Because a State, constituting
-part of a Nation dedicated to Human Rights,
-may govern itself and supply the machinery of local
-self-government, <i>it does not follow that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> such a State may
-deny Human Rights within its borders</i>. State Rights,
-when properly understood, are entirely consistent with
-the maintenance of Human Rights by the Nation. The
-State is not humbled, when it receives the mandate of
-the Nation to do no wrong; nor can the Nation err, when
-it asserts everywhere within its borders the imperialism
-of Human Rights. Against this righteous supremacy
-all pretensions of States must disappear, as darkness
-before the King of Day.</p>
-
-<p>The song of State Rights has for its constant refrain
-the asserted <i>Equality of the States</i>. Is it not strange
-that words so constantly employed as a cover for pretensions
-against Human Rights cannot be found in the
-Constitution? It is true, that, by the Laws of Nations,
-all sovereign States, great or small, are equal; but this
-principle has been extended without authority to States
-created by the Nation and made a part of itself. There
-is but one active provision in the Constitution which
-treats the States as equal, and this provision shows how
-this very Equality may be waived. Every State, large
-or small, has two Senators, and the Constitution places
-this Equality of States under its safeguard by providing
-that “no State, <i>without its consent</i>, shall be deprived of
-its <i>equal suffrage</i> in the Senate.” But this very text
-contains what lawyers might call a “negative pregnant,”
-being a negation of the right to change this rule,
-with an affirmation that it may be changed. The State,
-<i>with its consent</i>, may be deprived of its equal suffrage
-in the Senate. And this is the whole testimony of the
-Constitution to that Equality of States which is now
-asserted in derogation of all compacts or conditions. It
-is startling to find how constantly the obvious conclusions
-from the text of the Constitution have been overlooked.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
-Even in the contemplation of the Constitution
-itself, a State may waive its equal suffrage in the Senate,
-so as to be represented by a single Senator only.
-Of course, all this must depend on its own consent,
-in concurrence with the Nation. Nothing is said of
-the manner in which this consent may be given by the
-State or accepted by the Nation. But if this important
-limitation can in any way be made the subject of agreement
-or compact, pray, Sir, where will you stop? What
-other power or prerogative of the State may not be limited
-also, especially where there is nothing in the Constitution
-against any such limitation? All this I adduce
-simply by way of illustration. There is no question
-now of any limitation, in the just sense of this term. A
-condition in favor of Human Rights cannot be a limitation
-on a State or on a citizen.</p>
-
-<p>If we look further, and see how the Senatorial equality
-of States obtained recognition in the Constitution,
-we shall find new occasion to admire that facility which
-has accorded to this concession so powerful an influence;
-and here the record is explicit. The National
-Convention had hardly assembled, when the small States
-came forward with their pretensions. Not content with
-suffrage in the Senate, they insisted upon equal suffrage
-in the House of Representatives. They had in their
-favor the rule of the Continental Congress, and also of
-the Confederation, under which each State enjoyed one
-vote. Assuming to be independent sovereignties, they
-had likewise in their favor the rule of International Law.
-Against these pretensions the large States pleaded the
-simple rule of justice; and here the best minds concurred.
-On this head the debates of the Convention are
-interesting. At an early day we find Mr. Madison moving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
-“that the equality of suffrage established by the
-Articles of Confederation ought not to prevail in the
-<i>National</i> Legislature.”<a name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> This proposition, so consistent
-with reason, was seconded by Gouverneur Morris, and,
-according to the report, “being generally relished,” was
-about being adopted, when Delaware, by one of her
-voices on the floor, protested, saying, that, in case it were
-adopted, “it might become the duty of her deputies to
-retire from the Convention.”<a name="FNanchor_223_223" id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> Such was the earliest cry
-of Secession. Gouverneur Morris, while observing that
-the valuable assistance of those members could not be
-lost without real concern, gave his testimony, that “the
-change proposed was so fundamental an article in a
-<i>National</i> Government that it could not be dispensed
-with.”<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> Mr. Madison followed, saying, very justly, that,
-“whatever reason might have existed for the equality of
-suffrage when the Union was a Federal one <i>among sovereign
-States</i>, it must cease when a <i>National</i> government
-should be put into the place.”<a name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> Franklin, in similar
-spirit, reminded the Convention that the equal suffrage
-of the States “was submitted to originally by Congress
-under a conviction of its impropriety, inequality, and
-injustice.”<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> This is strong language from the wise old
-man, but very true. Elbridge Gerry, after depicting the
-States as “intoxicated with the idea of their sovereignty,”
-said that “the injustice of allowing each State an
-equal vote was long insisted on. He voted for it; but
-it was against his judgment, and under the pressure of
-public danger and the obstinacy of the lesser States.”<a name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a>
-Against these overwhelming words of Madison, Morris,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
-Franklin, and Gerry, the delegates from Delaware pleaded
-nothing more than that, without an equal suffrage, “Delaware
-would have about one ninetieth for its share in
-the general councils, whilst Pennsylvania and Virginia
-would possess one third of the whole”;<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> and New Jersey,
-by her delegates, pleaded also “that it would not
-be safe for Delaware to allow Virginia sixteen times as
-many votes” as herself.<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> On the part of the small States,
-the effort was for power disproportioned to size. On the
-part of the large States there was a protest against the
-injustice and inequality of these pretensions, especially
-in a government national in its character. The question
-was settled by the great compromise of the Constitution,
-according to which representation in the House
-of Representatives was proportioned to population, while
-each State was entitled to an equal suffrage in the Senate.
-To this extent the small States prevailed, and the
-Senate ever since has testified to the equality of States;
-or rather, according to the language of the “Federalist”
-on this very point, it has been “a palladium to the residuary
-sovereignty of the States.”<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> Thus, by the pertinacity
-of the small States, was this concession extorted
-from the Convention, in defiance of every argument of
-justice and equity, and contrary to the judgment of the
-best minds; and now it is exalted into a universal rule
-of Constitutional Law, before which justice and equity
-must hide their faces.</p>
-
-<p>This protracted and recurring conflict in the Convention
-is compendiously set forth by our great authority,
-Judge Story, when he says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It constituted one of the great struggles between the
-large and the small States, which was constantly renewed in
-the Convention, and impeded it in every step of its progress
-in the formation of the Constitution. The struggle applied
-to the organization of each branch of the Legislature. The
-small States insisted upon an equality of vote and representation
-in each branch, and the large States upon a vote in proportion
-to their relative importance and population.…
-The small States at length yielded the point as to an equality
-of representation in the House, and acceded to a representation
-proportionate to the Federal numbers. But they insisted
-upon an equality in the Senate. To this the large
-States were unwilling to assent, and for a time the States
-were on this point equally divided.”<a name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This summary is in substantial harmony with my
-own abstract of the debates. I present it because I
-would not seem in any way to overstate the case. And
-here let me add most explicitly, that I lend no voice
-to any complaint against the small States; nor do I
-suggest any change in the original balances of our system.
-I insist only that the victory achieved in the
-Constitution by the small States shall not be made
-the apology for a pretension inconsistent with Human
-Rights. And now, for the sake of a great cause, the
-truth must be told.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be disguised that this pretension has another
-origin, outside the Constitution. This is in the
-Ordinance of 1787, where it is positively provided that
-any State formed out of the Northwest Territory “shall
-be admitted, by its delegates, into the Congress of the
-United States <i>on an equal footing with the original States
-in all respects whatever</i>.” Next after the equal suf<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>frage
-in the Senate stands this provision with its talismanic
-phrase, <i>equal footing</i>. New States are to be admitted
-on an <i>equal footing</i> with the original States in all respects
-whatever. This language is strong; but nobody
-can doubt that it must be read in the light of the Ordinance
-where it appears. Read in this light, its meaning
-cannot be questioned. By the Ordinance there are no
-less than six different articles of compact, “forever unalterable,
-unless by common consent,” constituting so
-many perpetual safeguards: the first perpetuating religious
-liberty; the second perpetuating <i>Habeas Corpus</i>,
-trial by jury, and judicial proceedings according to the
-course of the Common Law; the third perpetuating
-schools and the means of education; the fourth perpetuating
-the title of the United States in the soil without
-taxation, the freedom of the rivers as highways, and
-the liability of the people for a just proportion of the
-national debt; the fifth perpetuating the right of the
-States to be admitted into the Union on an <i>equal footing</i>
-with the original States; and then, next in order,
-the sixth perpetuating freedom,&mdash;being that immortal
-condition which is the golden bough of this mighty oak,&mdash;that
-“there shall be neither slavery nor involuntary
-servitude in the said Territory.” Now it is clear that
-subjection to these perpetual conditions was not considered
-in any respect inconsistent with that “equal footing”
-which was stipulated. Therefore, even assuming
-that States, when admitted, shall be on an “equal footing”
-with others, there can be no hindrance to any conditions
-by Congress kindred to those which were the
-glory of the Ordinance.</p>
-
-<p>To all who, borrowing a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> catchword from Slavery, assert
-the Equality of States in derogation of fundamental
-conditions, I oppose the plain text of the Constitution,
-which contains no such rule, except in a single instance,
-and there the equality may be waived; and I oppose
-also the Ordinance of 1787, which, while requiring that
-new States shall be admitted on an “equal footing”
-with other States, teaches by its own great example
-that this requirement is not inconsistent with conditions
-of all kinds, and especially in favor of Human
-Rights. The Equality of States on the lips of Slave-Masters
-was natural, for it was a plausible defence
-against the approaches of Freedom; but this unauthorized
-phrase, which has deceived so many, must be rejected
-now, so far at least as it is employed against
-the Equal Rights of All. As one of the old garments
-of Slavery, it must be handed to the flames.</p>
-
-<p>From this review it is easy to see that we approach
-the present question without any impediment or constraint
-in the Constitution. Not a provision, not a
-clause, not a sentence, not a phrase in the Constitution
-can be made an apology even for the present
-objection,&mdash;absolutely nothing; and here I challenge
-reply. Without any support in the Constitution, its
-partisans borrow one of the worst pretensions of Slavery,
-and utter it now as it was uttered by Slave-Masters.
-Once more we hear the voice of Slavery crying
-out in familiar tones, that conditions cannot be imposed
-on new States. Alas that Slavery, which we thought
-had been slain, is not entirely dead! Again it stalks
-into this Chamber, like the majesty of buried Denmark,&mdash;“in
-the same figure, like the king that’s dead,”&mdash;and
-then, like this same ghost, it cries out, “Swear!” and
-then again, “Swear!”&mdash;and Senators pledged to Freedom
-take up the old pretension and swear it anew. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
-myself, I insist not only that Slavery shall be buried
-out of sight, but that all its wretched pretensions hostile
-to Human Rights shall be buried with it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The conditions upon new States are of two classes:
-<i>first</i>, those that <i>may</i> be required; <i>secondly</i>, those that
-<i>must</i> be required.</p>
-
-<p>The first comprehends those conditions which the
-Nation may consider it advisable to require, before
-admitting a new member into the partnership of government.
-The Constitution, in positive words, leaves
-to the Nation a discretion with regard to the admission
-of new States. The words are: “New States <i>may</i>
-be admitted by the Congress into the Union,”&mdash;thus
-plainly recognizing a latitude under which any conditions
-not inconsistent with the Constitution may be required,
-as by a firm on the admission of a new partner.
-All this is entirely reasonable; but I do not stop to
-dwell on it, for the condition which I have at heart
-does not come under this head.</p>
-
-<p>A fundamental condition in favor of Human Rights
-is of that essential character that it <i>must</i> be required.
-Not to require it is to abandon a plain duty; so it
-seems to me. I speak with all deference to others,
-but I cannot see it otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution declares that “the United States
-shall guaranty to every State in this Union <i>a republican
-form of government</i>.” These are grand words,
-perhaps the grandest in the Constitution, hardly excepting
-the Preamble, which is so full of majestic
-meaning and such a fountain of national life. Kindred
-to the Preamble is this supreme obligation imposed
-on the United States to guaranty a republican<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
-government. There it is. You cannot avoid this duty.
-Called to its performance, you must supply a practical
-definition of a republican government. This again you
-cannot avoid. By your oaths, by all the responsibilities
-of your position, you must say what in your judgment
-is a republican government, and you must so decide
-as not to discredit our fathers and not to give an unworthy
-example to mankind. Happily the definition
-is already of record in our history. Our fathers gave
-it to us, as amid the thunders of Sinai, when they
-put forth their Declaration of Independence. There it
-stands in the very front of our Great Charter, embodied
-in two simple, self-evident truths,&mdash;first, that all men
-are equal in rights, and, secondly, that all just government
-is founded only on the consent of the governed,&mdash;the
-two together making an axiomatic definition
-which proves itself. Its truth is like the sun; blind
-is he who cannot see it. And this is the definition
-bequeathed as a freehold by our fathers. Though often
-assailed, even by Senators, it is none the less true. So
-have I read of savages who shot their arrows at the
-sun. Clearly, then, that is a republican government
-where all have equal rights and participate in the government.
-I know not if anything need be added; I
-am sure that nothing can be subtracted.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution itself sets the example of imposing
-conditions upon the States. Positively it says, no State
-shall enter into any treaty, alliance, or confederation;
-no State shall grant letters of marque and reprisal; no
-State shall coin money; no State shall emit bills of
-credit. Again it says, no State shall, without the consent
-of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, or keep troops
-or ships of war in time of peace. All these are conditions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
-in the text of the Constitution so plain and intelligible
-as to require no further elucidation. To repeat
-them on the admission of a State would be superfluous.
-It is different, however, with that highest condition of
-all, that the State shall be republican. This requires
-repetition and elucidation, so as to remove all doubt of
-its application, and to vitalize it by declaring what is
-meant by a republican government.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Here I might close this argument; but there are two
-hostile pretensions which must be exposed: the first
-founded on a false interpretation of “qualifications,”
-being nothing less than the impossible assumption, that,
-because the States may determine the “qualifications”
-of electors, therefore they can make color a criterion
-of the electoral franchise; and the second founded on
-a false interpretation of the asserted power of the
-States “to regulate suffrage,” being nothing less than
-the impossible assumption that under the power to
-regulate suffrage the rights of a whole race may be
-annihilated. These two pretensions are of course derived
-from Slavery. They are hatched from the eggs
-that the cuckoo bird has left behind. Strange that
-Senators will hatch them!</p>
-
-<p>1. By the Constitution it is provided that “the electors
-in each State shall have the <i>qualifications</i> requisite
-for electors of the most numerous branch of the
-State Legislature.” On this clause Senators build the
-impossible pretension that a State cannot be interrupted
-in its disfranchisement of a race. Here is the
-argument: Because a State may determine the
-<i>qualifications</i> of electors, <i>therefore</i> it may deprive a whole
-race of equal rights and of participation i<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>n the Government.
-Logically speaking, here are most narrow
-premises for the widest possible conclusion. On the
-mere statement, the absurdity is so unspeakable as to
-recall the kindred pretension of Slavery, that, because
-commerce is lawful, therefore commerce in human flesh
-is lawful also. If the consequences were not so offensive,
-this “argal” might be handed over to consort
-with that of the Shakespearean grave-digger. But the
-argument is not merely preposterous, it is insulting to
-the human understanding, and a blow at human nature
-itself. If I use strong language, it is because such
-a proclamation of tyranny requires it. Admitting that
-the States may determine the “qualifications” of electors,
-what then? Obviously it must be according to the
-legitimate meaning of this word. And here, besides
-reason and humanity, two inexhaustible fountains, we
-have two other sources of authority: first, the Constitution,
-in which the word appears, and, secondly, the dictionaries
-of the English language, out of both of which
-we must condemn the intolerable pretension.</p>
-
-<p>The Constitution, where we find this word, follows the
-Declaration of Independence, and refuses to recognize
-any distinction of color. Search, and you will confess
-that there is no word of “color” in its text; nor is there
-anything there on which to found any disfranchisement
-of a race. The “qualifications” of different officers, as
-President, Vice-President, Senators, and Representatives,
-are named; but “color” is not among these. The Constitution,
-like the Ten Commandments and the Beatitudes,
-embraces all alike within its mandates and all
-alike within its promises. There are none who must
-not obey it; there can be none who may not claim
-its advantages. By what title do you exclude a rac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>e?
-The Constitution gives no such title; you can only find
-it in yourselves. The fountain is pure; it is only out
-of yourselves that the waters of bitterness proceed.</p>
-
-<p>The dictionaries of our language are in harmony with
-the Constitution. Look at “Qualification” in Webster
-or Worcester, the two best authorities of our time, and
-you will find that the word means “fitness,” “capability,”
-“accomplishment,” “the condition of being qualified”;
-but it does not mean “color.” It embraces age, residence,
-character, education, and the payment of taxes,&mdash;in
-short, all those conditions which, when honestly
-administered, are in the nature of <i>regulation</i>, not of <i>disfranchisement</i>.
-The English dictionaries most used by
-the framers of the Constitution were Bailey and Johnson.
-According to Bailey, who was the earliest, this
-important word is thus defined:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“(1.) <i>That which fits any person or thing for any particular
-purpose.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“(2.) <i>A particular faculty or endowment, an accomplishment.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">According to Johnson, who is the highest authority, it
-is thus defined:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“(1.) <i>That which makes any person or thing fit for anything.</i>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Example.</span>&mdash;“It is in the power of the prince to make
-piety and virtue become the fashion, if he would make them
-necessary <i>qualifications</i> for preferment.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Swift.</span>”</p>
-
-<p>“(2.) <i>Accomplishment.</i>”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Example.</span>&mdash;“Good <i>qualifications</i> of mind enable a magistrate
-to perform his duty, and tend to create a public esteem
-of him.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Atterbury.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>By<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> these definitions this word means “fitness,” or
-“accomplishment,” and, according to the well-chosen
-examples from Swift and Atterbury, it means qualities
-like “piety” and “virtue,” or like faculties “of mind,”
-all of which are more or less within the reach of every
-human being. But it is impossible to extend this list so
-as to make “color” a quality,&mdash;absolutely impossible.
-Color is a physical condition affixed by the God of Nature
-to a large portion of the human race, and insurmountable
-in its character. Age, education, residence,
-property,&mdash;all these are subject to change; but the
-Ethiopian cannot change his skin. On this last distinctive
-circumstance I take my stand. <i>An insurmountable
-condition is not a qualification, but a disfranchisement.</i>
-Admit that a State may determine the
-“qualifications” of electors, it cannot, under this authority,
-arbitrarily exclude a whole race.</p>
-
-<p>Try this question by examples. Suppose South Carolina,
-where the blacks are numerous, should undertake
-to exclude the whites from the polls on account of
-“color”; would you hesitate to arrest this injustice?
-You would insist that a government sanctioning such
-a denial of rights, under whatever pretension, could
-not be republican. Suppose another State should gravely
-declare that <i>all with black eyes</i> should be excluded
-from the polls, and still another should gravely declare
-that <i>all with black hair</i> should be excluded from the
-polls, I am sure that you would find it difficult to restrain
-the mingled derision and indignation which such
-a pretension must excite. But this fable pictures your
-conduct. All this is now gravely done by States; and
-Senators gravely insist that such exclusion is proper in
-determining the “qualifications” of electors.</p>
-
-<p>2. Like unto the pretension founded on a misi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>nterpretation
-of “qualifications” is that other founded on
-a misinterpretation of the asserted power of a State
-to make “regulations.” Listen to this pretension. Assuming
-that a State may <i>regulate</i> the elections without
-the intervention of Congress, it is insisted that it
-may disfranchise a race. Because a State may regulate
-the elective franchise, <i>therefore</i> it may destroy this
-franchise. Surely it is one thing to regulate, and quite
-another thing to destroy. The power to regulate cannot
-involve any such conclusion of tyranny. To every
-such wretched result, howsoever urged, there is one
-sufficient reply,&mdash;<i>Non sequitur</i>.</p>
-
-<p>According to the Constitution, “the <i>times, places, and
-manner</i> of holding elections for Senators and Representatives
-shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature
-thereof; but the Congress may at any time by
-law make or alter such <i>regulations</i>, except as to the
-places of choosing Senators.” Here is the text of this
-portentous power to blast a race. In these simple words
-no such power can be found, unless the seeker makes
-the Constitution a reflection of himself. The times,
-places, and manner of holding elections are referred to
-the States,&mdash;nothing more; and even these may be
-altered by Congress. Being matters of form and convenience
-only, in the nature of <i>police</i>, they are justly
-included under the head of “regulations,” like the sword
-and uniform of the army. Do we not familiarly speak
-of a <i>regulation</i> sword and a <i>regulation</i> sash? Who will
-dare to say that under this formal power of <i>regulation</i>
-a whole race may be despoiled of equal rights and of all
-participation in the Government? This very pretension
-was anticipated by Mr. Madison, and condemned in
-advance. Here are his decisive words in the Virginia
-Convention:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Some States might regulate the elections on the principles
-of equality, and others might regulate them otherwise.…
-Should the people of any State by any means be deprived
-of the right of suffrage, <i>it was judged proper that it should be
-remedied by the General Government</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus was it expressly understood, at the adoption of
-the Constitution, that Congress should have the power
-to prevent any State, under the pretence of regulating
-the suffrage, from depriving the people of this right, or
-from interfering with the principle of <i>Equality</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Kindred to this statement of Mr. Madison is that
-other contemporary testimony which will be found in
-the “Federalist,” where the irrepealable rights of citizens
-are recognized without distinction of color. This
-explicit language cannot be too often quoted. Here
-it is:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is only under the pretext that the laws have transformed
-the negroes into subjects of property that a place is
-denied to them in the computation of numbers; and it is
-admitted, that, if the laws were to restore the rights which
-have been taken away, <i>the negroes could no longer be refused
-an equal share of representation with the other inhabitants</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This testimony is as decisive as it is authentic. Consider
-that it was given in explanation and vindication
-of the Constitution. Consider that the Constitution was
-commended for adoption by the assertion, that, on the
-termination of Slavery, “the negroes could no longer be
-refused an <i>equal share</i> of representation with the other
-inhabitants.” In the face of this assurance, how can it
-be now insisted, that, under the simple power to regulate
-the suffrage, a State may deny to a whole race that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
-“equal share of representation” which was promised?
-Thus from every quarter we are brought to the same
-inevitable conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore I dismiss the pretension founded on the
-power to make <i>regulations</i>, as I dismiss that other
-founded on the power to determine <i>qualifications</i>. Each
-proceeds on a radical misconception. Admit that a
-State may determine <i>qualifications</i>; admit that a State
-may make <i>regulations</i>; it cannot follow, by any rule of
-logic or law, that, under these powers, either or both,
-it may disfranchise a race. The pretension is too lofty.
-No such enormous prerogative can be wrung out of any
-such moderate power. As well say, that, because a constable
-or policeman may keep order in a city, therefore
-he may inflict the penalty of death,&mdash;or, because a father
-may impose proper restraint upon a child, therefore he
-may sell him into slavery. We have read of an effort
-to extract sunbeams out of cucumbers; but the present
-effort to extract a cruel prerogative out of the simple
-words of the Constitution is scarcely less absurd.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I conclude as I began, in favor of requiring conditions
-from States on their admission into the Nation;
-and I insist that it is our especial duty, in every possible
-way, by compact and by enactment, to assure
-among these conditions the Equal Rights of All, and the
-participation of every citizen in the government over
-him, without which the State cannot be republican.
-For the present I confine myself to the question of
-conditions on the admission of States, without considering
-the broader obligation of Congress to make Equal
-Rights coextensive with the Nation, and thus to harmonize
-our institutions with the principles of the Decl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>aration
-of Independence. That other question I leave
-to another occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile I protest against the false glosses originally
-fastened upon the Constitution by Slavery, and,
-now continued, often in unconsciousness of their origin,
-perverting it to the vilest uses of tyranny. I protest
-against that exaggeration of pretension which out
-of a power to make “regulations” and to determine
-“qualifications” can derive an unrepublican prerogative.
-I protest against that pretension which would
-make the asserted Equality of States the cover for a
-denial of the Equality of Men. The one is an artificial
-rule, relating to artificial bodies; the other is a
-natural rule, relating to natural bodies. The one is
-little more than a legal fiction; the other is a truth
-of Nature. Here is a distinction which Alexander
-Hamilton recognized, when, in the debates of the Convention,
-he nobly said:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“As States are a collection of individual men, which
-ought we to respect most,&mdash;the rights of the people composing
-them, or of the artificial beings resulting from the
-composition? Nothing could be more preposterous or absurd
-than to sacrifice the former to the latter.”<a name="FNanchor_234_234" id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>High above States, as high above men, are those
-commanding principles which cannot be denied with
-impunity. They will be found in the Declaration of
-Independence, expressed so clearly that all can read
-them. Though few, they are mighty. There is no
-humility in bending to their behests. As man rises
-in the scale of being while walking in obedience to
-the Divine will, so is a State elevated by obedien<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>ce
-to these everlasting truths. Nor can we look for harmony
-in our country until these principles bear unquestioned
-sway, without any interdict from the States.
-That unity for which the Nation longs, with peace and
-reconciliation in its train, can be assured only through
-the Equal Rights of All, proclaimed by the Nation everywhere
-within its limits, and maintained by the national
-arm. Then will the Constitution be filled and inspired
-by the Declaration of Independence, so that the two
-shall be one, with a common life, a common authority,
-and a common glory.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="ELIGIBILITY_OF_A_COLORED_CITIZEN_TO_CONGRESS" id="ELIGIBILITY_OF_A_COLORED_CITIZEN_TO_CONGRESS"></a>ELIGIBILITY OF A COLORED CITIZEN TO CONGRESS.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter to an Inquirer at Norfolk, Va., June 22, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>This letter appeared in a Richmond paper.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Senate Chamber</span>, June 22, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">DEAR SIR,&mdash;I have your letter of the 18th, in
-reference to the eligibility of a colored man to
-Congress.</p>
-
-<p>I know of no ground on which he could be excluded
-from his seat, if duly elected; and I should
-welcome the election of a competent representative of
-the colored race to either House of Congress as a final
-triumph of the cause of Equal Rights. Until this step
-is taken, our success is incomplete.</p>
-
-<p class="sig">Yours truly,</p>
-
-<p class="sig2"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="INDEPENDENCE_AND_THOSE_WHO_SAVED_THE" id="INDEPENDENCE_AND_THOSE_WHO_SAVED_THE"></a>INDEPENDENCE, AND THOSE WHO SAVED THE
-ORIGINAL WORK.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter on the Soldiers’ Monument at North Weymouth, Mass.,
-July 2, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Senate Chamber</span>, July 2, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MY DEAR SIR,&mdash;I wish that I could take part
-in the interesting ceremonies to which you invite
-me; but my duties will keep me here.</p>
-
-<p>On the anniversary of the birth of our Nation you
-will commemorate the death of patriots who gave their
-lives that the Nation might live. Grateful to our fathers,
-who at the beginning did so much, we owe an equal
-debt to those who saved the original work.</p>
-
-<p>The monument which you rear will be national in
-its character. Dedicated on the anniversary of Independence,
-it will have for its special object to guard
-forever the memory of those through whom the first
-fruits of Independence have been secured.</p>
-
-<p>Our fathers established the National Independence;
-our recent heroes have made it perpetual through
-those vital principles which can never die. Honor to
-the fathers! Honor also to the sons, worthy of the
-fathers!</p>
-
-<p>Accept my best wishes; believe me, my dear Sir,
-very faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent medium"><span class="smcap">Gen. B. F. Pratt.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="COLORED_SENATORS_THEIR_IMPORTANCE_IN_SETTLING" id="COLORED_SENATORS_THEIR_IMPORTANCE_IN_SETTLING"></a>COLORED SENATORS,&mdash;THEIR IMPORTANCE IN SETTLING
-THE QUESTION OF EQUAL RIGHTS.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter to an Inquirer in South Carolina, July 3, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The following letter, from a South Carolina paper, is one of many in
-the same sense which found its way to the public.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Senate Chamber</span>, July 3, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">DEAR SIR,&mdash;I have never given any opinion in
-regard to the Senatorial question in your State,
-except to express regret that the golden opportunity
-should be lost of making a colored citizen Senator from
-South Carolina.</p>
-
-<p>Such a Senator, if competent, would be a powerful
-support to the cause of Equal Rights. His presence
-alone would be a constant testimony and argument.
-Nothing could do so much to settle the question of
-Equal Rights forever in the United States. The howl
-against the negro, which is sometimes heard in the
-Senate, would cease. A colored Senator would be as
-good as a Constitutional Amendment, making all backward
-steps impossible.</p>
-
-<p>I write now frankly, in reply to your inquiry, and
-without any purpose of interfering in your election.
-You will pardon my anxiety for the cause I have so
-much at heart.</p>
-
-<p>Accept my best<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> wishes, and believe me, dear Sir,
-faithfully yours,</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent medium">To <span class="smcap">Thaddeus K. Sasportas</span>, Esq., Columbia, S. C.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="FINANCIAL_RECONSTRUCTION_THROUGH_PUBLIC" id="FINANCIAL_RECONSTRUCTION_THROUGH_PUBLIC"></a>FINANCIAL RECONSTRUCTION THROUGH PUBLIC
-FAITH AND SPECIE PAYMENTS.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech in the Senate, on the Bill to Fund the National Debt,
-July 11, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote medium">
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>We denounce all forms of Repudiation as a national crime [<i>prolonged
-cheers</i>]; and the national honor requires the payment of the public indebtedness,
-<i>in the utmost good faith</i>, to all creditors, at home and abroad, <i>not
-only according to the letter, but to the spirit of the laws under which it was
-contracted</i>. [<i>Applause.</i>]&mdash;<span class="smcap">Chicago Platform</span>, May, 1868.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-<p>Fundamentum est autem justitiæ fides, id est, dictorum conventorumque
-constantia et veritas.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Cicero</span>, <i>De Officiis</i>, Lib. I. Cap. 7.</p>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a><br /><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>SPEECH.</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The Senate having under consideration the Bill for funding the National
-Debt and for the Conversion of the Notes of the United States,
-Mr. Sumner said:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. PRESIDENT,&mdash;After a tempest sweeping sea
-and land, strewing the coast with wrecks, and
-tumbling houses to the ground, Nature must become
-propitious before the energy of man can repair the various
-losses. Time must intervene. At last ships are
-launched again, and houses are built, in larger numbers
-and fairer forms than before. A tempest has swept over
-us, scourging in every direction; and now that its violence
-has ceased, we are occupied in the work of restoration.
-Nature is already propitious, and time, too, is
-silently preparing the way, while the national energies
-are applied to the work.</p>
-
-<p>To know what to do, we must comprehend the actual
-condition of things, and how it was brought about. All
-this is easy to see, if we will only look.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is a mistake of too constant occurrence to treat the
-financial question by itself, without considering its dependence
-upon the abnormal condition through which
-the country has passed. The financial question, in all
-its branches, depends upon the political, and cannot be
-separated. I might use stronger language. It is a part
-of the political question; and now that Reconstruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
-seems about to be accomplished, it is that enduring part
-which still remains.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Our present responsibilities, whether political or financial,
-have a common origin in that vast Rebellion, when
-the people of eleven States, maddened by Slavery, rose
-against the Nation. As the Rebellion was without example
-in its declared object, so it was without example
-in the extent and intensity of its operations. It sought
-nothing less than the dismemberment of our Nation and
-the establishment of a new power with Slavery as its
-quickening principle. The desperate means enlisted by
-such a cause could be encountered only by the most
-strenuous exertions in the name of Country and of Human
-Rights. Here was Slavery, barbarous, brutal, vindictive,
-warring for recognition. The tempest or tornado
-can typify only feebly the ravage that ensued. There
-were days of darkness and despair, when the national
-existence was in peril. Rebel armies menaced the Capitol,
-and Slavery seemed about to vindicate its wicked
-supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the scene in its political aspects, we behold
-one class of disorders, and looking at it in its financial
-aspects, we behold still another,&mdash;both together
-constituting a fearful sum-total, where financial disorder
-mingles with political. Turn, first, to the political, and
-you will see States, one after another, renouncing their
-relations with the Nation, and constituting a new government,
-under the name of Confederacy, with a new
-Constitution, making Slavery its corner-stone,&mdash;all of
-which they sought to maintain by arms, while, in aggravation
-of these perils, Foreign Powers gave ominous
-signs of speedy recognition and support. Look next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
-to the financial side, and you will see business in some
-places entirely prostrate, in others suddenly assuming
-new forms; immense interests destroyed; property annihilated;
-the whole people turned from the thoughts of
-peace to the thoughts of war; vast armies set on foot, in
-which the youthful and strong were changed from producers
-to destroyers, while life itself was consumed; an
-unprecedented taxation, commensurate with the unprecedented
-exigency; and all this followed by the common
-incidents of war in other countries and times,&mdash;first,
-the creation of a national debt, and, secondly, the
-substitution of inconvertible paper as a currency. In
-this catalogue of calamities, political and financial, who
-shall say which was the worst? Certainly it is difficult
-to distinguish between them. One grew out of the other,
-so that they belong together and constitute one group,
-all derived ultimately from the Rebellion, and directly
-depending upon it. So long as Slavery continued in
-arms, each and all waxed in vastness; and now, so long
-as any of these remain, they testify to this same unnatural
-crime. The tax-gatherer, taking so much from
-honest industry, was born of the Rebellion. Inconvertible
-paper, deranging the business of the country at
-home and abroad, had the same monstrous birth. Our
-enormous taxation is only a prolongation of the Rebellion.
-Every greenback is red with the blood of fellow-citizens.</p>
-
-<p>To repair these calamities, political and financial, the
-first stage was the overthrow of the Rebellion in the
-field, thus enabling the Nation to reduce its armaments,
-to arrest its accumulating debt, and to cease anxiety on
-account of foreign intervention so constantly menaced.
-Thus relieved, we were brought to a resting-place, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
-the Nation found itself in condition to begin the work
-of restoration.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Foremost came the suppression of Slavery, in which
-the Rebellion had its origin. Common prudence, to say
-nothing of common humanity, required this consummation,
-without which there would have been a short-lived
-truce only. So great a change necessarily involved other
-changes, while there was the ever-present duty to obtain
-from the defeated Rebels, if not indemnity for the
-past, at least security for the future. It was impossible
-to stop with the suppression of Slavery. That whole
-barbarous code of wrong and outrage, whose first article
-was the denial of all rights to an oppressed race, was
-grossly inconsistent with the new order of things. It
-was necessary that it should yield to the Equal Rights
-of All, promised by the Declaration of Independence.
-The citizen, lifted from Slavery, must be secured in
-all his rights, civil and political. Loyal governments,
-republican in form, must be substituted for Rebel governments.
-All this being done, the States, thus transformed,
-will assume once more their ancient relations
-to the Nation. This is the work of Political Reconstruction,
-constituting the new stage after the overthrow
-of the Rebellion.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile there has been an effort and a longing
-for Financial Reconstruction also,&mdash;sometimes without
-sufficiently reflecting that there can be small chance
-for any success in this direction until after Political
-Reconstruction. Here also we must follow Nature,
-and restore by removing the disturbing cause. This is
-the natural process. Vain all attempt to reconst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>ruct
-the national finances while the Rebellion was still in
-arms. This must be obvious to all. Vain also while
-Slavery still domineered. Vain also while Equal
-Rights are without a sure defence against the oppressor.
-Vain also while the Nation still palpitates with
-its efforts to obtain security for the future. Vain also
-until the States are all once more harmonious in their
-native spheres, like the planets, receiving and dispensing
-light.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is more sensitive than Credit, which is the
-essential element of financial restoration. A breath will
-make it flutter. How can you expect to restore the national
-credit, now unnaturally sensitive, while the Nation
-is still uneasy from those Rebel pretensions which
-have cost so much? Security is the first condition of
-Financial Reconstruction; and I am at a loss to find any
-road to it, except through Political Reconstruction. All
-this seems so plain that I ought to apologize for dwelling
-on it. And yet there are many, who, while professing
-a desire for an improvement in our financial condition,
-perversely turn their backs upon the only means
-by which this can be accomplished. Never was there
-equal folly. Language cannot picture it. Every denial
-of Equal Rights, every impediment to a just reconstruction
-in conformity with the Declaration of Independence,
-every pretension of a “white man’s government”
-in horrid mockery of self-evident truths declared
-by our fathers, and of that brotherhood of mankind declared
-by the Sermon on Mars Hill, is a bar to that
-Financial Reconstruction without which the Rebellion
-still lingers among us. So long as a dollar of irredeemable
-paper is forced upon the country, the Rebellion
-still lives, in its spurious progeny.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Party organization and Presidential antagonism have
-thus far stood in the way, while at each stage individual
-perverseness has played its part. The President has set
-himself obstinately against Political Reconstruction; so
-also has the Democratic Party; others have followed,
-according to the prejudices of their nature; and so the
-national finances have suffered. Not the least of the
-offences of Andrew Johnson is the adverse influence he
-has exerted on this question. All that he has done from
-the beginning has tended to protract the Rebellion and
-to extend the disorder of our finances. And yet there
-are many not indifferent to the latter who have looked
-with indifference upon his criminal conduct. So far as
-their personal interests depended on an improved condition
-of the finances, they have already suffered; but
-it is hard that the country should suffer also. Andrew
-Johnson has postponed specie payments, and his supporters
-of all degrees must share the responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>Such is my confidence in the resources of our country,
-in the industry of its people, and in the grandeur of its
-destinies, that I cannot doubt the transcendent future.
-Alas that it should be interrupted by unwise counsels,
-even for a day! Financial Reconstruction is postponed
-only. It must come at last. Here I have no panacea
-that is not as simple as Nature. I know of no device
-or trick or medicine by which this cure can be accomplished.
-It will come with the general health of the
-body politic. It will come with the renovated life of
-the Nation, when it is once more complete in form,
-when every part is in sympathy with the whole, and
-the Rebellion, with all its offspring, is trampled out
-forever. In such a condition of affairs, inconvertible
-paper would be an impossibility, as much as a bill of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
-sale for a human being.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Meanwhile there are certain practical points which
-must not be forgotten. Foremost among these I put
-the absolute dependence of the national finances upon
-the faithful performance of all our obligations to the
-national freedmen. Pardoned Rebels will never look
-with complacency upon the national debt, or the interest
-which testifies semiannually to its magnitude. Their
-political colleagues at the North will be apt to sympathize
-with them. Should the scales at any time hang
-doubtful, it is to others that we must turn to adjust the
-balance. Therefore, for the sake of the national finances,
-I insist that the national freedmen shall be secured and
-maintained in Equal Rights, so that local prejudices and
-party cries shall be unavailing against them. You who
-have at heart the national credit, on which so much depends,
-must never fail to cherish the national freedmen,
-treating their enemies as if they were your enemies.
-Every blow at them will rebound upon yourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In dealing with the financial question, there are two
-other points of ever-present importance: first, the necessity
-of diminishing, so far as practicable, the heavy
-burden of taxation so oppressive to the people; and,
-secondly, the necessity of substituting specie for inconvertible
-paper. Here are two objects, which, when accomplished,
-will add infinitely to the wealth and happiness
-of the country, besides being the assurance that the
-Nation has at last reached that condition of repose so
-much longed for.</p>
-
-<p>Before consideri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>ng these two points in detail, I venture
-to remark that there is one condition, preliminary
-in character and equally essential to both, through
-which taxation will be lightened and specie payments
-will be hastened. I refer to the Public Faith, which
-must be sacredly preserved above all question or suspicion.
-The word of our Nation must be as good as
-its bond; and nobody must attempt to take a tittle
-from either. Nothing short of universal wreck can
-justify any such bankruptcy. Let the Public Faith be
-preserved, and all that you now seek will be easy.</p>
-
-<p>A virtuous king of early Rome dedicated a temple
-on the Capitol Hill itself to a divinity under the name
-of <i>Publica Fides</i>, who was represented with a wreath of
-laurel about her head, carrying ears of corn and a basket
-of fruit,&mdash;typical of honor and abundance sure to follow
-in her footprints. In the same spirit another temple
-was dedicated to the god Terminus, who presided
-over boundaries. The stones set up to mark the limits
-of estates were sacred, and on these very stones there
-were religious offerings to the god. The heathen maledictions
-upon the violator were echoed also by the Hebrews,
-when they said: “Cursed be he that removeth
-his neighbor’s landmark: and all the people shall say,
-Amen.”<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> In those early Roman and Hebrew days there
-was no national debt divided into bonds; there was
-nothing but land. But a national bond is as well defined
-as a piece of land. Here, then, is a place for the
-god Terminus. Every obligation is like a landmark,
-not to be removed without curses. Here, also, is a place
-for that other divinity, <i>Publica Fides</i>, with laurelled
-head, and hands filled with corn and fruit.</p>
-
-<p>Public Faith may be seen in the evil which <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>springs
-from its loss and in the good which overflows from its
-preservation. It is like honor: and yet, once lost, more
-than dishonor is the consequence; once assured, more
-than honor is the reward. It is a possession surpassing
-all others in value. The gold and silver in your Treasury
-may be counted; it stands recorded, dollar for dollar,
-in the national ledger; but the sums which the unsuspected
-credit of a magnanimous nation can command
-are beyond the record of any ledger. Public Faith is
-more than mines of silver or gold. Only from Arabian
-story can a fit illustration be found, as when, after all
-human effort had failed, the Genius of the Lamp reared
-the costly palace and stored it with beauty. Public
-Faith is in itself a treasury, a tariff, and an internal
-revenue, all in one. These you may lose; but if the
-other is preserved, it will be only for a day. The Treasury
-will be replenished, the tariff will be renewed, the
-internal revenue will be restored. With Public Faith as
-an unfailing law, the Nation, like Pactolus, will sweep
-over golden sands; or, like Midas, it will change into
-gold whatever it touches. Keep, then, the Public Faith
-as the “open sesame” to all that you can desire; keep
-it as you would keep the philosopher’s stone of fable,
-having which, you have all.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, in the face of this plain commandment, on
-which hangs so much of all that is most prized in national
-existence, we are called to break faith. It is proposed
-to tax the national bonds, in violation of the original
-bargain on which the money was lent. Sometimes
-the tax is to be by the Nation, and sometimes by the
-States. The power to do this wrong you may possess,
-but the right never. Do what you will, there is one
-thing you cannot do: you cannot make wrong right. It
-is in vain that you undertake to set aside the perp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>etual
-obligation which you have assumed. Against every
-such pretension, whether by speech or vote, there is
-this living duty, which will survive Congress and politician
-alike. Puny as the hand of a child is the effort
-to undo this original bargain. The Nation has promised
-six per cent. interest, payable semiannually in coin, nor
-more nor less, without any abatement; and then, having
-bound itself, it proceeds to guard against the States by
-declaring specifically that the bonds shall be “exempt
-from taxation by or under State authority.” Such is the
-bargain. There it is; and it must continue unchanged,
-except by the consent of the parties, until the laws of
-the universe tumble into chaos.</p>
-
-<p>The rogue in Shakespeare exclaims, “What a fool
-Honesty is! and Trust, his sworn brother, a very simple
-gentleman!” In equal levity it is said, “Tax the bonds,”
-although, by the original bargain on which the money
-was obtained, amid the trials of war for the safety of
-the Nation, it was expressly stipulated that these bonds
-should not be taxed. Nevertheless, tax the bonds! Of
-course, by taxing the bonds the bargain is brutally
-broken,&mdash;and this, too, after the Nation has used the
-money. Such a transaction in common life, except
-where bankruptcy had supervened, would be intolerable.
-A proud Nation, justly sensitive to national honor,
-as the great Republic through whose example liberal
-institutions are commended to mankind, cannot do this
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>The proposition to tax the bonds, in open violation of
-the original bargain, is similar in spirit to that other
-enterprise, which, under various discordant ensigns, proposes
-to pay the national bonds with inconvertible paper.
-Here at once, and on the threshold, Public Faith interposes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>
-a summary protest. On such a question debate
-even is dangerous; the man who doubts is lost. The
-money was borrowed and lent on the undoubting faith
-that it was to be paid in coin. Nothing to the contrary
-was suggested, imagined, or dreamed, at the time. Behind
-all forms of language, and even all omissions, this
-obligation stands forth, in the nature of the case, explained
-and confirmed by the history of our national
-loans, and by the official acts of successive Secretaries of
-the Treasury interpreting the obligations of the Nation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>So much stress is laid upon the language of the five-twenties
-that I cannot let it pass. The terms employed
-were precisely those in previous bonds of the United
-States where the principal was paid in coin, some of
-which are still outstanding. Had there been any doubt
-about the meaning, it was fixed by the general understanding,
-and by special declarations of responsible persons
-speaking for the Nation. On 26th May, 1863, Mr.
-Harrington, the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, in
-an official letter, says: “These bonds will, therefore, be
-paid in gold.” On 15th February, 1864, Mr. Field, also
-Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, writes: “I am directed
-by the Secretary to say that it is the purpose
-of the Government to pay said bonds, like other bonds
-of the United States, in coin, at maturity.” On 18th
-May, 1864, Mr. Chase, at the time Secretary of the
-Treasury, wrote: “These bonds, <i>according to the usage
-of the Government</i>, are payable in coin.” Mr. Fessenden,
-while Secretary of the Treasury, in his annual report to
-Congress, expressed the same conclusion; and his successor,
-Mr. McCulloch, in a letter of 15th November, 1866,
-says: “I regard, as did also my predecessors, all bonds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
-of the United States as payable in coin.” There are also
-numerous advertisements from the Treasury, and from
-its business agents, all in the same sense.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a succession of authorities, embracing high
-functionaries of the United States, all concurring in
-affixing upon these bonds the obligation to pay in coin.
-As testimony to the meaning of the bonds, it is important;
-but considering that all these persons represented
-the National Treasury, and that they were the agents of
-the Nation for the sale of these very bonds, their representations
-are more than testimony. Until their authority
-is disowned by Congress, and their representations
-discarded, it is difficult to see why their language must
-not be treated as part of the contract, at least in all sales
-subsequent to its publication. It must not be forgotten
-that these original sales were mainly to bankers and
-brokers, and in large amounts, for the purpose of resale
-to small purchasers seeking investments. It was in reply
-to parties interested in these resales that the letters
-of Assistant Secretary Field and Mr. Chase were written,
-pledging the Nation to payment in coin. At the date
-of these important letters Congress was in session, and,
-although the opportunity was constant, there was no
-protest against the meaning thus authoritatively affixed
-to these obligations. The bonds were in the market, advertised
-and sold daily, with a value established by the
-representations of these national agents; and Congress
-did not interfere to set aside these representations. By
-subsequent Acts similar loans were authorized, and nobody
-protested. There was the supplementary clause of
-3d March, 1864, for the issue of eleven millions of these
-bonds, to cover an excess subscribed above the amount
-authorized by the original Act. This was debated in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
-Senate on the 1st of March; but you will search the
-“Globe” in vain for any protest. Then came other Acts,
-at different dates, by which the loan was further enlarged
-to its present extent, and all the time these representations
-were uncontradicted. Against them there
-was no Act of Congress, no protest, nothing. If this is
-not “acquiescence,” then I am at a loss to know how
-acquiescence can be shown. Therefore do I insist that
-these representations are a part of the contract by which
-the Nation is bound.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that in the five-twenty bonds there are
-words promising interest in coin, but nothing with regard
-to the principal. Forgetting the contemporary
-understanding and the official interpretation, and assuming
-that at maturity the bond is no better than a
-greenback, it becomes important to know the character
-of this obligation. On its face a greenback is a promise
-to pay a certain number of dollars. It is paper, and it
-promises to pay “dollars.” Here is an example, which I
-take from my pocket: “The United States promise to pay
-to the bearer <i>five dollars</i>”&mdash;not five dollars in paper,
-or in some other substituted promise, but “five dollars,”
-which can mean nothing else than the coin known over
-the world with the stamp of Spain, Mexico, and the
-United States, being a fixed value, which passes current
-in every zone and at the antipodes. The “dollar” is an
-established measure of value, like the five-franc piece of
-France, or the pound sterling of England. As well say,
-that, on a promise to pay so many francs in France, or
-so many pounds sterling in England, you could honestly
-acquit yourself by handing over a scrap of printed paper,
-inconvertible in value. This could not be done. The
-promise in our greenbacks carries with it an ultimate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
-obligation to pay the silver dollar whose chink is so familiar
-in the commerce of the world. The convertibility
-of the greenback is for the present suspended; but when
-paid, it must be in coin. To pay with another promise
-is to renew, and not to discharge the debt. But the obligation
-in our bonds is to pay “dollars” also, <i>whenever
-the bonds are paid</i>; it may be after five years, or, in the
-discretion of the Nation, not till twenty years, but, <i>when
-paid</i>, it must be in “dollars.” Such is the stipulation;
-nor could the addition of “coin” or “gold” essentially
-change this obligation. <i>It is contrary to reason that a
-bond should be paid in an inferior obligation.</i> It is dishonest
-to force inconvertible paper without interest in
-payment of an interest-bearing obligation. The statement
-of the case is enough. Such an attempt disturbs
-the reason and shocks the moral sense.</p>
-
-<p>Between the bond and the greenback there is an obvious
-distinction, doubly attested by the Act of Congress
-creating them both,&mdash;for they were created together.
-This distinction appears, first, in the title of the Act,
-and, secondly, in its provisions. According to its title,
-it is “An Act to authorize the issue of United States
-notes, <i>and for the redemption or funding thereof, and
-for funding the floating debt of the United States</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> In
-brief, greenbacks were made a legal tender, and authority
-was given to fund them in these bonds. This appears
-in the very title of the Act. Now the object of funding
-is to bring what is uncertain and floating into a permanent
-form; and accordingly greenbacks were funded
-and placed on interest. The bonds were a substitute for
-the greenbacks; but the new theory makes the greenbacks
-a substitute for the bonds. To carry forward still<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
-further the policy of the Act, it was provided that the
-greenbacks might be exchanged at once for bonds; and
-then, by the Act of 11th July, 1862,<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> it was further
-provided that these very greenbacks “may be paid in
-coin,” at the direction of the Secretary, instead of being
-received in exchange for certificates of deposit, which
-were convertible into bonds,&mdash;thus treating the bonds
-as the equivalent of coin. The subsequent repeal of
-these provisions does not alter their testimony to the
-character of these bonds. Thus, at every turn, we are
-brought to the same conclusion. The dishonor of these
-obligations, whatever form it may assume, and whatever
-pretext it may adopt, is nothing but Repudiation.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The word <i>Repudiation</i>, now so generally used to denote
-the refusal to pay national obligations, has been
-known in this sense only recently. In the early dictionaries
-of our language it had no such signification.
-According to Dr. Johnson, it meant simply “divorce,”
-“rejection,” as when a man put away his wife. It began
-to be known in its present sense when Mississippi, the
-State of Jefferson Davis, dishonored her bonds. From
-that time the word has been too familiar in our public
-discussions. It was not unnatural that a State mad with
-Slavery should dishonor its bonds. Rejecting all obligations
-of humanity and justice, it easily rejected the obligations
-of Public Faith. Slavery was in itself a perpetual
-<i>repudiation</i>, and slave-masters were unblushing
-<i>repudiators</i>. Such an example is not fit for our Nation
-at this great period of its history.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the calamities of war, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>that, while it compels
-the employment of large means, it blunts the moral
-sense, and breeds too frequently an insensibility to the
-obligations incurred. A national debt shares for the
-time the exceptional character of war itself. Contracted
-hastily, it is little regarded except as a burden. At last,
-when business is restored and all things assume their
-natural proportions, it is recognized in its true character.
-The country accommodates itself to the pressure.
-This time is now at hand among us, if not arrested by
-disturbing influences. Unhappily, the demands of Public
-Faith are met by higgling and chaffering, and we are
-gravely reminded that the “bloated bond-holders” now
-expect more than they gave,&mdash;forgetting that they gave
-in the darkness of the war, at the appeal of the Nation,
-and to keep those armies in the field through which its
-existence was preserved,&mdash;forgetting also that among
-these bond-holders, now so foully stigmatized, were the
-poor, as well as the rich, all giving according to their
-means. It was not in the ordinary spirit of money-lending
-that those contributions were made. Love of country
-entered into them, and made them more than money.
-If the interest was considerable, it was only in proportion
-to the risk. Every loan at that time was a contract
-of bottomry on the Nation,&mdash;like money lent to a ship
-in a strange port, and conditioned on its arrival safe at
-home,&mdash;so that it failed entirely, if Slavery, by the aid
-of Foreign Powers, established its supremacy. God be
-praised, the enemy has been overcome! It remains now
-that we should overcome that other enemy, which, hardly
-less malignant than war itself, would despoil the Nation
-of its good name and take from it all the might of
-honesty. And here to every citizen, and especially to
-every legislator, I would address those incomparable
-words of Milton in his sonnet to Fairfax:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Oh, yet a nobler task awaits thy hand,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">(For what can war but endless war still breed?)</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Till truth and right from violence be freed,</div>
-<div class="verse"><i>And Public Faith cleared from the shameful brand</i></div>
-<div class="verse indent2"><i>Of public fraud</i>.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The proposition to pay bonds in greenbacks becomes
-futile and fatuous, when it is considered that such an
-operation would be nothing more than the substitution
-of greenbacks for bonds, and not a payment of anything.
-The form of the debt would be changed, but the debt
-would remain. Of the twenty-five hundred millions
-which we now owe, whether in greenbacks or bonds,
-every dollar must be paid, sooner or later, or be ignobly
-repudiated. By paying the interest of the bonds in
-coin, instead of greenbacks, the annual increase of the
-debt to this extent is prevented. But the principal remains
-to be paid. If this be attempted in greenbacks, it
-will be by an issue far beyond all the demands of the
-currency. There will be a deluge of greenbacks. The
-country must suffer inconceivably under such a dispensation.
-The interest on the bonds may be stopped by
-the substitution, but the currency will be depreciated
-infinitely beyond any such dishonest saving. The country
-will be bankrupt. Inconvertible paper will overspread
-the land, to the exclusion of coin or any chance
-of coin for some time to come. Farewell then to specie
-payments! Greenbacks will be everywhere. The multitudinous
-rats that swam the Rhine and devoured
-Bishop Hatto in his tower were not more destructive.
-The cloud of locusts described by Milton as “warping
-on the eastern wind” and “darkening all the land of
-Nile,” were not more pestilential.</p>
-
-<p>I am now brought to the practical <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>question, to which
-I have already alluded: How the public burdens shall
-be lightened. Of course, in this work, the Public Faith,
-if kept sacred, will be a constant and omnipresent agency,
-powerful in itself, and powerful also in its reinforcement
-of all other agencies.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It will not seem trivial, if I insist on systematic
-economy in the administration of the Government. All
-needless expenditure must be lopped off. Our swollen
-appropriations must be compressed. Extravagance and
-recklessness, so natural during a period of war, must
-give way to moderation and thrift. All this without
-any denial of what is just or beneficent. The rule should
-be economy without niggardliness. Always there must
-be a good reason for whatever we spend. Every dollar,
-as it leaves the National Treasury, must be able to exhibit
-its passport. Doubtless the army and navy can
-be further reduced without detriment to the public service.
-Beyond this great saving there should be a constant
-watchfulness against those schemes of public plunder,
-great and small, from which the Nation has latterly
-suffered so much. All these things are so plain as to
-be little more than truisms.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Another help will be found in the simplification of
-our system of taxation, so that it shall be less complex
-and shall apply to fewer objects. In Europe taxation
-has become a science, according to which the largest
-possible amounts are obtained at the smallest possible
-inconvenience. Instead of sweeping through all the
-highways and byways of life, leaving no single thing
-unvisited, the English system has a narrow range and
-visits a few select articles only. I see no reason why
-we should not profit by this example, much to the co<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>nvenience
-of the Government and of the citizen. The
-tax-gatherer will never be a very welcome guest, but he
-may be less of an intruder than now. A proper tax on
-two articles, whiskey and tobacco, with proper securities
-for its collection, would go far to support the Government.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Still another agency will be found in some proper
-scheme for a diminution of the interest on our national
-debt, so far as this can be done without a violation of
-Public Faith; and this brings me to the very bill now
-before the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>All are anxious to relieve the country from recurring
-liabilities, which come round like the seasons. How
-can this be done best? First, by the strict performance
-of all existing engagements, so that the Public Faith
-shall be our inseparable ally; and, secondly, by funding
-the existing debt in such ways as to provide a reduced
-rate of interest. A longer term would justify a smaller
-interest. There may be differences as to the form of the
-substitute, but it would seem as if something of this
-kind must be done.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after the close of the war, as the smoke
-of battle was disappearing, but before the national ledger
-was sufficiently examined to justify a comparison between
-liabilities and resources, there was a generous
-inclination to proceed at once to the payment of the
-national debt. Volunteers came forward with their contributions
-for this purpose, in the hope that the generation
-which suppressed the Rebellion might have the
-added glory of removing this great burden. This ardor
-was momentary. It was soon seen that the task was too
-extensive, and that it justly belonged to another gen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>eration,
-with aggrandized population and resources, in presence
-of which the existing debt, large to us, would be
-small. Here the census has its instructive lesson. According
-to the rate of increase in past years, our population
-will advance in the following proportion:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="Population" class="small">
- <tr>
- <td>In 1870,</td><td class="tdr">42,323,341</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In 1880,</td><td class="tdr">56,967,216</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In 1890,</td><td class="tdr">76,677,872</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In 1900,</td><td class="tdr">103,208,415</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>In 1910,</td><td class="tdr">138,918,526</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The resources of the country, already so vast, will
-swell in still larger proportions. Population increasing
-beyond example, improved systems of communication
-expanding in every direction, and the mechanical arts
-with their infinite activities old and new,&mdash;all these
-must carry the Nation forward beyond any present calculation,
-so that the imagination tires in the effort to
-grasp the mighty result. Therefore to the future we
-may tranquilly leave the final settlement of the national
-debt, meanwhile discharging our own incidental duty,
-so that the Public Faith shall be preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Here is a notable difference between the United
-States and other countries, where population and resources
-have arrived at such a point that future advance
-is very gradual. With us each decade is a leap forward;
-with them it marks a gradation sometimes scarcely appreciable.
-This difference must not be forgotten in the
-estimate of our capacity to deal with a debt larger than
-that of any European power except England. But we
-must confess our humiliation, as we find that our debt,
-with its large interest in coin, secured by mortgage on
-the immeasurable future of the Nation, is less regarded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
-abroad than the English debt, with its smaller interest
-and its more limited security. Our sixes will command
-only seventy-four per cent. in the market of London,
-while the three per cent. consols of England are freely
-bought at ninety-four per cent. One of our bonds brings
-twenty per cent. less than an English bond, although the
-interest on it is one hundred per cent. more. I know
-no substantial reason for this enormous difference, except
-in the superior credit established by England.
-With the national credit above suspicion, our debt must
-stand as well, and, as our multiplying resources become
-known, even better still. Thus constantly are we brought
-to the same lesson of Public Faith.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the general discredit of our national stocks
-abroad, Massachusetts fives payable in 1894 sell at the
-nominal price of 84, with the pound sterling at $4.44,
-equal to 91½ in our gold, with the pound sterling at
-$4.83. There can be no other reason for this higher
-price than the superior credit enjoyed by Massachusetts;
-and thus again is Public Faith exalted. Why should
-not the Nation, with its infinite resources, surpass Massachusetts?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The bill before us proposes a new issue of bonds, redeemable
-in coin after twenty, thirty, and forty years,
-with interest at five per cent., four and one half per
-cent., and four per cent., in coin, exempt from State or
-municipal taxation, and also from national taxation, except
-the general tax on income,&mdash;these bonds to be
-used exclusively for the conversion of an equal amount
-of the interest-bearing debt of the United States, except
-the existing five per cent. bonds and the three per cent.
-certificates. These proposed bonds have the advantage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
-of being explicit in their terms. The obligations of the
-Government are fixed clearly and unchangeably beyond
-the assaults of politicians.</p>
-
-<p>A glance at the national debt will show the operation
-of this measure. The sum-total on the 1st of February,
-1868, according to the statement from the Treasury, was
-$2,514,315,373, being, in round numbers, twenty-five
-hundred millions. Out of this may be deducted legal-tender
-and fractional notes, as currency, amounting to
-$388,405,565, and several other smaller items. The following
-amounts represent the portions of debt provided
-for by this bill:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="Debt" class="small">
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging">Six per cent., due 1881,</td><td class="tdr">$&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;283,676,600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging">Six per cent., five-twenties,</td><td class="tdr">1,398,488,850</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="hanging">Seven and three tenths Treasury notes, convertible into five-twenty bonds at maturity,</td><td class="tdr">214,953,850</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td><td class="tdr total">$1,897,119,300</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This considerable sum may be funded under the proposed
-bill.</p>
-
-<p>If this large portion of the national debt, with its six
-per cent. interest in coin, can be funded at a less interest,
-there will be a corresponding relief to the country.
-But there is one way only in which this can be
-successfully accomplished. It is by making the Public
-Faith so manifest that the holders will be induced to
-come into the change for the sake of the longer term.
-All that is done by them must be voluntary. Every
-holder must be free to choose. He may prefer his
-short bond at six per cent., or a long bond at five per
-cent., or a longer at four and one half per cent., or a
-still longer at four per cent. This is his affair. Ther<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>e
-must be no compulsion. Any menace of compulsion
-will defeat the transaction. It will be nothing less than
-Repudiation, with a certain loss of credit, which no saving
-of interest can repay. You must continue to borrow
-on a large scale; but who will lend to the repudiator,
-unless at a destructive discount? Any reduction of
-interest without the consent of the holders will reduce
-your capacity to borrow. A forced reduction of interest
-will be like a forced loan. While seeming to save interest,
-you will lose capital. Do not be deceived. Any
-compulsory conversion is only another form of Repudiation.
-It is tantamount to this declared crime. It is the
-same misdeed, taking still another shape,&mdash;as Proteus
-was the same heathen god in all his various transformations.
-It is Repudiation under an <i>alias</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Happily the bill before us is free from any such damning
-imputation. The new bonds are authorized; but the
-holders of existing obligations are left free to exercise
-their judgment in making the change. I am assured by
-those who, from practical acquaintance with business,
-ought to know, that these bonds will be rapidly taken
-for the five-twenties.</p>
-
-<p>The same bill, in its second section, sets apart
-$135,000,000 annually to the payment of the interest
-and the reduction of the principal of the national debt;
-and this is to be in lieu of a sinking fund. This is an
-additional security. It is another assurance of our determination
-to deal honestly.</p>
-
-<p>The third section of the same bill is newer in its provisions,
-and, perhaps, more open to doubt. But, though
-uncertain with regard to it in the beginning, I have
-found that it commended itself on careful examination.
-On its face it provides for a system of conversion a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>nd
-reconversion. The holder of lawful money to the amount
-of $1,000, or any multiple of $1,000, may convert the
-same into the funded debt for an equal amount; and
-any holder of the funded debt may receive for the same
-at the Treasury lawful money, unless the notes then
-outstanding shall be equal to $400,000,000. If bonds
-in the funded debt shall be worth more than greenbacks,
-the latter would be converted into bonds according to
-the ordinary laws of trade. The latest relation of these
-two is as follows: $100 greenbacks equal seventy-one
-dollars gold; $100 five per cent. equal seventy-six dollars
-gold. If the greenbacks are convertible into the
-five per cent., they will, of course, be converted while
-the above relation continues. This must be so long as
-the national credit is maintained abroad and the demand
-for our securities continues there. By this process our
-greenbacks will be gradually absorbed, and those that
-are not absorbed will be lifted in value. It would seem
-as if bonds and greenbacks must both gain from this
-business, and with them the country must gain also.
-Here would be a new step to specie payments.</p>
-
-<p>The bill closes with a provision authorizing contracts
-in coin, instead of greenbacks, according to the agreement
-of parties. This authority is in harmony with the
-other provisions of the bill, and is still another step toward
-specie payments.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>I am now brought to the last branch of this discussion,
-in which all the others are absorbed: I mean the
-necessity of specie payments, or, in other words, the
-necessity of coin in the place of inconvertible paper.
-Other things are means to this end: this is the end itself.
-Until this is accomplished, Financial Reconstruction<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
-exists in aspiration only, and not in reality.</p>
-
-<p>The suspension of specie payments was originally a
-war measure, like the suspension of the <i>Habeas Corpus</i>.
-It was so declared by myself at the time it was authorized.
-Pardon me, if I quote my own words in the debate
-on the bill:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It is a discretion kindred to that under which the <i>Habeas
-Corpus</i> is suspended, so that citizens are arrested without
-the forms of law,&mdash;kindred to that under which an extensive
-territory is declared to be in a condition of insurrection,
-so that all business with its inhabitants is suspended,&mdash;kindred
-to that, which unquestionably exists, to obtain soldiers,
-if necessary, by draft or conscription instead of the free
-offering of volunteers,&mdash;kindred to that under which private
-property is taken for public uses,&mdash;and kindred, also, to that
-undoubted discretion which sanctions the completest exercise
-of the transcendent right of self-defence.”<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As a war measure, it should cease with the war, or so
-soon thereafter as practicable. It should not be continued
-a day beyond positive exigency. While the war
-lasted, it was a necessity, as the war itself. Its continuance
-now prolongs into peace this belligerent agency,
-and projects its disturbing influence into the most distant
-places. Like war, whose greatest engine it was, it
-is the cause of incalculable evil. Like war, it troubles
-the entire Nation, deranges business, and demoralizes the
-people. As I hate war, so do I hate all its incidents, and
-long to see them disappear. Already in these remarks I
-have pictured the financial anarchy of our country, the
-natural reflection of the political; but the strongest illustration
-is in a disordered currency, which is present
-to everybody with a dollar in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The derangement of business may be seen at home
-and abroad. It is not merely derangement; it is dislocation.
-Everything is out of joint. Business has its disease
-also, showing itself in opposite conditions: shrunk
-at times, as with paralysis; swollen at times to unhealthy
-proportions, as with <i>elephantiasis</i>. The first
-condition of business is stability, which is only another
-form of security; but this is impossible, when nobody
-can tell from day to day the value of the currency. It
-may change in a night. The reasonable contract of to-day
-may become onerous beyond calculation to-morrow.
-There is no fixed standard. The seller is afraid to sell,
-the buyer afraid to buy. Nobody can sell or buy a farm,
-nobody can build or mortgage a house, except at an unnatural
-hazard. Salaries and all fixed incomes suffer.
-The pay of every soldier in the army, every sailor in the
-navy, every office-holder from the President to the humblest
-postmaster, is brought under this tyrannical influence.
-Harder still, innocent pensioners, wards of the
-Nation, must bear the same doom. Maimed soldiers,
-bereaved widows, helpless orphans, whose cup is already
-full, are compelled to see their scanty dole shrink before
-their sight till it seems ready to vanish in smoke.</p>
-
-<p>A greenback is a piece of paper with a promise on its
-face and green on its back, declared to be money by Act
-of Congress, but which the Government refuses to pay.
-It is “failed paper” of the Government. The mischief
-of such a currency is everywhere, enveloping the whole
-country and penetrating all its parts. It covers all and
-enters all. It is a discredit to the national name, from
-which the Nation suffers in whole and in detail. It
-weakens the Nation and hampers the citizen. There is
-no national enterprise which it does not impede. Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>e
-Pacific Railroad feels it. There is not a manufacture or
-business which does not feel it also. There is not a town,
-or village, or distant place, which it does not visit.</p>
-
-<p>A practical instance will show one way in which individuals
-suffer on an extensive scale, being generally
-those who are least able. I follow an ingenious merchant,
-Mr. Atkinson, of Boston, whose figures sustain his
-conclusion, when I insist that our present currency, from
-its unstable character, operates as an <i>extra</i> tax of more
-than one hundred millions annually on the labor and
-business of the country; and this vast sum is taken
-from the pockets of the people, not for the support of
-the Government, but to swell the unreported fund out
-of which the excesses of the present day are maintained.
-There are few business men who would not put the annual
-loss in their affairs, from the fluctuation in the currency,
-somewhere from one to five per cent. One per
-cent. is the lowest. Mr. Hazard, of Rhode Island, puts
-it at two per cent. Now the aggregate sales in the fiscal
-year ending June, 1867, were over eleven thousand millions
-($11,000,000,000) in currency, excluding sales of
-stocks or bonds. One per cent. on this prodigious amount
-represents a tax of one hundred and ten millions, paid
-annually by consumers, according to their consumption,
-and not in any degree according to their ability. This is
-one instance only of the damages annually paid on account
-of our currency. If we estimate the annual tax at
-more than one per cent., the sum-total will be proportionally
-larger. Even at the smallest rate, it is many
-millions more than all the annual expenses of our Government
-immediately preceding the Rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>Fluctuations in the measure of value<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> are as inconvenient
-and fatal as fluctuations in the measures of length
-and bulk. A dollar which has to-day one value and
-to-morrow another is no better than a yard which has
-to-day one length and another to-morrow, or a bushel
-which has to-day one capacity and another to-morrow.
-It is as uncertain as “Equity” measured by the varying
-foot of successive chancellors, sometimes long and sometimes
-short, according to the pleasant illustration of Selden
-in his “Table-Talk.” Such fluctuations are more
-than a match for any prudence. Business is turned into
-a guess, or a game of hazard, where the prevailing anarchy
-is overruled by accident:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent8">“Chaos umpire sits,</div>
-<div class="verse">And by decision more embroils the fray</div>
-<div class="verse">By which he reigns; next him high arbiter</div>
-<div class="verse">Chance governs all.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In such a condition of things the gamblers have the
-advantage. The stock exchange becomes little better
-than a faro bank. By such scenes the country is demoralized.
-The temptation of excessive gains leads from the
-beaten path of business. Speculation without money
-takes the place of honest industry, extending from the
-stock exchange everywhere. The failed paper of the
-Government teaches the lesson of bankruptcy. The
-Government refuses to take up its notes, and others
-do likewise. These things cannot be without a shock
-to public morals. Honesty ceases to be even a policy.
-Broken contracts prepare the way for crime, which
-comes to complete the picture.</p>
-
-<p>Our foreign commerce is not less disturbed; for here
-we are brought within the sphere of other laws than our
-own. Gold is the standard of business throughout the
-civilized world. Until it becomes again the standard
-among us, we are not, according to the familiar phra<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>se
-of President Lincoln, in “practical relation” with the
-civilized world. We are States out of the great Union.
-Our currency has the stamp of legality at home, but it
-is worthless abroad. In all foreign transactions we are
-driven to purchase gold at a premium, or to adopt a system
-of barter which belongs to the earlier stages of commerce.
-Corn, wheat, and cotton are exchanged for the
-products we desire, and this traffic is the coarse substitute
-for that refined and plastic system of exchanges
-which adapts itself so easily to all the demands of business.
-Commerce with foreign powers is prosecuted at
-an incalculable disadvantage. Our shipping, which in
-times past has been the pride of the Nation, whitening
-every sea with its sails, is reduced in number and value.
-Driven from the ocean by pirate flags during the Rebellion,
-it cannot struggle back to its ancient supremacy
-until the accustomed laws of trade once more resume
-their rule.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There are few who will deny the transcendent evil
-which I have set forth. There are few who will advocate
-inconvertible paper as currency. How shall the
-remedy be applied? On this question, so interesting to
-the business and good name of the country, there are
-theories without number,&mdash;some so ingenious as to be
-artificial rather than natural. What is natural is simple;
-and I am persuaded that our remedy must be of
-this character.</p>
-
-<p>The legal-tender note, which we wish to expel from
-our currency, has two different characters: first, as mere
-currency, for use in the transactions of business; and,
-secondly, as real value, from the assurance that ultimately
-it will be paid in coin, according to its promise.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>
-These two different characters may be sententiously expressed
-as <i>availability</i> and <i>convertibility</i>. The notes are
-now available without being convertible. Our desire is
-to make them convertible,&mdash;in other words, the equivalent
-of coin in value, dollar for dollar. On the 1st
-of June last past these notes were $388,675,802 in
-amount.</p>
-
-<p>Discarding theories, however ingenious, and following
-Nature, I call attention to a few practical points, before
-reverting to those cardinal principles applicable to this
-subject, from which there can be no appeal.</p>
-
-<p><i>First.</i> The present proposition for funding is an excellent
-measure for this purpose, being at once simple
-and practical: not that it contains any direct promise
-for the redemption of our currency, but because it places
-the national debt on a permanent footing at a smaller
-interest than is now paid. By this change three things
-essential to financial reconstruction are promoted: economy,
-stability, and national credit. With these once
-established, specie payments cannot be long postponed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Secondly.</i> Another measure of immediate value is <i>the
-legalization of contracts in coin</i>, so that henceforth all
-agreements made in coin may be legally enforced in coin
-or its equivalent. This would establish specie payments
-wherever parties desired, and to this extent begin the
-much-desired change. Contracts in coin would increase
-and multiply, until the exception became the rule. There
-would for a time be <i>two currencies</i>; but the better must
-gradually prevail. The essential equity of the new system
-would be apparent, while there would be a charm
-in once more looking upon familiar faces long hidden
-from sight, as the hoarded coin came forth. Nor can any
-possible injury ensue. The legalization is applicabl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>e
-only to future contracts, as the parties mutually agree.
-Every citizen in this respect would be a law to himself.
-If he chose in his own business to resume specie payments,
-he could do so. There would be a voluntary resumption
-by the people, one by one. But this influence
-could not be confined to the immediate parties. Beyond
-the contagion of its example, there would be a positive
-necessity on the part of the banks that they should
-adapt themselves to the exigency by the substitution of
-proper commercial equivalents; and thus again we take
-another step in specie payments.</p>
-
-<p><i>Thirdly.</i> Another measure of practical value is <i>the
-contraction of the existing currency</i>, so as to bring it on a
-par with coin, dollar for dollar. Before alluding to any
-of the expedients to accomplish this precious object, it
-is important to arrive at some idea of the amount of
-currency of all kinds required for the business of the
-country. To do this, we may look at the currency before
-the Rebellion, when business was in its normal condition.
-I shall not occupy space with tables, although
-they are now before me, but content myself with results.
-From the official report of the Treasury it appears that
-on the 1st of January, 1860, the whole active circulation
-of the country, including bank circulation, bank deposits
-available as currency, specie in bank, specie in
-Treasury, estimated specie in circulation, and deducting
-reserves, amounted to $542,097,264. It may be assumed
-that this sum-total was the amount of currency required
-at the time. From the same official tables it appears
-that on the 1st of October, 1867, the whole active circulation
-of the country, beginning with greenbacks and
-fractional currency, and including all the items in the
-other account, amounted to $1,245,138,193. Th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>us from
-1860, when the currency was normal, to 1867, some
-time after the suspension of specie payments, there
-was an increase of one hundred and thirty per cent.
-Omitting bank deposits for both years, the increase was
-one hundred and forty-six per cent. Making due allowance
-for the increase of population, business, and
-Government transactions, there remains a considerable
-portion of this advance which must be attributed to the
-abnormal condition of the currency. I follow various
-estimates in putting this at sixty or seventy per cent.,
-representing the difference of prices at the two different
-periods, and the corresponding excess of currency
-above the requirements of the country. Therefore, for
-the reduction of prices, there must be a reduction of
-the currency; and this must be to the amount of
-$300,000,000. So it seems, unless these figures err.</p>
-
-<p>Against the movement for contraction, which is commended
-by its simplicity and its tendency to a normal
-condition of things, we have two adverse policies,&mdash;one,
-the stand-still policy, and the other, worse yet, the policy
-of inflation. By the first the currency is left <i>in statu
-quo</i>,&mdash;stationary,&mdash;subject to the influence of other
-conditions, which may operate to reduce it. Better stand
-still than move in a wrong direction. By the latter the
-currency is enlarged at the expense of the people,&mdash;being
-at once a tax and a derangement of values. You
-pamper the morbid appetite for paper money, and play
-the discarded part of John Law. You blow up a bladder,
-without thinking that it is nothing but a bladder,
-ready to burst. As the volume of currency is increased,
-the purchasing power of each dollar is reduced in proportion.
-As you add to the currency, you take from
-the dollar. You do little more than mark your goods at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
-higher prices, and imagine that they have increased in
-value. Already the price is too high. Do not make it
-higher. Already the currency is corrupted. Do not corrupt
-it more. The cream has been reduced to skimmed
-milk. Do not let it be reduced to chalk and water. Let
-there be national cream for all the people.</p>
-
-<p>Obviously any contraction of the currency must be
-conducted with caution, so as to interfere as little as
-possible with existing interests. It should be understood
-in advance, so that business may adapt itself to
-the change. Once understood, it must be pursued wisely
-to the end. I call attention to a few of the expedients
-by which this contraction may be made.</p>
-
-<p>1. Any holder may have liberty to fund his greenbacks
-in bonds, as he may desire; so that, as coin increases,
-they will be merged in the funded debt, and
-the currency be reduced in corresponding proportion.</p>
-
-<p>2. Greenbacks, when received at the Treasury, may be
-cancelled, or they may be redeemed directly, so far as
-the coin on hand will permit.</p>
-
-<p>3. Greenbacks may be converted into compound-interest
-notes, to be funded in monthly instalments,
-running over a term of years, thus reaching specie payments
-within a brief period.</p>
-
-<p>4. Another expedient, more active still, is the application
-of the coin on hand to the payment of greenbacks
-at a given rate,&mdash;say $6,000,000 a month,&mdash;selecting
-for payment those holders who present the largest
-amount of five-twenties for conversion into the long
-bonds at a low rate of interest, or shall pay the highest
-premium on such bonds.</p>
-
-<p>I mention these as exp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>edients, having the authority
-of financial names, calculated to operate in the same
-direction, without violent change or spasmodic action.
-Under their mild and beneficent influence the currency
-would be gradually reduced, so that the final step, when
-taken, would be hardly felt. With so great an object in
-view, I do not doubt its accomplishment at an early
-day, if the Nation only wills it. “Where there is a will,
-there is a way”; and never was this proverb truer than
-on this occasion. To my mind it is clear, that, when the
-Nation wills a currency in coin, then must this victory
-over the Rebellion be won,&mdash;provided always that there
-is no failure in those other things on which I have also
-dwelt as the <i>conditions precedent</i> of this final victory.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>How vain it is to expect Financial Reconstruction until
-Political Reconstruction has been completed I have
-already shown. How vain to expect specie payments
-until the Nation has once more gained its natural vigor,
-and it has become <i>one</i> in reality as in name! Let this
-be, and the Nation will be like a strong man, in the full
-enjoyment of all his forces, coping with the trials of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>There must also be peace within our borders, so that
-there shall be no discord between President and Congress.
-Therefore, so long as Andrew Johnson is President,
-the return to specie payments is impossible. So
-long as a great party, called Democratic, better now
-called Rebel, wars on that Political Reconstruction which
-Congress has organized, there can be no specie payments.
-So long as any President, or any political party,
-denies the Equal Rights of the freedman, it is vain to
-expect specie payments. Whoso would have equity
-must do equity; and now, if you would have specie
-payments, you must do this great equity. The re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>st will
-follow. When General Grant said, “Let us have peace,”
-he said also, “Let us have specie payments.” Among
-all the blessed gifts of peace there is none more certain.</p>
-
-<p>Nor must it be forgotten that there can be no departure
-in any way from the requirements of Public Faith.
-This is a perpetual obligation, complete in all respects,
-and just as applicable to the freedman as to the bond-holder.
-Repudiation in all its forms, direct or indirect,
-whether of the freedman or the bond-holder, must be repudiated.
-The freedman and bond-holder are under the
-same safeguard, and there is the same certain disaster
-from any repudiation of either. Unless the Public Faith
-is preserved inviolate, you cannot fund your debt at a
-smaller interest, you cannot convert your greenbacks,
-you cannot comply with the essential terms of Reconstruction.
-Amid all surrounding abundance you are
-poor and powerless, for you are dishonored. Do not say,
-as an apology, that all should have the same currency.
-True as this may be, it is a cheat, when used to cover
-dishonor. The currency of all should be coin, and you
-should lift all the national creditors to this solid platform
-rather than drag a single citizen down. A just
-Equality is sought by levelling up instead of levelling
-down. In this way the national credit will be maintained,
-so that it will be a source of wealth, prosperity,
-and renown.</p>
-
-<p>Pardon me, if now, by way of recapitulation, I call
-your attention to three things in which all others centre.
-The first is the <i>Public Faith</i>. The second is the
-<i>Public Faith</i>. The third is the <i>Public Faith</i>. Let these
-be sacredly preserved, and there is nothing of power or
-fame which can be wanting. All things will pay tribute
-to you, even from the uttermost parts of the sea.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
-All the sheaves will stand about, as in the dream of
-Joseph, and make obeisance to your sheaf. Good people,
-especially all concerned in business, whether commerce,
-banking, or labor, our own compatriots or the people of
-other lands, will honor and uphold the nation which,
-against all temptation, keeps its word.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="NO_REPRISALS_ON_INNOCENT_PERSONS" id="NO_REPRISALS_ON_INNOCENT_PERSONS"></a>NO REPRISALS ON INNOCENT PERSONS.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech in the Senate, on the Bill concerning the Rights of
-American Citizens, July 18, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The Senate had under consideration the Bill concerning the Rights
-of American Citizens in Foreign States, which had already passed the
-House of Representatives. As it came from the House it contained
-the following section:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Sec. 3.</span> <i>And be it further enacted</i>, That, whenever it shall be duly
-made known to the President that any citizen of the United States has
-been arrested and is detained by any foreign Government, in contravention
-of the intent and purposes of this Act, upon the allegation that
-naturalization in the United States does not operate to dissolve his allegiance
-to his native sovereign, or if any citizen shall have been arrested
-and detained, whose release upon demand shall have been unreasonably
-delayed or refused, <i>the President shall be, and hereby is, empowered to
-suspend, in part or wholly, commercial relations with the said Government,
-or, in case no other remedy is available, to order the arrest and to
-detain in custody any subject or citizen of such foreign Government who
-may be found within the jurisdiction of the United States, and who has
-not declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States, except
-ambassadors and other public ministers and their domestics and domestic
-servants; and the President shall without delay give information
-to Congress of any proceedings under this Act</i>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Sumner reported an amendment, to strike out the words in
-Italic authorizing the suspension of commercial relations and reprisals
-on persons, and substitute therefor these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“It shall be the duty of the President forthwith to report to Congress
-all the circumstances of any such arrest and detention, and any proceedings
-for the release of the citizen so arrested and detained, that Congress
-may take prompt action to secure to every citizen of the United States
-his just rights.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On this amendment Mr. Sumner spoke as follows.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. PRESIDENT,&mdash;Before entering upon this discussion,
-I wish to read a brief telegram, which
-came by the cable last evening, as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">London</span>, <i>July 17</i>.&mdash;In the House, last evening, Stanley,
-the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, made an important statement
-in answer to a question asking for information. In
-reply, he said he had already sent to the United States Government
-a note on the matter of Naturalization, the substance
-of which was, that the British ministry was ready to accept
-the American views of the question. He therefore thought a
-misunderstanding between the two nations impossible.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Add to this important information the well-known
-fact, that the United States have already ratified treaties
-with North Germany and Bavaria, and that we are engaged
-in negotiating treaties with other powers, for the
-settlement of this vexed question, and we may surely
-approach this discussion without any anxiety, except
-for the honor of our country.</p>
-
-<p>Permit me to say, at the outset, that the declared
-object of the present bill is all lost in certain special
-features, which are nothing less than monstrous, and
-utterly unworthy of a generous Republic hoping to
-give an example to mankind. Surely, Sir, it is noble
-to reach out and protect the rights of the citizen at
-home and abroad; but no zeal in this behalf should
-betray us into conduct which cannot be regarded without
-a blush.</p>
-
-<p>This bill proposes to confer upon the President prodigious
-powers, such as have never been lavished before
-in our history. They are without precedent. On this
-account alone they should be considered carefully; and
-they should not be granted, unless on good reason. If it
-be shown that they are not only without precedent,
-but that they are inconsistent with the requirements<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
-of modern civilization, that they are of evil example,
-and that they tend directly to war,&mdash;then, on this
-account, we should hesitate still more before we venture
-to grant them. Not lightly can a nation set itself
-against the requirements of civilization; not lightly
-can a nation do an act of evil example; not lightly
-can a nation take any step toward war. The whole
-business is solemn. Nothing graver could challenge
-the attention of the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>Two powers are conferred upon the President: first,
-to suspend commercial relations with a foreign government,
-and, secondly, to arrest and detain in custody
-any subject of a foreign government found within the
-jurisdiction of the United States. The suspension of
-commercial relations, and the arrest of innocent foreigners,
-simply at the will of the President,&mdash;these
-are the two powers. It would be difficult to imagine
-greater.</p>
-
-<p>We have had in our own history the instance of
-an embargo, when all our merchant ships were kept
-at home and forbidden to embark in foreign commerce.
-That measure was intended to save our commerce from
-insult and our sailors from impressment. This was
-done by Act of Congress. I am not aware of any instance,
-in our own history or in the history of any
-other country, where there has been a suspension of
-commercial relations with any foreign power, unless as
-an act of war. The moment war is declared, there is,
-from the fact of war, a suspension of commercial relations
-with the hostile power. Commerce with that
-power is impossible, and there can be no contract even
-between the citizens or subjects of the two powers.
-But this is war. It is now proposed to do this same<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
-thing and to call it peace. The proposition is new, absolutely
-new. Not an instance of history, not a phrase
-in the Law of Nations, sanctions it. I need not say
-how little congenial it is with the age in which we live.
-The present object of good men is to make war difficult,
-if not impossible. Here is a way to make war
-easy. To the President is given this alarming power.
-In Europe war proceeds from the sovereign: in England,
-from the Queen in Council; in France, from
-Louis Napoleon. This is according to the genius of
-monarchies. By the Constitution of our Republic it
-is Congress alone that can declare war. And yet by
-this bill One Man, in his discretion, may do little short
-of declaring war. He may hurl one of the bolts of
-war, and sever the commercial relations of two great
-powers. Consider well what must ensue. Suppose the
-bolt is hurled at England. All that various commerce
-on which so much depends, all that interchange of
-goods which contributes so infinitely to the wants of
-each, all that shipping and all those steamers traversing
-the ocean between the two, all the multitudinous
-threads of business by which the two peoples are woven
-together, warp and woof, as in a mighty loom,&mdash;all
-these must be severed.</p>
-
-<p>The next power conferred on the President is like
-unto the first in its abnormal character. It is nothing
-less than authority, in his discretion, to make reprisals,
-by seizing innocent foreigners happening to be
-in the United States. The more this is considered, the
-more it must be regarded with distrust.</p>
-
-<p>Reprisals belong to the incidents of war in the earlier
-ages, before civilization had tempered the rudeness of
-mankind. All reprisals are of doubtful character. Repri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>sals
-on persons are barbarous. I do not say, that,
-according to the received rights of war, some terrible
-occasion may not arise even for this barbarous agency;
-but I insist that it is frowned upon by all the best
-authorities even in our own country, that it is contrary
-to enlightened reason, and that it is utterly without
-any recent example. Admitting that such reprisals
-are not entirely discarded by writers on the Law of Nations,
-they are nevertheless condemned. By the rights
-of war, as once declared, the lives of prisoners taken
-on the field of battle were forfeit. Early history attests
-the frequency of this bloody sacrifice. Who now would
-order the execution of prisoners of war? The day has
-passed when any such outrage can be tolerated. But it
-is hardly less barbarous to seize innocent persons whom
-business or pleasure has brought within your peaceful
-jurisdiction, under the guaranty of the Public Faith.</p>
-
-<p>I am unwilling to occupy time on a matter which is
-so clear in the light of modern civilization, and of that
-enlightened reason which is the handmaid to civilization.
-And yet the present effort will justify me in exposing
-the true character of reprisals, as seen in the light
-of history.</p>
-
-<p>Reprisals were recognized by the Greeks, but disowned
-by the Romans. According to Bynkershoek,
-who is so much quoted on the Law of Nations, “there
-is no instance of such wickedness in the history of that
-magnanimous people; neither do their laws exhibit the
-least trace of it.”<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> This is strong language, and is in
-itself a condemnation of this whole agency. It is of the
-more weight, as the author is our austerest authority on
-questions of the Law of Nations, giving to the rights of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
-war the strongest statement. According to him, reprisals
-are nothing less than “wickedness” (<i>improbitas</i>), and
-unworthy of a magnanimous people. During the Middle
-Ages, and afterwards, reprisals were in vogue; but they
-never found favor. They have been constantly reprobated.
-Even when formally sanctioned, they have been
-practically excluded by safeguards and conditions. In
-a treaty between Cromwell and the States-General there
-was a stipulation against reprisals, “unless the prince
-whose subject shall conceive himself to have been injured
-shall first lay his complaint before the sovereign
-whose subject is supposed to have committed the tortious
-act, and <i>unless that sovereign shall not cause justice
-to be rendered to him within three months after his application</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a>
-This stipulation was renewed under Charles
-the Second.<a name="FNanchor_241_241" id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> The same principle was declared by the
-Grand Pensionary, De Witt, who, in the name of the
-United Provinces, protested, “that reprisals cannot be
-granted, <i>except in case of an open denial of justice</i>,” and
-“that, even in case of a denial of justice, a sovereign
-cannot empower his subjects to make reprisals, <i>until he
-has repeatedly demanded justice for them</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> A similar
-rule was also declared in the famous letter to the King
-of Prussia, in the case of the Silesian loan, written by
-Murray, afterward Lord Mansfield, and much praised by
-Montesquieu and by Vattel.<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> Here it is said: “The Law
-of Nations, founded upon justice, equity, convenience,
-and the reason of the thing, and confirmed by long
-usage, does not allow of reprisals, except in case of violent
-injuries, directed or supported by the State, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
-justice absolutely denied, <i>in re minime dubia</i>, by all the
-tribunals, and afterwards by the prince.”<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> This is clear
-and strong. I might quote authorities without end to
-the same point. I content myself with adding the words
-of General Halleck, who, after saying, in his admirable
-manual, that “reprisals bring us to the awful confines
-of actual war,” proceeds to lay down the rule,
-that reprisals, even on property, can be only “where
-justice has been plainly denied or most unreasonably
-delayed.”<a name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> This rule commends itself as proper and
-just. It is your duty to apply it on the present occasion.
-But, in the face of the authorities in our own
-country, judges, jurists, publicists, and commentators,
-in long array, according to whom our own claim of
-allegiance is coincident with that of England,&mdash;and
-then, again, in face of the well-known and much-heralded
-disposition of foreign powers, including England,
-to settle this whole question by treaty, is it not absurd
-to say that here is a case for reprisals of any
-kind?</p>
-
-<p>In the early days reprisals were directed against
-persons as well as property. Even against property it
-was done with hesitation, only in cases free from all
-doubt, and after ample appeal to the sovereign for justice.
-Against persons it was done very rarely. Grotius,
-our greatest master, who brought the rules of International
-Law to the touchstone of reason, asserts
-that all reprisals are vindicated by custom rather than
-by Nature. His language is, that this rule “is not
-indeed authorized by Nature, but generally received
-by custom.”<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a> Since then the tendency has been <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>to a
-constant mitigation of this pretension, even as regards
-property. Without burdening this discussion with cases,
-which are numerous, I give a summary of Wheaton in
-these words: “It appears to be the modern rule of international
-usage, that property of the enemy found within
-the territory of the belligerent state, or debts due to his
-subjects by the Government or individuals, at the commencement
-of hostilities, are not liable to be seized and
-confiscated as prize of war.”<a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> This rule, which is applicable
-to the condition of things on the breaking out of
-war, attests the care with which the modern Law of
-Nations watches the rights of individuals, and how it
-avoids making them suffer. Thus even debts are not
-liable to seizure. How much more should an innocent
-person be exempt from any such outrage!</p>
-
-<p>It is when we consider the modern rule with regard
-to persons, instead of property, that we are impressed
-still more by its benignity. Here I quote, first a British
-authority, and then an American. Mr. Phillimore, the
-author of the very elaborate and candid treatise on the
-Law of Nations, so full of various learning, after admitting
-that reprisals, “strictly speaking, affect the persons
-as well as the goods,” proceeds to say, that, “in modern
-times, however, they have been chiefly confined to goods”;
-and then adds, in words worthy of consideration now,
-that “it is to be hoped that the reprisal of persons has
-fallen, with other unnecessary and unchristian severities,
-into desuetude; <i>and certainly, to seize travellers, by
-way of reprisal, is a breach of the tacit faith pledged to
-them by the State, when they were allowed to enter her borders</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a>
-The same enlightened conclusion is expressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
-by Dana, in his excellent notes to Wheaton, as follows:
-“The right of making reprisals is not limited to property,
-but extends to persons; <i>still, the practice of modern
-times discountenances the arrest and detention of innocent
-persons strictly in the way of reprisal</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> Thus do British
-and American publicists concur in homage to a common
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>If we look at the reason of the modern rule which
-spares persons, we shall find it in two different considerations,
-each of controlling authority: first, that an innocent
-person cannot be seized in a foreign country without
-a violation of the Public Faith; and, secondly, that
-no private individual can be justly held responsible for
-the act of his Government. On the first head Vattel
-speaks as follows: “The sovereign who declares war
-can no more detain the subjects of the enemy who are
-found in his states at the time of the declaration than
-he can their effects. <i>They have come into his dominions
-on the Public Faith.</i> In permitting them to enter his
-territories and continue there he tacitly promised them
-full liberty and full security for their return.”<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> In
-the same sense Halleck says, “Travellers and passing
-guests are in general excepted from such liability.”<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a>
-Here again Grotius speaks with the authority of a
-Christian lawgiver, saying that by the Law of Nations
-there can be no reprisals “on travellers or sojourners.”<a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a>
-The other reason was assigned by Mr. Webster, in his
-correspondence with the British Government in relation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
-to the “Caroline.” The British Government having
-acknowledged the act of McLeod in burning this vessel
-as their act, Mr. Webster at once declared, that,
-after this avowal, the individuals engaged in it could
-not be held personally responsible, and he added words
-worthy of memory at this juncture: “The President
-presumes that it can hardly be necessary to say that
-the American people, not distrustful of their ability to
-redress public wrongs by public means, <i>cannot desire
-the punishment of individuals, when the act complained
-of is declared to have been an act of the Government
-itself</i>.”<a name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> Weighty words, by which our country is forever
-bound. The same principle is adopted by Halleck,
-in his text-book, when he says, “No individual
-is justly chargeable with the guilt of a personal crime
-for the act of the community of which he is a member.”<a name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a>
-All these authorities furnish us the same lesson,
-and warn against the present proposition. Shall
-we at the same time violate the Public Faith and
-wreak a dishonorable vengeance on an innocent traveller
-or sojourner, making him the scapegoat of his
-country? Shall we do this outrage to the stranger
-within our gates?</p>
-
-<p>Another argument may be found in the extent to
-which reprisal on persons has been discarded by modern
-precedents. It is denounced, not only by authority,
-but also by practice. I have already said that the
-proposition to suspend commercial relations is without
-an example in history. The other proposition is without
-example since the hateful act of the first Napoleon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
-condemned afterward by himself, when, at the breaking
-of the short-lived Peace of Amiens, he seized innocent
-Englishmen who happened to be in France, and detained
-them as prisoners, precisely as is now proposed
-under the present bill. Among the numerous victims
-of this tyrannical decree was Lord Elgin, the father of
-the late Sir Frederick Bruce, on his return from Constantinople,
-where he had been ambassador. There was
-also an ingenious scholar, of feeble health, but exquisite
-attainments, Joseph Forsyth, author of one of the
-best books ever written on Italy.<a name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> He, too, was seized.
-In the preface to his admirable work his family have
-recorded the outrage. Read it, if you would know the
-judgment that awaits such a transaction. There is also
-another record in the pages of the English historian who
-has pictured the events of that time.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“This declaration of war was immediately followed by an
-act as unnecessary as it was barbarous, and which contributed
-more, perhaps, than any other circumstance to produce that
-strong feeling of animosity against Napoleon which pervaded
-all classes of the English during the remainder of the contest.
-Two French vessels had been captured, under the English
-letters of marque, in the Bay of Audierne, and the
-First Consul made it a pretence for ordering the arrest of all
-the English then travelling in France between the ages of
-eighteen and sixty years. Under this savage decree, unprecedented
-in the annals of modern warfare, above ten thousand
-innocent individuals, who had repaired to France in pursuit
-of business, science, or amusement, on the faith of the Law of
-Nations, which never extended hostilities to persons in such
-circumstances, were at once thrown into prison, from whence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
-great numbers of them were never liberated till the invasion
-of the Allies in 1814.”<a name="FNanchor_256_256" id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Napoleon himself, at a later day, when reason resumed
-its sway, condemned the act. In his conversations
-at St. Helena with Las Cases, he said: “The greater
-part of these English were wealthy or noble persons,
-who were travelling for their amusement. The more
-novel the act was, <i>the more flagrant its injustice</i>, the more
-it answered my purpose.”<a name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> Here, then, was an admission
-that the act was at once novel and unjust. The
-generals that surrounded him at the time most reluctantly
-enforced it. From the Memoirs of the Duchess
-D’Abrantès, we learn how poignantly her gallant husband,
-Junot, took it to heart and protested. He was
-unwilling to have anything to do with such an infamy.
-Recovering at last from the stupor caused by the order,
-the brave soldier said: “My General, you know not only
-my attachment to your person, but my absolute devotion
-to everything which concerns you. It is that devotion
-which induces me to hesitate at obeying your orders,
-before imploring you to take a few hours to reflect on
-the measure which you have now commanded.…
-Demand my blood; demand my life; I will surrender
-them without hesitation; but to ask a thing which must
-cover us with&mdash;&mdash; … I am sure, that, when you
-come to yourself, and are no longer fascinated by those
-around you, who compel you to violent measures, you
-will be of my opinion.”<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> Every word of this earnest expostulation
-may now be justly addressed to the Senate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
-You, too, Senators, should you unhappily yield to those
-who now insist upon violent measures, will regret the
-surrender. You will grieve that your country has been
-permitted through you to fall from the great example
-which it owes to mankind. Save your country; save
-yourselves.</p>
-
-<p>Suppose the law is passed, and the authority conferred
-upon the President. Whom shall he seize? What innocent
-foreigner? What trustful traveller? What honored
-guest? It may be Mr. Dickens, or Mr. Trollope,
-or Rev. Newman Hall; or it may be some merchant
-here on business, guiltless of any wrong and under
-the constant safeguard of the Public Faith. Permit
-me to say, Sir, that, the moment you do this, you will
-cover the country with shame, of which the present
-bill will be the painful prelude. You will be guilty
-of a barbarism kindred to that of the Abyssinian king
-Theodorus. You will degrade the national name, and
-make it a byword of reproach. Sir, now is the time to
-arrest this dishonor. See to it by your votes that it is
-impossible forever.</p>
-
-<p>Sir, it is hard to treat this pretension with composure.
-Argument, denunciation, and ridicule are insufficient. It
-must be trampled under foot, so as to become a hissing
-and a scorn. With all the granting of legislation, it is
-solemnly proposed that good men shall suffer for acts in
-which they had no part. Innocence is no excuse against
-the present pretension. The whole attempt is out of
-time; it is an anachronism, no better than the revival
-of the <i>Prügel-knabe</i>, who was kept at the German courts
-of former days to receive the stripes which the prince<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
-had merited for his misdeeds. Surely, if anybody is to
-suffer, let it be the offending Government, or those who
-represent it and share its responsibilities, instead of private
-persons, who in no way represent their Government,
-and may condemn it. Seize the ambassador or
-minister. You will then audaciously violate the Law of
-Nations. The absurdity of your act will be lost in its
-madness. In the seizure which is now proposed there
-will be absurdity to make the world shake with laughter,
-if for a moment it can cease to see the flagrant cruelty
-and meanness of your conduct.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>A debate ensued, which ran into the next day, in the course of
-which Mr. Conness, of California, insisted that the striking out of the
-reprisals clause would impair the efficiency of the bill, and make it
-nothing but “air.” At the close of the debate, immediately before
-the vote on the amendment, Mr. Sumner summed up his objection as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My objection to the text of the bill which it is proposed
-to strike out is, that it is a proposal of unutterable
-barbarism, which, if adopted, would disgrace this
-country.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The question, being taken by yeas and nays, resulted,&mdash;Yeas 30,
-Nays 7; as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Yeas</span>,&mdash;Messrs. Anthony, Buckalew, Cattell, Chandler, Cole, Conkling,
-Corbett, Cragin, Davis, Fessenden, Harlan, Harris, Henderson,
-Howe, Kellogg, McDonald, Morgan, Morrill of Vermont, Osborn, Patterson
-of New Hampshire, Patterson of Tennessee, Pomeroy, Rice,
-Sumner, Trumbull, Van Winkle, Vickers, Willey, Williams, and Wilson,&mdash;30.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nays</span>,&mdash;Messrs. Conness, Nye, Sprague, Stewart, Thayer, Tipton,
-and Whyte,&mdash;7.</p>
-
-<p>For the sectio<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>n thus amended, Mr. Williams, of Oregon, moved a substitute;
-whereupon the debate was resumed, and Mr. Sumner spoke again.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The amendment of the Senator, and the remarks that
-he has made, it seems to me, go on a mistaken hypothesis.
-They accept the idea that there has been some
-failure on the part of our Government with reference
-to citizens abroad.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Wilson</span> [of Massachusetts]. Is not that true?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> I think it is not true; and if time
-would allow now, I could go into the evidence and
-show that it is not true. I have the documents here.
-But we are entering upon this question to-night with
-an understanding, almost a compact, that there shall
-be no debate. I do not wish to break that compact.
-But here are documents lying on my table containing
-all the facts of record with regard to every American
-citizen who has been taken into custody abroad. Examine
-that record, and you will see how strenuous and
-steadfast our Government has been.</p>
-
-<p>Permit me to say that the argument of the Senator
-from Oregon [<span class="smcap">Mr. Williams</span>] proceeds on a misunderstanding
-of the facts. There is no occasion now for
-any such legislative prompting to the Government of
-the United States.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Williams.</span> I should like to ask the Senator a question.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> Certainly.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Williams.</span> Why is it, if everything has been so
-smooth and so placid upon this subject, that both of the
-political parties of this country have seen proper to put in
-their platforms resolutions in reference to the rights of American
-citizens abroad?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> I have not said that things were
-placid or smooth; but I have said that our Government
-has been strenuous and steadfast in the maintenance
-of the rights of American citizens, whether
-native-born or naturalized; and the record will show
-the truth of what I say. Where has there been a
-failure? Has it been in Germany? Read the correspondence,
-running now over several years, between
-the United States and the different powers of Germany,
-and see the fidelity with which the rights of our naturalized
-citizens have been maintained there.</p>
-
-<p>I wish to be as brief as possible. If the Senator will
-take the trouble to read the documents on the table, he
-will see that among all the numerous applications made
-by the United States to the Government of Prussia, the
-leading power of Germany, there is hardly an instance
-where this power did not meet us kindly and generously.
-I speak according to the record. I have been
-over every one of these cases; and I must say, as I read
-them I felt a new gratification in the power of my country,
-which made itself felt for the protection of its citizens
-in those distant places, and also a new sense of the
-comity of nations. A letter went forth from one of our
-ministers, and though at that time this difficult question
-of expatriation was still unsettled, yet, out of regard to
-our country, or out of regard, it might be, sometimes, to
-the personal character of our minister, the claim was
-abandoned. You can hardly find an instance&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Conness</span> rose.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> Will the Senator let me finish my
-sentence?</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mr. Conness.</span> Certainly.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span><span class="smcap">Mr. Sumner.</span> You can hardly find an instance in
-that voluminous correspondence where the claim has
-been persisted in on the part of the Prussian Government.
-The abstract question was left unsettled; but
-the individual was left free, without claim of allegiance
-or military service. All this was anterior to
-the treaty, by which this whole question is happily settled
-forever.</p>
-
-<p>But it is not my purpose to discuss the conduct of
-foreign Governments. My simple aim is to show the
-conduct of our own. That was the point with which I
-began. I said that it needed no quickening such as the
-Senator from Oregon proposes to apply. There is no
-evidence that our Government has not been persistent
-and earnest for the protection of its citizens abroad,
-whether native-born or naturalized, and I alluded to
-Prussia only by way of illustration. Pass that by. We
-have then the greater and more complex case of England.
-But I would rather not enter upon this. Here
-are the documents on my table, the passages all marked,
-which would illustrate the conduct of the British Government
-and the British tribunals toward every one of
-these persons whose names have been brought in question.
-I do not wish to go into this question. I should
-be misunderstood; and it is not necessary. I am speaking
-now of the conduct of our own Government, rather
-than of the conduct of any other Government. Mark,
-Sir, my reply to the Senator from Oregon was, that
-our Government did not need any additional power
-or any additional impulse to activity in this behalf.
-Already it has the power to do everything permitted
-by the Law of Nations, and it ought not to do anything
-else.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span></p>
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>Mr. Conness followed in support of the bill, and to a correction from
-Mr. Sumner retorted:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The honorable Senator would be very quick to demand
-the interference of all the powers of this Government in behalf
-of an arrested American citizen, if he were black. But,
-Sir, those arrested happen to be of another color,&mdash;not
-a color which appeals to his sympathies, but a color that
-allows him to belittle their arrest and incarceration,&mdash;that
-enables him to say here in the Senate that our Government
-have done everything that they could do, all that was necessary.
-It is true in his judgment, I have no doubt; for,
-if you only write letters, if you only publish and utter productions
-of the brain, if you only present views, the honorable
-Senator is satisfied. Those are his means, except when
-the progress through the thoroughfares of the city or the
-country of an American citizen of African descent is involved.
-Then views are at once thrown to the dogs, and he demands
-the interference of the Government, the police authority; if
-it be a railroad company, repeal their acts of incorporation!
-No matter how much capital stands in the way,&mdash;it may be
-$10,000,000 that is affected,&mdash;repeal their acts at once!
-How dare they impiously set up their tyranny over one human
-being who is stamped with American citizenship?…
-The law as proposed to be passed under the direction of the
-honorable Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations
-amounts to nothing.… I hope, without detaining the Senate
-any longer, that we shall not add to our too great delay
-upon these questions the offence and insult that the passage
-of this Act would be as proposed by the Committee.<a name="FNanchor_259_259" id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>To this attack Mr. Sumner replied as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I hesitate very much to say another word; and yet I
-think the Senate will pardon me, if I make a brief reply
-to the charge, so absolutely unjust, of the Senator from
-California. He throws upon me the reproach of indifferen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>ce
-to foreigners. Sir, I deny the imputation, and
-challenge comparison on this head with any Senator on
-this floor. Here I know that I am without blame. Sir,
-you do not forget that more than ten years ago there
-was a storm that passed over this country which had a
-name more familiar than polite: I mean Know-nothing-ism.
-It was everywhere, and enveloped my own State.
-At that time I had the honor of holding the position
-which I now hold. Did I yield to this storm, when it
-was carrying all before it? Sir, at that time I went
-down to Faneuil Hall, and in the presence of one of the
-largest audiences ever there assembled, and knowing well
-the prevailing sentiment, I made a speech vindicating
-the rights of emigrants to our country and promising
-them welcome. I have that speech here now, and I will
-read a few sentences from it. This was on the 2d of
-November, 1855,&mdash;nearly thirteen years ago. Pardon
-me for reading this record of other days; but I am justified
-by the attacks to which I have been exposed. If
-any foreign-born citizen is disposed to hearken to the
-Senator from California impeaching me, I ask him to
-bear in mind how I stood for his rights at another time,
-when there were fewer ready to stand for them than
-now. I read from this forgotten speech, as reported at
-that time.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>Mr. Sumner read the first two paragraphs on the thirteenth page of
-the pamphlet edition.<a name="FNanchor_260_260" id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Such was my argument for the rights of the foreign-born
-among us. To all of them I offered such welcome
-as I could:&mdash;</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span></p>
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There are our broad lands, stretching towards the setting
-sun; let them come and take them. Ourselves children
-of the Pilgrims of a former generation, let us not turn from
-the Pilgrims of the present. Let the home founded by our
-emigrant fathers continue open in its many mansions to the
-emigrants of to-day.”<a name="FNanchor_261_261" id="FNanchor_261_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir, those were the words which I uttered in Faneuil
-Hall at a time when the opposition to foreigners was
-scouring over the whole country. Others yielded to
-that tempest, but I did not yield. All my votes in this
-Chamber, from the first day that I entered it down to
-this moment, have been in the same direction, and for
-that welcome which I thus early announced. Never
-have I missed an occasion to vote for their protection;
-never shall I miss any such occasion. I was the first
-in the Senate to announce the essential incompatibility
-between the claim of perpetual allegiance and the license
-of unlimited emigration which we had witnessed, saying
-that every Irishman or German leaving with the
-consent of his Government was a living witness to the
-hollowness of the original pretension. And now I am
-most anxious to see expatriation a law as well as a fact.
-If I do not adopt the expedients proposed, it is because
-I regard them as less calculated to produce the much-desired
-result than other means equally at hand, to the
-end that the rights of our naturalized citizens may find
-adequate safeguard everywhere. The present bill can
-do little good, and may do harm. It will not protect a
-single citizen; but it may be a drag on those pending
-negotiations by which the rights of all will be secured.
-Too studious of the Law of Nations, perhaps, to be willing
-to treat it with distrust or neglect, I look to that
-prevailing agency rather than to the more limited instrumentality
-of Municipal Law. It is the province of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
-Municipal Law to determine rights at home,&mdash;how a
-foreign-born person may be naturalized in our country,&mdash;how
-he may be admitted to all the transcendent
-privileges of American citizenship; but it belongs to
-another system of law to determine what shall be his
-privileges, should he return to the country which gave
-him birth. We may, by our declarations, by our diplomacy,
-by our power, do much; but it is by our treaties
-that we shall fix all these rights in adamant. The
-Senator seems to have no higher idea than to write
-them in the fleeting passions of party. My vote will
-never be wanting to elevate them above all such fitful
-condition, and to place them under the perpetual sanction
-of International Law,&mdash;the only law which can
-bind two different powers. Sir, the Senator from California
-shall not go before me; he shall not be more
-swift than I; he shall not take one single step in advance
-of me. Be the person Irish or German or African
-or Chinese, he shall have from me the same equal
-protection. Can the Senator say as much?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="THE_CHINESE_EMBASSY_AND_OUR_RELATIONS" id="THE_CHINESE_EMBASSY_AND_OUR_RELATIONS"></a>THE CHINESE EMBASSY, AND OUR RELATIONS
-WITH CHINA.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech at the Banquet by the City of Boston to the Chinese
-Embassy, August 21, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The year 1868 was memorable for the Chinese Embassy, with Hon.
-Anson Burlingame at its head, which, arriving first at Washington by
-the way of San Francisco, negotiated a treaty with the United States,
-and then visited Europe. The abundant hospitality with which it was
-received throughout the United States was marked at Boston by a distinguished
-reception and entertainment on the part of the municipal
-authorities. August 20th, the Embassy was received by Hon. Nathaniel
-B. Shurtleff, Mayor, and escorted in public procession through
-the principal streets, and with the customary diplomatic salutes, to the
-Parker House, where they were lodged as the guests of the city. The
-next day at noon they were publicly received at Faneuil Hall, which
-was decorated for the occasion. In the evening they were entertained
-at a banquet at the St. James Hotel, where were present about two
-hundred and twenty-five gentlemen, including the City Government.</p>
-
-<p>The company is thus described in the official report:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Hon. Nathaniel B. Shurtleff, Mayor, presided. On his right were seated
-Hon. Anson Burlingame, Chief of the Embassy; His Excellency Alexander
-H. Bullock, Governor of the Commonwealth; Teh Lao-yeh, English Interpreter
-attached to the Embassy; Hon. Charles Sumner, Chairman of
-the Committee on Foreign Relations of the United States Senate; Hon.
-Caleb Cushing; Major-General Irwin McDowell, U. S. A.; Commodore
-John Rodgers, U. S. N.; Charles G. Nazro, Esq., President of the Board
-of Trade. On the left of the Mayor were seated Chih Ta-jin, Associate
-Minister; Mr. McLeavy Brown, Secretary to the Embassy; Sun Ta-jin,
-Associate Minister; M. Émile Dechamps, Secretary to the Embassy; Fung
-Lao-yeh, English Interpreter; Ralph Waldo Emerson, LL.D.; Rev. George
-Putnam, D. D.; Mr. Edwin P. Whipple.</p>
-
-<p>“Among the other distinguished guests present were: Dr. Oliver Wendell
-Holmes; Hon. Nathaniel P. Banks, Hon. George S. Boutwell, and Hon.
-Ginery Twichell, Members of Congress; Rev. Thomas Hill, D. D., President
-of Harvard College; Hon. George S. Hillard, United States District<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> Attorney;
-Hon. George O. Brastow, President of the Senate; Hon. Harvey
-Jewell, Speaker of the House of Representatives; Brevet Major-General
-H. W. Benham, and Brevet Major-General J. G. Foster, U. S. Engineer
-Corps; Major-General James H. Carleton, U. S. A.; Brevet Brigadier-General
-Henry H. Prince, Paymaster U. S. A.; Major-General James A. Cunningham,
-Adjutant-General; Hon. Henry J. Gardner, Ex-Governor of the
-Commonwealth; Hon. Josiah Quincy; Hon. Frederic W. Lincoln, Jr.; Dr.
-Peter Parker, formerly Commissioner to China; Hon. Isaac Livermore;
-Sr. Frederico Granados, Spanish Consul; Mr. G. M. Finotti, Italian Consul;
-Mr. Joseph Iasigi, Turkish Consul; Hon. Marshall P. Wilder, President
-of the Board of Agriculture; Rev. N. G. Clark, D. D., Secretary of the
-Board of Foreign Missions; and many of the leading merchants and professional
-men of Boston.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>At the banquet speeches were made by the Mayor, Mr. Burlingame,
-Governor Bullock, Mr. Sumner, Mr. Cushing, Mr. Emerson, General
-Banks, Mr. Nazro, and Mr. Whipple.</p>
-
-<p>The Mayor announced as the fifth regular toast, “The Supplementary
-Treaty with China,” and called upon Mr. Sumner to respond. Mr.
-Burlingame had already said in his speech, while declining any elaborate
-exposition of the Treaty: “No, Sir,&mdash;I leave the exposition of
-that treaty to the distinguished Senator on my right, who was its champion
-in the Senate, and who procured for it a unanimous vote.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sumner said:&mdash;</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">MR. MAYOR,&mdash;I cannot speak on this interesting
-occasion without first declaring the happiness I
-enjoy at meeting my friend of many years in the exalted
-position he now holds. Besides this personal relation,
-he was also an honored associate in representing
-the good people of this community, and in advancing a
-great cause, which he championed with memorable eloquence
-and fidelity. Such are no common ties.</p>
-
-<p>The splendid welcome now offered by the municipal
-authorities of Boston is only a natural expression of
-prevailing sentiments. Here his labors and triumphs
-began. In your early applause and approving voices
-he first tasted of that honor which is now his in such
-ample measure. He is one of us, who, going forth into
-a strange country, has come back with its highest trus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>ts
-and dignities. Once the representative of a single Congressional
-district, he now represents the most populous
-nation of the globe. Once the representative of little
-more than a third part of Boston, he is now the representative
-of more than a third part of the human race.
-The population of the globe is estimated at twelve hundred
-millions; that of China at more than four hundred
-and sometimes even at five hundred millions.</p>
-
-<p>If in this position there be much to excite wonder,
-there is still more for gratitude in the unparalleled opportunity
-it affords. What we all ask is opportunity.
-Here is opportunity on a surpassing scale,&mdash;employed,
-I am sure, to advance the best interests of the human
-family; and if these are advanced, no nation can suffer.
-Each is contained in all. With justice and generosity
-as the reciprocal rule,&mdash;and nothing else can be the aim
-of this great Embassy,&mdash;there can be no limits to the
-immeasurable consequences. Nor can I hesitate to say
-that concessions and privileges are of less consequence
-than that spirit of friendship and good neighborhood,
-embracing alike the distant and the near, which, once
-established, renders all else easy.</p>
-
-<p>The necessary result of the present experiment in
-diplomacy will be to make the countries it visits better
-known to the Chinese, and also to make the Chinese
-better known to them. Each will know the other better,
-and better comprehend that condition of mutual dependence
-which is the law of humanity. In relations
-among nations, as in common life, this is of infinite
-value. Thus far, I fear the Chinese are poorly informed
-with regard to us. I am sure we are poorly informed
-with regard to them. We know them through the
-porcelain on our tables, with its lawless perspecti<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>ve,
-and the tea-chest, with its unintelligible hieroglyphics.
-There are two pictures of them in the literature of
-our language, which cannot fail to leave an impression.
-The first is in “Paradise Lost,” where Milton, always
-learned, even in his poetry, represents Satan descending
-in his flight</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse indent8">“on the barren plains</div>
-<div class="verse">Of Sericana, where <i>Chineses</i> drive</div>
-<div class="verse">With sails and wind their cany wagons light.”<a name="FNanchor_262_262" id="FNanchor_262_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The other is in that admirable “Discourse on the Study
-of the Law of Nature and Nations,” where Sir James
-Mackintosh, in words of singular felicity, points to “the
-tame, but ancient and immovable civilization of China.”<a name="FNanchor_263_263" id="FNanchor_263_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a>
-It is for us at last to enlarge these pictures, and to fill
-the canvas with life.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know if it has occurred to our honored guest
-that he is not the first stranger who, after sojourning in
-this distant, unknown land, has come back loaded with
-its honors, and with messages to the Christian powers.
-He is not without a predecessor in his mission. There
-is another career as marvellous as his own. I refer to
-the Venetian Marco Polo, whose reports, once discredited
-as the fables of a traveller, are now recognized
-among the sources of history, and especially of geographical
-knowledge. Nobody can read them without
-feeling their verity. It was in the latter part of the far-away
-thirteenth century that this enterprising Venetian,
-with his father and uncle, all merchants, journeyed from
-Venice, by the way of Constantinople, Trebizond on the
-Black Sea, and Central Asia, until they reached first the
-land of Prester John, and then that golden country<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
-known as Cathay, where the lofty ruler, Kublaï Khan,
-treated them with gracious consideration, and employed
-young Polo as his ambassador. This was none other
-than China, and the lofty ruler, called the Grand Khan,
-was none other than the first of its Mongolian dynasty,
-having his imperial residence in the immense city of
-Kambalu, or Peking. After many years of illustrious
-service, the Venetian, with his companions, was dismissed
-with splendor and riches, charged with letters
-for European sovereigns, as our Bostonian is charged
-with similar letters now. There were letters for the
-Pope, the King of France, the King of Spain, and other
-Christian princes. It does not appear that England
-was expressly designated. Her name, so great now, was
-not at that time on the visiting list of the distant Emperor.
-Such are the contrasts in national life. Marco
-Polo reached Venice, on his return, in 1295, at the very
-time when Dante, in Florence, was meditating his divine
-poem, and Roger Bacon, in England, was astonishing
-the age with his knowledge. These were his two
-greatest contemporaries, constituting with himself the
-triumvirate of the century.</p>
-
-<p>The return of the Venetian to his native city was
-attended by incidents which have not occurred among
-us. Bronzed by long residence under the sun of the
-East, wearing the dress of a Tartar, and speaking his
-native language with difficulty, it was some time before
-his friends could be persuaded of his identity. Happily
-there is no question on the identity of our returned fellow-citizen;
-and surely it cannot be said that he speaks
-his native language with difficulty. A dinner was
-spread at Venice as here at Boston, and now, after the
-lapse of nearly six hundred years, the Venetian d<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>inner
-still lives in glowing description. Marco Polo, with
-his companions, appeared first in long robes of crimson
-satin reaching to the floor, which, when the guests had
-washed their hands, were changed for other robes of
-crimson damask, and then again, after the first course,
-for other robes of crimson velvet, and at the conclusion
-of the banquet, for the ordinary dress worn by the rest
-of the company. Meanwhile the other costly garments
-were distributed among the attendants at the table. In
-all your magnificence to-night, Mr. Mayor, I have seen
-no such largess. Then were brought forward the coarse
-threadbare garments in which they had travelled, when,
-on ripping the lining and patches with a knife, costly
-jewels, in sparkling showers, leaped forth before the
-eyes of the company, who for a time were motionless
-with wonder. Then at last, says the Italian chronicler,
-every doubt was banished, and all were satisfied that
-these were the valiant and honorable gentlemen of the
-house of Polo. I do not relate this history to suggest
-any such operation on the dress of our returned fellow-citizen.
-No such evidence is needed to assure us of his
-identity.</p>
-
-<p>The success of Marco Polo is amply attested. From
-his habit of speaking of “millions” of people and “millions”
-of money, he was known as <i>Messer Millioni</i>, or
-the millionaire, being the earliest instance in history of
-a designation so common in our prosperous age. But
-better than “millions” was the knowledge he imparted,
-and the impulse he gave to that science which teaches
-the configuration of the globe and the place of nations
-on its face. His travels, dictated by him, were reproduced
-in various languages, and, after the invention of
-printing, the book was multiplied in more than fifty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
-editions. Unquestionably it prepared the way for the
-two greatest geographical discoveries of modern times,&mdash;the
-Cape of Good Hope, by Vasco da Gama, and the
-New World, by Christopher Columbus. One of his admirers,
-a French <i>savant</i>, does not hesitate to say, that,
-“when, in the long series of ages, we seek the three
-men who, by the magnitude and influence of their discoveries,
-have most contributed to the progress of geography
-or the knowledge of the globe, the modest name
-of the Venetian traveller finds a place in the same line
-with those of Alexander the Great and Christopher Columbus.”<a name="FNanchor_264_264" id="FNanchor_264_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>
-It is well known that the imagination of
-the Genoese navigator was fired by the revelations of
-the Venetian, and that, in his mind, the countries embraced
-by his transcendent discovery were none other
-than the famed Cathay, with its various dependencies.
-In his report to the Spanish sovereigns, Cuba was nothing
-else than Zipangu, or Japan, as described by the
-Venetian, and he thought himself near a Grand Khan,&mdash;meaning,
-as he says, a king of kings. Columbus was
-mistaken. He had not reached Cathay or the Grand
-Khan; but he had discovered a new world, destined in
-the history of civilization to be more than Cathay, and,
-in the lapse of time, to welcome the Ambassador of the
-Grand Khan.</p>
-
-<p>The Venetian, returning home, journeyed out of the
-East, westward; our Marco Polo, returning home, journeyed
-out of the West, eastward. And yet they both
-came from the same region: their common starting-point
-was Peking. This change is typical of the surpassing
-revolution under whose influence the Orient will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
-become the Occident. Journeying westward, the first
-welcome is from the nations of Europe; journeying
-eastward, the first welcome is from our Republic. It
-remains that this welcome should be extended, until,
-opening a pathway for the mightiest commerce of the
-world, it embraces within the sphere of American activity
-that ancient ancestral empire, where population, industry,
-and education, on an unprecedented scale, create
-resources and necessities on an unprecedented scale also.
-See to it, merchants of the United States, and you, merchants
-of Boston, that this opportunity is not lost.</p>
-
-<p>And this brings me, Mr. Mayor, to the Treaty, which
-you invited me to discuss. But I will not now enter
-upon this topic. If you did not call me to order for
-speaking too long, I fear I should be called to order in
-another place for undertaking to speak of a treaty not
-yet proclaimed by the President. One remark I will
-make, and take the consequences. The Treaty does not
-propose much; but it is an excellent beginning, and, I
-trust, through the good offices of our fellow-citizen, the
-honored plenipotentiary, will unlock those great Chinese
-gates which have been bolted and barred for long centuries.
-The Embassy is more than the Treaty, because it
-prepares the way for further intercourse, and helps that
-new order of things which is among the promises of the
-Future.</p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>Mr. Burlingame’s sudden death, at St. Petersburg, February 23, 1870,
-arrested the remarkable career he had begun, leaving uncertain what
-he might have accomplished for China with European powers, and also
-uncertain the possible influence he might have exercised with the great
-nation he represented, in opening its avenues of approach, and bringing
-it within the sphere of Western civilization.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="THE_REBEL_PARTY" id="THE_REBEL_PARTY"></a>THE REBEL PARTY.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech at the Flag-Raising of the Grant and Colfax Club, in
-Ward Six, Boston, on the Evening of September 14, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">I find a special motive for being here to-night in
-the circumstance that this is the ward where I was
-born and have always voted, and where I expect to vote
-at the coming election. Here I voted twice for Abraham
-Lincoln, and here I expect to vote for Grant and
-Colfax. According to familiar phrase, this is my ward.
-This, also, is my Congressional District. Though representing
-the Commonwealth in the Senate, I am not
-without a representative in the other House. Your Congressional
-representative is my representative. Therefore
-I confess a peculiar interest in this ward and this
-district.</p>
-
-<p>In hanging out the national flag at the beginning of
-the campaign, you follow the usage of other times; but
-to my mind it is peculiarly appropriate at the present
-election. The national flag is the emblem of loyalty,
-and the very question on which you are to vote in the
-present election is whether loyalty or rebellion shall
-prevail. It is whether the national flag shall wave
-gloriously over a united people in the peaceful enjoyment
-of Equal Rights for All, or whether it shall be dishonored
-by traitors. This is the question. Under all
-forms of statement or all resolutions, it comes back to
-this. As during the war all of you voted for the national
-flag, while some carried it forward in the face of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
-peril, so now all of you must vote for it, and be ready
-to carry it forward again, if need be, in the face of
-peril.</p>
-
-<p>As loyalty is the distinctive characteristic of our
-party, so is disloyalty the distinctive characteristic of
-the opposition. I would not use too strong language,
-or go beyond the strictest warrant of facts; but I am
-obliged to say that we cannot recognize the opposition
-at this time as anything else but the Rebel Party in
-disguise, or the Rebel Party under the <i>alias</i> of Democracy.
-The Rebels have taken the name of Democrats,
-and with this historic name hope to deceive people
-into their support. But, whatever name they adopt,
-they are the same Rebels who, after defeat on many
-bloody fields, at last surrendered to General Grant, and,
-by the blessing of God and the exertions of the good
-people, will surrender to him again.</p>
-
-<p>I am unwilling to call such a party democratic. It is
-not so in any sense. It is not so according to the natural
-meaning of the term, for a Democrat is a friend of
-popular rights; nor is it so according to the examples of
-our history, for all these disown the policy of the opposition.
-Thomas Jefferson was an original Democrat;
-but he drew with his own hand the Declaration of Independence,
-which announces that all men are equal in
-rights, and that just government stands only on the consent
-of the governed. Andrew Jackson was another Democrat;
-but he put down South Carolina treason with a
-strong hand, and gave the famous toast, “The Union, it
-must be preserved.” These were Democrats, representative
-Democrats, boldly announcing the Equal Rights
-of All and the Unity of the Nation. Thus looking at
-the word, in its natural bearing or in the gr<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>eat examples
-of our history, we find it entirely inapplicable to a party
-which denies equal rights and palters with Rebellion itself.
-Such a party is the Rebel Party, and nothing else;
-and this is the name by which it should be known.</p>
-
-<p>Look at the history of their leaders,&mdash;Rebels all,
-Rebels all. I mention those only who take an active
-part. A party, like a man, is known by the company it
-keeps. What a company! Here is Forrest, with the
-blood of Fort Pillow still dripping from his hands;
-Semmes, fresh from the Alabama, glorying in his piracies
-on our commerce; Wade Hampton, the South
-Carolina slave-master and cavalry officer of the Rebellion;
-Beauregard, the Rebel general, who telegraphed for
-the execution of Abolition prisoners; Stephens, Toombs,
-and Cobb, a Georgia triumvirate of Rebels; and at the
-head of this troop is none other than Horatio Seymour
-of New York, who, without actually enlisting in the Rebellion,
-dallied with it, and addressed its fiendish representatives
-in New York as “friends.” A party with
-such leaders and such a chief is the Rebel Party.</p>
-
-<p>Such a party, so filled and permeated with treason,
-cannot utter any shibboleth of loyalty. Every loyal word
-must stick in its throat, as “Amen” stuck in the throat
-of Macbeth, after the murder of his royal guest. Therefore,
-I say again, let it be called the Rebel Party. This
-is a truthful designation, stamping upon the party its
-real character. By this name I now summon it to judgment.
-If I could make my voice heard over the Republic,
-it should carry everywhere this just summons. It
-should go forth from this schoolhouse, traversing the
-land, echoing from valley to valley, from village to village,
-from town to town, and warning all who love their
-country against a party which is nothing but a continuation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
-of the Rebellion. How can such a party pretend
-to hang out the national flag? I do not wonder that
-its Presidential candidate has cried out in his distress,
-“Press the financial question!” Yes, press anything
-to make the country forget the disloyalty of the party,&mdash;anything
-to divert attention from the national flag,
-which they would dishonor. But on the financial question,
-as everywhere else, they are disloyal. Repudiation
-is disloyalty, early taught by Jefferson Davis in his own
-State, and now adopted by the Rebel Party, North and
-South.</p>
-
-<p>Here I come back to the point with which I began.
-Hang out the national flag! It is the flag of our country,
-our whole country, beaming with all its inseparable
-stars, and proclaiming in all its folds the strength, the
-glory, and the beauty of Union. Let that flag be the
-light to your footsteps. <i>By this conquer!</i> And surely
-you will conquer. The people are not ready to join
-with Rebels or submit to Rebel yoke. They will stand
-by the flag at the ballot-box, as they stood by it on
-the bloody field. History has recorded the triumphant
-election of Abraham Lincoln, as the representative
-of Loyalty against Rebellion. Thank God, it will soon
-make the same joyful record with regard to Grant and
-Colfax, the present representatives of Loyalty against
-Rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>Every man must do his duty, each in his way, according
-to his ability,&mdash;some by voice, and others by efforts
-of a different kind, but all must work and vote. The
-cause is that of our country and its transcendent future,
-pictured in the flag. And permit me to remind you
-that our Congressional District has obligations it cannot
-forget. It must be true to itself and to its own <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>example.
-At the last Presidential election there was a report,
-which travelled all the way to Washington, that ours
-was a doubtful district. On the evening of the election,
-as soon as the result was known, I had the happiness
-of telegraphing to the President that in this district the
-majority was some five thousand for himself and Mr.
-Hooper. It so happened that it was the first despatch
-received from any quarter announcing the triumph of
-that great day. On reading it, the President remarked,
-with his humorous point: “Five thousand majority!
-If this is a specimen of the doubtful districts, what
-may we expect of the whole country?” This victory
-must be repeated. There must be another five thousand
-majority; and let General Grant, like Abraham Lincoln,
-measure from our majority the majorities throughout
-the country, giving assurance that the Rebel Party is
-defeated and utterly routed in its last desperate struggle.
-This is Beacon Hill, the highest point of Boston, where
-in early days were lighted the beacon fires which flashed
-over the country. The fires which we light on Beacon
-Hill will be of congratulation and joy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="ENFRANCHISEMENT_IN_MISSOURI_WHY_WAIT" id="ENFRANCHISEMENT_IN_MISSOURI_WHY_WAIT"></a>ENFRANCHISEMENT IN MISSOURI: WHY WAIT?</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Letter to a Citizen of St. Louis, October 3, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>The following letter appeared in the <i>St. Louis Democrat</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right medium"><span class="smcap">Boston</span>, October 3, 1868.</p>
-
-<p class="dropcap">DEAR SIR,&mdash;I am pained to learn that there can
-be any question among good Republicans with
-regard to the enfranchisement of the colored race, especially
-as declared in the Constitutional Amendment now
-pending in Missouri. When shall this great question
-be settled, if not now? Why wait? Why prolong the
-agony? There is only one way in which it can be settled.
-Why not at once? All who vote against it only
-vote to continue the agitation, which will never end except
-with the establishment of the Equal Rights of All.</p>
-
-<p>Only in this way can the Declaration of Independence
-be vindicated in its self-evident truths. As long
-as men are excluded from the suffrage on account of
-color, it is gross impudence for any nation to say that
-they are equal in rights. Of course, men are not equal
-in strength, size, or other endowments, physical or mental;
-but they are equal in rights, which is what our fathers
-declared. They are equal before God, equal before
-the divine law; they should be made equal before
-human law. Equality before the Law is the true rule.</p>
-
-<p>How can any possible evil result from a rule which is
-so natural and just? There can be no conflict of races
-where there is no denial of rights. It is only when
-rights are denied that conflict begins. See to it that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span> all
-are treated with justice, and there will be that peace
-which is the aspiration of good men. For the sake of
-peace I pray that this great opportunity be not lost.</p>
-
-<p>I hear a strange cry about the supremacy of one race
-over another. Of course I am against this with my
-whole heart and soul. I was against it when it showed
-itself in the terrible pretensions of the slave-master;
-and now I am against it, as it shows itself in the most
-shameful oligarchy of which history has made mention,&mdash;an
-oligarchy of the skin. Reason, humanity, religion,
-and common sense, all reject the wretched thing. Even
-if the whites are afraid that the blacks will become an
-oligarchy and rule their former masters, this is no reason
-for a continued denial of rights. But this inquietude on
-account of what is nicknamed “negro supremacy” is as
-amusing as it is incredible. It is one of the curiosities
-of history. Occupied as I am at this moment, I should
-be tempted to put aside all other things and journey to
-the Mississippi in order to look at a company of whites
-who will openly avow their fear of “negro supremacy.”
-I should like to see their pallid faces, and hear the confession
-from their own trembling lips. Such a company
-of whites would be a sight to behold. Falstaff’s sorry
-troops were nothing to them.</p>
-
-<p>Such foolish fears and foolish arguments cannot prevail
-against the great cause of Equal Rights. Spite of
-all obstacles and all prejudices, this truth must triumph.
-Was it not declared by our fathers? What they declared
-is a promise perpetually binding on us, their children.</p>
-
-<p>Accept my best wishes, and believe me, dear Sir, faithfully
-yours,</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Charles Sumner</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="ISSUES_AT_THE_PRESIDENTIAL_ELECTION" id="ISSUES_AT_THE_PRESIDENTIAL_ELECTION"></a>ISSUES AT THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION.</h2>
-
-<p class="plabeln"><span class="smcap">Speech at the City Hall, Cambridge, October 29, 1868.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="medium">
-
-<p>At the Republican State Convention, held at Worcester, September
-9, 1868, of which Hon. George S. Boutwell was President, the following
-was the last resolution of the platform, which was unanimously
-adopted:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“That the public life of the Honorable Charles Sumner, during three
-terms of service in the Senate of the United States, has fully justified the
-confidence which has been successively reposed in him; that his eloquent,
-fearless, and persistent devotion to the sacred cause of Human Rights, as well
-in its early struggles as in its later triumphs,&mdash;his beneficent efforts, after
-the abolition of Slavery, in extirpating all the incidents thereof,&mdash;his constant
-solicitude for the material interests of the country,&mdash;his diligence and
-success, as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, in vindicating
-the policy of maintaining the just rights of the Government against
-foreign powers, and at the same time preserving peace with the nations,&mdash;all
-present a public record of rare usefulness and honor; and that his fidelity,
-experience, and honorable identification with our national history call
-for his reëlection to the high office in which he has rendered such illustrious
-service to his country and to mankind.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The report of the <i>Boston Daily Advertiser</i> stated that “the reading
-of the resolutions was accompanied by repeated applause,&mdash;the last one,
-relating to Mr. Sumner, calling forth a perfect tempest of approval.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>January 19, 1869, Mr. Sumner was reëlected Senator for the term
-of six years, beginning with March 4th following, by the concurrent
-vote of the two Houses of the Legislature. The vote was as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="Votes" class="small">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdc"><i>In the Senate.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Charles Sumner,</td><td class="tdr">37</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Josiah G. Abbott,</td><td class="tdr">2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdc"><i>In the House.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Charles Sumner,</td><td class="tdr">216</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Josiah G. Abbott,</td><td class="tdr">15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Nathaniel P. Banks,</td><td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="r15" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>SPEECH.</h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/line.png" width="80" height="16" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="dropcap">FELLOW-CITIZENS,&mdash;If I have taken little part
-in the present canvass, you will do me the justice
-to believe that it is from no failure of interest in the
-cause for which I have so often pleaded; nor is it from
-any lukewarmness to the candidates. The cause is
-nothing less than our country redeemed from peril and
-dedicated to Human Rights, so as to become an example
-to mankind. The candidates are illustrious citizens,
-always loyal to this great cause, both of surpassing
-merit, and one of unequalled renown in the suppression
-of the Rebellion. In this simple statement I open the
-whole case. The cause would commend any candidates,
-and I might almost add that the candidates would commend
-any cause.</p>
-
-<p>It is only in deference to my good physician that I
-have thus far forborne those customary efforts to which
-I was so strongly prompted; and now I speak in fear of
-offending against his rules. But I am unwilling that
-this contest shall close without my testimony, such as it
-is, and without mingling my voice with that general
-acclaim which is filling the land.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Indulge me still further while for a moment I allude
-to myself. The Republican State Convention has by
-formal resolution presented me for reëlection to the
-Senate, so that this question enters into the larger canvass.
-Meeting my fellow-citizens now, it would not be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
-out of order, I believe, nor should I depart from any of
-the proprieties of my position, if I proceeded to give you
-an account of my stewardship during the term of service
-about to expire. But when I consider that this extends
-over six busy years, beginning while the Rebellion
-still raged and continuing through all the anxious
-period of Reconstruction,&mdash;that it embraces nothing
-less than the Abolition of Slavery, and all the steps by
-which this transcendent measure was promoted and consummated,
-also the various efforts for the establishment
-of Equal Rights, especially in the court-room and at the
-ballot-box, thus helping the fulfilment of the promises
-originally made in the Declaration of Independence,&mdash;that
-it embraces, besides, all the infinite questions of
-taxation, finance, railroads, business and foreign relations,
-including many important treaties, among which
-was that for the acquisition of the Russian possessions
-in North America,&mdash;and considering, further, how these
-transactions belong to the history of our country, where
-they are already read, I content myself with remarking
-that in all of them I have borne a part, I trust not unworthy
-of the honored Commonwealth whose representative
-I am; and here I invite your scrutiny and candid
-judgment.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly some of the frequent criticism to which I
-have been exposed is already dulled by time or answered
-by events. A venerable statesman, eminent in
-the profession, once rebuked me for the term <i>Equality
-before the Law</i>, which I had taken from the French, as
-expressing more precisely than the Declaration of Independence
-that equality in rights which is all that constitutions
-or laws can secure. My learned critic had
-never met this term in the Common Law, or in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
-English language, and therefore he did not like the
-innovation. In the same spirit other efforts have been
-encountered, often with virulence, especially those two
-fundamentals of Reconstruction,&mdash;first, the power of
-Congress over the Rebel States, whether as territories,
-or provinces, or as States having no republican government,
-or, according to the language of President Lincoln,
-“out of their proper practical relation with the
-Union,”<a name="FNanchor_265_265" id="FNanchor_265_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> and, secondly, the necessity of lifting the freedman
-into Equal Rights, civil and political, so as to make
-him a part of the body politic. Who can forget the
-clamor at these two propositions? All this has happily
-ceased, except as an echo from Rebels and their allies,
-whose leading part is a protest against the power of
-Congress and the equal rights of the freedman.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Though formal criticism has tardily died out, there is
-sometimes a warning against men of “one idea,” with a
-finger-point at myself. Here I meet my accuser face
-to face. What duty have I failed to perform? Let it
-be specified. What interest have I neglected? Has it
-been finance? The “Globe” will show my earnest and
-elaborate effort at the beginning of the war, warning
-against an inconvertible currency, and a similar effort
-made recently to secure the return to specie payments.
-Has it been taxation, or commerce, or railroads, or business
-in any of its forms, or foreign relations, with which,
-as Chairman of the Senate Committee on this subject,
-I have been particularly connected? On all of these I
-refer to the record. What, then, have I neglected? It
-is true, that, while bearing these things in mind and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
-neglecting none, I felt it a supreme duty to warn my
-country against the perils from Slavery, and to insist
-upon irreversible guaranties for the security of all, especially
-those freedmen whom we could not consent to
-sacrifice without the most shameful ingratitude. As the
-urgency was great, I also was urgent. In season and out
-of season, at all times, in all places, here at home and
-in the Senate, I insisted upon the abolition of Slavery,
-and the completion of this great work by the removal
-of its whole brood of inequalities, so that it should not
-reappear in another form. But my earnestness and constancy
-only imperfectly represented the cause. There
-could be no excess,&mdash;nothing too strong. The Republic
-was menaced; where was the limit to patriotic duty?
-Human Rights were in jeopardy; who that had a heart
-to feel could be indifferent? Nobody could do too
-much. This was not possible. No wisdom too great,
-no voice too eloquent, no courage too persevering. Of
-course, I claim no merit for effort in this behalf; but I
-appeal to you, my fellow-citizens, that the time for reproach
-on this account is past. We must be “practical,”
-says the critic. Very well. Here we agree. But, pray,
-who has been “practical”? Is it those laggards, who,
-after clinging to Slavery, then denied the power of Congress,
-and next scouted the equal rights of the freedman?
-Permit me to say that the “practical” statesman
-foresees the future and provides for it.</p>
-
-<p>Whoever does anything with his whole heart makes
-it for the time his “one idea.” Every discoverer, every
-inventor, every poet, every artist, every orator, every
-general, every statesman, is absorbed in his work; and
-he succeeds just in proportion as for the time it becomes
-his “one idea.” The occasion must not be unworthy or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
-petty; but the more complete the self-dedication, the
-more effective is the result. I know no better instance
-of “one idea” pursued to a triumphant end than when
-our candidate, after planning his campaign, announced
-that he meant “to fight it out on this line, if it took all
-summer.” Here was no occasion for reproach, except
-from Rebels, who would have been glad to see him fail
-in that singleness of idea which gave him the victory.
-There are other places where the same singleness is
-needed and the idea is not less lofty. The Senate Chamber
-has its battles also; and the conflict embraces the
-whole country. Personally, I have nothing to regret,
-except my own inadequacy. I would have done more,
-if I could. Call it “one idea.” That idea is nothing
-less than country, with all that is contained in that inspiring
-word, and with the infinite vista of the same
-blessings for all mankind.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>From these allusions, suggested by my own personal
-relations, I come directly to the issues of this canvass.
-Others have presented them so fully that there is less
-need of any minute exposition on my part, even if the
-heralds of triumph did not announce the certain result.
-But you will bear with me while I state briefly what
-is to be decided. This may be seen in general or in
-detail.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking generally, you are to decide on the means
-for the final suppression of the Rebellion, and the establishment
-of security for the future. Shall the Rebellion
-which you have subdued on the bloody field be permitted
-to assert its power again, or shall it be trampled
-out, so that its infamous pretensions shall disappear forever?
-These general questions involve the whole issue.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
-If you sympathize with the Rebellion, or decline to take
-security against its recurrence, then vote for Seymour
-and Blair. I need not add, that, if you are in earnest
-against the Rebellion, and seek just safeguards for the
-Republic, then vote for Grant and Colfax. The case is
-too plain for argument.</p>
-
-<p>It may be put more precisely still: <i>Shall the men who
-saved the Republic continue to rule it, or shall it be handed
-over to Rebels and their allies?</i> Such is the simple issue,
-stripped of all hypocritical guise; for here, as in other
-days, the real question is concealed by the enemy. The
-plausible terms of Law and Constitution, with even the
-pretence of generosity, now employed to rehabilitate the
-Rebellion, are unmasked by the witty touch of “Hudibras,”
-whose words are as pointed now as under Charles
-the Second:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“What’s liberty of conscience,</div>
-<div class="verse">I’ th’ natural and genuine sense?</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis to restore, with more security,</div>
-<div class="verse">Rebellion to its ancient purity.”<a name="FNanchor_266_266" id="FNanchor_266_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the one side are loyal multitudes, and the generous
-freedmen who bared themselves to danger as our
-allies, with Grant still at their head; and on the other
-are Rebels, under the name of the Democratic Party, all
-dripping with blood from innumerable fields of slaughter
-where loyal men gasped away life,&mdash;from Fort Pillow,
-from Andersonville, from pirate decks,&mdash;hurrying, with
-Seymour at their head, to govern the Republic in the
-name of the Lost Cause. Not so fast, ye men of blood!
-Stand back! They who encountered you before will
-encounter you again.</p>
-
-<p>I would not make thi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>s statement too strong. I wish
-to keep within bounds. But the facts are too patent to
-admit of doubt. Yes, it is the old Democracy, which,
-after giving to the Rebellion its denationalizing pretension
-of State Rights, and all its wicked leaders, from
-Davis to Forrest and Semmes,&mdash;after thwarting every
-measure for its suppression as “unconstitutional,” from
-the Proclamation of Emancipation to the firing of a gun
-or the condemnation of Vallandigham,&mdash;after interfering
-with enlistments also as “unconstitutional,”&mdash;after
-provoking sympathetic riots,&mdash;after holding up “blue
-lights” for the guidance of the enemy,&mdash;after hanging
-upon the country like a paralysis,&mdash;and after, finally,
-under the lead of Seymour, declaring the war a “failure,”&mdash;this
-same Democracy, still under the lead of Seymour,
-champions the Lost Cause. Under the pretence
-of restoring Rebels to rights, it seeks to restore them to
-power; and this is the very question on which you are
-to vote. The Tories at the end of the Revolution were
-more moderate. They did not insist upon instant restoration
-to rights forfeited by treason; nor did they
-bring forward a candidate against Washington. This
-is reserved for the Tories of our day.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All this is general. Descending to details, we find
-that the issue now presented reappears in other questions.
-Of these none is more important than that of the
-Reconstruction Acts, which have been openly assailed as
-“unconstitutional, revolutionary, and void.”<a name="FNanchor_267_267" id="FNanchor_267_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> In nothing
-more than in this declaration, associated with the
-letter of its candidate, do we behold the audacity of the
-Rebel Party. Even while professing allegiance and asking
-your vote, they proclaim war in a new form. Instead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
-of <i>Secession</i> maintained by arms, it is now <i>Nullification</i>
-maintained by arms. In no other way can we interpret
-the party platform, and the programme of Mr. Blair,
-when, with customary frankness, he calls upon the President
-“to declare these Acts null and void, compel the
-army to undo its usurpations at the South, and disperse
-the carpet-bag State governments.”<a name="FNanchor_268_268" id="FNanchor_268_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> Here is Nullification
-with a vengeance,&mdash;that very Nullification which,
-in a much milder type, made Andrew Jackson threaten
-to hang its authors high as Haman. Secession is declared
-to be settled by the war; but Nullification is
-openly recognized. What is the difference between the
-two? The answer is plain. Secession is war out of the
-Union; Nullification is war in the Union. And this is
-the open menace of the Rebel Party.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Reconstruction Acts err from what they fail to
-do rather than from what they do. They do too little
-rather than too much. They should have secured a
-piece of land to the landless freedman, whose unrewarded
-toil has mingled for generations in the soil;
-and they should have secured a system of common
-schools open to all. In these demands, as in every
-other measure of Reconstruction, I would do nothing
-in severity or triumph, nothing to punish or humble.
-Nor is it only in justice to the freedman, who has a bill
-against his former master for unpaid wages, and also
-against the country for an infinite debt, but it is for
-the good of all constituting the community, including
-the former master. Nothing can be truer than that
-under such influences society will be improved, chara<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>cter
-will be elevated, and the general resources will
-be enlarged. Only in this way will the Barbarism of
-Slavery be banished, and a true civilization organized
-in its place. Our simple object is expressed in the
-words of Holy Writ: “Let us build these cities, and
-make about them walls and towers, gates and bars,
-while the land is yet before us.”<a name="FNanchor_269_269" id="FNanchor_269_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> By contributing to
-this work, by laboring for its accomplishment, by sending
-it our God-speed, we perform a service at once of
-the highest charity and the highest patriotism, which
-hereafter the children of the South, emancipated from
-error, will rejoice to recognize. With Human Rights
-under a permanent safeguard, there can be no limit to
-prosperity. As under this sunshine the land yields its
-increase and the gardens bloom with beauty, while commerce
-and manufactures enjoy a new life, they will confess
-that we did well for them, and will hail with pride
-the increased glory of the Republic. If, as in ancient
-Rome, we demanded the heads of senators and orators,&mdash;if,
-as in England, we took the life and estate of all
-traitors,&mdash;if, as in Germany, we fatigued the sword
-with slaughter, and cried “havoc,”&mdash;if, as in France,
-we set up guillotines, and worked them until the blood
-stood in puddles beneath,&mdash;if, as in all these historic
-countries, we acted in pitiless vengeance,&mdash;if in anything
-we have done or attempted there was one deed
-of vengeance,&mdash;then we, too, might deserve a chastening
-censure. But all that we have done, next after the
-safety of the Republic, is for the good of those who
-were our enemies, and who despitefully used us. Never
-before was clemency so sublime; never before was a
-rebel people surrounded by beneficence so comprehensi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>ve.
-Great as was the Republic in arms, it is greater
-still in the majesty of its charity.</p>
-
-<p>So far as the Reconstruction Acts have been assailed,
-I am ready to defend them against all comers. And I
-repel at the outset every charge or suggestion of harshness.
-They are not harsh, unless it is harsh to give
-every man his due. If they are harsh, then is beneficence
-harsh, then is charity harsh. It is only by outraging
-every principle of justice, stifling every sympathy
-with Human Rights, and discarding common sense, and,
-still further, by forgetting all the sacred obligations of
-country, that we can submit to see political power in
-the hands of Rebels. No judgment is too terrible for
-us, if we consent to the sacrifice. For the sake of the
-freedman, for the sake of his former master, for the sake
-of all, and for the sake of the Republic, this must not
-be. Therefore were the Reconstruction Acts adopted by
-immense majorities in both Houses of Congress as the
-guaranty of peace. The aspiration of our candidate
-was in every line and word, “Let us have peace.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Two questions are presented by the enemies of these
-Acts: first, on the Power of Congress; and, secondly, on
-the Equal Rights of the Freedman.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Too often have I asserted the plenary power of Congress
-with arguments that have never been answered, to
-feel it necessary now to occupy time on this head. The
-case may be proved in so many ways that it is difficult
-to know which to select. Whether the power is derived
-from the necessity of the case, because the Rebel States
-were without governments, which is the reason assigned
-by Chief Justice Marshall for the jurisdiction of Congre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span>ss
-over the Territories,&mdash;or from the universal rights
-of war, following the subjection of belligerents on land,&mdash;or
-from the obligation of the United States to guaranty
-a republican government to each State,&mdash;or from the
-Constitutional Amendment abolishing Slavery, with its
-supplementary clause conferring upon Congress power
-to enforce this abolition,&mdash;whether the power is derived
-from one or all of these bountiful sources, it is
-clear that it exists. As well say that the power over
-the Territories, the war power, the guaranty power,
-and the power to enforce the abolition of Slavery, do
-not exist; as well say that the Constitution itself does
-not exist.</p>
-
-<p>If any confirmation of this irresistible conclusion
-were needed, it might be found in the practical admissions
-of Andrew Johnson, who, while perversely
-usurping the power of Reconstruction, did it in the
-name of the Nation. In the prosecution of this usurpation,
-he summoned conventions of delegates made
-eligible by his proclamation, and chosen by electors invested
-by him with the right of suffrage; and through
-these conventions, to which he gave the law by telegraphic
-wire, he assumed to institute local governments.
-Thus has Andrew Johnson testified to the power of the
-Nation over Reconstruction, while, with an absurdity
-of pretension which history will condemn even more
-than any contemporary judgment, he assumed that he
-was the Nation. His usurpation has been overthrown,
-but his testimony to the power of the Nation remains.
-When the Nation speaks, it is by Congress,&mdash;as the
-Roman Republic spoke by its Senate and people, <i>Senatus
-Populusque Romanus</i>, in whose name went forth those
-great decrees which ruled the world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In considering the constitutionality of the Reconstruction
-Acts, there is a distinction, recognized by repeated
-judgments of the Supreme Court, which has not been
-sufficiently regarded, even by our friends. The Rebel
-Party, especially in their platform at New York, forget
-it entirely. They tell us that the Reconstruction Acts
-are “unconstitutional, revolutionary, and void,” and Wade
-Hampton boasts that he prompted this declaration. I
-have already exhibited the power of Congress in four
-different sources; but beyond these is the principle,
-<i>that Congress, in the exercise of political powers, cannot
-be questioned</i>. So says the Supreme Court. Thus it has
-been decided, in general terms, “that the action of <i>the
-political branches</i> of the Government in a matter that
-belongs to them is conclusive.”<a name="FNanchor_270_270" id="FNanchor_270_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> And in the famous
-case of <i>Luther</i> v. <i>Borden</i>, it is announced, that, where the
-National Government interferes with the domestic concerns
-of a State, “the Constitution of the United States,
-as far as it has provided for an emergency of this kind,
-<i>has treated the subject as political in its nature, and
-placed the power in the hands of that department</i>”; and
-it is further added, that “its decision is binding on every
-other department of Government, and could not be
-questioned in a judicial tribunal.”<a name="FNanchor_271_271" id="FNanchor_271_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> In the face of these
-peremptory words, it is difficult to see what headway
-can be made in contesting the validity of the Reconstruction
-Acts, except by arms. If ever a question was
-political, it is this. It is political in every aspect, whether
-regarded as springing from the necessity of the case,
-from the rights of war, from the obligation to guaranty
-a republican government, or from the power to enforce
-the abolition of Slavery. Never before was any question<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
-presented so completely political. Reconstruction is as
-political as the war, or as any of the means for its conduct.
-It is political from beginning to end. It is nothing,
-if not political. Therefore, by unassailable precedents
-under the Constitution, are these Acts fixed and
-secured so that no court can touch them,&mdash;nothing but
-the war which Mr. Blair has menaced.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Equal Rights conferred upon the freedman are all
-placed under this safeguard. Congress has done this
-great act of justice, and, thank God, it cannot be undone.
-It has already taken its place in the immortal
-covenants of history, and become a part of the harmonies
-of the universe. As well attempt to undo the Declaration
-of Independence, or suspend the law of gravitation.
-This cannot be. The bloody horrors of San Domingo,
-where France undertook to cancel Emancipation, testify
-with a voice of wail that a race once lifted from Slavery
-cannot be again degraded. Human Rights, when at last
-obtained, cannot be wrested back without a conflict in
-which God will rage against the oppressor.</p>
-
-<p>But I do not content myself with showing the essential
-stability of this measure of Reconstruction. I defend
-it in all respects,&mdash;not only as an act of essential
-justice, without which our Nation would be a deformity,
-but as an irresistible necessity, for the sake of that security
-without which peace is impossible. It is enough
-that justice commanded it; but the public exigency left
-no opportunity for any fine-spun system, with educational
-or pecuniary conditions, even if this were consistent
-with the fundamental principle that “all just
-government stands only on the consent of the governed.”
-As the strong arms of this despised race had <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span>been needed
-for the safety of the Republic, so were their votes needed
-now. The cause was the same. Without them loyal
-governments would fail. They could not be organized.
-To enfranchise those only who could read and write or
-pay a certain tax was not enough. They were too few.
-All the loyal are needed at the ballot-box to counterbalance
-the disloyal.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was at this time, and under this pressure, that conditions,
-educational or pecuniary, were seen to be inadmissible;
-and many, considering the question in the
-light of principle, were led to ask, if, under any circumstances,
-such conditions are just. Surely an unlettered
-Unionist is better than a Rebel, however learned
-or wise, and on all practical questions will vote more
-nearly right. If there is to be exclusion, let it be of
-the disloyal, and not of the loyal. Nobody can place
-the value of education too high; but is it just to make
-it the prerequisite to any right of citizenship? There
-are many, whose only school has been the rough
-world, in whom character is developed to a rare degree.
-There are freedmen unable to read or write who are
-excellent in all respects. If willing to reject such persons
-as allies, can you justly exclude them from participation
-in the Government? Can you justly exclude any
-good citizen from such participation?</p>
-
-<p>It is recorded of the English statesman, Charles James
-Fox, that, after voting at a contested election, and finding
-his coachman, who had driven him to the polls,
-voting the other way, he protested pleasantly that the
-coachman should have told him in advance how he was
-to vote, that the two might have paired off and stayed
-at home. Here is Fox at the polls neutralized by hi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span>s
-coachman. A similar incident is told of Judge Story,
-here in Cambridge. Both stories have been used to discredit
-suffrage by the people. They have not this effect
-on my mind. On the contrary, I find in them a beautiful
-illustration of that Equality before the Law which is
-the promise of republican institutions. At the ballot-box
-the humblest citizen is the equal of the great statesman
-or the great judge. If this seems unreasonable, it must
-not be forgotten that the eminent citizen exercises an
-influence which is not confined to his vote. It extends
-with his fame or position, so that, though he has only a
-single vote, there are many, perhaps multitudes, swayed
-by his example. This is the sufficient compensation for
-talent and education exerted for the public weal, without
-denying to anybody his vote. The common man
-may counterbalance the vote of the great statesman or
-great judge, but he cannot counterbalance this influence.
-The common man has nothing but his vote. Who would
-rob him of this?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Thus far I have shown the Reconstruction Acts to be
-constitutional, natural, and valid, in contradiction to the
-Rebel platform, asserting them to be “unconstitutional,
-revolutionary, and void.” But these Acts may be seen
-in other aspects. I have shown what they accomplish.
-See now what they prevent; and here is another series
-of questions, every one of which is an issue on which
-you are to vote.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Are you ready for the revival of Slavery? I put this
-question plainly; for this is involved in the irreversibility
-of the Reconstruction Acts. Let these be overthrown
-or abandoned, and I know no adequate safeguard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span>
-against an outrageous oppression of the freedman,
-which will be Slavery under another name. The original
-type, as received from Africa and perpetuated here,
-might not appear; but this is not the only form of the
-hateful wrong. Not to speak of peonage, as it existed in
-Mexico, there is a denial of rights, with exclusion from
-all participation in the Government and subjection to
-oppressive restraints, which of itself is a most direful
-slavery, under which the wretched bondman smarts as
-beneath the lash. And such a slavery has been deliberately
-planned by the Rebels. It would be organized, if
-they again had power. Of this there can be no doubt.
-The evidence is explicit and authentic.</p>
-
-<p>I have here a Congressional document, containing the
-cruel legislation of the Rebel States immediately after
-the close of the Rebellion, under the inspiration of the
-Johnson governments.<a name="FNanchor_272_272" id="FNanchor_272_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> Here are its diabolical statutes,
-fashioned in the spirit of Slavery, with all that heartlessness
-which gave to Slavery its distinctive character.
-The emancipated African, shut out from all participation
-in the Government, despoiled of the ballot, was enmeshed
-in a web of laws which left him no better than
-a fly in the toils of a spider. If he moved away from
-his place of work, he was caught as a “vagrant”; if he
-sought work as a mechanic or by the job, he was constrained
-by the requirement of a “license”; if he complained
-of a white man, he was subjected to the most
-cunning impediments; if he bought arms for self-defence,
-he was a violator of law;&mdash;and thus, wherever he went,
-or whatever he attempted, he was a perpetual victim.
-In Mississippi he could not “rent or lease any lands o<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span>r
-tenements except in incorporated towns or cities,” thus
-keeping him a serf attached to the soil of his master.
-Looking at these provisions critically, it appears, that,
-while pretending to regulate vagrants, apprentices, licenses,
-and civil rights, the freedman was degraded to
-the most abject condition; and then, under a pretence
-for the public peace, he was shut out from opportunities
-of knowledge, and also from keeping arms, while he was
-subjected to odious and exceptional punishments, as the
-pillory, the stocks, the whipping-post, and sale for fine
-and costs. Behind all these was violence, assassination,
-murder, with the Ku-Klux-Klan constituting the lawless
-police of this new system. The whole picture is too
-horrible; but it is true as horrible. In the face of this
-unanswerable evidence, who will say that it was not
-proposed to revive Slavery? To call such a condition
-Liberty is preposterous. If not a slave of the old type,
-the freedman was a slave of a new type, invented by his
-unrepentant master as the substitute for what he had
-surrendered to the power of the Nation. Beginning with
-a caste as offensive and irreligious as that of Hindostan,
-and adding to it the pretensions of an oligarchy in government,
-the representatives of the old system were preparing
-to trample upon an oppressed race. The soul
-sickens at the thought.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>With all this indubitable record staring us in the
-eyes, with the daily report of inconceivable outrage
-darkening the air, with wrong in every form let loose
-upon the long-suffering freedman, General Lee breaks
-the respectable silence of his parole to deny that “the
-Southern people are hostile to the negroes, and would
-oppress them, if in their power to do it.” The report, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>he
-asserts, is “entirely unfounded,”&mdash;that is the phrase,&mdash;“entirely
-unfounded”; and then he dwells on the old
-patriarchal relation, with the habit from childhood of
-“looking upon them with kindness” (witness the history
-of Slavery in its authentic instances!); and then
-he insists that “the change in the relations of the two
-races has wrought no change in feelings towards them,”
-that “without their labor the land of the South would
-be comparatively unproductive, and therefore <i>self-interest
-would prompt the whites of the South to extend to the
-negroes care and protection</i>.” Here is the threadbare pretension
-with which we were so familiar through all the
-dreary days of the old Barbarism, now brought forward
-by the Generalissimo of the Rebellion to vindicate the
-new,&mdash;and all this with an unabashed effrontery, which
-shows, that, in surrendering his sword, he did not surrender
-that insensibility to justice and humanity which
-is the distinctive character of the slave-master. The
-freedman does not need the “care and protection” of
-any such person. He needs the rights of an American
-citizen; and you are to declare by your votes if he shall
-have them.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The opposition to the Reconstruction Acts manifests
-itself in an inconceivable brutality, kindred to that of
-Slavery, and fit prelude to the revival of this odious
-wrong. Shall this continue? Outrage in every form
-is directed against loyal persons, without distinction of
-color. It is enough that a man is a patriot for Rebels
-to make war upon him. Insulted, abused, and despoiled
-of everything, he is murdered on the highway, on the
-railway, or, it may be, in his own house. Nowhere is
-he safe. The terrible atrocity of these acts is aggr<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span>avated
-by the rallying cries of the murderers. If the victim is
-black, then it is a “war of races”; if white, then he is
-nothing but a “carpet-bagger”; and so, whether black
-or white, he is a victim. History has few scenes of
-equal guilt. Persecution in all its untold cruelties, ending
-in martyrdom, rages over a wide-spread land.</p>
-
-<p>If there be a “war of races,” as is the apologetic defence
-of the murderers, then it is war declared and carried
-on by whites. The other race is inoffensive and
-makes no war, asking only its rights. The whole pretension
-of a “war of races” is an invention to cover the
-brutality of the oppressors. Not less wicked is the loud-mouthed
-attack on immigrants, whom Rebels choose to
-call “carpet-baggers,”&mdash;that is, American citizens, who,
-in the exercise of the rights of citizenship, carry to the
-South the blood, the capital, and the ideas of the North.
-This term of reproach does not belong to the Northerner
-alone. The carpet-bag is the symbol of our whole population:
-there is nobody who is not a “carpet-bagger,” or
-at least the descendant of one. Constantly the country
-opens its arms to welcome “carpet-baggers” from foreign
-lands. And yet the cry ascends that “carpet-baggers”
-are to be driven from the South. Here permit me to
-say, that, if anybody is driven from anywhere, it will
-not be the loyal citizen, whether old or new.</p>
-
-<p>On all this you are to vote. It will be for you to determine
-if there shall be peace between the two races,
-and if American citizens shall enjoy everywhere within
-the jurisdiction of the Republic all the rights of citizenship,
-free from harm or menace, and with the liberty of
-uttering their freest thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>There is another issue at this <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span>election. It is with
-regard to the unpatriotic, denationalizing pretensions of
-State Rights. In their name was the Rebellion begun,
-and now in their name is every measure of Reconstruction
-opposed. Important as are the functions of a State
-in the administration of local government, especially in
-resisting an overbearing centralization, they must not be
-exalted above the Nation in its own appropriate sphere.
-Great as is the magic of a State, there is to my mind a
-greater magic in the Nation. The true patriot would
-not consent to see the sacrifice of the Nation more than
-the true mother before King Solomon would consent to
-see the sacrifice of her child. It is as a Nation&mdash;all
-together making one&mdash;that we have a place at the
-council-board of the world, to excite the pride of the
-patriot and the respect of foreign powers. It is as a
-Nation that we can do all that becomes a civilized government;
-and “who dares do more is none.” But all
-this will be changed, just in proportion as any State
-claims for itself a sovereignty which belongs to all, and
-reduces the Nation within its borders to be little more
-than a tenant-at-will,&mdash;just in proportion as the National
-Unity is assailed or called in question,&mdash;just in
-proportion as the Nation ceases to be a complete and
-harmonious body, in which each State performs its ancillary
-part, as hand or foot to the natural body. There
-is an irresistible protest against such a sacrifice, which
-comes from the very heart of our history. It was in the
-name of “the good people of these Colonies,” called “one
-people,” that our fathers put forth the Declaration of
-Independence, with its preamble of Unity, and its dedication
-of the new Nation to Human Rights. And now
-it is for us, their children, to keep this Unity, and to
-perform all the national promises thus announced. The
-Nation is solemnly pledged to guard its Unity, and to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span>
-make Human Rights coextensive with its boundaries.
-Nor can it allow any pretension of State Rights to interfere
-with this commanding duty.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is still another issue, which is subordinate to
-Reconstruction and dependent upon it, so, indeed, as to
-be a part of it. I refer to the Financial Question, with
-the menace of Repudiation in different forms. Let the
-Reconstruction Acts be maintained in peace, in other
-words, let peace be established in the Rebel States,
-and the menace of Repudiation will disappear from the
-scene,&mdash;none so poor to do it reverence. If it find any
-acceptance now, it is only in that revolutionary spirit
-which assails all the guaranties of peace. Repudiation
-of the Reconstruction Acts, with all their securities for
-Equal Rights, is naturally followed by repudiation of
-the National Debt. The Acts and the Debt are parts
-of one system, being the means and price of peace. So
-strongly am I convinced of the potency of this influence,
-that I do not doubt the entire practicability of
-specie payments on the fourth of July next after the
-inauguration of General Grant.</p>
-
-<p>Nay, more, it is my conviction, not only that we <i>can</i>
-have specie payments at that time, but that we <i>ought</i> to
-have them. If we can, we ought; for this is nothing
-but the honest payment of what we owe. A failure to
-pay may be excused, but never justified. Our failure
-was originally sanctioned only under the urgency of
-war; but this sanction cannot extend beyond the urgency.
-It is sometimes said that necessity renders an
-action just, and Latin authority is quoted: <i>Id enim
-justissimum quod necessarium</i>. But it is none the less
-untrue. Necessity may excuse an action not in itself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span>
-just, but it is without the force to render it just; for
-justice is immutable. The taking of the property of
-another under the instigation of famine is excused, and
-so is the taking of the property of citizens by the Government
-during war,&mdash;in both cases from necessity.
-But as the necessity ceases, the obligations of justice
-revive. Necessity has no rights, but only privileges,
-which disappear with the exigency. Therefore do I say
-that the time has passed when the Nation can be excused
-for refusing to pay according to its promise. But
-it is vain to expect this important change from a political
-party which emblazons Repudiation on its banners.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is in two conspicuous forms that Repudiation
-flaunts: first, in the barefaced proposition to tax the
-bonds, contrary to the contract at the time the money
-was lent; and the other, not less barefaced, to pay interest-bearing
-bonds with greenbacks, or, in other words,
-mere promises to pay without interest.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The exemption from taxation was a part of the original
-obligation, having, of course, a positive value, which
-entered into the price of the bond at the time of subscription.
-This additional price was taken from the
-pocket of the subscriber and transferred to the National
-Treasury, where it has been used for the public advantage.
-It is so much property to the credit of the bond-holder,
-which it is gravely proposed to confiscate. Rebel
-property you will not confiscate; but you are considering
-how to confiscate that of the loyal citizen. Taxation
-of the bonds is confiscation.</p>
-
-<p>The whole case can be stated <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span>with perfect simplicity.
-To tax the bonds is to break the contract <i>because you
-have the power</i>. It is an imitation of the Roman governor,
-a lieutenant of Cæsar, who, after an agreement by
-the people of Gaul to pay a certain subsidy monthly,
-arbitrarily changed the number of months to fourteen.
-The subtraction from the interest by taxation is kindred
-in dishonesty to the increase of the Gaulish subsidy by
-adding to the months. Of course, in private contracts
-between merchant and merchant no such thing could be
-done. But there can be no rule of good faith binding on
-private individuals which is not binding on the Nation,
-while there are exceptional reasons for extraordinary
-scrupulousness on the part of the Nation. As the transaction
-is vast, and especially as the Nation is conspicuous,
-what is done becomes an example to the world
-which history cannot forget. A Nation cannot afford
-to do a mean thing. There is another reason, founded
-on the helpless condition of the creditor, who has no
-power to enforce his claim, whether of principal or interest.
-It was Charles James Fox who once exclaimed
-against a proposition kindred to that now made: “Oh,
-no, no! His claims are doubly binding who trusts to
-the rectitude of another.” This is only according to an
-admitted principle in the Laws of War, constraining the
-stronger power to the best of faith in dealing with a
-weaker power, because the latter is without the capacity
-to redress a wrong. This benign principle, borrowed
-from the Laws of War, cannot be out of place in the
-Laws of Peace; and I invoke it now as a sufficient protection
-against taxation of the bonds, even if common
-sense in its plainest lessons, and the rule of right in its
-most imperious precepts, did not forbid this thing.</p>
-
-<p>The cheat of paying interest-bearing bonds in promi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span>ses
-without interest is kindred in character to that of
-taxing the bonds. It is flat Repudiation. No subtlety
-of technicality, no ingenuity of citation, no skill in arranging
-texts of statutes, can make it anything else. It
-is so on the face, and it is so the more the transaction
-is examined. Here again I invoke that rule of conduct
-to a weaker party, and I insist, that, if, from any failure
-of explicitness excluding all contrary conclusion, there
-can be any reason for Repudiation, every such suggestion
-must be dismissed as the frightful well-spring of
-disastrous consequences impossible to estimate, while it
-is inconsistent with that Public Faith which is the supreme
-law.</p>
-
-<p>Elsewhere I have considered this question so fully,<a name="FNanchor_273_273" id="FNanchor_273_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a>
-that I content myself now with conclusions only. Do
-you covet the mines of Mexico and Peru, the profits of
-extended commerce, or the harvest of your own teeming
-fields? All these and more you will multiply infinitely,
-if you will keep the Public Faith inviolate. Do you
-seek stability in the currency, with the assurance of
-solid business, so that extravagance and gambling speculations
-shall cease? This, too, you will have through
-the Public Faith. Just in proportion as this is discredited,
-the Nation is degraded and impoverished. If nobody
-had breathed Repudiation, we should all be richer,
-and the national debt would be at a lower interest, saving
-to the Nation millions of dollars annually. Talk of
-taxation; here is an annual tax of millions imposed by
-these praters of Repudiation.</p>
-
-<p>Careless of all the teachings of history, you are exhorted
-to pay the national debt in greenbacks, knowing
-that this can be done only by creating successive
-batches, counted by hundreds of millions, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span> will
-bring our currency to the condition of Continental
-money, when a night’s lodging cost a thousand dollars,
-or the condition of the French <i>assignats</i>, the paper currency
-of the Revolution, which was increased to a fearful
-amount, precisely as it is now proposed to increase
-ours, until the story of Continental money was repeated.
-Talk of clipping the coin, or enfeebling it with alloy,
-as in mediæval times; talk of the disgraceful frauds
-of French monarchs, who, one after another in long
-succession, debased their money and swore the officers
-of the Mint to conceal the debasement; talk of persistent
-reductions in England, from Edward the First
-to Elizabeth, until coin was only the half of itself;
-talk of unhappy Africa, where Mungo Park found that
-a gallon of rum, which was the unit of value, was half
-water;&mdash;talk of all these; you have them on a colossal
-scale in the cheat of paying bonds with greenbacks.
-If not taught by our own memorable experience, when
-Continental money, which was the currency of the time,
-was lost, like the river Rhine at its mouth, in an enormous
-outstretched quicksand, then be taught by the
-experience of another country. Authentic history discloses
-the condition to which France was reduced. Carlyle,
-in his picturesque work on the Revolution, says:
-“There is, so to speak, no trade whatever, for the time
-being. <i>Assignats</i>, long sinking, emitted in such quantities,
-sink now with an alacrity beyond parallel.” The
-hackney-coachman on the street, when asked his fare,
-replied, “Six thousand livres.”<a name="FNanchor_274_274" id="FNanchor_274_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> And still the <i>assignats</i>
-sunk, until at last the nation was a pauper. The Directory,
-invested for the time with supreme power, on repairing
-to the palace of the Luxembourg, found it without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span>
-a single article of furniture. Borrowing from the
-door-keeper a rickety table, an inkstand, and a sheet of
-letter-paper, they draughted their first official message,
-announcing the new government. There was not a solitary
-piece of coin in the Treasury; but there was a printing-press
-at command. <i>Assignats</i> were fabricated in the
-night, and sent forth in the morning wet from the press.<a name="FNanchor_275_275" id="FNanchor_275_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a>
-At last they ended in nothing,&mdash;but not until a great
-and generous people was enveloped in bankruptcy and
-every family was a sufferer. Bankruptcy has its tragedies
-hardly inferior to those which throb beneath the
-“sceptred pall.”</p>
-
-<p>Similar misconduct among us must result in similar
-consequences, with all the tragedies of bankruptcy. Not
-a bank, not a corporation, not an institution of charity,
-which would not suffer,&mdash;each sweeping multitudes into
-the abyss which it could not avoid. Business would be
-disorganized, values would be uncertain; nobody would
-know that the paper in his pocket to-day would buy
-a dinner to-morrow. There is no limit to the depreciation
-of inconvertible paper. Down, down it descends, as
-the plummet, to the bottom, or up, up, as the bubble in
-the air, until, whether down or up, it disappears. It is
-hard to think of the poor, or of those who depend on
-daily wages, under the trials of this condition. The rich
-may, for the time, live from their abundance; but the
-less favored class can have no such refuge. Therefore,
-for the poor, and for all who labor, do I now plead,
-when I ask that you shall not hearken to this painful
-proposition.</p>
-
-<p>I plead, als<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span>o, for the business of the country. So long
-as the currency continues in its present uncertainty, it
-cannot answer the demands of business. It is a diseased
-limb, no better than what is known in India as a
-“Cochin leg,” or an excrescence not unlike the pendulous
-goitre which is the pitiful sight of an Alpine village.
-But it must be uncertain, unless we have peace.
-Therefore, for the sake of the currency, do I unite with
-our candidate in his longing. Business must be emancipated.
-How often are we told by the lawyers, in a saying
-handed down from antiquity, that “a wretched servitude
-exists where the law is uncertain”! But this is not
-true of the law only. Nothing short of that servitude
-which denies God-given rights can be more wretched
-than the servitude of an uncertain currency. And now
-that, by the blessing of God, we are banishing that terrible
-wrong which was so long the curse and shame of
-our Nation, let us apply ourselves to this other servitude,
-whose yoke we are all condemned to bear in daily
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Looking into the travels of Marco Polo in the thirteenth
-century, you will find that he encountered in
-China paper money on a large scale, being an inconvertible
-currency standing on the credit of the Grand
-Khan, not unlike our greenbacks. Describing the celestial
-city of Kin-sai, the famous traveller says, “The
-inhabitants are idolaters, and they use paper money”;
-and then describing another celestial city, Ta-pin-zu,
-he says, “The inhabitants worship idols, and use paper
-money.”<a name="FNanchor_276_276" id="FNanchor_276_276"></a><a href="#Footnote_276_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> I know not if Marco Polo intended by this
-association to suggest any dependence of paper money
-upon the worship of idols. It is enough that he puts
-them together. To my mind they are equally forbidden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span>
-by the Ten Commandments. If one Commandment enjoins
-upon us not to worship any graven image, does not
-another say expressly, “Thou shalt not steal”?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There is another consideration, which I have reserved
-for the last, and which I would call an issue in the
-pending election. It is nothing less than the good name
-of the Republic, and its character as an example to the
-Nations. All this is directly in question. If you are
-true to the great principles of Equal Rights, declared by
-our fathers as the foundation of just government,&mdash;if
-you stand by the freedman and maintain him in well-earned
-citizenship,&mdash;if you require full payment of the
-national debt in coin, principal and interest, at the pleasure
-of the holder, so that the Republic shall have the
-crown of perfect honesty, as also of perfect freedom,&mdash;I
-do not doubt that it will exercise a far-reaching sway.
-Nothing captivates more than the example of virtue,&mdash;not
-even the example of vice. <i>By this sign conquer</i>:
-by fidelity to declared principles, by the performance of
-all promises, by a good name. Then will American history
-supply the long-sought definition of a Republic,
-and our Western star will illumine the Nations.</p>
-
-<p>Reverse the picture, let the Rebel Party prevail, and
-what do we behold? The bonds of the Nation repudiated,
-and the Equal Rights of the freedman, which are
-nothing but bonds of the Nation, repudiated also. Alas!
-the example of the Republic is lost, and our Western
-star is quenched in darkness. But this cannot be without
-a shock, as when our first parents tasted the forbidden
-fruit:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Earth felt the wound; and Nature from her seat,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sighing through all her works, gave signs of woe</div>
-<div class="verse">That all was lost.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">The shock will begin at home; but it will spread wherever
-there are hearts to thrill with anguish. The struggling
-people in foreign lands, now turned to us with
-hope, will sink in despair as they observe the disastrous
-eclipse.</p>
-
-<p>I would not seem too confident in the destinies of my
-country; but I cannot doubt, that, if only true to herself,
-there is nothing too vast for her peaceful ambition.
-Here again I catch the aspiration of our leader in war,
-“Let us have peace.” Out of peace will spring all
-else. Abroad there will be welcome and acceptance,
-with the might of our example constantly increasing.
-At home there will be safety and opportunity for all
-within our borders, with freedom of speech, freedom
-of the press, freedom of travel, and the equal rights
-of citizenship, like the rights of the national creditor,
-all under the perpetual safeguard of that Public Faith
-which is the golden cord of the Republic. Let despots
-break promises, but not our Republic. A Republic is
-where every man has his due. Equality of rights is the
-standing promise of Nature to man, and the Republic
-has succeeded to this promise.</p>
-
-<p>In harmony with the promise of Nature is the promise
-of our fathers, recorded in the Declaration of Independence,
-to which the Republic has succeeded also.
-It is the twofold promise, first, that all are equal in
-rights, and, secondly, that just government stands only
-on the consent of the governed,&mdash;being the two great
-political commandments on which hang all laws and
-constitutions. Keep these truly, and you will keep
-all. Write them in your statutes; write them in
-your hearts. <i>This is the great and only final settlement
-of all existing questions.</i> Under its kindly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span> influence
-the past Rebellion will disappear, alike in its
-principles and its passions; future Rebellion will be
-impossible; and there will be a peace never to be
-disturbed. To this sublime consecration of the Republic
-let me aspire. With nothing less can I be content.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> <i>Ante</i>, Vol. I. pp. 314, 315.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Sermo CCXCIX. § 6: Opera, ed. Benedict., (Paris, 1836-39,) Tom. V.
-col. 1785.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> History of the World, Book V. ch. I: Works, (Oxford, 1829,) Vol.
-VI. p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Of Reformation touching Church Discipline in England, Book II.:
-Works, (London, 1851,) Vol. III. p. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Essay upon the Original and Nature of Government: Miscellanea,
-Part I.: Works, (London, 1720,) Vol. I. p. 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> “La totalité des personnes nées ou naturalisées dans un pays, et vivant
-sous un même gouvernement.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, ed. Milman, (London, 1846,)
-Ch. II. Vol. I. p. 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> See his Essay, as amplified in the successive editions, variously entitled,
-“The National Polity is the Normal Type of Modern Government:
-A Fragment”; “Nationalism: A Fragment of Political Science”; and
-“Fragments of Political Science on Nationalism and Inter-Nationalism”:
-the first two without date,&mdash;the last, New York, 1868.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Menenius Agrippa. Livii Hist. Lib. II. c. 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Journal of the House of Representatives, p. 133, October 24, 1765.
-Hutchinson’s History of Massachusetts, Vol. III. p. 472.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Hazard’s Historical Collections, Vol. II. p. 2. Palfrey’s History of
-New England, Vol. I. p. 624.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Winthrop, History of New England, ed. Savage, Vol. II. p. 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Ibid., p. 160.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Plan of Union: Franklin’s Works, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. pp. 36, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Bancroft, History of the United States, Vol. IV. p. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Franklin to Governor Shirley, December 22, 1754: London Chronicle,
-Feb. 6-8, 1766, Vol. XIX. p. 133; London Magazine, Feb. 1766, Vol.
-XXXV. p. 95. See also Franklin’s Works, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Wells’s Life of Samuel Adams, Vol. II. pp. 90, 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Ibid., p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Journals of Congress, October 14, 1774, Vol. I. pp. 28, 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> The Federalist, ed. J. C. Hamilton, Historical Notice, pp. xii, xiv, lix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Wordsworth, The Excursion, Book IV. 138, 139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Letter to Jefferson, November 12, 1813: Works, Vol. X. p. 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates from several of the New England
-States, held at Boston, August 3-9, 1780: edited from an original MS.
-Record in the New York State Library, with an Introduction and Notes, by
-Franklin B. Hough, Albany, 1867, pp. 50, 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Address and Recommendations to the States by the United States in
-Congress assembled, (Philadelphia, 1783,) p. 9. Journal of Congress, April
-26, 1783, Vol. VIII. pp. 194, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Writings of Washington, ed. Sparks, Vol. VIII. pp. 567, 568, Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Ibid., pp. 441, 443.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Ibid., pp. 504, 505.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Resolution of Congress, October 10, 1780: Journal, Vol. VI. p. 215.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> The Federalist, ed. J. C. Hamilton, Historical Notice, pp. xxii, lviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Ibid., p. xxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Resolutions, July 21, 1782: Hamilton’s Works, ed. J. C. Hamilton,
-Vol. II. pp. 201-204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Journal, February 21, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> Sketches of American Policy, (Hartford, 1785,) Part IV. See also
-Introduction to Debates in the Federal Convention: Madison Papers, Vol.
-II. p. 708.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Life, by his Son, William Jay, Vol. I. pp. 249, 250. See also Letter to
-John Lowell, May 10, 1785: Ibid., p. 190.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> See, <i>ante</i>, p. 274.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Letter to Edmund Randolph, April 8, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II.
-pp. 631, 632.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. IX. pp. 187, 188.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Letter to John Jay, March 10, 1787: Life of Jay, by his Son, Vol. I.
-p. 259.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Debates, May 30, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II. p. 748.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Debates, July 7th: Ibid., p. 1049.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Debates, July 5th: Ibid., p. 1030.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Debates, June 19, 1787: Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 904, 905.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Debates, June 7th: Ibid., p. 817.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Debates, June 19th: Ibid., p. 907.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Debates, June 29th: Ibid., p. 995.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Debates, June 30th: Ibid., p. 1010; see also p. 1011.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> March 16, 1785: Journal, Vol. X. p. 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> Debates, June 25th: Madison Papers, Vol. II. pp. 946, 950.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Journal of Congress, September 28, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 165.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Works of Daniel Webster, Vol. III. p. 474.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Elliot’s Debates, (2d edit.,) Vol. III. p. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Elliot’s Debates, Vol. III. p. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Ibid., p. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Hamilton’s History of the National Flag of the United States, p. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Ibid., pp. 65, 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Hamilton’s History of the National Flag, p. 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Ibid., p. 110.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> For the original of these devices see the Pennsylvania Gazette, May 9,
-1754; copies of the others are presented in Hamilton’s History of the National
-Flag, Plate II.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> Hamilton’s History of the National Flag, pp. 72-79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> The Thracians: Herodotus, Lib. V. c. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Dr. Francis Lieber, who narrated the incident to Mr. Sumner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Locke, Essay concerning Human Understanding, Book III. ch. 2, § 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Cratylus, 389 A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Diary of John Adams: Works, Vol. II. p. 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Journal, June 17, 1775, Vol. I. p. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. III. p. 491, Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> Letter to the President of Congress, December 20, 1776: Ibid., Vol.
-IV. p. 236.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> See, <i>ante</i>, p. 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Journal of Congress, September 28, 1787, Vol. XII. p. 165.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Writings, ed. Sparks, Vol. XII. p. 218.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> Isaiah, xl. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Revelation, iii. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> Job, xxxviii. 35.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> Geographica, Lib. IV. cap. 1, §§ 2, 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Marlow, Edward the Second, Act V. Sc. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Proclamation, December 10, 1832: Executive Documents, 22d Cong.
-2d Sess., H. of R., No. 45, p. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> Speech in the Senate, in Reply to Mr. Simmons, of Rhode Island, February
-20, 1847: Works, Vol. IV. pp. 358, 357.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> Section 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Address at the Consecration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg,
-November 19, 1863: McPherson’s Political History of the United States
-during the Rebellion, p. 606.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> From a toast by Charles P. Sumner at the State Celebration of the Fiftieth
-Anniversary of American Independence, in the Doric Hall of the State House in
-Boston, July 4, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Note to § 776, Vol. I. pp. 433, 434, 3d edit.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Act to prescribe an Oath of Office, July 2, 1862: Statutes at Large,
-Vol. XII. p. 502.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Pleas of the Crown, Vol. I. p. 484.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> 3 Institutes, p. 139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Criminal Law, Vol. I. § 652.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Ibid., § 655.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> Statutes at Large, Vol. I. p. 112.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> Catilina, Cap. XXXIX.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Bramston, The Art of Politics, 162-165. See, <i>ante</i>, Vol. VI. p. 350; Vol. XI.
-p. 6</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> View of the Constitution, (Philadelphia, 1825,) Chap. XXI. p. 206.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Commentaries on the Constitution, § 775, Vol. II. p. 247.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> Second edition (Philadelphia, 1829).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> See, <i>post</i>, p. 93.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Madison Papers, Vol. III. pp. 1572, 1573.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Elliot’s Debates, (2d edit.,) Vol. III. p. 498.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> See, <i>ante</i>, Vol. XIV. pp. 15, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Lex Parliamentaria Americana: Elements of the Law and Practice of
-Legislative Assemblies in the United States, (2d edit.,) § 302.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Trial of Judge Peck, Appendix, p. 499.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> 4 Institutes, pp. 14, 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Commentaries, Vol. I. p. 181.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Speech on Conciliation with America, March 22, 1775: Works, (Boston,
-1866-67,) Vol. II. p. 125. Besides the importations into the Colonies from
-England, where, according to Lowndes, no less than six editions had been
-published prior to the date of this speech, an edition was printed in Philadelphia
-in 1771-72, with a subscription, as appears by the list accompanying
-it, of nearly sixteen hundred copies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Lords’ Standing Orders: May’s Parliamentary Practice, (5th edit.,)
-p. 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> May, Parliamentary Practice, Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 288.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Report from the Committee appointed to inspect the Lords’ Journals,
-Appendix, No. I. (Extract from Foster’s Crown Law): Burke’s Works,
-(Boston, 1866-67,) Vol. XI. p. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Ibid., p. 129, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Ibid., p. 132.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit., London, 1856,) Vol. I. p. 15, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Ibid., p. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. I. pp. 14, 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> Ibid., Vol. II. p. 229.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. III. p. 156.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. III. p. 270.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Ibid., p. 281.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> History of the Rebellion, (Oxford, 1826,) Book III., Vol. I. p. 381.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. IV. p. 68.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. IV. p. 145.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Ibid., p. 139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> Ibid., p. 147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> Campbell. Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. V. p. 46.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> Ibid., p. 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Ibid., p. 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Ibid., pp. 109, 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. V. p. 207.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Ibid., p. 257.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Ibid., p. 259.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Ibid., p. 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Ibid., p. 377.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XVI. col. 768.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. VI. p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> Campbell, Lives of the Chancellors, (4th edit.,) Vol. VI. p. 316.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> Ibid., Vol. I. p. 15, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> Twiss, Life of Eldon, Vol. I. p. 319.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> Congressional Debates, 19th Cong. 1st Sess., col. 759, 760, May 18, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> June 7, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> June 27, 29, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> Onslow, No. I.: National Intelligencer, June 27, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> D’Ewes’s Journals, p. 683.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 294.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> Ibid., § 300.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> Hansard’s Parliamentary History, April 15, 1640, Vol. II. col. 535.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> Hatsell’s Precedents, (London, 1818,) Vol. II. p. 242.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Hansard’s Parliamentary History, Vol. XXXVI. col. 915.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> Barclay’s Digest of the Rules of the House of Representatives, &amp;c., p. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> Barclay’s Digest, p. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> Cushing, Lex Parliamentaria Americana, (2d edit.,) § 306.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> Proceedings on the Impeachment of William Blount, p. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> Commentaries, (2d edit.,) § 803, Vol. I. p. 560.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Annals of Congress, 5th Cong., July 8, 1797, col. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> See, <i>ante</i>, Vol. VIII. pp. 12, 13: Expulsion of Trusten Polk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> Wooddeson, Lectures, Vol. II. p. 602.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren Hastings,
-ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Ibid., pp. 183, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> Constitutional History of England, (2d edit.,) Chap. XII., Vol. II. p. 554.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> No. LXV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> View of the Constitution, (2d edit.,) p. 211.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> Commentaries, (2d edit.,) Vol. I. §§ 746, 764.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> History of the Constitution, pp. 260, 261.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> Speech in the House of Representatives, June 17, 1789, on the Bill for
-establishing the Department of Foreign Affairs: Annals of Congress, 1st
-Cong. 1st Sess., col. 498.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Speech at St. Louis, September 8, 1866: McPherson’s Political History
-of the United States during Reconstruction, p. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> Rolls of Parliament, Vol. III. p. 244, § 7,&mdash;cited in Report from the
-Committee of the House of Commons appointed to inspect the Lords’ Journals,
-April 30, 1794: Burke’s Works, (Boston, 1866-67,) Vol. XI. p. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Report from the Committee to inspect the Lords’ Journals: Burke’s
-Works, Vol. XI. p. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> 4 Institutes, p. 15. Burke, Vol. XI. p. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Crown Law, Discourse IV., pp. 389, 390. Burke, Vol. XI. p. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> Lords’ Journals, Vol. IV. p. 133. Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 467. Lords’ Journals, March 14,
-1709-10, Vol. XIX. p. 107.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 471.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> Ibid., col. 473. Lords’ Journals, March 23, 1709-10, Vol. XIX. p. 121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. pp. 19, 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 877.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> Ibid., col. 883, 884.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. XV. col. 885.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Ibid., col. 886.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Ibid., col. 887.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> Lords’ Journals, March 19, 1715-16, Vol. XX. p. 316.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren Hastings,
-ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> The Federalist, No. LXV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> Burke’s Works, Vol. XI., p. 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Rationale of Judicial Evidence, Book IX. Part I. Ch. 3: Works, ed.
-Bowring, (Edinburgh, 1843,) Vol. VII. p. 338.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Omychund <i>v.</i> Barker, 1 Atkyns, R., 49.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Mayor of Hull <i>v.</i> Horner, Cowper, R., 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> Burke’s Works, Vol. XI. p. 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> Fortescue, De Laudibus Legum Angliæ, Cap. XLII.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> Commentaries, Vol. II. p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> Blackstone, Commentaries, Vol. IV. p. 286.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> Speech on the Lords’ Amendments to the Bill for the Regulation of
-Trials in Cases of Treason, December 11, 1691: Hansard’s Parliamentary
-History, Vol. V. col. 678.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> Secretary Seward to Provisional Governor Marvin of Florida, September
-12, 1865: McPherson’s Political History of the United States during
-Reconstruction, p. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. III. col. 1421.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> Coleridge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> Statutes at Large, Vol. XIV. pp. 430-432.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> Section 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> Aldridge <i>v.</i> Williams, 3 Howard, R., 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> See, <i>ante</i>, p. 147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> Bacon, Upon the Statute of Uses, Introductory Discourse: Works, ed.
-Spedding, (Boston, 1864,) Vol. XIV. p. 285.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> Statutes at Large, Vol. I. p. 415.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. p. 656.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Bill to repeal the 1st and 2d Sections of an Act to limit the Term of
-Office of certain Officers therein named. See Congressional Debates, 23d
-Cong. 2d Sess., 1834-35, col. 361, 418-491, 495-539, 552-571, 576. Ibid.,
-24th Cong. 1st Sess., 1835-36, col. 52, 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Act of February 25, 1863, Sec. 1: Statutes at Large, Vol. XII.
-pp. 665, 666.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> Sec. 5: Statutes at Large, Vol. XIV. p. 92.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> Howell’s State Trials, Vol. IV. col. 1070.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> Life, by Roger North, (London, 1826,) Vol. I. p. 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> 5 Wheaton, R., 291, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> 1 Cranch, R., 137, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Speech of Sir James Marriott, Admiralty Judge, in the House of Commons,
-March 15, 1782: Hansard’s Parliamentary History, Vol. XXII. col.
-1184.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> <i>Ante</i>, pp. 148, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> Commentaries, Vol. II. p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> Ibid., Vol. III. p. 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren Hastings,
-ed. Bond, Vol. I. p. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> Preface to Shakespeare: Works, (Oxford, 1825,) Vol. V. p. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> History of the Rebellion, (Oxford, 1826,) Vol. IV. pp. 91, 92.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Act of March 6, 1820: Statutes at Large, Vol. III. p. 548.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> Works, Vol. III. pp. 263, 264.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Ibid., p. 264.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> Argument in the Case of Jones <i>v.</i> Vanzandt, pp. 62, 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> Debates in the Federal Convention, May 30, 1787: Madison Papers,
-Vol. II. p. 751.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Ibid., p. 752.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> Debates, June 11th: Ibid., p. 841.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> Debates, June 29th: Madison Papers, Vol. II. p. 995.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> Debates, June 8th: Ibid., p. 826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> Debates, June 19th: Ibid., p. 902.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> No. XLIII. § 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> Commentaries on the Constitution, (2d edit.,) Vol. I. § 694.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> Elliot’s Debates, Vol. III. p. 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> The Federalist, No. LIV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> Debates in the Federal Convention, June 29, 1787: Madison Papers,
-Vol. II. p. 993.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Deuteronomy, xxvii. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> Act of February 25, 1862: Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. pp. 345-348.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> Statutes at Large, Vol. XII. p. 532.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> Speech in the Senate, February 13, 1862: <i>ante</i>, Vol. VI. p. 343.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> Quæstiones Juris Publici, tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24, p. 182.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> Bynkershoek, Quæst. Jur. Pub., tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24, p. 185.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Halleck, International Law, Ch. XII. § 29, p. 310.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> Wheaton, Elements of International Law, ed. Lawrence, (Boston, 1863,)
-p. 528, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> Bynkershoek, Quæst. Jur. Pub., tr. Du Ponceau, Lib. I. Cap. 24, p. 188,
-note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> International Law, Ch. XII. § 11, p. 297.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> De Jure Belli ac Pacis, Lib. III. Cap. II. § <span class="smcapuc">V.</span> 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> Elements of International Law, ed. Lawrence, (Boston, 1863,) Part IV.
-Ch. I. § 9, p. 529.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Commentaries upon International Law, Part IX. Ch. II. § 19, Vol. III.
-pp. 23, 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> Wheaton’s Elements of International Law, ed. Dana, p. 370, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Le Droit des Gens, Liv. III. Ch. 4, § 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> International Law, Ch. XII. § 16, p. 302.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> De Jure Belli ac Pacis, Lib. III. Cap. II. § <span class="smcapuc">VII.</span> 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> Mr. Webster to Mr. Fox, April 24, 1841: Works, Vol. VI. p. 253.
-See also Phillimore, International Law, Part IX. Ch. III. § 38, Vol. III.
-p. 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> International Law, Ch. XII. § 10, p. 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> Remarks on Antiquities, Arts, and Letters, during an Excursion in
-Italy, in the Years 1802 and 1803.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> Alison, History of Europe, (Edinburgh, 1843,) Ch. XXXVII. Vol. V.
-pp. 113, 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> Mémorial de Sainte-Hélène, Tom. VII. pp. 32, 33. Alison, Vol. V.
-p. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> Junot, Mme., Duchesse d’Abrantès, Mémoires sur Napoléon, Tom. VI.
-pp. 398-403. Alison, Vol. V. p. 115, note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> Congressional Globe, 40th Cong. 2d Sess., Part V. p. 4331.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Works, Vol. IV. pp. 78-80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_261_261" id="Footnote_261_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> Works, Vol. IV. p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_262_262" id="Footnote_262_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> Paradise Lost, Book III. 437-439.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_263_263" id="Footnote_263_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> Miscellaneous Works, (London, 1851,) p. 170.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_264_264" id="Footnote_264_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> Walckenaër, in the Biographie Universelle, Tom. XXXV. p. 222, art.
-Polo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_265_265" id="Footnote_265_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> Speech on Victory and Reconstruction, April 11, 1865: McPherson’s
-Political History of the United States during the Rebellion, p. 609.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_266_266" id="Footnote_266_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> Hudibras, Part III. Canto I. 1303-6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_267_267" id="Footnote_267_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Resolutions of the National Democratic Convention, July, 1868:
-McPherson’s Political History of the United States during Reconstruction,
-p. 368.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_268_268" id="Footnote_268_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> Letter of F. P. Blair to Col. James O. Brodhead, June 30, 1868:
-McPherson’s Political History of the United States during Reconstruction,
-p. 381.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_269_269" id="Footnote_269_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> 2 Chronicles, xiv. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_270_270" id="Footnote_270_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> Williams <i>v.</i> Suffolk Insurance Co.: 13 Peters, R., 420.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_271_271" id="Footnote_271_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> 7 Howard, R., 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_272_272" id="Footnote_272_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Laws in relation to Freedmen: Executive Documents, 39th Cong. 2d
-Sess., Senate, No. 6, pp. 170, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_273_273" id="Footnote_273_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> Speech on Financial Reconstruction, <i>ante</i>, pp. 445, seqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_274_274" id="Footnote_274_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> Carlyle’s French Revolution, (New York, 1867,) Book IX. Ch. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_275_275" id="Footnote_275_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> Thiers, Histoire de la Révolution Française, (Paris, 1837,) Tom. VIII.
-p. 15: Directoire, Chap. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_276_276" id="Footnote_276_276"></a><a href="#FNanchor_276_276"><span class="label">[276]</span></a> Travels of Marco Polo, ed. Marsden, (London, 1818,) pp. 353, 354,
-521, 547.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
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