Showing posts with label Declaration of Independence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Declaration of Independence. Show all posts

Saturday, March 9, 2024

Daniel Webster to Josiah Randall & Others, November 14, 1850

Boston, November 14, 1850.

GENTLEMEN,—I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 11th of this month, inviting me, in behalf of the friends of the Constitution and the Union, without distinction of party, resident in the city and county of Philadelphia, to attend a public meeting in that city on the 21st instant. I most sincerely wish that it was in my power to attend that meeting. That great central city is not only full of the friends of the Constitution, but full, also, of recollections connected with its adoption, and other great events in our history. In Philadelphia the first revolutionary Congress assembled. In Philadelphia the Declaration of Independence was made. In Philadelphia the Constitution was formed, and received the signatures of Washington and his associates; and now, when there is a spirit abroad evidently laboring to effect the separation of the Union, and the subversion of the Constitution, Philadelphia, of all places, seems the fittest for the assembling together of the friends of that Constitution, and that Union, to pledge themselves to one another and to the country to the last extremity.

My public duties, gentlemen, require my immediate presence in Washington; and for that reason, and that alone, I must deny myself the pleasure of accepting your invitation.

I have the honor, gentlemen, to be, with great regard, your fellow-citizen and humble servant,

DANIEL WEBSTER.

TO JOSIAH RANDALL, ISAAC HAZLEHURST, ROBERT M. LEE, C. INGERSOLL, JNO. W. FORNEY, JOHN S. RIDDLE.

SOURCE: Fletcher Webster, Editor, The Private Correspondence of Daniel Webster, Vol. 2, p. 403-4

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Andrew Jackson’s Proclamation Regarding the Nullifying Laws of South Carolina, December 10, 1832

PROCLAMATION,

BY ANDREW JACKSON, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1832.

Whereas a convention, assembled in the State of South Carolina, have passed an ordinance, by which they declare, "that the several acts and parts of acts of the Congress of the United States, purporting to be laws for the imposing of duties and imposts on the importation of foreign commodities, and now having actual operation and effect within the United States, and, more especially" two acts for the same purposes, passed on the twenty-ninth of May, 1828, and on the fourteenth of July, 1832, "are unauthorized by the Constitution of the United States, and violate the true meaning and intent thereof, and are null and void, and no law," nor binding on the citizens of that State or its officers: and, by the said ordinance, it is further declared to be unlawful for any of the constituted authorities of the State, or of the United States, to enforce the payment of the duties imposed by the said acts within the same State, and that it is the duty of the legislature to pass such laws as may be necessary to give full effect to the said ordinance:

And, whereas, by the said ordinance, it is further ordained, that in no case of law or equity, decided in the courts of said State, wherein shall be drawn in question the validity of the said ordinance, or of the acts of the legislature that may be passed to give it effect, or of the said laws of the United States, no appeal shall be allowed to the Supreme Court of the United States, nor shall any copy of the record be permitted or allowed for that purpose; and that any person attempting to take such appeal, shall be punished as for a contempt of court:

And, finally, the said ordinance declares that the people of South Carolina will maintain the said ordinance at every hazard; and that they will consider the passage of any act by Congress, abolishing or closing the ports of said State, or otherwise obstructing the free ingress or egress of vessels to and from the said ports, or any other act of the Federal Government to coerce the State, shut up her ports, destroy or harass her commerce, or to enforce the said acts, otherwise than through the civil tribunals of the country, as inconsistent with the longer continuance of South Carolina in the Union; and that the people of the said State will thenceforth hold themselves absolved from all further obligation to maintain or preserve their political connection with the people of the other States, and will, forth with, proceed to organize a separate government, and do all other acts and things which sovereign and independent States may of right do:

And, whereas, the said ordinance prescribes to the people of South Carolina a course of conduct, in direct violation of their duty, as citizens of the United States, contrary to the laws of their country, subversive of its Constitution, and having for its object the destruction of the Union—that Union, which, coeval with our political existence, led our fathers, without any other ties to unite them, than those of patriotism and a common cause, through a sanguinary struggle to a glorious independence-that sacred Union, hitherto inviolate, which, perfected by our happy Constitution, has brought us, by the favor of Heaven, to a State of prosperity at home and high consideration abroad, rarely, if ever, equalled in the history of nations. To preserve this bond of our political existence from destruction, to maintain, inviolate, this state of national honor and prosperity, and to justify the confidence my fellow-citizens have reposed in me, I, ANDREW JACKSON, President of the United States, have thought proper to issue this, my PROCLAMATION, stating my views of the Constitution and laws, applicable to the measures adopted by the Convention of South Carolina, and to the reasons they have put forth to sustain them, declaring the course which duty will require me to pursue, and, appealing to the understanding and patriotism of the people, warn them of the consequences that must inevitably result from an observance of the dictates of the convention.

Strict duty would require of me nothing more than the exercise of those powers with which I am now, or may hereafter be invested, for preserving the peace of the Union, and for the execution of the laws. But the imposing aspect which opposition has assumed in this case, by clothing itself with State Authority, and the deep interest which the people of the United States must all feel, in preventing a resort to stronger measures, while there is a hope that any thing will be yielded to reasoning and remonstrance, perhaps demand, and will certainly justify, a full exposition to South Carolina and the nation, of the views I entertain of this important question, as well as a distinct enunciation of the course which my sense of duty will require me to pursue.

The ordinance is founded, not on the indefeasible right of resisting acts which are plainly unconstitutional, and too oppressive to be endured, but on the strange position that any one State may not only declare an Act of Congress void, but prohibit its execution—that they may do this consistently with the Constitution—that the true construction of that instrument permits a State to retain its place in the Union, and yet be bound by no other of its laws than those it may chose to consider as constitutional. It is true, they add, that, to justify this abrogation of a law, it must be palpably contrary to the Constitution; but it is evident that, to give the right of resisting laws of that description, coupled with the uncontrolled right to decide what laws deserve that character, is to give the power of resisting all laws. For, as by the theory, there is no appeal, the reasons alleged by the State, good or bad, must prevail. If it should be said that public opinion is a sufficient check against the abuse of this power, it may asked why it is not deemed a sufficient guard against the passage of an unconstitutional Act by Congress. There is, however, a restraint in this last case, which makes the assumed power of a State more indefensible, and which does not exist in the other. There are two appeals from an unconstitutional act passed by Congress one to the judiciary, the other to the people and the States. There is no appeal from the State decision in theory: and the practical illustration shows that the courts are closed against an application to review it, both judges and jurors being sworn to decide in its favor, But reasoning on this subject is superfluous when our social compact in express terms declares, that the laws of the United States, its Constitution, and treaties made under it, are the Supreme Law of the Land: and, for greater caution, adds, “that the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any thing in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding." And it may be asserted, without fear of refutation, that no federative government could exist without a similar provision. Look for a moment to the consequence. If South Carolina considers the revenue laws unconstitutional, and has a right to prevent their execution in the port of Charleston, there would be a clear constitutional objection to their collection in every other port, and no revenue could be collected any where; for all imposts must be equal. It is no answer to repeat that an unconstitutional law is no law, so long as the question of its legality is to be decided by the State itself; for every law operating injuriously upon any local interest will be perhaps thought, and certainly represented, as unconstitutional, and, as has been shown, there is no appeal.

If this doctrine had been established at an earlier day, the Union would have been dissolved in its infancy. The excise law in Pennsylvania, the embargo and non-intercourse law in the eastern States, the carriage tax in Virginia, were all deemed unconstitutional, and were more unequal in their operation than any of the laws now complained of; but, fortunately, none of those States discovered that they had the right now claimed by South Carolina. The war into which we were forced, to support the dignity of the nation and the rights of our citizens, might have ended in defeat and disgrace, instead of victory and honor, if the States, who supposed it a ruinous and unconstitutional measure, had thought they possessed the right of nullifying the act by which it was declared, and denying supplies for its prosecution. Hardly and unequally as those measures bore upon several members of the Union, to the legislatures of none did this efficient and peaceable remedy, as it is called, suggest itself. The discovery of this important feature in our Constitution was reserved to the present day. To the statesmen of South Carolina belongs the invention, and upon the citizens of that State will unfortunately fall the evils of reducing it to practice.

If the doctrine of a State veto upon the laws of the Union carries with it internal evidence of its impracticable absurdity, our constitutional history will also afford abundant proof that it would have been repudiated with indignation, had it been proposed to form a feature in our government.

In our colonial State, although dependent on another power, we very early considered ourselves as connected by common interest with each other. Leagues were formed for common defence, and before the Declaration of Independence, we were known in our aggregate character as THE UNITED COLONIES OF AMERICA. That decisive and important step was taken jointly. We declared ourselves a nation by a joint, not by several acts; and when the terms of our confederation were reduced to form, it was in that of a solemn league of several States, by which they agreed that they would, collectively, form one nation for the purpose of conducting some certain domestic concerns, and all foreign relations. In the instrument forming that Union, is found an article which declares that "every State shall abide by the determinations of Congress on all questions which by that confederation should be submitted to them."

Under the confederation, then, no State could legally annul a decision of the Congress, or refuse to submit to its execution; but no provision was made to enforce these decisions. Congress made requisitions, but they were not complied with. The government could not operate on individuals. They had no judiciary, no means of collecting revenue.

But the defects of the confederation need not be detailed. Under its operation, we could scarcely be called a nation. We had neither prosperity at home nor consideration abroad. This state of things could not be endured, and our present happy Constitution was formed; but formed in vain, if this fatal doctrine prevails. It was formed for important objects that are announced in the preamble made in the name and by the authority of the people of the United States, whose delegates framed, and whose conventions approved it. The most important among these objects, that which is placed first in rank, on which all the others rest, is "to from a more perfect Union" Now, is it possible that, even if there were no express provision giving supremacy to the Constitution and Laws of the United States over those of the States, it can be conceived, that an instrument made for the purpose of "forming a more perfect Union" than that of the confederation, could be so constructed by the assembled wisdom of our country as to substitute for that confederation a form of government dependent for its existence on the local interest, the party spirit of a State, or of a prevailing faction in a State? Every man of plain unsophisticated understanding, who hears the question, will give such an answer as will preserve the Union. Metaphysical subtlety, in pursuit of an impracticable theory, could alone have devised one that is calculated to destroy it.

I consider, then, the power to annual a law of the United States, assumed by one State, INCOMPATIBLE WITH THE EXISTENCE OF THE UNION, CONTRADICTED EXPRESSLY BY THE LETTER OF THE CONSTITUTION, UNAUTHORIZED BY ITS SPIRIT, INCONSISTENT WITH EVERY PRINCIPLE ON WHICH IT WAS FOUNDED, AND DESTRUCTIVE OF THE GREAT OBJECT FOR WHICH IT WAS FORMED.

After this general view of the leading principle, we must examine the particular application of it which is made in the ordinance.

The preamble rests its justification on these grounds: It assumes, as a fact, that the obnoxious laws, although they purport to be laws for raising revenue, were, in reality, intended for the protection of manufactures, which purpose it asserts to be unconstitutional—that the operation of these laws is unequal—that the amount raised by them is greater than is required by the wants of the government—and, finally, that the proceeds are to be applied to objects unauthorized by the Constitution. These are the only causes alleged to justify an open opposition to the laws of the country, and a threat of seceding from the Union, if any attempt should be made to enforce them. The first virtually acknowledges that the law in question was passed under a power expressly given by the Constitution, to lay and collect imposts; but its constitutionality is drawn in question from the motives of those who passed it. However apparent this purpose may be in the present case, nothing can be more dangerous than to admit the position that an unconstitutional purpose, entertained by the members who assent to a law enacted under a constitutional power, shall make that law void; for how is that purpose to be ascertained? Who is to make the scrutiny? How often may bad purposes be falsely imputed? in how many cases are they concealed by false professions? in how many is no declaration of motive made? Admit this doctrine, and you give to the States an uncontrolled right to decide, and every law may be annulled under this pretext. If, therefore, the absurd and dangerous doctrine should be admitted, that a State may annul an unconstitutional law, or one that it deems such, it will not apply to the present case.

The next objection is, that the laws in question operate unequally. This objection may be made with truth, to every law that has been or can be passed. The wisdom of man never yet contrived a system of taxation that would operate with perfect equality. If the unequal operation of a law makes it unconstitutional, and if all laws of that description may be abrogated by any State for that cause, then indeed is the Federal Constitution unworthy of the slightest effort for its preservation. We have hitherto relied on it as the perpetual bond of our Union.

We have received it as the work of the assembled wisdom of the nation, have trusted to it as to the sheet anchor of our safety, in the stormy times of conflict with a foreign or domestic foe. We have looked to it with sacred awe, as the palladium of our liberties; and, with all the solemnities of religion, have pledged to each other, our lives and fortunes here, and our hopes of happiness hereafter, in its defence and support. Were we mistaken, my countrymen, in attaching this importance to the Constitution of our country? Was our devotion paid to the wretched, inefficient, clumsy contrivance, which this new doctrine would make it? Did we pledge ourselves to the support of an airy nothing—a bubble that must be blown away by the first breath of disaffection? Was this self-destroying, visionary theory, the work of the profound statesmen, the exalted patriots, to whom the task of constitutional reform was entrusted? Did the name of Washington sanction, did the States deliberately ratify, such an anomaly in the history of fundamental legislation? No. We were not mistaken! The letter of this great instrument is free from this radical fault: its language directly contradicts the imputation: its spirit—its evident intent, contradicts it. No, we did not err! Our Constitution does not contain the absurdity of giving power to make laws, and another power to resist them. The sages, whose memory will always be reverenced, have given us a practical, and, as they hoped, a permanent constitutional compact. The father of his country did not affix his revered name to so palpable and absurdity. Nor did the States, when they severally ratified it, do so under the impression that a veto on the laws of the United States was reserved to them, or that they could exercise it by application. Search the debates in all their conventions—examine the speeches of the most zealous opposers of federal authority—look at the amendments that were proposed. They are all silent—not a syllable uttered, not a vote given, not a motion made to correct the explicit supremacy given to the laws of the Union over those of the States—or to show that implication, as is now contended, could defeat it. No, we have not erred! The Constitution is still the object of our reverence, the bond of our Union, our defence in danger, the source of our prosperity in peace. It shall descend, as we have received it, uncorrupted by sophistical construction, to our posterity; and the sacrifices of local interests, of State prejudices, of personal animosities, that were made to bring it into existence, will again be patriotically offered for its support.

The two remaining objections, made by the ordinance to these laws, are, that the sums intended to be raised by them are greater than are required, and that the proceeds will be unconstitutionally employed. The Constitution has given expressly to Congress the right of raising revenue, and of determining the sum the public exigencies will require. The States have no control over the exercise of this right, other than that which results from the power of changing the representatives who abuse it, and thus procure redress.

Congress may, undoubtedly, abuse this discretionary power, but the same may be said of others with which they are vested. Yet the discretion must exist somewhere. The Constitution has given it to the representatives of the people, checked by the representatives of the States, and by the executive power. The South Carolina construction gives it to the legislature or the convention of a single State, where neither the people of the different States, nor the States in their separate capacity, nor the Chief Magistrate, elected by the people, have any representation. Which is the most discreet disposition of the power? I do not ask you, fellow-citizens, which is the constitutional disposition—that instrument speaks a language not to be misunderstood. But if you were assembled in general convention, which would you think the safest depository of this discretionary power, in the last resort? Would you add a clause, giving it to each of the States; or would you sanction the wise provisions already made by your Constitution? If this should be the result of your deliberations, when providing for the future, are you—can you be—ready to risk all that we hold dear, to establish, for a temporary and a local purpose, that which you must acknowledge to be destructive, and even absurd, as a general provision? Carry out the consequences of this right vested in the different States, and you must perceive that the crisis your conduct presents at this day, would recur whenever any law of the United States displeased any of the States, and that we should soon cease to be a nation.

The ordinance, with the same knowledge of the future that characterizes a former objection, tells you that the proceeds of the tax will be unconstitutionally applied. If this could be ascertained with certainty, the objection would, with more propriety, be reserved for the law so applying the proceeds, but surely cannot be urged against the laws levying the duty.

These are the allegations contained in the ordinance. Examine them seriously, my fellow-citizens—judge for yourselves. I appeal to you to determine whether they are so clear, so convincing, as to leave no doubt of their correctness: and even if you should come to this conclusion, how far they justify the reckless, destructive course, which you are directed to pursue. Review these objections, and the conclusions drawn from them, once more. What are they? Every law, then, for raising revenue, according to the South Carolina ordinance, may be rightfully annulled, unless it be so framed as no law ever will or can be framed. Congress have a right to pass laws for raising revenue, and each State has a right to oppose their execution—two rights directly opposed to each other; and yet is this absurdity supposed to be contained in an instrument drawn for the express purpose of avoiding collisions between the States and the General Government, by an assembly of the most enlightened statesmen and purest patriots ever embodied for a similar purpose.

In vain have these sages declared that Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises—in vain have they provided that they shall have power to pass laws which shall be necessary and proper to carry those powers into execution; that those laws and that Constitution shall be the "supreme law of the land; and that the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any thing in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding." In vain have the people of the several States solemnly sanctioned these provisions, made them their paramount law, and individually sworn to support them whenever they were called on to execute any office. Vain provisions! ineffectual restrictions! vile profanation of oaths! miserable mockery of legislation! If a bare majority of the voters in any one State may, on a real or supposed knowledge of the intent with which a law has been passed, declare themselves free from its operation—say here it gives too little, there too much, and operates unequally—here it suffers articles to be free that ought to be taxed, there it taxes those that ought to be free—in this case the proceeds are intended to be applied to purposes which we do not approve—in that the amount raised is more than is wanted. Congress, it is true, are invested by the Constitution with the right of deciding these questions according to their sound discretion. Congress is composed of the representatives of all the States and of all the people of all the States; but we, part of the people of one State, to whom the Constitution has given no power on the subject, from whom it has expressly taken it away—we, who have solemnly agreed that this Constitution shall be our law—we, most of whom have sworn to support it—we, now abrogate this law, and swear, and force others to swear, that it shall not be obeyed—and we do this, not because Congress have no right to pass such laws; this we do not allege; but because they have passed them with improper views. They are unconstitutional from the motives of those who passed them, which we can never with certainty know, from their unequal operation; although it is impossible from the nature of things that they should be equal—and from the disposition which we presume may be made of their proceeds, although that disposition has not been declared. This is the plain meaning of the ordinance in relation to laws which it abrogates for alleged unconstitutionality. But it does not stop there. It repeals, in express terms, an important part of the Constitution itself, and of laws passed to give it effect, which have never been alleged to be unconstitutional. The Constitution declares that the judicial powers of the United States extend to cases arising under the laws of the United States, and that such laws, the Constitution and treaties shall be paramount to the State constitutions and laws. The judiciary act prescribes the mode by which the case may be brought before a court of the United States, by appeal, when a State tribunal shall decide against this provision of the Constitution. The ordinance declares there shall be no appeal; makes the State law paramount to the Constitution and laws of the United States; forces judges and jurors to swear that they will disregard their provisions; and even makes it penal in a suitor to attempt relief by appeal. It further declares that it shall not be lawful for the authorities of the United States, or of that State, to enforce the payment of duties imposed by the revenue laws within its limits.

Here is a law of the United States, not even pretended to be unconstitutional, repealed by the authority of a small majority of the voters of a single State. Here is a provision of the Constitution which is solemnly abrogated by the same authority.

On such expositions and reasonings, the ordinance grounds not only an assertion of the right to annul the laws of which it complains, but to enforce it by a threat of seceding from the Union, if any attempt is made to execute them.

This right to secede is deduced from the nature of the Constitution, which, they say, is a compact between sovereign States, who have preserved their whole sovereignty, and, therefore, are subject to no superior; that, because they made the compact, they can break it when, in their opinion, it has been departed from by the other States. Fallacious as this course of reasoning is, it enlists State pride, and finds advocates in the honest prejudices of those who have not studied the nature of our government sufficiently to see the radical error on which it rests.

The people of the United States formed the Constitution, acting through the State Legislatures in making the compact, to meet and discuss its provisions, and acting in separate conventions when they ratified those provisions; but the terms used in its construction, show it to be a government in which the people of all the States collectively are represented. We are ONE PEOPLE in the choice of the President and Vice President. Here the States have no other agency than to direct the mode in which the votes shall be given. The candidates having the majority of all the votes, are chosen. The electors of a majority of States may have given their votes for one candidate, and yet another may be chosen. The People, then, and not the States, are represented in the executive branch.

In the House of Representatives there is this difference, that the people of one State do not, as in the case of President and Vice President, all vote for the same officers. The people of all the States do not vote for all the members, each State electing only its own representatives. But this creates no material distinction. When chosen, they are all representatives of the United States, not representatives of the particular State from which they come. They are paid by the United States, not by the State; nor are they accountable to it for any act done in the performance of their legislative functions; and, however they may in practice, as it is their duty to do, consult and prefer the interests of their particular constituents when they come in conflict with any other partial or local interest, yet it is their first and highest duty, as representatives of the United States, to promote the general good.

The Constitution of the United States, then, forms a government, not a league; and whether it be formed by compact between the States, or in any other manner, its character is the same. It is a government in which all the people are represented, which operates directly on the people individually, not upon the States: they retained all the power they did not grant. But 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; and any injury to that unity is not only a breach which would result from the contravention of a compact, but it is an offence against the whole Union. To say that any State may at pleasure secede from the Union, is to say that the United States are not a nation; because it would be a solecism to contend that any part of a nation might dissolve its connexion with the other parts, to their injury or ruin, without committing any offence. Secession, like any other revolutionary act, may be morally justified by the extremity of oppression; but to call it a constitutional right is confounding the meaning of terms; and can only be done through gross error, or to deceive those who are willing to assert a right, but would pause before they made a revolution, or incur the penalties consequent on a failure.

Because the Union was formed by a compact, it is said the parties to that compact may, when they feel themselves aggrieved, depart from it: but it is precisely because it is a compact that they cannot. A compact is an agreement or binding obligation. It may, by its terms, have a sanction or penalty for its breach, or it may not. If it contains no sanction, it may be broken with no other consequence than moral guilt: if it have a sanction, then the breach incurs the designated or implied penalty. A league between independent nations, generally, has no sanction other than a moral one; or, if it should contain a penalty, as there is no common superior, it cannot be enforced. A government, on the contrary, always has a sanction, expressed or implied; and, in our case, it is both necessarily implied and expressly given. An attempt by force of arms to destroy a government, is an offence, by whatever means the constitutional compact may have been formed; and such government has the right, by the law of self defence, to pass acts for punishing the offender, unless that right is modified, restrained, or resumed, by the constitutional act. In our system, although it is modified in the case of treason, yet authority is expressly given to pass all laws necessary to carry its powers into effect, and under this grant provision has been made for punishing acts which obstruct the due administration of the laws.

It would seem superfluous to add any thing to show the nature of that union which connects us; but as erroneous opinions on this subject are the foundation of doctrines the most destructive to our peace, I must give some further development to my views on this subject. No one, fellow-citizens, has a higher reverence for the reserved rights of the States, than the magistrate who now addresses you. No one would make greater personal sacrifices, or official exertions, to defend them from violation; but equal care must be taken to prevent on their part an improper interference with, or resumption of, the rights they have vested in the nation. The line has not been so distinctly drawn as to avoid doubts in some cases of the exercise of power. Men of the best intentions and soundest views may differ in their construction of some parts of the Constitution: but there are others on which dispassionate reflection can leave no doubt. Of this nature appears to be the assumed right of secession. It rests, as we have seen, on the alleged, undivided sovereignty of the States, and on their having formed in this sovereign capacity a compact which is called the Constitution, from which, because they made it, they have the right to secede. Both of these positions are erroneous, and some of the arguments to prove them so have been anticipated.

The States severally have not retained their entire sovereignty. It has been shown that in becoming parts of a nation, not members of a league, they surrendered many of their essential parts of sovereignty. The right to make treaties, declare war, levy taxes, exercise exclusive judicial and legislative powers, were all of them functions of sovereign power. The States, then, for all these important purposes, were no longer sovereign. The allegiance of their citizens was transferred, in the first instance, to the government of the United States—they became American citizens, and owed obedience to the Constitution of the United States, and to laws made in conformity with the powers it vested in Congress. This last position has not been, and cannot be denied. How then can that State be said to be sovereign and independent, whose citizens owe obedience to laws not made by it, and whose magistrates are sworn to disregard those laws, when they come in conflict with those passed by another? What shows conclusively that the States cannot be said to have reserved an undivided sovereignty, is, that they expressly ceded the right to punish treason—not treason against their separate power—but treason against the United States. Treason is an offence against sovereignty, and sovereignty must reside with the power to punish it. But the reserved rights of the States are not less sacred, because they have for their common interest made the General Government the depository of these powers. The unity of our political character (as has been shown for another purpose) commenced with its very existence. Under the royal government, we had no separate character our opposition to its oppression began as UNITED COLONIES. We were the UNITED STATES under the confederation, and the name was perpetuated, and the union rendered more perfect, by the Federal Constitution. In none of these stages did we consider ourselves in any other light than as forming one nation. Treaties and alliances were made in the name of all. Troops were raised for the joint defence. How, then, with all these proofs, that under all changes of our position we had, for designated purposes and with defined powers, created national governments—how is it, that the most perfect of those several modes of union should now be considered as a mere league, that may be dissolved at pleasure? It is from an abuse of terms. Compact is used as synonymous with league, although the true term is not employed, because it would at once show the fallacy of the reasoning. It would not do to say that our Constitution was only a league; but, it is labored to prove it a compact, (which in one sense it is,) and then to argue that as a league is a compact, every compact between nations must of course be a league, and that from such an engagement every sovereign power has a right to recede. But it has been shown, that in this sense the States are not sovereign, and that even if they were, and the National Constitution had been formed by compact, there would be no right in any one State to exonerate itself from its obligations.

So obvious are the reasons which forbid this secession, that it is necessary only to allude to them. The Union was formed for the benefit of all. It was produced by mutual sacrifices of interests and opinions. Can those sacrifices be recalled? Can the States who magnanimously surrendered their title to the territories of the west, recall the grant? Will the inhabitants of the inland States agree to pay the duties that may be imposed without their assent by those on the Atlantic or the Gulf, for their own benefit? Shall there be a free port in one State, and onerous duties in another? No one believes that any right exists in a single State to involve all the others in these and countless other evils, contrary to the engagements solemnly made. Every one must see that the other States, in self-defence, must oppose at all hazards.

These are the alternatives that are presented by the Convention: a repeal of all the acts for raising revenue, leaving the government without the means of support; or an acquiescence in the dissolution of the Union by the secession of one of its members. When the first was proposed, it was known that it could not be listened to for a moment. It was known if force was applied to oppose the execution of the laws, that it must be repelled by force—that Congress could not, without involving itself in disgrace, and the country in ruin, accede to the proposition; and yet, if this is not done in a given day, or if any attempt is made to execute the laws, the State is, by the ordinance, declared to be out of the Union. The majority of a convention assembled for the purpose have dictated these terms, or rather this rejection of all terms, in the name of the people of South Carolina, It is true that the Governor of the State speaks of the submission of their grievances to a convention of all the States; which, he says, they "sincerely and anxiously seek and desire." Yet this obvious and constitutional mode of obtaining the sense of the other States on the construction of the federal compact, and amending it, if necessary, has never been attempted by those who have urged the State on this destructive measure. The State might have proposed the call for a general convention to the other States; and Congress, if a sufficient number of them concurred, must have called it. But the first magistrate of South Carolina, when he expressed a hope that, "on a review by Congress and the functionaries of the General Government of the merits of the controversy," such a convention will be accorded to them, must have known that neither Congress nor any functionary of the General Government has authority to call such a convention, unless it be demanded by two-thirds of the States. This suggestion, then, is another instance of the reckless inattention to the provisions of the Constitution with which this crisis has been madly hurried on; or of the attempt to persuade the people that a constitutional remedy had been sought and refused. If the Legislature of South Carolina "anxiously desire" a general convention to consider their complaints, why have they not made application for it in the way the Constitution points out? The assertion that they "earnestly seek" it, is completely negatived by the omission.

This, then, is the position in which we stand. A small majority of the citizens of one State in the Union have elected delegates to a State convention: that convention has ordained that all the revenue, laws of the United States, must be repealed, or that they are no longer a member of the Union. The Governor of that State has recommended to the Legislature the raising of an army to carry the secession into effect, and that he may be empowered to give clearances to vessels in the name of the State. No act of violent opposition to the laws has yet been committed, but such a state of things is hourly apprehended, and it is the intent of this instrument to PROCLAIM not only that the duty imposed on me by the Constitution "to take care that the laws be faithfully executed," shall be performed to the extent of the powers already vested in me by law, or of such other as the wisdom of Congress shall devise and entrust to me for that purpose; but to warn the citizens of South Carolina, who have been deluded into an opposition to the laws, of the danger they will incur by obedience to the illegal and disorganizing ordinance of the convention—to exhort those who have refused to support it to persevere in their determination to uphold the Constitution and laws of their country, and to point out to all, the perilous situation in which the good people of that State have been led—and that the course they are urged to pursue is one of ruin and disgrace to the very State whose rights they affect to support.

Fellow-citizens of my native State!—Let me not only admonish you, as the first magistrate of our common country, not to incur the penalty of its laws, but use the influence that a father would over his children, whom he saw rushing to certain ruin. In that paternal language, with that paternal feeling, let me tell you, my countrymen, that you are deluded by men who are either deceived themselves, or wish to deceive you, Mark under what pretences you have been led on to the brink of insurrection and treason, on which you stand! First, a diminution of the value of your staple commodity, lowered by over production in other quarters, and the consequent diminution in the value of your lands, were the sole effect of the tariff laws. The effect of those laws are confessedly injurious, but the evil was greatly exaggerated by the unfounded theory you were taught to believe, that its burdens were in proportion to your exports, not to your consumption of imported articles. Your pride was roused by the assertion that a submission to those laws was a state of vassalage, and that resistance to them was equal, in patriotic merit, to the opposition our fathers offered to the oppressive laws of Great Britain. You were told that this opposition might be peaceably—might be constitutionally made—that you might enjoy all the advantages of the Union and bear none of its burdens.

Eloquent appeals to your passions, to your state pride, to your native courage, to your sense of real injury, were used to prepare you for the period when the mask which concealed the hideous features of DISUNION should be taken off, It fell, and you were made to look with complacency on objects which, not long since, you would have regarded with horror. Look back at the arts which have brought you to this state—look forward to the consequences to which it must inevitably lead. Look back to what was first told you, as an inducement to enter into this dangerous course. The great political truth was repeated to you, that you had the revolutionary right of resisting all laws that were palpably unconstitutional, and intolerably oppressive—it was added that the right to nullify a law rested on the same principle, but that it was a peaceable remedy! This character which was given to it, made you receive, with too much confidence, the assertions that were made of the unconstitutionality of the law, and its oppressive effects. Mark, my fellow-citizens, that, by the admission of your leaders, the unconstitutionality must be palpable, or it will not justify either resistance or nullification! What is the meaning of the word palpable, in the sense in which it is here used?—that which is apparent to every one; that which no man of ordinary intellect will fail to perceive. Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description? Let those among your leaders who once approved and advocated the principle of protective duties, answer the question; and let them choose whether they will be considered as incapable, then, of perceiving that which must have been apparent to every man of common understanding, or as imposing upon your confidence, and endeavoring to mislead you now.

In either case, they are unsafe guides in the perilous path they urge you to tread. Ponder well on this circumstance, and you will know how to appreciate the exaggerated language they address to you. They are not champions of liberty, emulating the fame of our revolutionary fathers; nor are you an oppressed people, contending, as they repeat to you, against worse than colonial vassalage. You are free members of a flourishing and happy Union. There is no settled design to oppress you. You have indeed felt the unequal operation of laws which may have been unwisely, not unconstitutionally passed: but that inequality must necessarily be removed. At the very moment when you were madly urged on the unfortunate course you have begun, a change in public opinion had commenced. The nearly approaching payment of the public debt, and the consequent necessity of a diminution of duties, had already produced a considerable reduction, and that too on some articles of general consumption in your State. The importance of this change was understood, and you were authoritatively told, that no further alleviation of their burdens was to be expected, at the very time when the condition of the country imperiously demanded such a modification of the duties, as should reduce them to a just and equitable scale. But, as if apprehensive of the effect of this change, in allaying your discontents, you were precipitated into the fearful state in which you now find yourselves.

I have urged you to look back to the means that were used to hurry you on to the position you have now assumed; and forward to the consequences it will produce. Something more is necessary. Contemplate the condition of that country of which you still form an important part! Consider its government, uniting in one bond of common interests and general protection, so many different States; giving to all their inhabitants the proud title of AMERICAN CITIZENS; protecting their commerce, securing their literature and their arts, facilitating their intercommunication, defending their frontiers, and making their name respected in the remotest parts of the earth! Consider the extent of its territory, its increasing and happy population, its advance in arts, which render life agreeable, and the sciences, which elevate the mind! See education spreading the lights of religion, humanity, and general information into every cottage in the wide extent of our Territories and States! Behold it as the asylum where the wretched and the oppressed find a refuge and a support! Look on this picture of happiness and honor, and say WE, TOO, ARE CITIZENS OF AMERICA; Carolina is one of these proud States: her arms have defended, her best blood has cemented this happy Union! And then add, if you can, without horror and remorse, this happy Union we will dissolve this picture of peace and prosperity we will deface this free intercourse we will interrupt—these fertile fields we will deluge with blood—the protection of that glorious flag we renounce—the very names of Americans we discard. And for what, mistaken men!—for what do you throw away these inestimable blessings—for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union? For the dream of a separate independence—a dream interrupted by bloody conflicts with your neighbors, and a vile dependence on a foreign power. If your leaders could succeed in establishing a separation, what would be your situation? Are you united at home—are you free from the apprehension of civil discord, with all its fearful consequences? Do our neighboring republics, every day suffering some new revolution or contending with some new insurrection—do they excite your envy? But the dictates of a high duty oblige me solemnly to announce, that you cannot succeed.

The laws of the United States must be executed. I have no discretionary power on the subject—my duty is emphatically pronounced in the Constitution. Those who told you that you might peaceably prevent their execution, deceived you they could not have been deceived themselves. They know that a forcible opposition could alone prevent the execution of the laws, and they know that such opposition must be repelled. Their object is disunion; but be not deceived by names; disunion by armed force, is TREASON. Are you really ready to incur its guilt? If you are, on the heads of the instigators of the act be the dreadful consequences—on their heads be the dishonor, but on yours may fall the punishment—on your unhappy State will inevitably fall all the evils of the conflict you force upon the government of your country. It cannot accede to the mad project of disunion of which you would be the first victims—its first magistrate cannot, if he would, avoid the performance of his duty—the consequence must be fearful for you, distressing to your fellow-citizens here, and to the friends of good government throughout the world. Its enemies have beheld our prosperity with a vexation they could not conceal—it was a standing refutation of their slavish doctrines, and they will point to our discord with the triumph of malignant joy. It is yet in your power to disappoint them. There is yet time to show that the descendants of the Pinckneys, the Sumpters, the Rutledges, and of the thousand other names which adorn the pages of your revolutionary history, will not abandon that Union, to support which so many of them fought and bled and died. I adjure you, as you honor their memory as you love the cause of freedom, to which they dedicated their lives—as you prize the peace of your country, the lives of its best citizens, and your own fair fame, to retrace your steps. Snatch from the archives of your State the disorganizing edict of its convention—bid its members to re-assemble and promulgate the decided expressions of your will to remain in the path which alone can conduct you to safety, prosperity and honor—tell them that, compared to disunion, all other evils are light, because that brings with it an accumulation of all—declare that you will never take the field unless the star spangled banner of your country shall float over you that you will not be stigmatized when dead, and dishonored and scorned while you live, as the authors of the first attack on the Constitution of your country! Its destroyers you cannot be. You may disturb its peace—you may interrupt the course of its prosperity—you may cloud its reputation for stability—but its tranquility will be restored, its prosperity will return, and the stain upon its national character will be transferred, and remain an eternal blot on the memory of those who caused the disorder.

Fellow-citizens of the United States! The threat of unhallowed disunion the names of those, once respected, by whom it is uttered—the array of military force to support it—denote the approach of a crisis in our affairs on which the continuance of our unexampled prosperity, our political existence, and perhaps that of all free governments, may depend. The conjunction demanded a free, a full, and explicit enunciation, not only of my intentions but of my principles of action; and as the claim was asserted of a right by a State to annul the laws of the Union and even to secede from it at pleasure, a frank exposition of my opinions in relation to the origin and form of our government, and the construction I give to the instrument by which it was created, seemed to be proper. Having the fullest confidence in the justness of the legal and constitutional opinion of my duties which has been expressed, I rely with equal confidence on your undivided support in my determination to execute the laws—to preserve the Union by all constitutional means—to arrest, if possible, by moderate but firm measures, the necessity of a recourse to force; and, if it be the will of Heaven that the recurrence of its primeval curse on man for the shedding of a brother's blood should fall upon our land, that it be not called down by any offensive act on the part of the United States.

Fellow citizens! The momentous case is before you. On your undivided support of your government depends the decision of the great question it involves, whether your sacred Union will be preserved, and the blessings it se cures to us as one people shall be perpetuated. No one can doubt that the unanimity with which that decision will be expressed, will be such as to inspire new confidence in republican institutions, and that the prudence, the wisdom and the courage which it will bring to their defence, will transmit them unimpaired and invigorated to our children.

May the Great Ruler of nations grant that the signal blessings with which He has favored ours, may not, by the madness of party or personal ambition, be disregarded and lost: and may His wise Providence bring those who have produced this crisis, to see the folly, before they feel the misery of civil strife: and inspire a returning veneration for that Union which, if we may dare to penetrate His designs, He has chosen as the only means of attaining the high destinies to which we may reasonably aspire.

In testimony whereof, I have caused the seal of the United States to be hereunto affixed, having signed the same with my hand.

Done at the city of Washington this 10th day of December, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, and of the Independence of the United States the fifty-seventh.

ANDREW JACKSON.
By the President:
        EDW. LIVINGSTON, Secretary of State.

SOURCES: Jonathan Phillips, Editor, Messages of the Presidents of the United States, from the Formation of the General Government, Down to the Close of the Administration of President Van Buren; Concluding with the Inaugural Address of President William H. Harrison, p. 499-512; The Statutes at Large and Treaties, of the United States of America, From December 3, 1855 to March 3, 1859, and Proclamations since 1791, Volume 11 (1856-1857), 34th and 35th Congress. U.S. Statutes at Large, Volume 11 (1856-1857), p. 771-81

 

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Diary of John Beauchamp Jones: December 15, 1864

Cloudy and cool.

A dispatch from the West states that the enemy have made a heavy raid from Bean's Station, Ky., cutting the railroad between Abingdon and Bristol, destroying government stores, engines, etc. Breckinridge and Vaughan, I suppose, have been ordered away. Dr. Morris, Telegraph Superintendent, wants to know of the Secretary if this news shall be allowed to go to the press.

The President is ill, some say very ill, but I saw indorsements with his own hand on the 13th (day before yesterday).

Our affairs seem in a bad train. But many have unlimited confidence in Gen. Beauregard, who commands in South Carolina and Georgia, and all repose implicit trust in Lee.

A writer in the Sentinel suggests that if we should be hard pressed, the States ought to repeal the old Declaration of Independence, and voluntarily revert to their original proprietors― England, France, and Spain, and by them be protected from the North, etc. Ill-timed and injurious publication!

A letter from G. N. Sanders, Montreal, Canada E., asks copies of orders (to be certified by Secretary of War) commanding the raid into Vermont, the burning, pillaging, etc., to save Lieut. Young's life. I doubt if such written orders are in existence—but no matter.

It is said the enemy have captured Fort McAlister, Savannah Harbor.

Mr. Hunter is very solicitous about the President's health-said to be an affection of the head; but the Vice-President has taken his seat in the Senate.

It was rumored yesterday that the President would surely die, an idle rumor, perhaps. I hope it is not a disease of the brain, and incurable.

SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 2p. 355

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Congressman Horace Mann to E. W. Clapp, February 6, 1850

WASHINGTON, Feb. 6, 1850.
E. W. CLAP, Esq.

MY DEAR SIR, . . . You must be entirely mistaken in your speculations. The Free-soil party, with the best principles to stand on that ever a political party had, well-nigh ruined themselves by   their injudicious conduct. But I am afraid the Whigs are behaving every whit as badly as they. Last Monday, a portion of the party gave the most insane votes that ever sane men gave. They voted down, or helped to vote down, not only the Wilmot Proviso, but the Declaration of Independence and the Ordinance of 1787. To be sure, they say they voted against these doctrines because they were brought forward by Root and Giddings for the mischievous purpose of embarrassment and party spite, and without any adequate cause. But I would not vote against such a measure if the Devil brought it forward. . . .

Yours very truly,

HORACE MANN.

SOURCE: Mary Tyler Peabody Mann, Life of Horace Mann, p. 289-90

Sunday, April 23, 2023

A. M. M., a Scotch Covenanter, to John Brown, November 23, 1859

New Alexandria, Penn., November 23.

Dear Sir: Permit a stranger to address you. I am the pastor of a congregation of people known as Scotch Covenanters — a people who refuse to incorporate with this Government by holding its offices or using its elective franchise on the ground that it refuses to perform the duty of Government either to God or man. It neither acknowledges the authority of God, nor protects the persons of its subjects; therefore we do not acknowledge it to be the moral ordinance of God for good to be obeyed for conscience' sake.

I do not address you from the expectation that you need any promptings to that fortitude which you have so nobly displayed, and which I doubt not is begotten in your soul by the Spirit of God, through a good conscience and a good cause. I have no fear but that your own familiarity with the word of God and the way to the Throne, will fortify your heart against the foul aspersions cast upon your character and motives by the purchased presses and parrot pulpits. He that fears God need fear no other. Still I know that the bravest heart may be cheered in the midst of sore trials by a kindly word from even a stranger. And, while the bulls of Bashan are roaring around you, it may be some consolation to you to know that there are some earnest Christians who regard you as a martyr to human liberty, and pray for a large outpouring of the martyr spirit upon you, and feel that in such a cause 'tis glorious to die. Whatever prudence may whisper as to the best course, God requires us to "remember them in bonds as bound with them," (Heb. xiii. 3,) and declares that "we know that we have passed from death to life, because we love the brethren," (1 John iii. 14 ; "that we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren," (1 John iii. 16;) "and if any have this world's goods, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him?" (1 John iii. 17.) If these are the proper tests of Christianity, I think, at least, you have no reason to fear a comparison of character in that respect with your clerical traducers.

But, my dear brother, you will allow me to urge upon you a rigid inquiry into your motives to know whether you have taken up the cross for Christ's sake, as well as for the sake of His oppressed people? If you have made all this sacrifice for Christ and His cross, you have the promise of a hundred fold now in this life, and in the world to come eternal life, (Mark x. 29, 30.) Your character will be a hundred fold more than redeemed, and a hundred fold better legacy will accrue to your family than you could otherwise have left them.

I know that your mind is deeply exercised in behalf of the slave; but I would suggest to you another feature of "the irrepressible conflict," to which you may not have bestowed as much thought: God's controversy with this nation for dishonor done to His Majesty. This nation, in its Constitution, makes no submission to the King of kings; pays no respect to His Higher Law; never mentions His name, even in the inauguration oath of its Chief Magistrate. God has said, He "will turn the wicked into hell, and all the nations that forget God," (Ps. ix. 17.) To His Son He says, "The nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; yea, those nations shall be utterly wasted," (Isa. lx. 12.)

If you must die a witness for the "inalienable rights" of man, I desire that you would also set the seal of your blood to a noble testimony for the supreme authority and outraged majesty of God, and with your expiring breath call upon this guilty nation, not only to "let God's people go," but also to serve God with fear and kiss His Son lest He be angry."

You have been called before judges and governors, and "it has been given you what to say and how to speak," and I pray that when you are called to witness a good confession before many witnesses, that there will be given you living words that will scathe and burn in the heart of this great and guilty nation, until their oppression of men and treason against God shall be clean purged out.

Noble man! you are highly honored of God! You are raised up to a high, commanding eminence, where every word you utter reaches the furthest corner of this great country; yes, of the civilized world. What matter if it be from a scaffold, Samson-like you will slay more Philistines in your death, than you ever did or could by a long life; and I pray God that in your dying agony, you may have the gratification of feeling the pillars of Dagon's Temple crumbling in your grasp. O, feel that you are a great actor on a world-wide stage; that you have a most important part to play, and that while you are suffering for Christ, he will take care of you. He sends none a warfare on their own charges, and, "as the tribulations of Christ abound, the consolations that are by Christ will much more abound." Fear not to die; look on the scaffold not as a curse but an honor, since it has been sanctified by Christ. It is no longer, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree;" that curse was borne by Jesus; — but now it is "Blessed is he that suffers for righteousness' sake; for his is the kingdom of Heaven."

I still entertain the lingering hope that this nation will not add to its already full cup of crime the blood of your judicial murder, and I daily pray God "to hear the groaning of the prisoner, and loose those that are appointed to death," (Ps. cii. 20.)

I wish to be understood as addressing your companions along with you. Should this reach you, will you gratify me by letting me know. I greatly desire to know more of one in whom I feel so deep an interest.

I commend you to God and to the word of His Grace, that is able to keep you from falling, and present you faultless before Him with exceeding great joy.

Yours, for God and the Slave,
A. M. M.

SOURCE: James Redpath, Editor, Echoes of Harper’s Ferry, p. 395-7

Thursday, April 7, 2022

William T. Sherman to George Mason Graham, July 4, 1860

July 4, 1860.

DEAR GENERAL: My supply of official paper is running low, and I take this sheet to tell you in a private way that our celebration to-day passed off perfectly well. The march by platoons from our usual parade ground to the stand was handsome, arms were stacked, and cadets seated. I had chairs enough for all ladies of whom the attendance was really very fine.

The marshal, Taliaferro (vice Spencer quit), performed his part with modesty and propriety, the Declaration was read by Cushman in a clear, manly voice, and the oration delivered by Cornelius gave general satisfaction. Boyce1 wants it for publication. At first I thought best to advise adversely, but of course I knew the speech before it was delivered and see no impropriety in its publication. I think I will prevail on Cornelius to have it published. Of course I know full well these are the mere ephemera of the hour, and next week will seem stale, but it will be an advertisement, and if good may spread beyond the circle of the Red River American.

I will now set about for the examination. I know the expectations of the public are too high and you must wink at any little stage play. The professors must favor their pupils at the examination, leaving us to grade them honestly and strictly according to our knowledge of their real progress.

As the Board has invited a public orator for the occasion, I want to know his name as soon as possible that I may advise with him as to his preference. Public speakers are as fickle as young ladies. They prefer sometimes out of doors to speak, some the length of the room, some across the room, etc. As to the cadets I will study to arrange for them to the best advantage. By a little management to-day we have made a decided hit. I have the regulations nearly done, amended pretty extensively. If the Board want to revise them they must act, for if they devolve on me any duty, my rule is to do it, though I do it wrong. . .

_______________

1 Editor of the Red River American. – Ed.

SOURCE: Walter L. Fleming, General W.T. Sherman as College President, p. 238-9

Friday, March 11, 2022

Speech of Congressman Edward Wade in the House of Representatives, August 2, 1856

I propose to say a few things on the old theme of which, we have all heard so much—the subject of slavery and the threatened dissolution of the Union. These two seem to constitute a sort or equality—a “two in one” subject, as inseparable as the Siamese twins.

A part of what I have to say, will be with the intention of calling the minds of gentlemen, to the purer and better days of the republic—to contrast those days with the present, and try if we can search out the old landmarks of constitutional liberty, and from these, to determine how far we may have wandered into the domains of despotism.  At this day, and under the perils to which liberty and union are exposed, I believe this to be the most acceptable service which a patriot can render to his country.

I desire sir if it be possible, to reproduced before the people of this day, the living realities of those purer and better days, when the union and constitution had their birth.  For, sir, it is in the spirit only in which the union and constitution were organized, that they can be preserved, if preserved at all.  If the ethical principles in which the union and constitution were brought into being, were the principles of despotism, of human bondage—if the spirit which presided at their birth, was the cold and sunless spirit of a crushing despotism, then in the perpetuity of that fell spirit, will rest their only peace and permanency.  But if, on the other hand, the union and constitution were produced from the gentle, genial sprint of liberty, and the changeless natural equality of human rights, then in the same spirit, must they be administered, to be perpetuated. No self-evident axiom, no demonstration in mathematics, is more convincing than this. Gentlemen may tell us—they do tell us—that, in order to preserve the union we must yield to the necessities or to the caprices of slavery. Sir, doing this, is a dissolution of the union. Its life expires the moment we yield to this senseless clamor. Sir, in order to preserve the union, necessity is laid upon us, to go back to the birth of the union prior to the constitution, and to catch and hold the spirit which animated those great and good men, and apply it now, and for all time, to the administration of the government. In no other way, sir, is it possible to preserve the government.  It will bear no other treatment more than man’s natural body can bear strychnine or arsenic.

Sir, if the constitution and union are to be used merely as instruments for propagating and making perpetual human bondage, they cannot be preserved—neither is it desirable that they should. They were designed by their framers, to be instruments of perpetual good; and to change them from this their original design, into instruments of ceaseless evil, is in itself to destroy them; and the obligation to obey them ceases, when their nature is changed by usurpation or corruption.

I do not say these things by way of menace, but as simple, fundamental truths, as necessary in the science of government, as are axioms in mathematics. But, sir, the preservation of this union and constitution, does not lie in force, but in the preparation of the hearts of the people. There is no better preparation for these, than a revival of that sentiment of veneration and affection for our fathers, which in individuals, is the highest possible development of a great character. Patriotism itself, that first duty of the citizen may be said to consist in the sum of our individual affections and veneration for our fathers. That sum of individual sentiments, constitutes the national sentiment of patriotism. To that spirit I appeal for the adjustment of all our internal troubles, both political and sectional. In that spirit, I shall endeavor to retrace our steps to the period when our constitution and union were brought into existence, and to persuade my fellow members to accompany me in the same spirit, to a short communing with the mighty dead. In that spirit alone, can we calm the agitated waters of political strife, either in this all or among our constituents.

To this end, I shall exhibit the fruits of their toil and their patriotism, as precious relics, worth of our ceaseless veneration and our ardent and devoted imitation. These relics constitute the pure foundation of freedom, from which our constitutional liberty flows, and will continue to flow through all time, unless fouled by the tread of the slaveholder and his free-state confederate.

The first general congress which ever assembled in the colonies of British America, convened in Philadelphia in 1774. One of its earliest and most earnest efforts was, to put an end to the African slave trade. This was attempted openly and boldly, and as a necessary preliminary to the abolition of slavery itself. Sir, those glorious old men, so deeply imbued with the spirit of the Bible, and at that time discovered no divinity—no Bible sanction to the wicked institution.

But hark! Let us listen to the solemn and truthful voice of that first old continental congress. Blessed old fathers of our institutions—gone to their graves, full of years, and full of honors! But still they speak to all of us who have ears to hear, or hearts to understand—men whose fame will only grow brighter with the lapse of ages; and whom it were an everlasting joy to call OUR FATHERS, were it not that their integrity to human liberty, has become the bitterest reproach upon our apostacy from, and treachery to the holiest interests of our country and the human race. But listen again to the voice of the fathers, oh, ye sham democrats! Hearken also, ye republicans! for their instructions  are to all such as revere their memory, and follow in their footsteps.

The first general congress assembled in Philadelphia in September 1774 resolve that

“The abolition of domestic slavery is the greatest object of desire in these colonies, where it was unhappily introduced in their infant state.  But previous to the enfranchisement of the slaves, it is necessary to exclude further importations from Africa. Yet our repeated attempts to effect this by prohibitions, and by imposing duties which might amount to prohibition, have been heretofore defeated by his Majesty’s negative; thus preferring the immediate advantage of a few African corsairs, to the lasting interests of the American states, and the rights of human nature, deeply wounded  by the infamous practice.” — American Archives, 4th series, vol. 1, p. 696.

So “his Majesty”—thick-skulled, but mulish old King George III, was perversely bent on forcing slavery upon the colonies, against their most earnest remonstrances—against reason, common sense, and common humanity—and just so now, our modern dull-headed, dough-faced, and sham democratic party, following in the perverse footsteps of its illustrious prototypes, old King George and Lord North, is doing the same infamous and ruinous work for the ill-fated and oppressed people of Kansas. In the eyes of King George, the interests of a score or two of slave-trading pirates, was sufficient to break down the interests, and to “crush out,” if possible, the principles of three millions of his subjects; and so now, in the eyes of the sham democracy, the pretended, but not actual right of a mere handful of slave-holders, to saddle their atrocious and ruinous institution of slavery  upon the free people and free territory of Kansas, against the most earnest remonstrances of that people, in breach of a solemn and time-honored compact, and at the hazard of civil war, and the overthrowing of the union, completes the parallel; and I leave it to the historian to say which should bear the palm, whether old King George or modern democracy, in this rivalship in the wickedness and stupidity.

Again, sir, I revert with gratitude and pride, to those venerated men who, in view of perils which would have daunted the boldest not armed in a panoply of righteousness and truth, and quote to the confusion of the combined, but recreant democracy and slaveocracy, the bold, and yet holy resolves of the fathers whose memory they dishonor. I quote from the articles of association, formed by that first congress of 1774:

“We do for ourselves and the inhabitants of the several colonies whom we represent, firmly agree and associate under the sacred ties of virtue, honor, and love of our country, as follows: * * *

 

2. That we will neither import nor purchase any slave imported after the first day of November next, after which time we will wholly discontinue the slave trade, and will neither be concerned in it ourselves, nor will we hire our vessels nor sell our commodities or manufactures to those who are concerned in it. * * *

 

[11]. That a committee be chosen in every county, city, and town, by those who are qualified to vote for representatives in the legislature, whose business it shall be attentively to observe the conduct of all persons touching this association; and when it shall be made to appear, to the satisfaction of a majority of any such committee, that any person within the limits of their appointment has violated this association, that such majority do forthwith cause the truth of the case to be published in the Gazette, to the end that all such foes to the Rights of British America may be publicly known, and universally contemned, as the enemies of American liberty, and thenceforth we, respectively will break of all dealings with him or her. * * *

 

14. And we do further agree, and resolve that we will have no trade, commerce, dealings, or intercourse whatever—with any colony, or province, in North America, which shall not accede to, or which shall hereafter violate, this association; but will hold them as unworthy of the rights of freemen, and as inimical to the liberties of the country.

 

The forgoing association, being determined upon by the congress, was ordered to be subscribed by the several members thereof; and thereupon we have hereunto set our respective names accordingly.

 

IN CONGRESS, PHILADELPHIA,

October 20, 1774.

 

PEYTON RANDOLPH, President.

(Archives, Ibid.)”

Mr. Chairman, that was the bold, stern language in which our fathers denounced slavery—the “sum of all villanies.” These were some of the incipient measures to which they resorted, to rid themselves of the iniquitous and ruinous system of slavery. Simultaneously with this association formed by the first congress, North Carolina denounced the slave trade and slavery in language equally bold and truthful. The colony of Georgia did the same in the following year; and, in deed, the united voice of the colonies, during the agitations which immediately preceded the revolutionary war, down to the crowning period of the declaration of independence, was utterly condemnatory of slavery, MORALLY, SOCIALLY, AND POLITICALLY.

The gentleman from Georgia [Mr. LUMPKIN] has assured us, that if the “black republicans” elect their president in the coming contest, the union will be dissolved, inasmuch as no southern man will take office under such an administration. This prediction however, is not original with that gentleman, nor to the section from which he comes, for even the north has at least, one man simple enough, to back his on pretensions to the presidency by a similar threat. But Mr. Chairman, if Mr. Fremont can induce no living southern statesman to accept the appointment, let him select the ghost of some one of their dead sages; for “though he be dead, he yet speaketh.” Hear the old Georgians speak from their honored graves!

COLONONY OF GEORGIA, January 12, 1775

 

“To show the world that we are not influenced by any contracted or interested motives, but a general philanthropy for all mankind, of whatever climate, language, or complexion, we hereby declare our disapprobation and abhorrence of the unnatural practice of slavery in America—a practice founded in the injustice and cruelty, and highly dangerous to our liberties, (as well as lives,) debasing part of our fellow-creatures below men, and corrupting the virtue and morals of the rest, and is of that liberty we contend for upon a very wrong foundation. We therefore, resolve, at all times, to use our utmost endeavors for the manumission of our slaves in this colony upon the most safe and equitable footing for the master and themselves.”

In that day, Mr. Chairman, Virginia was not behind her sister colonies in condemnation of slavery.  In November 1774, James City county endorsed the action of that first continental congress in the following language:

“The association entered into by congress being publicly read, the freeholders and other inhabitants of the county, that they might testify to the world their concurrence and hearty approbation of the measures adopted by that respectable body, very cordially acceded there to, and did bind and oblige themselves, by the sacred ties of virtue, honor and love to their country, strictly and inviolably to observe and keep the same in every particular.”—Ibid.

Woe is the day, Mr. Chairman, that she ever receded from her blighted faith! Had she kept the faith of her fathers, no note of discord would have ever marred the harmony of that union, then so auspiciously inaugurated. But she has fallen, and her sons are now heading that great conspiracy, the purpose of which is to blight the continent with the endless curse of human bondage.

I know very well, Mr. Chairman, and I blush to own it, that Virginia and the south are not alone in this great apostacy. My own section had its full share in the original sin of African kidnapping; and fealty to truth compels me to admit, that in nothing is her case more hopefully than that of the south, but in that remission which may be expected to follow, the confession and repentance of sin. Still, sir, however much of injustice and cupidity prevailed in that day, both at the north and the south, there was yet an immense balance of justice, humanity, and love of human rights. Bad men and base actions were not then unknown; but the central force of public opinion was love of freedom and justice; and this drew our fathers to a union so close and cordial, that the result was the old confederation, the declaration of independence, revolutionary war, and the constitution of the United States. These all, were the sole fruits of the love of liberty and justice, and an intense and unremitting hostility to the existence—much more to the extension of slavery. But there is no end to the proofs, that the spirit of liberty, and not of slavery, was the spirit and bond of union, under the old confederation, and throughout the revolutionary war. Why, sir, under the guidance of that evil sp[i]rit of slavery propagandism, which not possesses the sham democracy of the slave and the free states, the war of independence would have been an impossibility. A cargo of African negroes, sir, would have transformed five regiments of these shams into “cow-boys” and tories. I will adduce but one proof more of my original proposition, and that shall be the declaration of independence itself.  Here it is, O ye slavery-extending democrats, and blush that ever you dubbed yourselves followers of Jefferson!

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,” &c.

I know sir, that a democrat in the other end of the capitol, in the last congress, pronounced this sacred charter of human rights “a self-evident lie;” and that democrat, so far as I know, is still in full communion in the democratic church, and is probably honored the more, for throwing the lie in the faces of those whose blood purchased that freedom which enabled him, on the floor of the American senate, to dishonor their memories and insult those of their posterity, who revere their virtues and cherish their principles.  But why marvel at such audacity of language? Alas, sir! it but too well accords with the acts and records of the apostate party of which he was a prominent member.

Mr. Chairman, if any human records of the past can be relied on as prove of any event of the past, then the proof, that the bond of our American union, prior to, and during the revolutionary war, was an irrepressible love of personal freedom, as one of the inherent, indestructible rights of all human beings unconvicted of crime, is proved. And, sir, I declare it here, as the truth of history that so long as this great truth was cherished, and practically recognized by the federal government, in all matters within the legitimate cognizance of its several departments, there was never manifested any dangerous indication of disloyalty to the union. No, sir, disunion is the whelp of the spirit of slavery propagandism; and since that evil spirit has possessed southern politicians and their alliance has been perfected with our northern slave democracy, there has been no peace for the union; and, in the providence of God, there never can, and never ought to be any “peace to the Wicked,” either in union or out of it.

But, Mr. Chairman, having proven the allied forces of the slavery propagandists of the south and the slave democracy of the free states to be hostile to the only enduring element of union, liberty! as received and understood by our fathers “in the times that tried men’s souls,” I proceed now to show, that the same allies are equally hostile to the same essential element of union under the constitution of the United States. Mr. Chairman, I first call the attention of the committee to the preamble of the constitution. Here it:

“We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessing of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America.”

There, Mr. Chairman, whoever, after reading that declaration of the objects and purposes for which the constitution of the United States, was framed and adopted by the people of the United States, shall assert, that the extension and perpetuation of slavery, or the exaltation of slavery into a “domestic institution,” to be laced side by side with the institution of husband and wife, parent and child, &c., as is attempted by the slave democracy in and by the Nebraska bill and as is asserted in every alternate breath, by each slaveholder and slave democrat in congress and out of it—I say, sir, every such person charges the men who framed, and the people who adopted the constitution, with deliberate and wicked LYING, or else with a stupidity so nearly absolute, as to relieve them of moral responsibility for what they did assert.

Our fathers set this preamble at the threshold of the constitution as a lamp, as well to dispel darkness from the minds of those who should attempt to enter this great edifice of FREE government, as to cast its cheering light through all the compartments of that edifice. They did it, that whoever might hope to find in the constitution a guarantee of slavery, or any form of injustice, might, at the commencement of his search, meet only—“liberty and justice.” It was done to take all excuse from that perverse ingenuity which, from the infirmities of human language might attempt to use the constitution as the slave democracy in congress, and out of it, are now using it, viz: as an instrument for the extension of slavery into free territory, and as a justification of their pretence, that the constitution proprio vigor, carries slavery into all the territories of the United States; or that slavery and liberty are twin brethren, and must be brought, as such, simultaneously into the union, or not be born at all; or that other piece of stupidity or perverseness, that the territories are the common property of the people of all the states, and therefore the slaveholder has the right to enter all or any of the federal territories with his slaves—or that other, and last for the present, assertion, that there exists a certain equality among all the states, which authorizes the people of the slave states to take their slaves, as property, into the territories, but does not authorize the people of the free states to enter the territories and exclude slavery therefrom—a sort of equality of states, which warrants the establishment of nuisances and social curses in the territories, but takes from the people the power to abate such nuisances.

Another design of the preamble to the constitution was, to enable the people to detect that class of demagogues who, under the cloak of devotion to the union, are trying to force or cheat the people of the free states, into “carrying the flag and keeping step to the music of the coffle gang,” as it pursues its dead march from the old and slave-cursed states, to make its halt in the now free territories, there to leave forever the mildew of its blighting nature.

But the preamble to the constitution, is not the constitution. This must speak with its own voice, but it must nevertheless speak in the spirit of its preamble, otherwise both preamble and constitution are a hypocrisy and a delusion. The constitution as framed by the convention, gave no power to any department of the government to make a slave of a free man, nor to convert free territory into slave territory. The federal government, under the constitution, prior to the amendments, was utterly impotent, either to make or hold a slave, or to give authority to others to make or hold slaves. The unamended constitution was precisely that, neither more nor less than its authors made it; but they did not make a slave constitution. They did not omit a clause in that instrument, authorizing slaveholding by accident, but by design. Mr. Madison, one of the chief artificers of the constitution, assures us that they did not intend that the constitution should even disclose the shameful act, that there existed such a crime and disgrace in the United State as slavery.

But to “make assurance doubly sure,” and as it were, “to take a bond of fate,”1 those great and good men, for the vindication of their own fame as the friends of liberty and justice, and jealous least, through the degeneracy of after times, and almost as if foreseeing the apostacy of the slave democracy of the present day, immediately on the adoption of the constitution, as framed by the convention, the first congress assembled under it, proposed divers[e] amendments, the chief object of which were, to negative all power in congress, which bad men might claim to be implied in the original constitution, to make oppressive laws, or to wrest from men their inalienable rights.

First amendment.—“Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

Mr. Chairman, it is very true that this prohibition against violating the freedom of speech and the press by congress, does not affect the states as such, and consequently the freedom of speech and the press in the states, must depend on state laws; but there  is not a slave state in the union, with the exception of perhaps Delaware, where this great fundamental element of civil liberty, either practically, by licensed mobbing or by state laws, is not utterly annihilated, The principle of slavery, Viz: property in man, will not bear discussion; neither dare it “come to the light, lest its deeds should be reproved.” But the discussion of the right to property in “the beasts of the field and the fowls of the air,” in the earth and the products of the earth, the air and the waters, are as freely discussed in slave states as in free states. The reason for this is too obvious to require illustration. But apropos of this, we have all heard of the celebrated laws of the bogus legislature of Kansas for the protection of property in slaves. If not, the masterly speech of my friend from Indiana, [Mr. COLFAX] will throw abundant light of these pandects of Atchison, Stringfellow, Shannon, and company. But super-fiendish are these infamous acts in the form of laws, against the great right of free speech and a free press, we have nevertheless, the assurance of a senator from Mississippi, [Mr. ADAMS,] that the Kansas laws are by no means peculiar; but are such as are usual and necessary in the slave states. In alluding to these Kansas laws, he says:

“They have passed just such laws—not perhaps exactly in the language, but substantially the same—as the states maintain the institution of slavery have found it necessary to pass to sustain their rights. In the state in which I have the honor to live, we prohibit the circulation of incendiary pamphlets, as they are called, which mean nothing more nor less than the language objected to and provided against in this act. Men are punished for it; so in nearly all the states where the institution of slavery exists. The mistake which is made here is in reference to the question which I have already called to the attention of the senate. These people have acted in conformity with the provisions of the act of congress.”

Now sir, admitting that slave states, for the support of the barbarism of slavery, will within their own limits, may enact laws thus cruel, unjust, and disgusting; still this legislative assembly of Kansas, is but the CREATURE of which the congress of the United States is the CREATOR—the mere instrument, made by congress, to make and execute laws for Kansas, in the place of, and for congress. Therefore, it can pass no law which congress, by the constitution of the United States is prohibited from passing. Hence all these beastly, disgusting, and infamous slave laws of Kansas, are a nullity and a nuisance, by the express provisions of the first article of the amendments to the constitution of the United States. But what care this democracy, for the constitution of the United States, where that stands in the way of the extension of human slavery? Just nothing at all! And hence every nerve of this mis-begotten administration, is strained to uphold these unconstitutional and scandalous laws. The whole military force of the government, is put in requisisition [sic] by the slave democracy, to dragoon the people of Kansas, into submission to these laws; and men, good, and wise, and just men are to be tried by slave democratic judges and juries, and convicted and executed as traitors, for the resistance to these laws, the forcible execution of which, is TREASON, and ought to subject the president, his cabinet, and all advising to their execution, to the trial, and sentence, and DOOM OF TRAITORS.

Second amendment.—“The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.”

In this amendment the same SPIRIT OF LIBERTY is developed, as was so apparent in the preceding. “The right to “keep and bear arms,” is thus guarantied, in order that if the liberties of the people should be assailed, the means for their defence should be in their own hands.

But this right of the people of the United States, of which the free-state settlers of Kansas are a part, has been torn away from them by the treasonable violence of this ill-starred administration, which is used as the mere pack-mule of the slave democracy.

Fourth amendment.—“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.”

In utter contempt of this clause of the constitution, this guilty administration, by its less guilty tools in Kansas, has been sacking cities, burning houses, and carrying desolation, murder and rapine, over that fair territory.

Fifth amendment.—“No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”

It should be always borne in mind, that the constitution of the United States was intended, first, to confer power on the government of the United States; second, to limit the power thus conferred; and third, to withdraw certain powers from the individual states.

Nowhere in the constitution of the United States is the word “slave” used. Wherever in the constitution slaves are alluded to, or rather, are suppose to be alluded to, they are not named as slaves, but as persons, just as all the people, individually, are included in the term “persons,” in the fifth amendment above quoted. Mr. Madison, called the father of the constitution, informs us that the banishment of the term “slave” from the text of the constitution, was not the result of an accident, but was done purposely, and with the intention of excluding the idea, that man can hold his fellow-man as property, the affirmative of which, would be implied in the term “slave.”

Mr. Chairman, if the framers of the constitution cast the word, “slave,” as a reprobate, out of the constitution, because its definition is “a man held as property,” how dare our bogus democrats and slaveholders interpolate what venerated instrument with the execrable term? No, sir; the argument is irresistible, that wherever the authority of the United Sates, in any of its departments, whether legislative, executive, or judicial, is invoked to interfere against a “person” held as a slave by the laws of any state, the United States must treat such slave as a person; and if such person’s “life, liberty or property,” may be brought in jeopardy by the authority of the United States, that “person,” however humble, however bruised or trodden under foot by other states or other nations, is entitled to “due process of law,” which by the common consent of all—whether slave-holders, slave democrats, or republicans—is admitted to be a “trial by jury, according to the course of the common law.” Thus, sir, the thrice-execrable “fugitive slave law,” with its chatchpole bevy of slave-hunting commissioners and deputy marshals, becomes a nullity and nuisance—the villainous concoction of slaveholding usurpation and doughfaced subserviency—and dissolves like stubble before the devouring fire.

Now, sir, I flatter myself that I have vindicated the memory and the fame of our fathers who bequeathed to us a constitution based on justice—a union knit and held together by the gentle, genial humanizing spirit of God-given, and God-honoring freedom. I have proven by facts and arguments which no sophistry can overthrow, that the spirit which created the constitution and the union, was the love of personal liberty under just and humane law.  The same spirit which created must preserve the constitution and the union; but the spirit which has taken possession of the slaveholders, and their base tools, the slave democracy of the free states, is the unclean spirit of slavery propagandism and perpetuation; and just as sure as animal life perishes in mephitic gases, so sure is it, that this constitution and union must perish, when smothered in the foul embraces of these allies of human slavery.

Mr. Chairman, I would respectfully ask of our union-saving physicians and craftsmen, whether in their opinion, the health of the union is improving under the slavery-extension nostrums which they have been administering to it now for some twenty years past?—whether their last dose of Nebraska bitters, bids fair to improve the health or prolong the life of their unhappy patient? To me, sir, though I am mo political doctor, and my opinion is therefore, of little value, I confess that the writhings and pantings of the patient, and the agitated and anxious countenances of the doctors and nurses, do not look like a favorable working of the medicines; and I would respectfully suggest a change of prescriptions. When you took your patient in hand, some twenty years ago, it was blessed with a robust constitution, seemingly calculated to outlive all the quacks and granddames who had taken its cure in hand, and only needed to be wisely let alone, to outlive the years of Methuselah himself. But you could not rest. You pronounced the union in danger, and again commenced administering your doses of pro-slavery agitation. In 1836 you “saved” the union by “Pinckney’s Resolution.” That was by laying “anti-slavery petitions on the table without reading or reference.” You pronounced your patient “cured”—still, to all but the doctors, it was now evidently made sick by your medicine. You nevertheless tired the same remedy in 1838, in another resolution of the same character. In 1842 you administered another pro-slavery dose, and in that attempt to expel from the House, the venerable ex-president Adams, merely for presenting a petition to congress. The union was thereby again saved, however; still, strange to say, it grew more and more feeble under these repeated salvations; and again in 1843, you saved it by expelling from the house, my venerable friend and colleague, [Mr. GIDDINGS,] for offering a resolution in respect to slave trading under the flag of the union. But, like all your past quackery, this also, only made bad worse. But the union made out to keep above ground until 1846, when it was again saved by the annexation of the slave state of Texas and the Mexican war, and in 1848, by the new acquisition of the new slave territories of New Mexico and Utah, and by the exertions of Colonel Fremont, the free territory of California, making of slave territory 724,000 square miles, and the free territory of California 188,000 square miles. At about the same time, you commenced depleting your patient by a treaty with Great Britain, and the cession to her majesty of [54]° 40’ of latitude and 26° of longitude, equal to 774,000 square miles of free territory, to which your slave holding president had declared the title of the United states [to] be “clear and unquestioned.” Still the Union only grew worse, and in 1852, was again declared by the pro-slavery and slaveholding doctors, to be “as good as dead.” So you called in both whig and democratic doctors to a consultation over your old patient, the union. The council of doctors were unanimously of the opinion, not only that the patient was very sick but, in addition thereto, was badly wounded—having “seven bleeding wounds” which were to be staunched at once, or the case was hopeless. As usual on those occasions, more concessions to slavery were prescribed; California was graciously permitted to come into the union as a free state; Texas was consigned to the dissecting room, to be cut into only five slave states; and New Mexico and Utah were to be slave or free at their option. With this came a withdrawal of the slaveholders’ license to convert the District of Columbia into a slave stable. But above all, this arrangement was declared final—was to be the very last dose of patent medicine to be administered—the “all-healing ointment” for the convalescent union.

But did the union recover on taking this dose of “finality” physic? The doctors told us it was cured—that in this new ointment, of letting slaveholders have their own way in the territories, the union was restored—was “good as new.” But alas! Mr. Chairman, however will it might fare with the union, the case was different with the doctors. In curing their patient, they killed themselves—every mother’s son of them. But, again, alas for the poor union, and for the infallibility of political nostrum venders! In less than four years from this perfect, this “final recovery, the union was found again in hysterics. There was discovered a dreadful “tender spot” at the junction of the slave state of Missouri and the free territory of Kansas. The democratic faculty of political quacks was hurriedly summoned. What in the world could be the matter with the union now? Well it was found by them to be the dying of a poison called “Missouri compromise,” administered by the doctors in charge of her in 1820. This was the unanimous opinion of the doctors.  The union, with that Missouri compromise, had taken an over dose of freedom, and it must be extracted from her system, as the only and the infallible remedy. Yes, sir; the slave democracy have, for all the diseases of the union, on, and only one, remedy; and that is to bleed her of every drop of freedom left in her veins. This, sir, is the course of surgery prescribed and administered by the democratic doctors for a union nursed in the lap, and nutured at the bosom of freedom! Feed her with more slavery, more slave states, more slave territory; and when you cease to have enough of these articles on hand, why, then, steal more from your neighbor nations, after the prescription of the Ostend conference of democratic doctors, of which Mr. Buchanan, the nominee of the slave democracy for the presidency, was the acknowledged head, and Mr. Soulé, of Louisiana, the fitting tail. Steal it, sir, with a relish. Go at it sir, wolf and lamb fashion. Says the wolf, drinking in the stream to the lamb, drinking in the same stream, below the wolf, “Sir, if your drinking in the stream below me does seriously endanger the riling of the water where I am drinking, then, by every law, human and divine, I shall be justified in wresting you from the brook;” and, so saying, seizes and devours the lamb. Go at it wolf fashion, O slave democracy, and take Cuba; it will be needed in a little while as medicine for the union sick of too much freedom and too little slavery. Here is the warrant, sir, under the hands of your slave democratic casuists and candidate.

“Does Cuba in the possession of Spain seriously endanger our internal peace and the existence of our cherished union? Should this question be answered in the affirmative, then by every law, human and divine, we shall be justified in wresting it from Spain, if we possess the power; and this upon the very same principle that would justify an individual in tearing down the burning house of his neighbor, if there were no other means of preventing the flames from destroying his own home. Under such circumstances, we ought neither to count the cost nor regard the odds which Spain might enlist against us. We forbear to enter into the question, whether the present condition of the island would justify such a measure. We should, however, be recreant to our duty, be unworthy of our gallant forefathers, and commit base treason against our posterity, should we permit Cuba to be Africanized, and become a second St. Domingo, with all its attendant horrors to the white race, and suffer the flames to extend to our own neighboring shores, seriously to endanger, or actually to consume, the fair fabric of our union. We hear that the course and current of events are rapidly tending toward such a catastrophe. * * *

 

JAMES BUCHANAN.

JOHN Y. MASON.

PIERRE SOULE.

Aix La Chappelle, October 18, 1854.”

Oh yes, we will need Cuba; we do need it now; and Central America, why we shall need that by the time we can get it, and that will be as soon as Walker and his filibusters shall put slavery fairly under way there. Have it! why not have it when such a doctor of divinity as “Old Buck” says were are entitled to it by divine law? There, Mr. Chairman, is your president, who will be his own chaplain, and do his own preying.

But, Mr. Chairman, this is getting slightly, but no more than that, in advance of the “wagon.” Let us return to the handiwork of the slave democracy for the advent of another dispensation of harmony—another “finality” to succeed the old and worn out “finality” of 1850. The scriptures say, that the “sinner an hundred years old shall be accursed;” but a slave democratic “finality” is an as sad a plight, at four years old, as the sinner at “an hundred.” So they cursed their old “finality” of 1850, and introduced another in 1854, by the repeal of the Missouri compromise; which, in the short period of two years, has deserved and received more cursing, by friends and foes, than it of 1850, or all its predecessors put together. Indeed, this last seems to have had a bad effect even according to the democratic doctors themselves, inasmuch as it was a surfeit of slavery, which has resulted in the “black (republican) vomit.”

But seriously, Mr. Chairman, what I have spoken ironically is nevertheless, not an unfaithful picture of our present condition as a nation under the wicked and imbecile attempt of the slave holders and the slave democracy, to strengthen the institutions of freedom, by nursing and feeding them on the garbage of human bondage. God knows, Mr. Chairman, that I desire, as earnestly as human nature can long for any earthly blessing, the perpetuity of the union in these states, just so long as the union shall subserve the ends for which our fathers formed it; but my convictions, that the accumulated perversions of those ends and objects, will if repeated, at no distant period, subvert the union, are as strong and earnest as my desires for its perpetuity. Sir, I have no faith in the conservative efficacy of anything for states and nations, but the healing virtues of justice, truth, and liberty.

Mr. Chairman, it was my design, before resuming my seat, to say something on the causes which have led to the disgraceful state of things in Kansas—a state so repugnant to every sentiment of national pride nothing of justice, peace, or even common decency? Sir, there is involved in these Kansas troubles, something low, vulgar, dirty, savoring of the fish-market, on the part of the administration, mingled in the causes and accomplishments of these shameful scenes—much, sir, of the low, disgusting arrogance of the overseer, in his brutal efforts to subdue some refractory slave. “We mean to subdue you,” is the ebullition of a vulgar nature, elevated by means of some “villain service,” to an unexpected height; and it is the mingling of this base spirit with executive power in Kansas, which has been at the root of all these shameful scenes.

But before going further on this subject, I wish to say a few words, sir, on this new-fangled doctrine of squatter or popular sovereignty, as applicable to the promiscuous settlement of new territories, by slaveholders and persons opposed, either on the conscientious, economical, or any other grounds, to the holding of slaves. As a simple question of statesmanship, waiving for the time, the moral question involved in the extension and perpetuity of slavery, no congregation of blockheads, ever committed a more egregious, or a more shallow blunder. Why, popular sovereignty implies, not only the right, but imposes the necessity for the most absolutely free discussion by the press, and by the exercise of perfect freedom of speech by the people. How can popular institutions be rightly established, without the exercise of those fundamental rights? The negative of this question, strikes at the root of democratic institutions. The FREE STATE POPULAR sovereign must have the same right to discuss the slaveholder’s right to his slave, as a moral, religions, and economical question, as he has to discuss the policy of incorporating banks, granting city charters, or establishing the legal height and strength of a division fence. The moment this right is taken from him, that moment, he ceases to be a “popular sovereign.” But slavery can bear no such discussion. The slave must not be told that he has, by the law of nature, the right to seek his own well-being in his own way, doing to harm to others—that he has a right to labor, and to receive, use and dispose of the fruits of his labor—that his wife and children are his own, and not another’s.

Sir, the single free state squatter soverein, who is able to plant himself down in a territory, and exercise these undoubted rights of squatter sovereignty, would by this simple process of truth-telling, expel ever slave and slaveholder from 100,000 square miles of territory. But the slaveholding squatter sovereign must be authorized to silence all such “damnable heresies,” coming from his free state brother sovereign; or slavery must slink away from the territories, like ghosts at the dawn of morning. But the statesmanship of the Nebraska bill is, to set free state squatter sovereign, against slave holder squatter sovereign, contending for freedom against slavery and slavery against freedom, in the territories, openly, with free speech and a free press.

The slaveholders understand this perfectly; and hence, the inherent and fundamental right of freedom of speech and the press, does not, and cannot exist in slaveholding communities. This is a necessity of despotic governments, it is more than a necessity of despotism, it is in itself, the essence of despotism. And, sir, there is not a more morbidly suspicious, cruel, revengeful, or lawless despotism on the face of the earth, than the nightmare of slavery, which has settled down upon the people of the slaveholding states, with the exception of perhaps two or three of these states. Why sir, there is more freedom of speech and of the press to-day, and more personal safety in the exercise of such freedom, and Vienna, St. Petersburg, Paris, or Rome, in an attack and exposure of the despotism which reigns supreme over those cities, than there is at Richmond, Charleston, Milledgeville, or Mobile, to attack and expose the slaveholding despotisms which rule over these cities with a rod of iron.  Sir, there are probably more citizens, born and nurtured in the slave states, now in exile from their native states for the exercise of freedom of speech and the press, against the despotism of slaveholding, than there are from Austria, Russian, France, or the Two Sicillies, for the exercise of the same rights, against the despotisms which crush those nations.

Why, sir, free speech and a free press, would in less than a decade, drive slavery from every slave state in the union. It would exclude slavery from every territory belonging to the United states, in half that time. This truth, the men of 1820 saw clearly; and they saw that slavery and liberty could not dwell together on the same soil, that these two must separate or fight. They therefore drew a line of separation between them, and instantly their territorial dissensions ceased. But the slave democracy of our times could not rest, while a foot of soil was dedicated to freedom. So that they threw down the bars which our fathers had raised between freedom and slavery, and instantly, those two mortal foes are at each other’s throats, just as every sensible and honest man knew they must be. This is the finale of the squatter-sovereignty humbug, and a stroke of statesmanship; and it is but another illustration of the maxim, that a child or a fool may destroy in an hour, what it required the wisdom and the labor of ages to construct.

The great procuring cause of these troubles, we all know to have been, the repeal of the Missouri compromise; and the cause of this repeal was, the lust of slavery propagandism, operating on mercenary northern politicians. But the efforts of the slave democracy, are now directed to the finding of some pretext by which, they may extricate themselves, by diverting the public attention to matters which may seem to implicate others. To accomplish this unworthy object, this slave democracy has made the Massachusetts emigrant aid society its “harp of a thousand strings.” Venting execrations on this never-quieted ghost, constitutes the staple of the presidential proclamations and messages, as well as of all the harangues, tirades, speeches, and reports, of the slave democracy, in and out of congress. The president also, expresses his regrets that Governor Reeder, in his Reading speech, had not dwelt “a little more at large on the emigrant aid societies.” All the outrages of the Missouri borderers, their forays into Kansas, seizing ballot-boxes, expulsion of free-state voters from the polls, and from the territory; the election of a bogus legislature of Missourians by a Missouri mob; the sacking and burning of Lawrence; the disarming and expulsion of peaceful free-state settlers by United States troops, and the arrest, imprisonment, and nameless persecutions of innocent men for treason; the army of bands of lawless, worthless vagabonds, from the slave states, and enrolling them in the militia of the territory, thus, under color of law, turning loose, to rob, murder, and ravish, without restraint—are all justified and charged over to the account of the emigrant aid society, for its audacity in presuming to grant free-state settlers facilities for entering the territory of Kansas. This action of that society, is the sole justification set up by all, from the president of the United States, and grave senators, down, down, to the little “we-mean-to-subdue-you” scrub orator, commanding the advance guard of the free-state slave democracy.

Sir, I make no apology for any exertions, however great, on the part of the people of the free states, or any one or more of them, to preoccupy Kansas with free-state settlers. Their fault or guilt in that regard, has not been excess, but the lack of exertion to that end. Why, sir, did the slaveholders and their sham democratic allies presume that all spirit, all devotion to the constitution and the union—nay, all—self respect, all manhood ever, had so forsaken that people, that they would give up Kansas a prey to slavery, through the treachery of those whose special duty it was, to guard the interests of freedom, without availing themselves of the poor and only chance left for liberty on that soil—the chance of out voting the tools of slavery, by bona fide settlers from the free states? Well, sir, if they did, it was their own folly. They had no reason to expect such pusillanimity, such degradation from the sturdy and intelligent yeomanry and mechanics of the free states, whatever they may have had reason to expect from such specimens of cringing sycophants and doughfaces as had wormed themselves into congress and the executive from those states. Nay, sir, they did not expect it. They anticipated competition from that quarter. They challenged and defied it. They reasoned in favor of their squatter-sovereignty humbug, by asserting the superior capabilities of the free states over the slave states, for the immediate occupancy of Kansas by free state settlers. They taunted those of us, who were unwilling to remove this Missouri restriction, with hypocrisy on this very ground, viz: that on their squatter and popular sovereignty theory, the free states had greatly the advantage in the settlement of the territory, over the slave states. Some of them declared that they expected no advantage for slavery by the repeal. Thus Judge Butler, of South Carolina, (Senate, March 22, 1854; Appendix to Congressional Globe, first session Thirty-third Congress, p. 292:)

“If two states should come into the union from them, (Kansas and Nebraska,) it is very certain that not more than one of them could in any possible event be a slaveholding state; and I have not the least idea that even one would be.

 

As far as I am concerned, I must say that I do not expect that this bill is to give us of the south anything, but merely to accommodate something like the sentiment of the south.”

No, Mr. Chairman, it was then, “not to make a slave state of Kansas,” but to “accommodate a southern sentiment,” to which the Missouri restriction was offensive. Oh, how gentle then! The velvet foot-falls of the cat before seizing her prey, were not more soft and unalarming.

But, Mr. Chairman, notwithstanding all this seeming or real disinterestedness (I do not undertake to determine which) on the part of some of the southern men, there were others who did not view it in that light at all.

Mr. BELL of Tennessee (May 24, 1854, Appendix, as above, page 939,) alluding to what had been states in a caucus of the advocates of the repeal of the Missouri compromise, as to the effect of such repeal upon the entrance of slavery into the territories, says:

“But this broad principle of ‘Squatter sovereignty’ was not the idea on which the repeal clause of this bill was inserted. I was assured then that the South and some interest in it; that it would secure, practically, a slave territory west of Missouri; that slavery would go into Kansas, when the restriction of 1820 was removed. It was not dwelt on the argument; by my honorable friend from Missouri knows that that view was taken by him, [Atchison,] and I differed from him in regard to it. I thought slavery could not go there; the honorable Senator thought it could.

 

Mr. ATCHISON. And I think so still.”

This debate, slight as are the glimpses it furnishes, still discloses enough to prove the eager covetings of the slave holders for Kansas, and that they had already been “led into temptation” in relation to the question, how the territories could be appropriated to the uses of slavery? It was then already the “Naboth’s vineyard” of the slave holding section of the sham democracy, and they were then, casting about for the means of converting it to the use of slavery. “Atchison though it could be done,” though Bell doubted. At this conclave he [BELL] “was assured that the South had some interest in it; that it would secure, practically, a slave territory west of Missouri; that slavery would go into Kansas, when the restriction of 1820 was removed.”

Who that reads that, can doubt that there had been, at that time, a matured conspiracy, of which Atchison was the presiding genius, to repeal the restriction, and instantly to inundate Kansas with slave-breeding emigrants from Missouri? No one can entertain a reasonable doubt, that the sham democrats in congress from the free states, were at the time, advertised of the existence of such a conspiracy, and had been instructed by their leaders, the slaveholders, to attempt to convert their constituents to the new faith, that opening the territory of Kansas to the legal introduction to slaves, did not intend in the least, to make it a slave state; that the grand discovery of squatter sovereignty, would set all these things right, as by the power of magic.

For this conspiracy, there was doubtless a programme, which subsequent developments indicate to have been something after this wise: The Missouri restriction was to be repealed, under pretence of “accommodating a southern sentiment.” Southern Gentlemen were to affect, not to seem anxious for the entrance of slavery into the territory, no to anticipate any such result. The people of the free states were to be brought to jubilate over the new-born squatter-sovereignty faith, as a charm or fetish which would thereafter forever, secure them against all further political evil. In the mean time, Atchison was to organize the Cossacks of Missouri borders and take possession in the name of slavery and squatter sovereignty, before the free state laggards could draw on their boots.

It was probably in view of this programme, or something in substance the same, that their ablest debates in congress, were selected to open the fire upon the “abolitionists,” as the opponents of the repeal were called by its advocates. This was commenced in gallant style by Mr. Breckinridge, the now democratic candidate for vice president. In that speech, the “harp of a thousand strings,” “squatter or popular sovereignty,” was played on by the great musician to the following tune:

“But, again, cannot the North, with her overwhelming numbers, compete with us on these new theatres in the race of settlement and civilization, and must she not only violate the constitution by shutting out half the states, common property holds with her; but, in the name of liberty, outrage liberty by erecting a despotism over the territories?”

In the pamphlet edition of this speech, the question is put in this form:

“Cannot you, of the free states on this theory of ‘popular sovereignty,’ compete successfully with us of the slave states for supremacy in the territories—you, who have some fifteen millions of free population, while we, of the slave states, have less than one half of that number? If you cannot, then what becomes of your boasted superiority of free over slave institutions?”—Globe, Appendix, first session Thirty-third congress, p. 442.

This was the tune pitched by the “chief musician,” and was responded to by the whole choir of under-performers, as well in congress, and by the press, as on the stump. Sir, it was an open challenge to the intelligent, enterprising, and industrious people of the free states, to enter the lists with the slave states, in the peaceful settlement of the territory, on the newly-discovered principle of “squatter sovereignty.” By this it was implied, that there should be “fair field and no favor.” It was a distinct invitation to set free-state emigration against slave-state emigration, in which fair play was due from each party towards the other, and when, at least on the part of the free states, no unfairness was premeditated, and none anticipated from those who gave the challenge. No treacherous senator was suspected as being on the ground, digging pitfalls, laying ambushments and asserting armed bands to waylay, rob, murder, and drive back free-state settlers, who had honorably entered the lists in their own tournament of peaceful settlement. But the jamming proof is out before the sun, that while gentlemen of the south, were giving out these insidious challenges on this floor, their colaborers, or at least one of them, in this sad work of breaking time-honored compacts, and he, at the time a member of the other house of congress, was playing foul with the aver men who were attracted to Kansas, by these challenges of open and fair competition. It is sad indeed, to suspect that this challenge was given with a knowledge, that successful competition in the peaceful settlement of Kansas, by free-state men, would be defeated by fraud, or repelled by force; and yet the proof of the affirmative is almost irresistible.

But the gentleman from Georgia, [Mr. STEPHENS,] the “fiery Tybalt” of slavery propagandism, was still more arrogant and defiant in the tone and temper of his challenges to free-state men, to try the efficacy of “squatter sovereignty,” in the peaceful settlement of Kansas.

Mr. STEPHENS, (February 27, 1854, pamphlet edition of speech printed at office of Sentinel, Washington, District of Columbia, p. 11,) speaking of the prospect of a free state being made out of Kansas says:

“Why should you not be willing to remove this question forever from Congress, and leave it to the people of the Territories, according to the compromise of 1850? You have greatly the advantage of us in population. The white population of the United States is now over twenty millions. Of this number, the free states have over two to one, compared with the south. There are only a little over three million slaves.

 

If the immigration into the territories, therefore should be assumed to go on in the ratio of population, we must suppose that there would be near seven white persons to one slave at least, and of the seven two from the free states to one from the south. With such an advantage, are you afraid to trust this question with your own people—men reared under the influence of your own boasted superior institutions? With all the prejudices of birth and education against us, are you afraid to let them judge for themselves? Are your ‘free-born sons, who never breathed the tainted air of slavery,’ such nincompoops, that they cannot be trusted out, without their mothers’ leave?”

Mr. Chairman, this is not only a challenge to the people of the free states, to enter the lists with the slave states, in the settlement of Kansas, but it is a challenge couched in the language of contempt and defiance. Its tone and manner were a warning to all free state men, that the repeal of the Missouri compromise, was then, a foregone conclusion; and that if Kansas was rescued from the doom of slavery, it must be by take up the glove thus insolently thrown into their faces. Comparing the achievements, hitherto, of the two sections of the country—the slave and the free—in the successful settlement of new states, it was as rash as it was insolent.

The haughty, confident, and even defiant tone assumed by the south towards free-state men, in relation to the settlement of Kansas, was then a mystery. It seemed at the time, wholly gratuitous; but in the disclosures of the organization of secret associations by the slaveholders on the borders of the territory, in connection with the machinations of the then vice president in the same quarter, constitute more than a suspicion, they amount to a strong presumptive evidence that the purpose of repeating the compromise, and of making Kansas a slave state, were conceived simultaneously, as events inseparably connected, and to be accomplished at every hazard. The prove further, that the shallow and delusive notion of “squatter sovereignty,” was held up merely to gull a set of shallow, bigoted, and reckless partisans in the free states, as mackerel are caught with red rags.

In this view of the case, I ask honest men, north and south, were not these challenges, these taunts, this contempt and insolence, sufficient provocation to put the people of the free states to their mettle—those of them, I mean, who prefer freedom to slavery? Was it wrong in them—nay, was it not right—nay, was it not a duty which they owed to their principles, (if they had any,) to prove themselves no “nincompoops,” to use the select phrase of the gentleman from Georgia; but to show themselves equal at least in intelligence, energy, enterprise and wealth, to the slaveholders who had thus insultingly challenged them to the trial? Why, sir, emigrant aid societies, as agencies for the colonization of new and distant  countries, are as natural a result of superior wealth, intelligence, and enterprise, as railroads and steamboats are to evidence of enterprise, wealth, and skill, superior to those which had only advanced to the invention of the hand-barrow, horse-cart, and flat-boat. Sir, the slave democracy, northern or southern, might as reasonably denounce free-state emigrants to Kansas, for not making their journeys thither, in mule-drawn wagons or scow-boats, instead of journeying by steamboats and railways, as for availing themselves of the superior advantages offered by emigrant aid societies.

Nevertheless, there has not been an utterance from those hostile to freedom in Kansas, from the leviathans and pigmy giants of the slave democracy in the other end of the capitol, to the president and his cabinet, and the other end of the avenue; or from the guests of the grog-shops, or even the street loafers, the purpose of which has not been to conceal or justify their breach of the nation’s plighted faith, and to shelter themselves from the storm of public odium and contempt, for their treason to the constitution and laws of their country, as well as to their own professed principles of “squatter sovereignty,” by cursing the “New England emigrant aid society,” by “bell, book and candle.” The slave democratic press, at the four cardinal and all intermediate points of the compass, has groaned with these execrations.

But when thus insultingly challenged to prove their superiority in wealth, intelligence, and enterprise, (if they possessed them,) by taking an even change with the slave states in the peaceful colonization of Kansas; and when fairly beaten in the trial, as the slave states have been, it is not only unreasonable but it is infamous to turn upon their successful competitors, and charge them with foul play; and not only so, but to resort themselves to the foulest, most infamous, and treasonable measures to recover what they had lost in the field of open and fair competition. And, sir, I charge the slave democracy with all the mischiefs (and God knows they are but too numerous) which have already resulted, and which, in the dark and stormy future, may result, from this shameless breach of the public faith, in the repeal of the Missouri compromise, in order to force the institution of slavery on territory dedicated to freedom from more than the third of a century. Sir, to talk of the acquiescence now, in this breach of plighted faith; and this still more aggravated offence of expelling, by the army of the United States, peaceable and innocent emigrants to a territory to which the slave democracy had invited them, is a manifestation of weakness and cowardice which must and will, only invite renewed aggressions. In point of morals, it is as culpable, and in point of policy, more imbecile if possible, than that which thew open the territories to the influx of slavery.

A few words in conclusion, Mr. Chairman, to those political adventurers, patriots, doughfaces, or what not, from the free states, who at this day attach themselves to the fortunes of the slave democracy, or to slavery propagandists of any school.  I would very respectfully ask of those gentlemen, whether, as a political investment, barring wear and tear of conscience, the business of extending human slavery, and cribbing and confining human liberty, has not, of late been rather overdone by the rush of political adventurers into this field of speculation?—whether the compensation is adequate to the excessive labor required in this kind of service? Formerly before slavery extension because the main business of the holders of office in the government, the president and his cabinet might hold out sound and strong for at least eight years, and subordinate officers indefinitely. But now, since the extension of slavery into free territory, has become almost the sole business of the officers of the federal government, from the president downwards, so excessive and exhausting is the service exacted of its servants by the slave democracy, that in one or two years at the longest, these officers become so worn down and fagged out, that the people are as anxious to be rid of them, as a gang of strolling beggars, infected with measles, small-pox, or vermin.

Mr. Chairman, mankind in general intuitively despises traitors. They do this, even though they my love the treason, or its fruits. This, sir, is a law of our moral nature, all pervading, and indispensable in the present condition of humanity.  This law of our moral being, addressing itself to one of the most powerful affections of our nature, the love of approbation, serves as one of the strongest checks from universal treachery to those, to whom we are under moral obligations alone. So strong is the hold which this law takes of men, controlled by no “higher law,” that when the traitor returns to receive applause from those who reap the fruits of his treason, the applause he covets, is often turned into loathing and unsuppressed disgust. Milton, sir, with his luxuriant imagination, has described the force of this sentiment, in is description of the reception of Satan by his subject fiends, on his return from the ruin of our first parents.

Satan is described as addressing, with regal pomp, the infernal sanhedrim, and giving them a narration of his adventures in paradise, and his triumph, and its consequents at some unset future period:

———————— I am to bruise his heel;

His seed, when is not set, shall bruise my head:

A world who would not purchase with a bruise,

Or much more grievous pain? Ye have the account

Of my performance: what remains, ye gods,—

But up, and enter now into full bliss?

So having said, a while he stood, expecting

Their universal shout, and high applause,

To fill his ear; when, contrary, he hears

On all sides, from innumerable tongues,

A dismal universal hiss, the sound

Of public scorn.”

 

———————— “Thus was the applause they

meant Turn'd to exploding hiss, triumph to shame

Cast on themselves from their own mouths.”

It seems to me, sir, that if gentlemen from the free states, who have been candidates or aspirants for the presidency, or who may become such hereafter, would reflect a little upon the fortunes of those who have tired the experiment, cannot but be convinced, that to eager subserviency to the interests of the slavery extensionists, is not the surest guarantee of success. Such subservience is treachery to the interests of the people of the free states, and, the people of those states see and understand this much more clearly than those time-servers and tricksters imagine. No man at the north, however great is administrative talent, or however triumphant his popularity for the time, can be guilty of an open betrayal of the interest of freedom on any pretence however plausible, without a ruinous blow to his popularity with his free-state constituency. There are too many common schools, too many newspapers read, and too many intelligent and well-read men among the laboring masses, not to render a double-dealing and ruinous policy on the question of slavery extension, fatal to the aspirations of such politicians. The living wrecks of such navigators are too numerously strewed along the beach of the political sea, not to be a warning to the whole crew, officers as well as mariners. It would be discourteous in me to name them; but I would invite you to run over, in your mind the number of such unfortunates since 1844, inclusive. The task of Sisyphus was a hard one; but the task of a dough-face, seeking the presidency is little, if any less onerous. If he makes shift to roll his stone up the slave-sates side of the hill, down it rolls on the free-state side; and so vice versa.

If his truckling to the slave power, has fitted him for the uses of the slavery propagandists, he is ruined with the friends of freedom; and if ruined with these, the slaveholders cannot use him, however much they may desire to do so. This is now the cause with the present incumbent of presidential office. It is the case with every prominent free-state aspirant to that office in the ranks of the slave democracy, or of the national Americans, as they ironically style themselves; and “killed by an over dose of slavery propagandism,” may be justly written over the political grave of each of them, as a most truthful and appropriate epitaph. Let all politicians of uncracked reputation in the free states, be warned by these examples, and remember the reception of Satan, even among his own fallen crew; for the reception of the of the pro-slavery politician of the free states, with his slaveholding friends, is as real an ordination of Providence, in the course of nature, as are the hisses with which Satan was received by his fallen crew, according to the paintings of the poet’s imagination, in the special awards of Devine justice.

_______________

1 William Shakespeare, “Macbeth,” Act IV, Scene 1, lines 83 & 84.

SOURCE: “Speech of Hon. Edward Wade,” National Era, Washington, D. C., Thursday, September 11, 1856, p. 4, columns 1-8.