Jefferson Davis' Speech at Boston
Faneuil Hall, October 11, 1858
Countrymen, Brethren, Democrats--Most happy am I to meet you, and to
have received here renewed assurance--of that which I have so long
believed--that the pulsation of the democratic heart is the same in
every parallel of latitude, on every meridian of longtitude throughout
the United States. But it required not this to confirm me in a belief so
long and so happily enjoyed.-- Your own great statesman who has
introduced me to this assembly has been too long associated with me, too
nearly connected, we have labored too many hours, sometimes even until
one day ran into another, in the cause of our country, for me to fail to
understand that a Massachusetts democrat has a heart comprehending the
whole of our wide Union, and that its pulsations always beat for the
liberty and happiness of its country. Neither could I be unaware such
was the sentiment of the democracy of New England. For it was my fortune
lately to serve under a President drawn from the neighboring State of
New Hampshire, [applause,] and I know that he spoke the language of his
heart, for I learned it in four years of intimate connection with him,
when he said he knew "no north, no south, no east, no west, but sacred
maintenance of the common bond and true devotion to the common
brotherhood." Never, sir, in the past history of our country, never, I
add, in its future destiny, however bright it may be, did or will a man
of higher and purer patriotism, a man more devoted to the common weal of
his country, hold the helm of our great ship of State, than that same
New Englander, Franklin Pierce. [Applause.]
I have heard the resolutions read and approved by this meeting; heard
the address of your candidate for Governor; and these added to the
address of my old and intimate friend, Gen. Cushing,
bear to me fresh testimony, which I shall be happy to carry away with
me, that the democracy, in the language of your own glorious Webster,
"still lives," lives not as his great spirit, when it hung 'twixt life
and death, like a star upon the horizon's verge, but lives like the germ
that is shooting upward, like the sapling that is growing to a mighty
tree, the branches of which will spread over the commonwealth, and may
redeem and restore Massachusetts to her once glorious place in the
Union.
As I look around me and see this venerable hall thus thronged, it
reminds me of another meeting, when it was found too small to contain
the assembly--that great meeting which assembled here, when the people
were called upon to decide what should be done in relation to the
tea-tax. Faneuil Hall, on that occasion, was found too small, and the
people went to the Old South Church, which still stands--a monument of
your early history. And I hope the day will soon come when many
Democratic meetings in Boston will be too large for Faneuil Hall!
[Applause.] I am welcomed to his hall, so venerable for its associations
with our early history; to this hall of which you are so justly proud,
and the memories of which are part of the inheritance of every American
citizen; and feel, as I remember how many voices of patriotic fervor
have here been heard; that in it originated the first movements from
which the Revolution sprung; that here began that system of town
meetings and free discussion which is the glory and safety of our
country; that I had enough to warn me, that though my theme was more
humble than theirs, (as befitted my poorer ability,) that it was a
hazardous thing for me to attempt to speak in this sacred temple. But
when I heard your statesman (Gen. Cushing) say, that a word once here
spoken never dies, that it becomes a part of the circumambient air, I
felt a reluctance to speak which increases upon me as I recall his
expression. But if those voices which breathed the first instincts into
the colony of Massachusetts, and into those colonies which formed the
United States, to proclaim community independence, and asserts it
against the powerful mother country,--if those voices live here still,
how must they feel who come here to preach treason to the Constitution,
and assail the Union it ordained and established? [Applause.] It would
seem that their criminal hearts should fear that those voices, so long
slumbering, would break their silence, that the forms which look down
from these walls behind and around me, would walk forth, and that their
sabres would once more be drawn from their scabbards, to drive from this
sacred temple fanatical men, who desecrate it more than did the
changers of money and those who sold doves, the temple of the living
God. [Loud cheers.]
And here, too, you have, to remind you, and to remind all who enter
this hall, the portraits of those men who are dear to every lover of
liberty, and part and parcel of the memory of every American citizen.
Highest among them all I see you have placed Samuel Adams and John Hancock.
[Applause.] You have placed them the highest and properly; for they
were the two, the only two, excepted from the proclamation of mercy,
when Governor Gage issued his anathema against them and their fellow
patriots. These men, thus excepted from the saving grace of the crown,
now occupy the highest place in Faneuil Hall, and thus are consecrated
highest in the reverence of the people of Boston. [Applause.] This is
one of the instances in which we find tradition more reliable than
history; for tradition has borne the name of Samuel Adams to the
remotest corner of our territory, placed it among the household words
taught to the rising generation, and there in the new States intertwined
with our love of representative liberty, it is a name as sacred among
us as it is amoung you of New England. [Applause.]
We remember how early he saw the necessity of community independence.
How, through the dim mists of the future, and in advance of his day, he
looked forward to the proclamation of that independence by
Massachusetts; how he steadily strove, through good report and evil
report, with the same unwavering purpose, whether in the midst of his
fellow citizens, cheered by their voices, or whether isolated, a
refugee, hunted as a criminal, and communing with his own heart, now
under all circumstances his eye was still fixed upon his first, last
hope, the community independence of Massachusetts! And when we see him,
at a later period, the leader in that correspondence which waked the
feelings of the other colonies and brought into fraternal association
the people of Massachusetts with the people of other colonies-- when we
see his letters acknowledging the receipt of the rice of South Caolina,
the flour, the pork, the money of Virginia, Maryland, New York,
Pennsylvania, and others, contributions of affection to relieve Boston
of the sufferings inflicted upon her when her port was closed by the
despotism of the British crown-- we there see the beginning of that
sentiment which insured the co-operation of the colonies throughout the
desperate struggle of the Revolution, and which, if the present
generation be true to the compact of their sires, to the memory and to
the principles of the noble men from whom they descended, will
perpetuate for them that spirit of fraternity in which the Union began.
[Applause.]
But it is not here alone, nor in reminiscenses connected with the
objects which present themselves within this hall, that the people of
Boston have much to excite their patriotism and carry them back to the
great principles of the revolutionary struggle. Where in this vicinity
will you go and not meet some monument to inspire such sentiments? On
one side are Lexington and Concord, where sixty brave countrymen came
with their fowling pieces to oppose six hundred veterans,--where
peaceful citizens animated by the love of independence and covered by
the triple shield of a righteous cause, finally forced those veterans
back, and pursued them on the road, fighting from every barn, and bush,
and stock, and stone, till they drove them to the shelters from which
they had gone forth! [Applause.] And there on another side of your city
stand those monuments of your early patriotism, Breed's and Bunker's
Hill, whose soil drank the sacred blood of men who lived for their
country and died for mankind! Can it be that any of you tread that soil
and forget the great purposes for which those men bravely fought, or
nobly died? [Applause.] While in yet another direction rise the Heights
of Dorchester, once the encampment of the great Virginian, the man who
came here in the cause of American independence, who did not ask "is
this a town of Virginia?" but, "Is this a town of my brethren?" who
pitched his camp and commenced his operations with the steady courage
and cautious wisdom characteristic of Washington, hopefully, resolutely
waiting and watching for the day when he could drive the British troops
out of your city. [Cheers.]
Here, too, you find where once the Old Liberty Tree, connected with
so many of your memories, grew. You ask your legend, and learn that it
was cut down for firewood by the British soldiers, as some of your
meeting houses were pulled down. They burned the old tree, and it warmed
the soldiers enough to enable them to evacuate the city. [Laughter.]
Had they been more slowly warmed into motion, had it burned a little
longer, it might have lighted Washington and his followers to their
enemies.
But they were gone, and never again may a hostile foe tread your
shore. Woe to the enemy who shall set his footprint upon your soil; he
comes to a prison or he comes to a grave! [Applause.] American
fortifications are not intended to protect our country from invasion.
They are constructed elsewhere as in your harbor to guard points where
marine attacks can be made; and for the rest, the breasts of Americans
are our parapets. [Applause.]
But, my friends, it is not merely in these military associations, so
honorably connected with the pride of Massachusetts, that one who visits
Boston finds much for gratification. If I were selecting a place where
the advocate of strict construction of the Constitution, the extreme
asserter of democratic state rights doctrine should go for his text, I
would send him into the collections of your historical association.
Instead of finding Boston a place where the records would teach only
federalism, he would find here, in bounteous store, that sacred doctrine
of state rights, which has been called the extreme and ultra opinion of
the South. He would find among your early records that at the time when
Massachusetts was undre a colonial government, administered by a man
appointed by the British crown, guarded by British soldiers; the use of
this old Faneuil Hall was refused by the town authorities to a British
Governor, to hold a British festival, because he was going to bring with
him the agents for collecting, and naval officers sent here to enforce,
an unconstitutional tax upon your commonwealth. Such was the proud
spirit of independence manifested even in your colonial history. Such
the great stone your fathers hewed with sturdy hand, and left the fit
foundation for a monument to state rights! [Applause.] And so throughout
the early period of our country you find Massachusetts leading, most
prominent of all the States, in the assertion of that doctrine which has
been recently so much decried.
Having achieved your independence, having passed through the
confederation, you assented to the formation of our present
constitutional Union. You did not surrender your state sovereignty. Your
fathers had sacrificed too much to claim as the reward of their trials
that they should merely have a change of masters. And a change of
masters it would have been had Massachusetts surrendered her State
sovereignty to the central government, and consented that that central
government should have the power to coerce a State. But if this power
does not exist, if this sovereignty has not been surrendered, then, I
say, who can deny the words of soberness and truth spoken by your
candidate this evening, when he has plead to you the cause of State
independence, and the right of every community to be the judge of its
own domestic affairs? [Applause.] This is all we have ever asked--we of
the South, I mean,--for I stand before you one of those who have been
called the ultra men of the South, and I speak, therefore, for that
class; and tell you that your candidate for Governor has asserted
to-night everything which we have claimed as a right, and demanded as a
duty resulting from the guarantees of the Constitution, made for our
mutual protection. [Applause.] Nor is here alone in that such doctrine
is asserted, the like it has been my happiness to hear in your daughter,
the neighboring State of Maine. I have found that the democrats there
asserted the same broad, constitutional principle for which we have been
contending, by which we are willing to live, for which we are willing
to die! [Loud cheers and cries of "good!"]
In this state of the case, my friends, why is the country agitated?
What is there practical or rational in the present excitement? Why,
since the old controversies, with all their lights and shadows, have
passed away, is the political firmament covered by one dark pall, the
funeral shade of which increases with every passing year?
Why is it, I say, that you are thus agitated in relation to the
domestic affairs of other communities? Why is it that the peace of the
country is disturbed in order that one people may assume to judge of
what another people should do? Is there any political power to authorize
such interference? If so, where is it? You did not surrender your
sovereignty. You gave to the federal government certain functions. It
was your agent, created for specified purposes. It can do nothing save
that which you have given it power to perform. Where is the grant of the
Constitution which confers on the federal government a right to
determine what shall be property? Surely none such exists; that question
it belongs to every community to settle for itself: you judge in your
case; every other State must judge in its case. The federal government
has no power to create or establish; more palpably still, it has no
power to destroy property. Do you pay taxes to an agent that he may
destroy your property? Do you support him for that purpose? It is an
absurdity on the face of it. To ask the question is to answer it. The
government is instituted to protect, not to destroy property. In
abundance of caution, your fathers provided that the federal government
should not take private property, even for its own use, unless by making
due compensation therefor. One of its great purposes was to increase
the security of property, and by a more perfect union of forces, to
render more effective protection to the States. When that power for
protection becomes a source of danger, the purpose for which the
government was formed will have been defeated, and the government can no
longer answer the ends for which it was established.
Why, then, in the absence of all control over the subject of African
slavery, are you agitated in relation to it? With Pharisaical pretension
it is sometimes said it is a moral obligation to agitate, and I suppose
they are going through a sort of vicarious repentance for other men's
sins. [Laughter.] Who gave them a right to decide that it is a sin? By
what standard do they measure it? Not the Constitution; the Constitution
recognizes the property in many forms, and imposes obligations in
connection with that recognition. Not the Bible; that justifies it. Not
the good of society; for if they go where it exists, they find that
society recognizes it as good. What, then, is their standard? The good
of mankind? Is that seen in the diminished resources of the country? Is
that seen in the diminished comfort of the world? Or is not the reverse
exhibited? Is it in the cause of Chrisitianity? It cannot be, for
servitude is the only agency through which Christianity has reached that
degraded race, the only means by which they have been civilized and
elevated. Or is their charity manifested in denunciation of their
brethren who are restrained from answering by the contempt which they
feel for a mere brawler, whose weapons are empty words? [Applause.]
What, my friends, must be the consequences of this agitation? Good or
evil? They have been evil, and evil they must be only, to the end. Not
one particle of good has been done to any man, of any color, by this
agitation. It has been insidiously working the purpose of sedition, for
the destruction of that Union on which our hopes of future greatness
depend.
On the one side, then you see agitation, tending slowly and steadily
to that separation of the states, which, if you have any hope connected
with the liberty of mankind, if you have any national pride in making
your country the gratest of the earth, if you have any sacred regard for
the obligation which the acts of your fathers entailed upon you,--by
each and all of these motives you are prompted to united and earnest
effort to promote the success of that great experiment which your
fathers left it to you to conclude. [Applause.] On the other hand, if
each community, in accordance with the principles of our government,
whilst controlling its own domestic institutitons, faithfully struggles
as a part of a united whole, for the common benefit of all, the future
points us to fraternity, to unity, to cooperation, to the increase of
our own happiness, to the extension fo our useful example over mankind,
and the covering of that flag, whose stars have already more than
doubled their original number, [applause,] with a galaxy to light the
ample folds which then shall wave either the recognized flag of every
state, or the recognized protector of every state upon the continent of
America. [Applause.]
In connection with the idea, which I have presented of the early
sentiment of community independence, I will add the very striking fact
that one of the colonies, about the time that they had resolved to unite
for the purpose of achieving their independence, addressed the colonial
congress to know in what condition they would be in the interval
between their separation from the government of Great Britain and the
establishment of the government for the colonies. The answer of the
colonial congress was exactly that which might have been
expected--exactly that which state rights democracy would anser to-day,
to such an inquiry--that they must take care of their domestic polity,
that the congress "had nothing to do with it." [Applause.] If such
sentiment continued--if it governed in every state--if representatives
were chosen upon it--then your halls of legislation would not be
disturbed about the question of the domestic concerns of the different
states. The peace of the country would not be hazarded by the
arraignment of the family relations of people over whom the government
has no control. In harmony working together, in co-intelligence for the
conservation of the interests of the country, in protection to the
states and the development of the great ends for which the government
was established, what effects might not be produced? As our government
increased in expansion, it would increase in its beneficent influence
upon the people; we should increase in fraternity; and it would be no
longer a wonder to see a man coming from a southern state to address a
Democratic audience in Boston. [Applause, cries of "good, good."]
But I have referred to the fact that, at an early period,
Massachusetts stood pre-eminently forward among those who asserted
community independence. And this reminds me of an incident, in
illustration, which occurred when President Washington visited Boston,
and John Hancock
was Governor. The latter is reported to have declined to call upon the
President, because he contended that every man who came within the
limits of Massachusetts must yield rank and precedence to the Governor
of the State; and only surrendered the point on account of his personal
regard and respect for the character of George Washington. I honor him
for it,-- value it as one of the early testimonies in favor of State
Rights, and wish all our governors had the same high estimate of the
dignity of the office of Governor of a State as had that great and
glorious man. [Applause.]
Thus it appears that the founders of this government were the true
democratic States Rights men. That Democracy was States rights, and
States rights was Democracy, and it is to-day. Your resolutions breathe
it. The Declaration of Independence
embodies the sentiment which had lived in the hearts of the people for
many years before its formal assertion. Our fathers asserted that great
principle--the right of the people to choose the government for
themselves--that government rested upon the consent of the governed. In
every form of expression it uttered the same idea, community independence,
and the dependence of the government upon the community over which it
existed. It was an American principle, the great spirit which animated
our country then, and it were well if more inspired us now. But I have
said that this State sovereignty--this community independence--has never
been surrendered, and that there is no power in the federal government
to coerce a State. Does any one ask, then, how it is that a State is to
be held to its obligations? My answer is: by its honor, and the
obligation is the more sacred to observe every feature of the compact,
because there is no power to force obedience. The great error of the
confederation was that it attempted to act upon the States. It was found
impracticable, and our present form of government was adopted, which
acts upon individuals and does not attempt to act upon States.
The question was considered in the convention which framed the
constitution, and after discussion the proposition to give power to the
general government to enforce upon a resistant State obedience to the
law was rejected. It was upon this ground of exemption from compulsion
that the compact of the States became a sacred obligation; and it was
upon this honorable fulfilment principally that our fathers depended for
the security of the rights which the Constitution was designed to
secure. [Applause.]
The fugitive slave compact in the Constitution of the United States
implied that the States should fulfil it voluntarily. They expected the
States to legislate so as to secure the rendition of fugitives.
And in 1788 it was a matter of complaint that the colony of Florida
did not restore fugitive negroes from the United States who escaped into
that colony, and a committee, composed of Hamilton, of New York,
Sedgwick, of Massachusetts, and Madison, of Virginia, reported
resolutions in the Congress instructing the committee for foreign
affairs to address the charge d'affaires at Madrid to apply to
his majesty of Spain to issue orders to his governor to compel them to
secure the rendition of fugitive negroes to any one who should go there
entitled to receive them. This was the sentiment of the committee, and
they added, by way of example, as the States would return any slaves
from Florida who might escape into their limits.
When the Constitutional requirement was imposed, who could have
doubted that every State faithful to its obligations would comply
without raising questions as to whether the institution should or should
not exist in another community over which they had no control. Congress
as at last forced by the failures of the States, to legislate on the
subject, and this has been one of the causes by which you have been
disturbed. You have been called upon to make war against a law which
would never have been enacted, if each State had faithfully discharged
the obligation imposed by the compact of the Constitution. [Cheers.]
There is another question connected with this negro agitation. It is
in relation to the right to hold slaves in the Territories. What power
has Congress to declare what shall be property? None, in the territory
or elsewhere. Have the States by separate legislation the power to
prescribe the condition upon which a citizen may enter on and enjoy the
common property of the United States? Clearly not. Shall those who first
go into the territory, deprive any citizen of the United States
subsequently emigrating thither, of those rights which belong to him as
an equal owner of the soil? Certainly not. Sovereignty jurisdiction can
only pass to these inhabitants when the States, the owners of that
territory, shall recognize the inhabitants as an independent community,
and admit it to become an equal State of the Union. Until then the
Constitution and laws of the United States must be the rules governing
within the limits of a territory. The Constitution recognizes all
property; gives equal privileges to every citizen of the States; and it
would be a violation of its fundamental principles to attempt any
discrimination. [Applause.] Viewed in any of its phases, political,
moral, social, general, or local, what is there to sustain this
agitation in relation to other people's negroes, unless it be a bridge
over which to pass into office--a ready capital in politics available to
missionaries staying at home--reformers of things which they do not go
to learn--preachers without an audience--overseers without laborers and
without wages-- warhorses who snuff the battle afar off, and cry: "Aha!
aha! I am afar off from the battle." [Great laughter and applause.]
Thus it is that the peace of the Union is destroyed; thus it is that
brother is arrayed against brother; thus it is that the people come to
consider--not how they can promote each other's interests, but how they
may successfully war upon them. And the politcal agitator like the
vampire fans the victim to which he clings but to destroy.
Among culprits there is none more odious to my mind than a public
officer who takes an oath to support the Constitution--the compact
between the States binding each for the common defence and general
welfare of the other--yet retains to himself a mental reservation that
he will war upon the principles he has sworn to maintain, and upon the
property rights the protection of which are part of the compact of the
Union. [Applause.]
It is a crime too low to be named before this assembly. It is one
which no man with self- respect would ever commit. To swear that he will
support the Constitution--to take an office which belongs in many of
its relations to all the States; and to use it as a means of injuring a
portion of the States of whom he is thus the representative; is treason
to every thing honorable in man. It is the base and cowardly attack of
him who gains the confidence of another, in order that he may wound him.
[Applause.]
But we have heard it argued--have seen it published--a petition has
been circulated for signers, announcing that there was an
incompatibility between the sections; that the Union had been tried long
enough, and that it had proved to be necessary to separate from those
sections of the Union in which the curse of slavery existed. Ah! those
modern saints, so much wiser than our fathers, have discovered an
incompatibility requiring separation in those relations which existed
when the Union was formed. They have found the remnants only of a
diversity which existed when South Carolina sent her rice to Boston, and
Maryland and Pennsylvania and New York brought in their funds for her
relief.
They have found the remnants only; for from that day to this the
difference between the people has been constantly decreasing, and the
necessity for union which then arose in no small degree from the
diversity of product, and soil and climate, has gone on increasing, both
by the extension of our own territory and the introduction of new
tropical products; so that whilst the difference between the people has
diminished, the diversity in the products has increased, and that motive
for union which your fathers found exists in a higher degree than it
did when they resolved to be united.
Diversity there is of occupation, of habits, of education, of
character. But it is not of that extreme kind which proves
incompatibility, or even incongruity; for your Massachusetts man, when
he comes to Mississippi, adopts our opinions and our institutions, and
frequently becomes the most extreme southern man among us. [Great
applause.] As our country has extended--as new products have been
introduced into it, the free trade which blesses our Union, has been of
increasing value.
And it is not an unfortunate circumstance that this diversity of
pursuit and character has survived the condition which produced it.
Originally it sprang in no small degree from natural causes.
Massachusetts became a manufacturing and a commercial State because of
the connection between her fine harbor and water power, resulting from
the fact that the streams make their last leap into the sea, so that the
ship of commerce brought the staple to the manufacturing power. This
made you a commercial and manufacturing people. In the Southern States
great plains interpose between the last leaps of the streams and the
sea. Those plains most proximate to navigation, were the first
cultivated, and the sea bore their products to the most approachable
water power, there to be manufactured. This was the first cause of the
difference. Then your longer and more severe winters--your soil not as
favorable for agriculture, also contributed to make you a manufacturing
and commercial people.
After the controlling cause had passed away--after railroads had been
built--after the steam engine had become a motive power for a large
part of machinery, the characteristics orginally stamped by natural
causes continued the diversity of pursuit. Is it fortunate or otherwise?
I say it is fortunate. Your interest is to remain a manufacturing and
ours to remain an agricultural people.
Your prosperity is to receive our staple and to manufacture it, and
ours to sell it to you and buy the manufactured goods. [Applause.] This
is an interweaving of interests, which makes us all the richer and all
the happier.
But this accursed agitation, this offensive, injurious intermeddling
with the affairs of other people, and this alone it is that will promote
a desire in the mind of any one to separate these great and growing
States. [Applause.]
The seeds of dissension may be sown by invidious reflections. Men may
be goaded by the constant attempt to infringe upon rights and to
traduce community character, and in the resentment which follows it is
not possible to tell how far the case may be driven. I therefore plead
to you now to arrest a fanaticism which has been evil in the beginning,
and must be evil to the end. You may not have the numerical power
requisite; and those at a distance may not understand how many of you
there are desirous to put a stop to the course of this agitation. But
let your language and your acts teach them to appreciate a faithful
self-denying majority. I have learned since I have been in New England
the vast mass of true State Rights Democrats are to be found within its
limits--though not represented in the halls of Congress.
And if it comes to the worst; if, availing themselves of a majority
in the two Houses of Congress, our opponents should attempt to trample
upon the Constitution; to violate the rights of the States; to infringe
upon our equality in the Union, I believe that even in Massachusetts,
though it has not had a representative in Congress for many a day, the
States Rights Democracy, in whose breasts beats the spirit of the
revolution, can and will whip the Black Republicans. [Great applause.] I
trust we shall never be thus purified, as it were, by fire; but that
the peaceful progressive revolution of the ballot box will answer all
the glorious purposes of the Constitutional Union. [Applause.]
I marked that the distinguished orator and statesman who preceded me in addressing you used the words national and constitutional
in such relations to each other as to show that in his mind the one was
a synonym of the other. And does he not do so with reason? We became a
nation by the Constitution; whatever is national springs from the
Constitution; and national and constitutional are convertible terms.
[Applause.]
Your candidate for the high office of governor--whom I have been once
or twice on the point of calling your governor, and whom I hope I may
be able soon to call so, [applause]--in his remarks to you has presented
the same idea in another form. And well may Massachusetts orators,
without even perceiving what they are saying, utter sentiments which lie
at the foundation of your colonial as well as your revolutionary
history, which existed in Massachusetts before the revolution, and have
existed since, whenever the true spirit which comes down from the
revolutionary sires has been aroused into utterance within her limits.
[Applause.]
It has been not only, my friends, in this increasing and mutual
dependence of interest that we have formed new bonds. Those bonds are
both material and mental. Every improvement in the navigation of a
river, every construction of a railroad, has added another link to the
chain which encircles us, another facility for interchange and new
achievements, whether it has been in arts or in science, in war or in
manufactures, in commerce or agriculture, success, unexampled success
has constituted for us a common and proud memory, and has offered to us
new sentiments of nationality.
Why, then, I would ask, do we see these lengthened shadows, which
follow in the course of our political day? Is it because the sun is
declining to the horizon? Are they the shadows of evening; or are they,
as I hopefully believe, but the mists which are exhaled by the sun as it
rises, but which are to be dispersed by its meridian splendor? Are they
but evanescent clouds that flit across but cannot obscure the great
purposes for which the Constitution was established?
I hopefully look forward to the reaction which will establish the
fact that our sun is yet in the ascendant--that the cloud which has
covered our political prospect is but a mist of the morning-- that we
are again to be amicably divided in opinion upon measures of expediency,
upon questions of relative interest, upon discussions as to the rights
of the States, and the powers of the federal government,--such
discussion as is commemorated in this historical picture [pointing to
the painting]. There your own great Statesman, Webster, addresses his
argument to our brightest luminary, the incorruptible Calhoun, who leans over to catch the accents of eloquence that fall from his lips. [Loud applause.]
They differed as Statesmen and philosophers; they railed not, warred
not against each other; they stood to each other in the relation of
affection and regard. And never did I see Mr. Webster so agitated, never
did I hear his voice so falter, as when he delivered his eulogy on John
C. Calhoun. [Applause.]
But allusion was made to my own connection with your favorite
departed statesman. I will only say on this occasion, that very early in
the commencement of my congressional life, Mr. Webster was arraigned
for an offence which affected him most deeply. He was no accountant; all
knew that there was but little of mercantile exactness in his habits.
He was arraigned on a pecuniary charge--the misapplication of what is
known as the secret service fund; and I was one of the committee that
had to investigate the charge. I endeavored to do justice, to examine
the evidence with a view to ascertain the truth. As an American I hoped
he would come out without stain or smoke upon his garments. But however
the fame of so distinguished an American Statesman might claim such
hopes, the duty was rigidly to inquire, and rigorously to do justice.
The result was that he was acquitted of every charge that was made
against him, and it was equally my pride and my pleasure to vindicate
him in every form which lay within my power. [Applause.] No man who knew
Daniel Webster, would have expected less of him. Had our position been
reversed, none such could have believed that he would with a view to a
judgment ask whether a charge was made against a Massachusetts man or a
Mississippian. No! it belonged to a lower, a later, and I trust a
shorter lived race of statesmen ["hear," "hear"] to measure all facts by
considerations of latitude and longitude. [Warm applause.]
I honor that sentiment which makes us oftentimes too confident, and
to despise too much the danger of that agitation which disturbs the
peace of the country. I honor that feeling which believes the
Constitutional Union too strong to be shaken. But at the same time I
say, in sober judgment, it will not do to treat too lightly the danger
which has beset and which still impends over us. Who has not heard our
Constitutional Union compared to the granite cliffs which face the sea
and dash back the foam of the waves, unmoved by their fury. Recently I
have stood upon New England's shore, and have seen the waves of a
troubled sea dash upon the granite which frowns over the ocean, have
seen the spray thrown back from the cliff, and the receding wave fret
like the impotent rage of baffled malice. But when the tide had ebbed, I
saw that the rock was seamed and worn by the ceaseless beating of the
sea, and fragments riven from the rock were lying on the beach.
Thus the waves of sectional agitation are dashing themselves against
the granite patriotism of the land. If long continued, that too must
show the seams and scars of the conflict. Sectional hostility must
sooner or later produce political fragments. The danger lies at your
door, it is time to arrest it. It is time that men should go back to the
origin of our institutions. They should drink the waters of the
fountain, ascend to the source, of our colonial history.
You, men of Boston, go to the street where the massacre occurred in
1770. There learn how your fathers unfaltering stood for community
right. And near the same spot mark how proudly the delegation of the
democracy came to demand the removal of the troops from Boston, and how
the venerable Samuel Adams stood asserting the rights of the people,
dauntless as Hampden, clear and eloquent as Sidney.
All over our country these monuments, instructive to the present
generation, of what our fathers felt and said and did, are to be found.
In the library of your association for the collection of your early
history, I found a letter descriptive of the reading of the address to
his army by Gen. Washington during one of those winters when he sought
shelter for the ill clad, unshod, but victorious army with which he
achieved the independence we enjoy; he had built a log-cabin for a
meeting house, and there reading his address, his sight failed him, he
put on his glasses and with emotion which manifested the reality of his
feelings, said, "I have grown gray in the service of my country, and now
I am growing blind." Who can measure the value of such incidents in a
people's history? It is a privilege to have access to documents, which
cause us to realize the trials, the patient endurance, the hardy virtue
and moral grandeur of the men from whom we inherit our political
institutions, and to whose teachings it were well that the present
generations should constantly refer.
If you choose still further to stretch your vision to South Carolina,
you will find a parallel to that devotion to their country's cause
which illustrates the early history of the Democrats of Boston. The
prisoners at Charleston, when confined upon the hulks where they were
exposed to the small pox, and, wasted by the progress of the infection,
were brought upon the shore and assured that if they would enlist in his
majesty's service they should be relieved from their present and
prospective suffering, but if they refused the rations would be taken
from their families, and themselves sent to the hulks and exposed to the
infection. Emaciated as they were, distressed with the prospect of
their families being turned into the street to starve, the spirit of
independence, the devotion to liberty, was so warm within their breasts
that they gave one loud hurrah for General Washington, and chose death
rather than dishonor. [Loud applause.] And if from these glorious
recollections, from the emotions they excite, your eye is directed to
your present condition, and you mark the prosperity, the growth and
honorable career of your country, I envy not the heart of that man whose
pulse does not beat quicker, who does not feel within him the
exultation of pride at the past glory and the future prospects of his
country. These prospects are to be realized if we are only wise and true
to the obligations of the compact of our fathers. For all which can sow
dissension can stop the progress of the American people, can endanger
the achievement of the high prospects which we have before us is that
miserable spirit, which, disregarding duty and honor, makes war upon the
Constitution. Madness must rule the hour when American citizens,
trampling as well upon the great principles at the foundation of the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States,
as upon the honorable obligations which their fathers imposed upon them,
shall turn with internecine hand to sacrifice themselves as well as
their brethren, upon the altar of sectional fanaticism.
With these views, it will not be surprising to those who differ from
me, that I feel an ardent desire for the success of the State Rights
Democracy, that convinced of the destructive consequences of the
heresies of their opponents, and of the evils upon which they would
precipitate the country, I do not forbear to advocate, here and
elsewhere, the success of that party which alone is national, on which
alone I rely for the preservation of the Constitution, to perpetuate the
Union, and to fulfil the purposes which it was ordained to establish
and secure. [Loud cheers.]
My friends, my brethren, my countrymen--[applause]--I thank you for
the patient attention you have given me. It is the first time it has
been my fortune to address an audience here. It will probably be the
last. Residing in a remote section of the country, with private as well
as public duties to occupy the whole of my time, it would only be under
some such necessity for a restoration of health as has brought me here
this season, that I could ever expect to make more than a very hurried
visit to any other portion of the Union than that of which I am a
citizen.
I will say, then, on this occasion, that I am glad, truly glad, that
it has been my fortune to stay long enough among the New Englanders to
obtain a better acquaintance than one can who passes in the ordinary way
through the country, at the speed of the railroad tourist. I have
stayed long enough to feel that generous hospitality which evinces
itself to-night, which has showed itself in every town and village of
New England where I have gone--long enough to learn that though not
represented in Congress, there is within the limits of New England a
large mass of as true Democrats as are to be found in any portion of the
Union. Their purposes, their construction of the Constitution, their
hopes for the future, their respect for the past, is the same as that
which exists among my beloved brethren in Mississippi. [Applause.]
It is not a great while since one who was endeavoring to pursue me
with unfriendly criticism opened an article with my name and "gone to
Boston!"--He seemed to think it a damaging reflection to say of me that I
had gone to Boston--I wish he could have been here to look upon these
Democratic faces to-night, and to listen to your resolutions and the
words of your Massachusetts speakers, he might have been taught that a
man might go and stay at Boston and learn better Democracy than many
have acquired in other places.
I shall gratefully carry with me the recollections of this and of
other meetings witnessed since I have been among you. In the hour of
apprehension I will hopefully turn back to my observations here--here in
this consecrated hall, where men so early devoted themselves to liberty
and community independence; and will endeavor to impress upon others
who know you only as you are misrepresented in the two Houses of
Congress, [applause,] how true and how many are the hearts that beat for
constitutional liberty, and with high resolve to respect every clause
and guaranty which the Constitution contains, are pledged to faithfully
uphold the rights of any and every portion of the States, and of the
people. [Tremendous cheering.]
Transcribed from Dunbar Rowland, ed., Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist, Volume 3, pp. 315-32. Summarized in The Papers of Jefferson Davis, Volume 6, p. 587.