NEW POLITICAL ASPECTS.
THE tendencies of public measures for more than twelve months past, have been such as to excite the fearful apprehensions of all true friends to their country.
To change a system of policy, under which a people find themselves merely exempt from evils common in the lot of nations, would seem to require deep reflection, mature judgment, and an ample view of the train of consequences dependent thereon, in all their different probable aspects, and in every possible line of extension and connection.
CHANGE is from the very nature of things an evil. To change even from bad to good, is not at all times expedient or safe; since [Page 6]it implies a confession of error and often of guilt, which the pride of man revolts at.
BUT when in any country, principles, under which the nation soared towards the temple of glory, with an eagle's flight, are totally abandoned, exploded, and reversed, it becomes an object of ten-fold importance to cast our eyes, in deep contemplation around us, and to explore amidst the secret recesses of narrow jealousy and private views, the motives and the grounds, on which it hath been presumed to urge us towards a condition in which misery and ruin stare us in the face; it behoves us, under such circumstances, to examine well the position we have abandoned and that to which we are so rapidly advancing.
THE tide in the affairs of America, had attained its full flood in the summer of 1798; [Page 7]when the whole extent of the continent bristled with the bayonets of indignant volunteers, when the aged and revered Washington, stept forth to command them, with the declaration that his successor had "exhausted to the last drop, the cup of reconciliation," and when that successor himself proclaimed, with oracular solemnity, that he would never send another supplicating embassy to the Republic of France.
THE French interest in America, was every where on the decline; and every narrow consideration of local prejudice, daily yeilded more and more, to that honorable zeal for the national glory which pervaded all hearts. The people were united; or, if a few murmurs of discontent were still heard, they were the growlings of the impotent and discomfited; of wretches, who, long habituated to turbulence and rebellion, now vainly vented their stupid slanders upon those, who had, to all human appearance, cut off every hope of a return of the times of old.
[Page 8] THE American name was rising rapidly to dignity and eminence: the fame of our resistance to the wiles and the arms of France, exalted our reputation at once for wisdom and for courage. The proudest and greatest of nations, took us with joy by the hand; exulting over our late return to reason, she promptly unfolded her arcana to our view, and opened every avenue that could lead to political consequence, or commercial prosperity. *
UNDER these auspices, the instruments of our trade whitened every sea, the produce of our industry crowded every port, and our ensign waved in every harbor of the known world.
BUT the wind changed—the weather-cock turned—and now, how different are [Page 9]the aspects! It even seems a question how long we may be permitted to enjoy those advantages which have ever been common and essential to us as a nation.
IN a contest like that which was carrying on before our eyes—in a warfare of confusion against order, an insurrection of every vile propensity, against every good that remained to mankind in common, the hope to continue neutral was foolish, and the wish to remain so, dishonorable. It became at length so palpable, that we had our election to make, which side between the contending parties we would espouse, and so clear that our all was equally at stake upon the issue with the rest of the world, that even the rabble took cognizance of the question, and with one accord, shouted to arms! A government without power and without disposition to avenge the insulted dignity of the country, and the stripes, wounds and executions of its citizens, was actually pricked on by popular acclaim, to some shew of spirit: —it was goaded by laborious and untiring exertions, to an exhibition and parade of intention, which now, abandoned, has served [Page 10]only to saddle us with a frivolous expense, without alleviating a single mischief.
ALTHOUGH the doors of the temple of Janus, have been alternately shut and opened, with puerile irresolution, almost every day for these four years, the friendship of Great Britain, and the friendship of France, still present themselves to us as two great alternatives. Here, I know it will be sagaciously inquired, are we not an independent nation? And have we not a right to do what seemeth meet in our own eyes.
I AM ready to answer, without hesitation, that a nation is no further independent of other nations, than one individual is independent of another in society. In either case, there are bonds of strong obligation. No nation may withhold from another privileges which are by nature common to all, by the mere right of power: nor can any one justly withhold or bar the rights of another to full and impartial justice.
NATIONS are actuated, in their connections, and even intercourse with one another, [Page 11]by interested motives; and miserable is that policy, which instead of fostering advantageous connections by creating interests, is seduced by vain conceptions of a fastidious independence, to destroy them, under a belief
THE various wants as well as various productions of different nations, constitute a natural binding chain of connection; all vauntings of self-dependence, are, therefore, foolish; but, in our peculiar situation, to talk of independence, in the sense in which many apply the term, is preposterous in the extreme.
IT seems hardly in the power of conception to suppose men so ignorant as to seek a change in the whole order of things merely for the sake of maintaining this visionary self-dependence; and yet it seems thus only to be accounted for, that we behold an humble and submissive policy suddenly put in force towards a nation, in the [Page 12]present order of things our natural enemy, and a most repulsive * and hostile system adopted towards another to which we have indissoluble ties.
IN deciding between the friendship of Great Britain and the friendship of France, the primary assemblies of the people on the British treaty, and the same repeated on the commencement of hostilities against France, have shewn that there was but one voice. Jealous of Great Britain, as of the authority of an ancient superior, the people sought not, wished not, needed not any closer or other connection with her than already existed in the treaty. So perfect an understanding was there, that her cruisers convoyed our ships as their own, an almost unlimited commerce was opened to us in her oriental and other dominions, in many ports where [Page 13]where no flag but the British had ever before been permitted to wave. On the other hand, how great was the unanimity in the measures pursued against the French Republic. Of the natives of the country, the descendants of the original stock, nineteen twentieths went hand and hand with the government. Prosperity bearned on the humblest nole in the commonwealth, a manly courage glistened in the countenances of the young, and joy at the bright prospect before them, gladdened the hearts of the aged. The imposthume of much wealth and peace seemed broken, and inoffensively dispelled.
BUT it seems we made a shew of war to avoid war. * In infantine language, it was make believe fight, in order to keep peace. Wretched degradation of human nature! This outgoes the utmost wanderings of Gallic philosophy, and men are thus at once very fairly reduced to a level with asses. This, however, is only one of the trappings and suits of versatility; there is that within which passeth show.
[Page 14] It cannot be, frivolous and vain as modern statesmen are; it cannot be, that we made war for the love of peace. This is too much like the murderer, who killed Don Carlos for his own good. Besides, the apostle of war, told us from his high place, that we were to gird on our swords and fit us for a long and bloody fight; ships were built, at an expence of many millions, and soldiers enlisted for the war. We were not thus farcically wheedled into all this expence, and all these sacrifices; it cannot have been: truth lies in a deeper well even than this.
THAT there is a time for peace and a time for war, required no very profound research nor very various reading, to be apprized of. The signs of the times, were moreover of very simple and obvious interpretation; nor, do they seem at first to have been misconstrued.
SINCE there are times when there ought to be war, and since there are also times when there ought not to be war: [Page 15]to keep peace, when the hand of war is upon us, is to carry on the worst of hostilities; it is a contest against the decrees of nature, inasmuch as it is to refer that season of war which in the nature of things is inevitable, to a season when there ought to be peace. For, as we have not yet dipped so deep into the infsatuation of millenarianism, or the whimsies of those other pestiferous prophets, who teach that the nature of man is perfectible, as to believe that the organization of nature and of mankind, in time to come, will be essentially variant from what it has been found through ages past, so we are to calculate on the usual periods of war, which have been common in the lot of every nation. *
ONE of these periods has long since arrived. It arrived at a moment, auspicious for [Page 16]staying the enervating inroads which fifteen years of sluggish peace and insignificance had made. This influence of pacific habits yielded so slowly to the sense of honour and of duty, that half the means and the sinews of war fell before the rapid violences of a most pernicious enemy, ere it was found expedient to resist. But it was so found at last, and when the resolution came, it came in unusual majesty and overbearing force. Never had a government less reason to complain of the temper and spirit of its subjects. Their treasuries were disembogued with alacrity—on the instant, they stood, with assumed arms, utrinque parati. Cheerfully they gave all that was asked, and the necessities of the state would have met with no deficiency in supply, but in the utter exhaustion of the people.
If ever there was a time for war, it was that in which America made her exhibitions of hostility to keep peace. The expences, the inconveniences, the evils, all—every bugbear of the Philippians were of necessity encountered. But while the friendly enemy were actually belligerantes, we chose to exhibit in [Page 17]reverse the curious spectacle of an hostile friend, cauponantem bellum.
AN armed and hostile peace, under a popular form of government, is of all conditions the most preposterous. The stupid populace, too abject in ignorance to think rightly, and too depraved to draw honest deductions if they could, judge, for the most part, of what they see, by what they feel. Burthens are imposed, taxes are encreased, the public debt magnifies, and yet it is peace. If in the calm of peace, the vessel of state drifts into the gulf of debt, what shall stay her when the hurricane of war blows its loud blast? But you will proceed to state, how that this is peace and yet it is not peace: how that it is a kind of warlike peace, or pacific war; of which the nature and essence is admirably such, as to cost us all that a war could cost, without producing any one of those benefits that ordinarily accrue from war. The spirit of enterprize is damped not encouraged. The ardent valour of our youth at once the ornament and pride of every nation, is stifled not promoted—the honour and glory of the American name are buried [Page 18]amidst the dust and rubbish of negociations, supplicating embassies, and assurances of respect: —all which, in the Phoenician tongue, are, to a sovereign people, words of very potent signification.
UNDER the auspices even of these mock hostilities, the maritime affairs of the country began to flourish in an unexampled manner. The natural temper of the people, burst the trammels by which a cold and cowardly policy had repressed it, and assumed a character, which at once displayed magnanimity and created it. A noble career of emulation had commenced, and the fame of a gallant commander existed at the same time a splendid ornament to himself, and a most valuable treasure to his country.
THERE are times, when the valour and constancy of an individual, may preserve an empire; but it seems to have been our peculiar fortune, that noble actions, performed at the utmost need of the commonwealth, should be utterly useless to the state, and productive of no honour, but the abuse of villains, to their authors. We have had our [Page 19]Camillus; but, we have pitched him down the tarpeian rock of oblivion, not for subsequent apostacy, but for the very deed of greatness itself.
As there are times when the constancy and valour of an individual, may preserve an empire, so there are frequent crises, when the obstinacy of a wrong-head and a fool may destroy it. Hence has arisen a scrupulosity, in well regulated governments, of commiting the safety of a whole country into the hands of any single person. In divine governments as well as human, where the salus populi is at all regarded, the chief magistrate, to whom, for the sake of unity in action, the executive powers are committed, is restrained by various and complicated provisions, from sallies of madness, from fits of spleen and hypocondriac, from wreaking his private malice, and sacrificing the honour and the peace of his country, at the shrine of his own weak and despicable vanity.
FOELIX quem faciunt aliena pericula cautum. The misfortune, however, is, that [Page 20]such happy are very few. Nations rarely profit by the experience, fortunate or disastrous, of other nations; and still less perhaps by the dangers and miseries which they encounter, than by instances of their success and prosperity. There is a propensity in human pride to shun as a pestilence every imputation, involving its sagacity and discretion. Hence, when the weak, wavering and timid policy of governments, which have manifestly fallen victims thereto, is held up as a memento to any other, obviously treading in the same footsteps, there will never be wanting enthusiastic and violently patriotic persons, to discover some shade of difference in situation, whereby she is to be rescued; fatalists who will hardily declare, that tho' through such and such errors, empire after empire has tottered from its base, yet the same errors can never bring their own to ruin, it being divine, and its endurance registered above.
BUT although nations may not learn wisdom from the experience of other nations, there is at least one source, whence they might with great safety and propriety deduce [Page 21]it,—from their own. After suffering great extremity from the adoption of wavering and irresolute conduct, it would be natural to expect that wavering and irresolute conduct would be abandoned; the very reverse has been the case with regard to us, and by how much we have been disgraced and endangered by any errors, by so much the more hath it been studied to repeat them.
FROM as prosperous a condition as ever yet nation enjoyed, we have been prematurely hurled to a state of the deepest decline. The fatal expedition to Paris, commenced in the tears, proceeds amidst the groans, and must terminate in the ruin of all the upright part of this community. The honest, faithful, generous friends of the American government, have been, with a perfidy unparalleled, betrayed into the power of an enemy, who relinquishes no advantage, who forgets no injury, who neglects no proffered opportunity of striding towards the final gaol of his ambition, the subversion of the existing state of society, and intermediately, the plunder, subjugation and assassination [Page 22]of the unhappy victims thus betrayed into his hands.
THE very men who through many a long year, had toiled with the ardor and enthusiasm of patriots, adjoined to the patience and perseverance of slaves, to fortify a bulwark, (which they vainly thought they beheld in the government) against their dangerous and daring enemies, were by one sudden stroke in one short hour, beaten off their ground, overwhelmed with confusion, and left abandoned to all the ridicule, and all the rage of their antagonists. Suddenly, down fell the mighty fabric of popular opinion; the bulwark, which it guarded, mouldered away; the champions of the faith, in moody, sullen despair, retired from the field, and nauseating nonsense, meanness, abject servility, and the effeminacy of Sybaris, now reign with a pomposity, undisturbed even by any casual exertions of genius or common sense.
THE expedition to Paris having been complotted, and the plot ratified by the acquiescence of the Elect, it was boldly ventured on, and impudently started upon the town [Page 23]not only unsupported by the opinions of a single man of credit or respectability, but wholly unknown to those very persons, who by the spirit, if not by the letter, of the constitution, certainly had a voice on the occasion.
INDIGNANT at an outrage so flagrant upon truth, honor, decency, avowed opinion, solemn declaration, and the feelings, prejudices, and bias of the country, the nation rose almost as a man against the flagrant shame. But all sense of honor and shame were lost in those, whose actions ought to have been wholly guided thereby.
HOPELESS of preventing the fatal sacrifice of the honor and peace * of the country, it was as fruitlessly sought to retard the final hour.
IN the course of that short space, which intervened the appointment of the suppliants and their departure, the jack puddings, at [Page 24]the footstool of whose power, it had been contemplated so ignominiously to prostrate the dignity of the country, perished the victims of that eternal justice, which the events of our own time demonstrate, more clearly perhaps, than those of any other, to proceed only from on high. Every un-supplicating temper, would have been better satisfied with the public execution of these ruffians by some lawful authority: but, it certainly would not have been so well-ordered, had they fallen by any other hand, than that which smote them.
THE destruction of these vile monsters, did not however ward off, nor even respite for an hour, the ruin to which ignorance, self-sufficiency, and a most blind and criminal pertinacity has destined us. Delendi eramus et delemur. * Wise and virtuous men—men whom Americans have been in the habit of revering, as the fathers and founders of the national character, exerted their [Page 25]energies against the infatuated [...]. They strove in vain: the struggle of patriotism against an antique vanity, and a [...] and pompous consequence which brooks no counsel, was in vain. Equally in vain would have been the remonstrances of Pericles, of Phocion and Demosthenes: Fufidius * would have said, I am not to be informed or enlightened by your efforts. All the things which you speak are known unto me, and the question you have mooted, has been decided before-hand. †
[Page 26] IN vain was it objected to the departure of the Suppliants, that the indispensable preliminary—the sine qua non, whereto the faith of the adventurous and desperate pacificator was pledged, had become null and void, by the abrogation of the power of those who constituted one of the parties. What were Rewbell and the rest, to him; or, what indeed was he to Rewbell? all ruffians and murderers, are alike in his eyes, and since before the footstool of ruffians and murderers, the country was to be humiliated, what imported it, whether the knee-worship was paid to Buonaparte or to Barras? to wave the forfeiture of faith, in sending the suppliants without the sine qua non, it must be allowed that if it had been sought to select a point of time the most improper, and a government, of all those which have gone before, the most odious and offensive, those objects were attained. *
[Page 27] YES, the point of time was the most untoward one, that could have been stumbled upon, whether we consider it in regard to our own particular situation, the particular situation of France, or the general aspect of the cause of the coalition.
OUR own situation was one of a most peculiar kind. We owed every thing we had [Page 28]or hoped for, to the spirit of hostility which had been with such difficulty excited against France; for, every man is at this day convinced, that the country would have been long since made an appendage to that empire, had not the people been roused by laborious exertions, to a just sense of the dangers of peace with the French Republic. To make a treaty with her, therefore, under such circumstances, is to destroy us in the very act of being saved.
THE very peculiar situation of France at the time when this black design was projected, forbade in terms still more forcible, if possible, the execution of the scheme. Not only had no change for the better taken place in the administration of the affairs of that distracted country, but on the contrary, every thing had changed, as much as possible for the worse. The villain Merlin, the pirate and minister of justice, had newly come into the Directory, and that enormous wretch and monster Talleyrand, who to fill up the measure of his atrocious iniquities, had demanded bribes from us, was also newly constituted Secretary for foreign affairs. Such and so [Page 29]favorable were the auspices so far as related to the particular situation of France, under which we were to conclude a peace. To heighten the colouring of this part of the picture, were a superfluous act. Other circumstances equally forbidding, and equally disgraceful, might be adduced, but one alone shall conclude. The assurances on the faith of which the expedition was bottomed, came from the mouth of the pestiferous Talleyrand.
THE general aspect of the affairs of the coalition was flourishing beyond example; while, an uncontroulable depression clouded the hopes of the enemy. Such was the point of time selected for sacrificing us, such the auspices under which we were again protrasted at the footstool of rebels, regicides and usurpers.
To the pirate Merlin, who ordered our ambassador to tell us, that we must break our incomprehensible treaty with England, if we would gain the favour of himself and fellows; who would make no treaty with America, because he was daily amassing [Page 30]thousands from the plunder of her commerce by his sixty privateers,—to the brutal Barras, who had told us we were the slaves of England; and the blood-stained Rewbell, the Crassus of the revolution:—to these pirates, ruffians, freebooters and assassins, has succceded one more ferocious, cruel, sanguinary, avaricious, vain-glorious and insatiable than all,—the successful rival of Danton, in premeditated villainy, of Robespierre in wild ambition, and of Marat, in cool deliberate thirst for carnage and rapine; a most "remorseless, treacherous, lecherous, kindless villain;" whose cruelties have stained the age with a deeper dye of sanguinary barbarity, than those of any other atrocious monster of the revolution; whose heart is relentless as the bosom of Tisiphoné whose crimes outvie in number, the revolutionary fiends that surround him; who has assassinated christians in the guise of an infidel; and infidels for the love of infidelity; one who would cut the throat of humanity, while peeping through the blanket of the dark, she cried, hold—hold! and hurl the reeking heart of mercy a prey to his murdering sans culottes; who in fine has out-done Attila, Alaric, Genseric, [Page 31]or Genghis Khan, not indeed in the extent of his ravages, but in the detestable deliberation with which he has offered up cities and countries to pillage, violation and conflagration, at the shrine of his insolent and lowbred vanity. Still the supplication goes on. All this is nothing to Fufidius: Quanto perditior quisque est, tantò acrius urget.
IT is fairly impossible, that such a juncture should have been stumbled on by chance, for, such an expedition; and I greatly fear, that it is "amidst the secret recesses of narrow jealousy, and private views," and vanity made drunk, as I have before remarked, that the grounds of this execrable step are to be explored.
HERE, a scene opens to our astonished view, which is well calculated to appal the senses of men not prepared for the worst results of the worst designs of deliberate malice. It will be expedient to touch lightly on the several topics which this subject involves; fortunately, a cursory view of them will suffice for our purpose.
[Page 32] THAT a deliberate purpose is entertained, of involving this country in a most horrible and ruinous war, there are various incidents of evidence, which it would neither be prudent nor proper to dilate on. It may be received as a fact, that he who seems so ambitious to be the arbiter of peace and war, expressly declared his conviction, that a war with Great Britain was the only means left of reconciling parties in this country. That the expedition of the suppliants was decided on with a resolution to consider Great Britain in a new and remote light, is abundantly proved by various subsequent occurrences.
It is then in suspicion, jealousy, or perhaps to use a more explicit term, in enmity to Great Britain, that the redintegration * of affection for France is founded. This enmity, however, was pent up in very narrow confines; it operated in a single breast only; and for all its consequences, there is a very single responsibility. But of what avail is that responsibility to us? If we must be destroyed, what satisfaction is it to us to know [Page 33]the instrument of our destruction? Does calamity press any the less heavy, for that we see the hand which inflicts it? Besides where there is no tribunal to take cognizance of breaches, and where there is no spirit to set enquiry on foot, what is responsibility but a visionary thing?
HOWEVER preposterous it must seem, that the destinies of a nation should be committed to the caprice of a most capricious man, it is worth while for those who are most deeply interested in the events which every day brings forth, to enquire, whether it is attributable to any other cause, than the caprice and vanity of that man, that we are in so degrading a situation with respect to France, and in so dangerous a one with respect to England.
THE detrusion of one of the first characters whom America has had the honor of giving birth to, from an office which he had long filled with unbounded applause, with eminent honor and utility to his country, throws much light on this subject, even when viewed as a simple and naked fact: but [Page 34]when we come to search into the grounds of that extraordinary act, and when we consider the ignominious manner in which it was thought fit to perpetrate it; when we review the torrents of calumny to which that unfortunate and honorable man has been, with such perfect nonchalance, devoted; when we consider these things through a medium, clarified from the sophistry and perversion of slaves, the humble tools and instruments of an authority, more arbitrary and more inscrutable than the Turkish divan, then it is, that we discern those hidden things that belong to our destruction; then it is that we discern an ill-smothered flame, still preying after so many years, upon a heart, the malice of which, no lapse of time can charm, no change of circumstances appease. Naturalists tell us of a foolish bird, which hiding its head in a thicket, imagines itself unseen, because it cannot see.
IF the late Secretary of State had a fault, it was to have too imperfectly renounced those Prejudices against Great Britain, which rankle in the breasts of Americans. His office, however, had afforded him opportunities superior [Page 35]to those of other men, of witnessing the candour and liberality of the British Cabinet in all its intercourse with America. Hence he had become more free from those bitter and stupid prejudices, than the men by whom he was surrounded. His antipathy to France and to her revolution, and his conviction that our safety lay in opposing her in arms, was deliberatedly established. Such ought to be the convictions and motives to action, of every American Secretary of State—of every American public officer.
ANIMATED by these convictions, and in the exercise of his official duty, that officer came forward in a manly and elaborate state paper, to expose the fallacy of French faith * the instability of their republican counsels, and the precariousness of their duration. The doltish gull, whom those Retiarii had caught in their subtle net, he with equal boldness exposed to public contempt, in all the shallowness with which he had suffered himself to be practised upon, by artifices the [Page 36]most palpable. The man of Thessaly was dragged out of the thickset hedge; * for their policy did not impose gyves upon him, as it had done on other more illustrious ambassadors; but his friend and patron, † felt himself wounded by the sarcasms which had been cast upon him, supported him uniformly, and at length avenged his disgrace.
THIS admirable exposition of French intrigue, electrized the continent; it was every where received with rapture; and the popularity of its author, as was natural, became "exceeding great." But the exceeding great popularity of the Secretary delighted not the man of peace. Aut Caesar aut nullus, is his motto, and the unfortunate Secretary approached too near to holding a divided [Page 37]empire * with him in the hearts of the people. To urge this subject further would partake of futility. The sequel, unlike the code of Domitian, (at least in this one respect) is inscribed on a conspicuous tablet, in very legible characters.
THE ideas of men respecting national relations in these enlightened times, partake rather of the crudeness of the dark ages, than of that perfectibility, towards which we are supposed to have advanced with so rapid strides. It seems to be seriously imagined that the desires and affections—the feelings, prejudices, and animosities, of foreign powers, may be controuled and regulated as our own; and that an exhibition of what is called American firmness—the fitting out of a few extra frigates, and the imposition of an embargo, will at any time curb "the insolence of Britain" as they say it has done that of France.
[Page 38] IT is to this despicable self conceit, that we owe much of the misery which has come upon us. The victory of the Nile, the loss consequent thereon, of an army of forty thousand veterans to France, the accession of Russia to the coalition, and the reverses which had befallen the arms of France, afforded to Illpause a very desirable pretext under which to give vent to his jealousy and hatred of Great Britain.
ACCORDINGLY all of a sudden, he discovers, that the success which had crowned the arms of England, had broken the balance of power, and of course might endanger in some future age, the welfare of these independent States. Therefore he resolves to restore the balance, by stopping short in that progress which was making towards a confidential connection with Great Britain, and to turn again to France, as the rock of reliance. Immediately, his apostles preach in every tabernacle, the dangers of foreign connections, the value of independence, and the weight and consequence of America in the scale of nations. While Europe said they, is wasting herself away, in murderous [Page 39]broils, let us display an honourable magnanimity by keeping aloof from the idle squabbles of her old and corrupt nations, and reserve that dignity and importance which we possess for the more honourable purpose of controuling their ambition. These doctrines soon gained extensive credit, and it has become a test of impartialism and columbianism, to profess equal hatred to all nations.
THUS, when a French cruizer captures an American ship, and murders the officers and crew, it is "an instance of more than British cruelty," and when a band of pirates seize a British man of war and murder their officers, the murderers are bemoaned in the columbian gazettes as martyrs to the cause of liberty. If some swindling, cowardly, neutral, Swede, Dane or American, is overtaken on the high sea, mendaciously, covering the property of the enemy, or basely aiding and abetting his attacks upon all the peace of all the world, these miscreants are up in arms on the instant, to defend and justify the perjury and treachery, and to malign the power which has chastized that perjury that treachery.
[Page 40] THE avenues of public opinion being in possession of ideots, whose malice transcends their dullness, are constantly shut against every liberal exposition of truth, or detection of falshood, on every subject relating to Great Britain. A columbian printer would as soon meet his evil genius in arms, as publish any thing even squinting at liberality towards that nation. But, on the other hand their whole power is exerted in belying and blackening the British name and nation, with an avidity and a perseverance, that evinces how much they fell themselves at home when thus employed
BUT these wretches are fools, villains and lyars of the first magnitude, the very foster-fathers of rebellion and every soul and unnatural crime; it is their vocation to cry down reason and honesty, and to propagate error and delusion of the grossest kind. We do not, therefore, wonder at these things coming from them; but when we see an high and respon ible public character, entering the lists of calumny, and tearing open old wounds, to gratify personal and private rancour, there is a call for all our indignation and all our rage
[Page 41] BECAUSE the man was obliged to sculk in Holland in the habiliments of a sailor, from the pursuit of Sir Joseph Yorke's messenger, at a time when he was acting in Holland the part of Genet in America, and because the king put some slight upon him at a subsequent period, are we to be made the sport of his prejudice and private pique?
THAT such is our deplorable fortune, the following paper seems to evince:
BETWEEN one and two o'clock the President was addressed by Wm. FITSBURGH, Esq on behalf of the citizens of Alexandria, as follows, to which the President made the subjoined reply:
ADDRESS TO JOHN ADAMS, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES,
The citizens of Alexandria see among then with [...], their revered President; his [...] brings to their view the constancy and ability with which he laboured [Page 42]in the vineyard of liberty, when devotion to its cause was surrounded with the gibbet and the halter.
HER intrepid and faithful defender, dear as he then was to the sons of America, is now more dear from the additional claim on their hearts, growing out of his unabated zeal in extending and confirming their common happiness.
IN this presentment of our respectful homage to the successor of our late incomparable Washington, we cannot but add our prayer, that like him you will pass through the storms and vicissitudes which always encircle the highest nations, most admired when best understood.
ON behalf and at the request of the citizens of Alexandria.
Alexandria, June. 11, 1800.
REPLY OF THE PRESIDENT TO THE PRECEDING ADDRESS.
TO THE CITIZENS OF ALEXANDRIA.
I receive from the citizens of Alexandria, this kind salutation on my first visit to Virginia, with much pleasure. In the earlier part of my life, I felt at sometimes an inexpressible grief, and at others, an unutterable indignation, at the injustice and indignities which, I though wantonly heaped on my innocent, virtuous, peaceable and unoffending country. And perceiving that the American people, from New-Hampshire to Georgia, felt and thought in the same manner, I determined refusing all favours and renouncing all personal obligations to the agressors, to run every hazard with my countrymen, at their invitation by sea and land in opposition and resistance—well knowing that if we should be unfortunate, all the pains and all the disgrace which injustice and cruelty could inflict, would be the destination of me and mine. Providence smiled on our well meant endeavours, and perhaps in no particular more remarkably in giving us your incomparable Washington for the leader [Page 44]of our armies. Our country has since enjoyed an enviable tranquillity and uncommon prosperity. We are grown a great people, this city and many others, which I have seen since I left Philadelphia, exhibit very striking proofs of our increase, on which I congratulate you. May no error or misfortune throw a veil over the bright prospects before us.
WHEN the French Harlequin Plenipo, Adet, expatiated in his memorable appeal to the sovereignty of America, on the cruelties of England; when he revived the recollection of an unhappy period of feuds and revolutions, which the lapse of many years had covered with a thick veil; when he called up the whitened bones of martyred Columbians, clad in complete sustian, to hover about the ferruginous instrument of the ploughman; we needed no elaborate commentary to enlighten our minds as to the object and tendency of the inflammatory harangue
[Page 45] BUT when a man whose duty it is to keep the public peace, and promote the public interests, no less by festering amicable relations with friends, than by chastizing the insolence of enemies; when such an one launches forth into inuendoes and accusations of such a nature, what are we to expect? What had the "injustice and cruelty of England" towards this redoutable patriot, to do with the occasion? He might with equal propriety have repeated a passage from the Seven Wise Masters, for any honorable end that he could have in view.
ONE would suppose that to revive the memory of a most bloody, cruel and unnatural civil war, whereby every member of the community has had to mourn some privation of fortune or of friends, could only be desirable to a malignant heart, actuated by some sinister design in the instance.
To what else than to a desire of reviving the spirit of hostility against England, shall we attribute the inuendoes before us? for the war in which this mighty man thus [Page 46]exposed himself to ‘all the pains and all the disgrace, which the injustice and cruelty of England could inflict,’ is no longer waged—a peace has been concluded, and acts of oblivion passed, whereby the wounds of the war are cicatrized, if not healed. Besides the result proved this bitter accusation, this dreadful attack upon the character of that people, to be utterly groundless: the result proved that if he had been "unfortunate" he would have suffered neither cruelty nor injustice at the hands of Great Britain. The verity of this exhibition of dignified rage, is, however, a quality of it, which I wish to have nothing to do with: the purpose for which I quoted it, has already appeared sufficiently plain in the "discontented paper" itself.
THAT the wavering and wanton conduct of this government must excite a very high degree of contempt in the British government and nation, every well-informed man will easily believe. That they will hold us very cheap, that they will regard our interests with an eye of perfect indifference, is equally probable. But that a state of war must inevitably arise out of these circumstances, [Page 47]I believe is credible, only from the manifestations of our own government.
MORE than nine tenths of the people of America believe that Great Britain, cannot or dare not go to war with them. What, say they, will become of her West-India Islands, and other Colonies, which depend on us for their bread, beef and fish? what will become of her manufacturers and artizans? Strong in this confidence, they imagine that she will bear, with American tameness, every aggression that can be made upon her by this country, and accordingly outrage her, as a young scoundrel spendthrift and rake does the guardian of his estate.
But we shall find to our cost, if this conduct be persisted in, that all such ideas are completely fallacious. The ties which ought to bind this country to Great Britain, are very forcible ones; for we are dependent on her for various necessaries of life, while she is in every such respect essentially independent. Canada, and her other possessions in North America are fully adequate to the supply, not only of her West India possessions, but of [Page 48]all her dominions, with every species of provisions. I have known seventeen ships, averaging three hundred tons each, lying at Quebec, at one time laden with wheat, the produce of Canada, and of a quality equal to any that the earth can produce.
THAT this country presents a very extensive mart for the commodities of Great Britain, is a very obvious fact. Equally obvious is it, that those commodities are to us not only indispensable, but derivable from no other source. Whence, but from the dominions of Great Britain can America be supplied with cloths, linens, muslins, silks, hosiery, and woollens of all kinds? with hardware, metals of every species, and a variety even of raw materials? the lien therefore, the security for good behaviour, is in her hands, and the calculations on this score, which have been so very current, are not only disgraceful, but unfounded.
IT is with this nation, so competent to every purpose of annoyance and distress to us, that so many of the people of this country, and so efficient a portion of its government, [Page 49]if a judgement may be formed from the stultiloquence in which they indulge, are willing to break off the ties of amity, and to rely on a broken reed, in the power of her covenanted foe.
I SHALL not suppose the force of this infatuation to be such, as to lead to actual, or declared war. But I do sincerely believe, that the train of measures, which have been taken and which are still pursuing, will produce a chilling coldness towards America, in the British government and nation; among the consequences of which will be, the excision of a trade to her Asiatic possessions, which employs annually more than fifteen thousand tons of American shipping; a suspension of the credits given by her merchants; and all the extensive consequences which must arise from the influence of her ill-will in the Italian ports, in Portugal, Russia, Hamburg, and in short wherever her influence extends.
IN such an extremity, what friendly power will there be left us to rely on? France! she needs our assistance, but can afford us [Page 50]none, nay among the least improbable of events, is the sudden restoration of the king; and the least improbable consequence of that event, the ill will of the French Court, who will most assuredly demand the repayment of the money which it loaned us.
THESE things, it will be said, are but contingencies; and different men, according to their different habits of thinking, will deem them more or less remote. But even allowing them to be contingencies, what evils avoided or what good in prospect, have we to set off against them, to authorize us in encountering the hazard of these contingencies? It appears to me, that the fatuity which is driving us into these straits, will not leave us a title to so honorable an epitaph even as the foolish Spaniard, who, taking, while in sound health, medicine, which destroyed him, had inscribed on his tomb, ‘I was well—would be better—now here I lie.’
THESE sad scenes, these dire aspects, soon ceasing to be seen, in speculation only, will soon be present to our eyes, in more ghastly deformity than is easy to conceive. [Page 51]The people however begin to fear these evils, and the beginning of fear is the beginning of wisdom. But our retrogression from the path of honor and safety, towards this hideous precipice of danger, hath been so rapid and so far elongated, that we are now almost on the extreme verge; and I tremble to think how much energy is requisite, and how little may be found, to retrieve our erratic steps.
THE time is arrived, when we must repudiate the author of our evils from any share in our confidence, and adopt all proper and honorable means to thwart those future measures, by which he may attempt to sacrifice the honor and safety of the country.
UNDER the auspices of a wise and prudent ruler, we may then proceed, by judicious provisions, to ward off in future similar disasters to those which have so nearly destroyed us. The arbitrary power now deposited in the hands of one man, must be checked and regulated, somewhat after the manner of the British Constitution, or by any better, if better can be devised by American ingenuity. Experience has shewn us, how entirely [Page 52]we have entrusted "our lives and sureties all" into the power of a single man; and if we have common wisdom, we shall profit by that experience to bar up in future every avenue [...] so dangerous, and in our case so ruinous an exercise of an authority so inconsistent with the spirit of freedom or the nature of man, as that by which we have suffered.
UNDER the auspices of a wise and prudent ruler, we might proceed to other reformations absolutely essential to the continuance of our existence, as a truly great, free and independent nation. Those egregious baubles of sovereignty, those pestiferous incitements to demagogy, the State Governments, might be abolished, and their officers rendered dependent as they ought to be on the Government of the United States, instead of having it in their power as at present, to organize revolts against that government.
THIS would be a very admirable act for a new administration to commerce its career with, the unfortunate people being in as distressful a situation amidst the jars and [Page 53]clashings of the multiplicity of jurisdictions, as they would be, placed between two globes, revolving in contact; so that a more popular, or a more judicious step could not be adopted.
THE present topographical location of the States should, in order the more effectually to abolish the memory of Federalism, be totally changed, and the Continent divided into ten, fifteen or twenty counties, to be governed by a Lieutenant, or Praefect, appointed by the Executive: certain subaltern appointments should be in his gift. These Praefects would constitute as proper an Upper House for one branch of the Legislature, as could well be devised. I venture to affirm that it would be found a more proper and independent branch than that for which it would be substituted.
UNDER the auspices of a wise and prudent ruler, the elective franchise might forever be cut off from all paupers, vagabonds and outlaws, and the Legislation of the country placed in those hands to which it belongs, the proprietors of the country. At present [Page 54]we are the vassals of foreign outlaws. The frequency of elections, those elections being now entrusted to men of sense, men of principle, and men having an interest connected with the interests of the country, declines of course; as the folly and danger of annual elections can now be securely remedied.
THUS, will the public burthens be alleviated—thus will public dilapidations cease—thus will undue influence—corruption of the lowest and basest sort be eradicated;—while the people grow quieter, happier, and are better served, without a ruinous and useless expence.
THE principle of Federalism must be abolished or it will very soon destroy the principle of union. It is influence, that sways the sceptre of irregular or popular Governments; and I will leave any man to decide what comparison the influence of the Government of the United States will bear with the sixteen Governments of the States: It is as sixteen to one.
BUT these should be gradual and secondary reformations; they are now only touched [Page 55]on, and that merely for the sake of committing to the public judgment, opinions on which their welfare may very essentially depend, and which I have the pleasure to know, prevail in no inconsiderable extent.
THE measure which most pressingly demands adoption, is, an immediate declaration of war against France, and her dependencies, Spain and Holland. It is time, after having so long and so pusillanimously beheld England fighting our battles, while we have rather comforted and abetted the common enemy, than even wished well to the opposition to him; it is time, after having fattened so long upon the spoils of the war, to bring our mite of contribution into the general chest, and to relieve, as we may effectually do, the generous assertors of the christian cause.
THE conquest of the remaining possessions of France, Spain and Holland in the West Indies, might be effected by this country, with very little expence or inconvenience. The naval force already extant, is fully adequate, and the regular troops lately embodied [Page 56]through its intervention would have atchieved the conquest, without difficulty. This country possesses such advantages for carrying on expeditions against the west India Islands, as must render her co-operation in the cause very acceptable. In short, the contingent we could bring into the coalition would be such as to entitle us to assume the rank of a first rate power, and to make stipulations the fulfilment of which could not fail to fix us in a state of prosperity and to extend our empire and renown. To instance, for our quota of 25,000 troops (which should act separately and independently) and a stipulated quantum of military stores, &c. Great Britain should guarantee to us the Island of Cuba, or, which would be more convenient to our commerce, that of Porto Rico. Either of these possessions would amply remunerate us for the most expensive exertions that the conquest of them could require. In the East, we might establish ourselves in the possession of Batavia or the Mauritius, and thus secure a footing in the Indian Ocean, highly essential to us, but now depending on the most precarious tenure.
[Page 57] IT is in vain to attempt to disguise the truth, that America is essentially and naturally a commercial nation; and that from her location on the map of the world she must ever remain so. It ought therefore to be the undeviating care of the Government, whether it be Federal or Jacobinical, or true Columbian, to secure on the most advantageous footing possible, our commercial intercourse with foreign nations. To procure admission to our flag in ports whence it is now excluded: to obtain it by right where it now rests on the ground of sufferance; and to establish it on a regular and permanent footing, in those cases where it is at present precarious and temporary; is not merely the province of the Government, but a duty, an obligation which its subjects have a right to hold it to.
WE have a right to expect, and the Government ought to exact from Spain, the opening of those of her ports in South America the most convenient for refitting our whalers on that coast. For the want of this privilege, our people are subjected to [...] [Page 58]privations and hardships, during voyages of two years' duration.
FROM Portugal, thro' the intervention of Great Britain, it could not be difficult to exact, for some adequate compensation which we could offer, the same privileges in Brazil, a station the most convenient to the whaling ground.
PEPPER, Spices, Cottons of various kinds, and above all Sugar and Coffee, are, whatever negro philanthropists may assert, undoubtedly necessaries of life. Whence are we to derive these, should our present precarious resources be cut off to us? Already, from the disadvantages to which we are subjected, do we pay nearly three prices for them, and a state of things seems very likely to arise in which they will be placed utterly without the reach of the middling and lower orders. Such a contingency, when we have it so fairly in our power, it would be the height of folly not to foreclose. Besides, while we deduce these commodities from the possessions of foreign powers, we can never be said to be truly independent. While we [Page 59]have to ask Great Britain, or France, or Denmark, for supplies which we cannot dispense with, those nations have a lien upon us, a security for our good behaviour which is derogatory to our dignity, and inconsistent with our self-will.
THE attainment of these ends, is believed with confidence to be neither impracticable nor difficult. For altho' our repulsive and jealous disposition towards Great Britain, may cause her now to view us as aspiring to become a rival with her in certain branches of her commerce; yet, once entered on a footing of good intelligence, and honorable confidence, the ground would be wholly changed, and by judiciously playing into each other's hands, the two nations might and would concenter in their own ports the commerce of the whole world.
UNDER the auspices of such a system of action, what terrestrial power could interfere with us, what violence could jostle us, what unrevenged insult, degrade or annoy?
A NATIONAL character is thus at once founded, and the American name ceasing to be [Page 60]an opprobrium, shall pass abroad over the earth as the denomination of a race of men illustrious for their courage and the wisdom of their policy.
ON this theme, I could dwell forever. It will be the salvation of the country. Nay, the country is otherwise doomed to irretrievable perdition. It is a long and a dark night, that succeeds the going down of our sun, now just lingering above the horizon. There was a time, and opportunity too, which seized, had placed us far beyond the reach of those dire calamities which have assailed us, and those worse which threaten. But we were cast upon Time for deliverance, and Time * hath betrayed, perhaps destroyed us: [Page 61]for the period of war is about to expire, and the circumstances and the relations of things by which we were to have profited, expire along with it.
It is worth while to reflect on the condition in which a peace probably will place us.
WE shall have upon our hands a controversy with Great Britain; which being for no less an object than twenty-one millions of dollars, can be regarded in no very trifling [Page 62] [...] insignificant light. With regard to France, what better aspect would our circumstances wear? His Majesty, restored to the throne of his ancestors, can feel little disposition to amity with those, who have so uniformly aided and abbetted the murderers of his princely brother: Nay, what is more likely than that he would demand the reimbursement of the money loaned us by the crown?
IT must be confessed that should we be swallowed up, by this coalition of power, we shall have been accessary to our own destruction; for we have given to each and either, mortal offences enough to justify a war of extermination against us.
BUT the present deplorable aspects may brighten: there is yet an interval open for our rescue; and the people are and have long been ready and willing to embrace it. May there speedily arise those who are able and willing to lead them out of this dark valley of the shadow of death, into the path of political salvation.