2154 lines
124 KiB
Plaintext
2154 lines
124 KiB
Plaintext
ADDRESSES, MESSAGES, AND REPLIES
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by Thomas Jefferson
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_Response to the Citizens of Albemarle_
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February 12, 1790
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GENTLEMEN,
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The testimony of esteem with which you are pleased to honour my
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return to my native country fills me with gratitude and pleasure.
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While it shews that my absence has not lost me your friendly
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recollection, it holds out the comfortable hope that when the hour of
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retirement shall come, I shall again find myself amidst those with
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whom I have long lived, with whom I wish to live, and whose affection
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is the source of my purest happiness. Their favor was the door thro'
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which I was ushered on the stage of public life; and while I have
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been led on thro' it's varying scenes, I could not be unmindful of
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those who assigned me my first part.
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My feeble and obscure exertions in their service, and in the
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holy cause of freedom, have had no other merit than that they were my
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best. We have all the same. We have been fellow-labourers and
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fellow-sufferers, and heaven has rewarded us with a happy issue from
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our struggles. It rests now with ourselves alone to enjoy in peace
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and concord the blessings of self-government, so long denied to
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mankind: to shew by example the sufficiency of human reason for the
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care of human affairs and that the will of the majority, the Natural
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law of every society, is the only sure guardian of the rights of man.
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Perhaps even this my sometimes err. But it's errors are honest,
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solitary and short-lived. -- Let us then, my dear friends, for ever
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bow down to the general reason of the society. We are safe with
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that, even in it's deviations, for it soon returns again to the right
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way. These are lessons we have learnt together. We have prospered
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in their practice, and the liberality with which you are pleased to
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approve my attachment to the general rights of mankind assures me we
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are still together in these it's kindred sentiments.
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Wherever I may be stationed, by the will of my country, it will
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be my delight to see, in the general tide of happiness, that yours
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too flows on in just place and measure. That it may flow thro' all
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times, gathering strength as it goes, and spreading the happy
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influence of reason and liberty over the face of the earth, is my
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fervent prayer to heaven.
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_First Inaugural Address_
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March 4, 1801
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FRIENDS AND FELLOW-CITIZENS,
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Called upon to undertake the duties of the first executive
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office of our country, I avail myself of the presence of that portion
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of my fellow-citizens which is here assembled to express my grateful
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thanks for the favor with which they have been pleased to look toward
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me, to declare a sincere consciousness that the task is above my
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talents, and that I approach it with those anxious and awful
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presentiments which the greatness of the charge and the weakness of
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my powers so justly inspire. A rising nation, spread over a wide and
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fruitful land, traversing all the seas with the rich productions of
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their industry, engaged in commerce with nations who feel power and
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forget right, advancing rapidly to destinies beyond the reach of
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mortal eye -- when I contemplate these transcendent objects, and see
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the honor, the happiness, and the hopes of this beloved country
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committed to the issue and the auspices of this day, I shrink from
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the contemplation, and humble myself before the magnitude of the
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undertaking. Utterly, indeed, should I despair did not the presence
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of many whom I here see remind me that in the other high authorities
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provided by our Constitution I shall find resources of wisdom, of
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virtue, and of zeal on which to rely under all difficulties. To you,
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then, gentlemen, who are charged with the sovereign functions of
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legislation, and to those associated with you, I look with
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encouragement for that guidance and support which may enable us to
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steer with safety the vessel in which we are all embarked amidst the
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conflicting elements of a troubled world.
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During the contest of opinion through which we have passed the
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animation of discussions and of exertions has sometimes worn an
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aspect which might impose on strangers unused to think freely and to
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speak and to write what they think; but this being now decided by the
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voice of the nation, announced according to the rules of the
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Constitution, all will, of course, arrange themselves under the will
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of the law, and unite in common efforts for the common good. All,
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too, will bear in mind this sacred principle, that though the will of
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the majority is in all cases to prevail, that will to be rightful
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must be reasonable; that the minority possess their equal rights,
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which equal law must protect, and to violate would be oppression.
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Let us, then, fellow-citizens, unite with one heart and one mind.
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Let us restore to social intercourse that harmony and affection
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without which liberty and even life itself are but dreary things.
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And let us reflect that, having banished from our land that religious
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intolerance under which mankind so long bled and suffered, we have
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yet gained little if we countenance a political intolerance as
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despotic, as wicked, and capable of as bitter and bloody
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persecutions. During the throes and convulsions of the ancient
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world, during the agonizing spasms of infuriated man, seeking through
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blood and slaughter his long-lost liberty, it was not wonderful that
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the agitation of the billows should reach even this distant and
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peaceful shore; that this should be more felt and feared by some and
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less by others, and should divide opinions as to measures of safety.
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But every difference of opinion is not a difference of principle. We
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have called by different names brethren of the same principle. We
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are all Republicans, we are all Federalists. If there be any among
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us who would wish to dissolve this Union or to change its republican
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form, let them stand undisturbed as monuments of the safety with
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which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to
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combat it. I know, indeed, that some honest men fear that a
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republican government can not be strong, that this Government is not
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strong enough; but would the honest patriot, in the full tide of
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successful experiment, abandon a government which has so far kept us
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free and firm on the theoretic and visionary fear that this
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Government, the world's best hope, may by possibility want energy to
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preserve itself? I trust not. I believe this, on the contrary, the
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strongest Government on earth. I believe it the only one where every
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man, at the call of the law, would fly to the standard of the law,
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and would meet invasions of the public order as his own personal
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concern. Sometimes it is said that man can not be trusted with the
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government of himself. Can he, then, be trusted with the government
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of others? Or have we found angels in the forms of kings to govern
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him? Let history answer this question.
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Let us, then, with courage and confidence pursue our own
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Federal and Republican principles, our attachment to union and
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representative government. Kindly separated by nature and a wide
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ocean from the exterminating havoc of one quarter of the globe; too
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high-minded to endure the degradations of the others; possessing a
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chosen country, with room enough for our descendants to the
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thousandth and thousandth generation; entertaining a due sense of our
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equal right to the use of our own faculties, to the acquisitions of
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our own industry, to honor and confidence from our fellow-citizens,
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resulting not from birth, but from our actions and their sense of
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them; enlightened by a benign religion, professed, indeed, and
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practiced in various forms, yet all of them inculcating honesty,
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truth, temperance, gratitude, and the love of man; acknowledging and
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adoring an overruling Providence, which by all its dispensations
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proves that it delights in the happiness of man here and his greater
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happiness hereafter -- with all these blessings, what more is
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necessary to make us a happy and a prosperous people? Still one
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thing more, fellow-citizens -- a wise and frugal Government, which
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shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them
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otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and
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improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it
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has earned. This is the sum of good government, and this is
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necessary to close the circle of our felicities.
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About to enter, fellow-citizens, on the exercise of duties
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which comprehend everything dear and valuable to you, it is proper
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you should understand what I deem the essential principles of our
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Government, and consequently those which ought to shape its
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Administration. I will compress them within the narrowest compass
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they will bear, stating the general principle, but not all its
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limitations. Equal and exact justice to all men, of whatever state
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or persuasion, religious or political; peace, commerce, and honest
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friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none; the
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support of the State governments in all their rights, as the most
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competent administrations for our domestic concerns and the surest
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bulwarks against antirepublican tendencies; the preservation of the
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General Government in its whole constitutional vigor, as the sheet
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anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad; a jealous care of the
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right of election by the people -- a mild and safe corrective of
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abuses which are lopped by the sword of revolution where peaceable
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remedies are unprovided; absolute acquiescence in the decisions of
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the majority, the vital principle of republics, from which is no
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appeal but to force, the vital principle and immediate parent of
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despotism; a well-disciplined militia, our best reliance in peace and
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for the first moments of war till regulars may relieve them; the
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supremacy of the civil over the military authority; economy in the
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public expense, that labor may be lightly burthened; the honest
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payment of our debts and sacred preservation of the public faith;
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encouragement of agriculture, and of commerce as its handmaid; the
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diffusion of information and arraignment of all abuses at the bar of
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the public reason; freedom of religion; freedom of the press, and
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freedom of person under the protection of the habeas corpus, and
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trial by juries impartially selected. These principles form the
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bright constellation which has gone before us and guided our steps
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through an age of revolution and reformation. The wisdom of our
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sages and blood of our heroes have been devoted to their attainment.
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They should be the creed of our political faith, the text of civic
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instruction, the touchstone by which to try the services of those we
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trust; and should we wander from them in moments of error or of
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alarm, let us hasten to retrace our steps and to regain the road
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which alone leads to peace, liberty, and safety.
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I repair, then, fellow-citizens, to the post you have assigned
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me. With experience enough in subordinate offices to have seen the
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difficulties of this the greatest of all, I have learnt to expect
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that it will rarely fall to the lot of imperfect man to retire from
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this station with the reputation and the favor which bring him into
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it. Without pretensions to that high confidence you reposed in our
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first and greatest revolutionary character, whose preeminent services
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had entitled him to the first place in his country's love and
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destined for him the fairest page in the volume of faithful history,
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I ask so much confidence only as may give firmness and effect to the
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legal administration of your affairs. I shall often go wrong through
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defect of judgment. When right, I shall often be thought wrong by
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those whose positions will not command a view of the whole ground. I
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ask your indulgence for my own errors, which will never be
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intentional, and your support against the errors of others, who may
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condemn what they would not if seen in all its parts. The
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approbation implied by your suffrage is a great consolation to me for
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the past, and my future solicitude will be to retain the good opinion
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of those who have bestowed it in advance, to conciliate that of
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others by doing them all the good in my power, and to be instrumental
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to the happiness and freedom of all.
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Relying, then, on the patronage of your good will, I advance
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with obedience to the work, ready to retire from it whenever you
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become sensible how much better choice it is in your power to make.
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And may that Infinite Power which rules the destinies of the universe
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lead our councils to what is best, and give them a favorable issue
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for your peace and prosperity.
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_To Elias Shipman and Others, a Committee of the Merchants of
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New Haven_
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Washington, July 12, 1801
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GENTLEMAN,
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I have received the remonstrance you were pleased to address to
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me, on the appointment of Samuel Bishop to the office of collector of
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New Haven, lately vacated by the death of David Austin. The right of
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our fellow citizens to represent to the public functionaries their
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opinion on proceedings interesting to them, is unquestionably a
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constitutional right, often useful, sometimes necessary, and will
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always be respectfully acknoleged by me.
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Of the various executive duties, no one excites more anxious
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concern than that of placing the interests of our fellow citizens in
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the hands of honest men, with understandings sufficient for their
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station. No duty, at the same time, is more difficult to fulfil.
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The knolege of characters possessed by a single individual is, of
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necessity, limited. To seek out the best through the whole Union, we
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must resort to other information, which, from the best of men, acting
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disinterestedly and with the purest motives, is sometimes incorrect.
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In the case of Samuel Bishop, however, the subject of your
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remonstrance, time was taken, information was sought, & such obtained
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as could leave no room for doubt of his fitness. From private
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sources it was learnt that his understanding was sound, his integrity
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pure, his character unstained. And the offices confided to him
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within his own State, are public evidences of the estimation in which
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he is held by the State in general, and the city & township
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particularly in which he lives. He is said to be the town clerk, a
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justice of the peace, mayor of the city of New Haven, an office held
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at the will of the legislature, chief judge of the court of common
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pleas for New Haven county, a court of high criminal and civil
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jurisdiction wherein most causes are decided without the right of
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appeal or review, and sole judge of the court of probates, wherein he
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singly decides all questions of wills, settlement of estates, testate
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and intestate, appoints guardians, settles their accounts, and in
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fact has under his jurisdiction and care all the property real and
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personal of persons dying. The two last offices, in the annual gift
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of the legislature, were given to him in May last. Is it possible
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that the man to whom the legislature of Connecticut has so recently
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committed trusts of such difficulty & magnitude, is `unfit to be the
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collector of the district of New Haven,' tho' acknoleged in the same
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writing, to have obtained all this confidence `by a long life of
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usefulness?' It is objected, indeed, in the remonstrance, that he is
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77. years of age; but at a much more advanced age, our Franklin was
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the ornament of human nature. He may not be able to perform in
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person, all the details of his office; but if he gives us the benefit
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of his understanding, his integrity, his watchfulness, and takes care
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that all the details are well performedby himself or his necessary
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assistants, all public purposes will be answered. The remonstrance,
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indeed, does not allege that the office _has been_ illy conducted,
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but only apprehends that it _will be_ so. Should this happen in
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event, be assured I will do in it what shall be just and necessary
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for the public service. In the meantime, he should be tried without
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being prejudged.
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The removal, as it is called, of Mr. Goodrich, forms another
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subject of complaint. Declarations by myself in favor of _political
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tolerance_, exhortations to _harmony_ and affection in social
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intercourse, and to respect for the _equal rights_ of the minority,
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have, on certain occasions, been quoted & misconstrued into
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assurances that the tenure of offices was to be undisturbed. But
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could candor apply such a construction? It is not indeed in the
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remonstrance that we find it; but it leads to the explanations which
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that calls for. When it is considered, that during the late
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administration, those who were not of a particular sect of politics
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were excluded from all office; when, by a steady pursuit of this
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measure, nearly the whole offices of the U S were monopolized by that
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sect; when the public sentiment at length declared itself, and burst
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open the doors of honor and confidence to those whose opinions they
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more approved, was it to be imagined that this monopoly of office was
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still to be continued in the hands of the minority? Does it violate
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their _equal rights_, to assert some rights in the majority also? Is
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it _political intolerance_ to claim a proportionate share in the
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direction of the public affairs? Can they not _harmonize_ in society
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unless they have everything in their own hands? If the will of the
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nation, manifested by their various elections, calls for an
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administration of government according with the opinions of those
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elected; if, for the fulfilment of that will, displacements are
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necessary, with whom can they so justly begin as with persons
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appointed in the last moments of an administration, not for its own
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aid, but to begin a career at the same time with their successors, by
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whom they had never been approved, and who could scarcely expect from
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them a cordial cooperation? Mr. Goodrich was one of these. Was it
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proper for him to place himself in office, without knowing whether
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those whose agent he was to be would have confidence in his agency?
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Can the preference of another, as the successor to Mr. Austin, be
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candidly called a removal of Mr. Goodrich? If a due participation of
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office is a matter of right, how are vacancies to be obtained? Those
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by death are few; by resignation, none. Can any other mode than that
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of removal be proposed? This is a painful office; but it is made my
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duty, and I meet it as such. I proceed in the operation with
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deliberation & inquiry, that it may injure the best men least, and
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effect the purposes of justice & public utility with the least
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private distress; that it may be thrown, as much as possible, on
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delinquency, on oppression, on intolerance, on incompetence, on
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ante-revolutionary adherence to our enemies.
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The remonstrance laments "that a change in the administration
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must produce a change in the subordinate officers;" in other words,
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that it should be deemed necessary for all officers to think with
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their principal. But on whom does this imputation bear? On those
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who have excluded from office every shade of opinion which was not
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theirs? Or on those who have been so excluded? I lament sincerely
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that unessential differences of political opinion should ever have
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been deemed sufficient to interdict half the society from the rights
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and the blessings of self-government, to proscribe them as characters
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unworthy of every trust. It would have been to me a circumstance of
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great relief, had I found a moderate participation of office in the
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hands of the majority. I would gladly have left to time and accident
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to raise them to their just share. But their total exclusion calls
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for prompter correctives. I shall correct the procedure; but that
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done, disdain to follow it, shall return with joy to that state of
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things, when the only questions concerning a candidate shall be, is
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he honest? Is he capable? Is he faithful to the Constitution?
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I tender you the homage of my high respect.
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_First Annual Message_
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December 8, 1801
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FELLOW CITIZENS OF THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES:
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It is a circumstance of sincere gratification to me that on
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meeting the great council of our nation, I am able to announce to
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them, on the grounds of reasonable certainty, that the wars and
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troubles which have for so many years afflicted our sister nations
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have at length come to an end, and that the communications of peace
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and commerce are once more opening among them. While we devoutly
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return thanks to the beneficent Being who has been pleased to breathe
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into them the spirit of conciliation and forgiveness, we are bound
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with peculiar gratitude to be thankful to him that our own peace has
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been preserved through so perilous a season, and ourselves permitted
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quietly to cultivate the earth and to practice and improve those arts
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which tend to increase our comforts. The assurances, indeed, of
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friendly disposition, received from all the powers with whom we have
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principal relations, had inspired a confidence that our peace with
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them would not have been disturbed. But a cessation of the
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irregularities which had effected the commerce of neutral nations,
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and of the irritations and injuries produced by them, cannot but add
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to this confidence; and strengthens, at the same time, the hope, that
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wrongs committed on offending friends, under a pressure of
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circumstances, will now be reviewed with candor, and will be
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considered as founding just claims of retribution for the past and
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new assurances for the future.
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Among our Indian neighbors, also, a spirit of peace and
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friendship generally prevailing and I am happy to inform you that the
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continued efforts to introduce among them the implements and the
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practice of husbandry, and of the household arts, have not been
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without success; that they are becoming more and more sensible of the
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superiority of this dependence for clothing and subsistence over the
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precarious resources of hunting and fishing; and already we are able
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to announce, that instead of that constant diminution of their
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numbers, produced by their wars and their wants, some of them begin
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to experience an increase of population.
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To this state of general peace with which we have been blessed,
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one only exception exists. Tripoli, the least considerable of the
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Barbary States, had come forward with demands unfounded either in
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right or in compact, and had permitted itself to denounce war, on our
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failure to comply before a given day. The style of the demand
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admitted but one answer. I sent a small squadron of frigates into
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the Mediterranean, with assurances to that power of our sincere
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desire to remain in peace, but with orders to protect our commerce
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against the threatened attack. The measure was seasonable and
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salutary. The bey had already declared war in form. His cruisers
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were out. Two had arrived at Gibraltar. Our commerce in the
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Mediterranean was blockaded, and that of the Atlantic in peril. The
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arrival of our squadron dispelled the danger. One of the Tripolitan
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cruisers having fallen in with, and engaged the small schooner
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Enterprise, commanded by Lieutenant Sterret, which had gone as a
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tender to our larger vessels, was captured, after a heavy slaughter
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of her men, without the loss of a single one on our part. The
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bravery exhibited by our citizens on that element, will, I trust, be
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a testimony to the world that it is not the want of that virtue which
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makes us seek their peace, but a conscientious desire to direct the
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energies of our nation to the multiplication of the human race, and
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not to its destruction. Unauthorized by the constitution, without
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the sanction of Congress, to go out beyond the line of defence, the
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vessel being disabled from committing further hostilities, was
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liberated with its crew. The legislature will doubtless consider
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whether, by authorizing measures of offence, also, they will place
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our force on an equal footing with that of its adversaries. I
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communicate all material information on this subject, that in the
|
|
exercise of the important function considered by the constitution to
|
|
the legislature exclusively, their judgment may form itself on a
|
|
knowledge and consideration of every circumstance of weight.
|
|
|
|
I wish I could say that our situation with all the other
|
|
Barbary states was entirely satisfactory. Discovering that some
|
|
delays had taken place in the performance of certain articles
|
|
stipulated by us, I thought it my duty, by immediate measures for
|
|
fulfilling them, to vindicate to ourselves the right of considering
|
|
the effect of departure from stipulation on their side. From the
|
|
papers which will be laid before you, you will be enabled to judge
|
|
whether our treaties are regarded by them as fixing at all the
|
|
measure of their demands, or as guarding from the exercise of force
|
|
our vessels within their power; and to consider how far it will be
|
|
safe and expedient to leave our affairs with them in their present
|
|
posture.
|
|
|
|
I lay before you the result of the census lately taken of our
|
|
inhabitants, to a conformity with which we are to reduce the ensuing
|
|
rates of representation and taxation. You will perceive that the
|
|
increase of numbers during the last ten years, proceeding in
|
|
geometrical ratio, promises a duplication in little more than
|
|
twenty-two years. We contemplate this rapid growth, and the prospect
|
|
it holds up to us, not with a view to the injuries it may enable us
|
|
to do to others in some future day, but to the settlement of the
|
|
extensive country still remaining vacant within our limits, to the
|
|
multiplications of men susceptible of happiness, educated in the love
|
|
of order, habituated to self-government, and value its blessings
|
|
above all price.
|
|
|
|
Other circumstances, combined with the increase of numbers,
|
|
have produced an augmentation of revenue arising from consumption, in
|
|
a ratio far beyond that of population alone, and though the changes
|
|
of foreign relations now taking place so desirably for the world, may
|
|
for a season affect this branch of revenue, yet, weighing all
|
|
probabilities of expense, as well as of income, there is reasonable
|
|
ground of confidence that we may now safely dispense with all the
|
|
internal taxes, comprehending excises, stamps, auctions, licenses,
|
|
carriages, and refined sugars, to which the postage on newspapers may
|
|
be added, to facilitate the progress of information, and that the
|
|
remaining sources of revenue will be sufficient to provide for the
|
|
support of government to pay the interest on the public debts, and to
|
|
discharge the principals in shorter periods than the laws or the
|
|
general expectations had contemplated. War, indeed, and untoward
|
|
events, may change this prospect of things, and call for expenses
|
|
which the imposts could not meet; but sound principles will not
|
|
justify our taxing the industry of our fellow citizens to accumulate
|
|
treasure for wars to happen we know not when, and which might not
|
|
perhaps happen but from the temptations offered by that treasure.
|
|
|
|
These views, however, of reducing our burdens, are formed on
|
|
the expectation that a sensible, and at the same time a salutary
|
|
reduction, may take place in our habitual expenditures. For this
|
|
purpose, those of the civil government, the army, and navy, will need
|
|
revisal.
|
|
|
|
When we consider that this government is charged with the
|
|
external and mutual relations only of these states; that the states
|
|
themselves have principal care of our persons, our property, and our
|
|
reputation, constituting the great field of human concerns, we may
|
|
well doubt whether our organization is not too complicated, too
|
|
expensive; whether offices or officers have not been multiplied
|
|
unnecessarily, and sometimes injuriously to the service they were
|
|
meant to promote. I will cause to be laid before you an essay toward
|
|
a statement of those who, under public employment of various kinds,
|
|
draw money from the treasury or from our citizens. Time has not
|
|
permitted a perfect enumeration, the ramifications of office being
|
|
too multipled and remote to be completely traced in a first trial.
|
|
Among those who are dependent on executive discretion, I have begun
|
|
the reduction of what was deemed necessary. The expenses of
|
|
diplomatic agency have been considerably diminished. The inspectors
|
|
of internal revenue who were found to obstruct the accountability of
|
|
the institution, have been discontinued. Several agencies created by
|
|
executive authority, on salaries fixed by that also, have been
|
|
suppressed, and should suggest the expediency of regulating that
|
|
power by law, so as to subject its exercises to legislative
|
|
inspection and sanction. Other reformations of the same kind will be
|
|
pursued with that caution which is requisite in removing useless
|
|
things, not to injure what is retained. But the great mass of public
|
|
offices is established by law, and, therefore, by law alone can be
|
|
abolished. Should the legislature think it expedient to pass this
|
|
roll in review, and try all its parts by the test of public utility,
|
|
they may be assured of every aid and light which executive
|
|
information can yield. Considering the general tendency to multiply
|
|
offices and dependencies, and to increase expense to the ultimate
|
|
term of burden which the citizen can bear, it behooves us to avail
|
|
ourselves of every occasion which presents itself for taking off the
|
|
surcharge; that it may never be seen here that, after leaving to
|
|
labor the smallest portion of its earnings on which it can subsist,
|
|
government shall itself consume the residue of what it was instituted
|
|
to guard.
|
|
|
|
In our care, too, of the public contributions intrusted to our
|
|
direction, it would be prudent to multiply barriers against their
|
|
dissipation, by appropriating specific sums to every specific purpose
|
|
susceptible of definition; by disallowing applications of money
|
|
varying from the appropriation in object, or transcending it in
|
|
amount; by reducing the undefined field of contingencies, and thereby
|
|
circumscribing discretionary powers over money; and by bringing back
|
|
to a single department all accountabilities for money where the
|
|
examination may be prompt, efficacious, and uniform.
|
|
|
|
An account of the receipts and expenditures of the last year,
|
|
as prepared by the secretary of the treasury, will as usual be laid
|
|
before you. The success which has attended the late sales of the
|
|
public lands, shows that with attention they may be made an important
|
|
source of receipt. Among the payments, those made in discharge of
|
|
the principal and interest of the national debt, will show that the
|
|
public faith has been exactly maintained. To these will be added an
|
|
estimate of appropriations necessary for the ensuing year. This last
|
|
will of course be effected by such modifications of the systems of
|
|
expense, as you shall think proper to adopt.
|
|
|
|
A statement has been formed by the secretary of war, on mature
|
|
consideration, of all the posts and stations where garrisons will be
|
|
expedient, and of the number of men requisite for each garrison. The
|
|
whole amount is considerably short of the present military
|
|
establishment. For the surplus no particular use can be pointed out.
|
|
For defence against invasion, their number is as nothing; nor is it
|
|
conceived needful or safe that a standing army should be kept up in
|
|
time of peace for that purpose. Uncertain as we must ever be of the
|
|
particular point in our circumference where an enemy may choose to
|
|
invade us, the only force which can be ready at every point and
|
|
competent to oppose them, is the body of neighboring citizens as
|
|
formed into a militia. On these, collected from the parts most
|
|
convenient, in numbers proportioned to the invading foe, it is best
|
|
to rely, not only to meet the first attack, but if it threatens to be
|
|
permanent, to maintain the defence until regulars may be engaged to
|
|
relieve them. These considerations render it important that we
|
|
should at every session continue to amend the defects which from time
|
|
to time show themselves in the laws for regulating the militia, until
|
|
they are sufficiently perfect. Nor should we now or at any time
|
|
separate, until we can say we have done everything for the militia
|
|
which we could do were an enemy at our door.
|
|
|
|
The provisions of military stores on hand will be laid before
|
|
you, that you may judge of the additions still requisite.
|
|
|
|
With respect to the extent to which our naval preparations
|
|
should be carried, some difference of opinion may be expected to
|
|
appear; but just attention to the circumstances of every part of the
|
|
Union will doubtless reconcile all. A small force will probably
|
|
continue to be wanted for actual service in the Mediterranean.
|
|
Whatever annual sum beyond that you may think proper to appropriate
|
|
to naval preparations, would perhaps be better employed in providing
|
|
those articles which may be kept without waste or consumption, and be
|
|
in readiness when any exigence calls them into use. Progress has
|
|
been made, as will appear by papers now communicated, in providing
|
|
materials for seventy-four gun ships as directed by law.
|
|
|
|
How far the authority given by the legislature for procuring
|
|
and establishing sites for naval purposes has been perfectly
|
|
understood and pursued in the execution, admits of some doubt. A
|
|
statement of the expenses already incurred on that subject, shall be
|
|
laid before you. I have in certain cases suspended or slackened
|
|
these expenditures, that the legislature might determine whether so
|
|
many yards are necessary as have been contemplated. The works at
|
|
this place are among those permitted to go on; and five of the seven
|
|
frigates directed to be laid up, have been brought and laid up here,
|
|
where, besides the safety of their position, they are under the eye
|
|
of the executive administration, as well as of its agents and where
|
|
yourselves also will be guided by your own view in the legislative
|
|
provisions respecting them which may from time to time be necessary.
|
|
They are preserved in such condition, as well the vessels as whatever
|
|
belongs to them, as to be at all times ready for sea on a short
|
|
warning. Two others are yet to be laid up so soon as they shall have
|
|
reserved the repairs requisite to put them also into sound condition.
|
|
As a superintending officer will be necessary at each yard, his
|
|
duties and emoluments, hitherto fixed by the executive, will be a
|
|
more proper subject for legislation. A communication will also be
|
|
made of our progress in the execution of the law respecting the
|
|
vessels directed to be sold.
|
|
|
|
The fortifications of our harbors, more or less advanced,
|
|
present considerations of great difficulty. While some of them are
|
|
on a scale sufficiently proportioned to the advantages of their
|
|
position, to the efficacy of their protection, and the importance of
|
|
the points within it, others are so extensive, will cost so much in
|
|
their first erection, so much in their maintenance, and require such
|
|
a force to garrison them, as to make it questionable what is best now
|
|
to be done. A statement of those commenced or projected, of the
|
|
expenses already incurred, and estimates of their future cost, so far
|
|
as can be foreseen, shall be laid before you, that you may be enabled
|
|
to judge whether any attention is necessary in the laws respecting
|
|
this subject.
|
|
|
|
Agriculture, manufactures, commerce, and navigation, the four
|
|
pillars of our prosperity, are the most thriving when left most free
|
|
to individual enterprise. Protection from casual embarrassments,
|
|
however, may sometimes be seasonably interposed. If in the course of
|
|
your observations or inquiries they should appear to need any aid
|
|
within the limits of our constitutional powers, your sense of their
|
|
importance is a sufficient assurance they will occupy your attention.
|
|
We cannot, indeed, but all feel an anxious solicitude for the
|
|
difficulties under which our carrying trade will soon be placed. How
|
|
far it can be relieved, otherwise than by time, is a subject of
|
|
important consideration.
|
|
|
|
The judiciary system of the United States, and especially that
|
|
portion of it recently erected, will of course present itself to the
|
|
contemplation of Congress: and that they may be able to judge of the
|
|
proportion which the institution bears to the business it has to
|
|
perform, I have caused to be procured from the several States, and
|
|
now lay before Congress, an exact statement of all the causes decided
|
|
since the first establishment of the courts, and of those which were
|
|
depending when additional courts and judges were brought in to their
|
|
aid.
|
|
|
|
And while on the judiciary organization, it will be worthy your
|
|
consideration, whether the protection of the inestimable institution
|
|
of juries has been extended to all the cases involving the security
|
|
of our persons and property. Their impartial selection also being
|
|
essential to their value, we ought further to consider whether that
|
|
is sufficiently secured in those States where they are named by a
|
|
marshal depending on executive will, or designated by the court or by
|
|
officers dependent on them.
|
|
|
|
I cannot omit recommending a revisal of the laws on the subject
|
|
of naturalization. Considering the ordinary chances of human life, a
|
|
denial of citizenship under a residence of fourteen years is a denial
|
|
to a great proportion of those who ask it, and controls a policy
|
|
pursued from their first settlement by many of these States, and
|
|
still believed of consequence to their prosperity. And shall we
|
|
refuse the unhappy fugitives from distress that hospitality which the
|
|
savages of the wilderness extended to our fathers arriving in this
|
|
land? Shall oppressed humanity find no asylum on this globe? The
|
|
constitution, indeed, has wisely provided that, for admission to
|
|
certain offices of important trust, a residence shall be required
|
|
sufficient to develop character and design. But might not the
|
|
general character and capabilities of a citizen be safely
|
|
communicated to every one manifesting a _bona fide_ purpose of
|
|
embarking his life and fortunes permanently with us? with
|
|
restrictions, perhaps, to guard against the fraudulent usurpation of
|
|
our flag; an abuse which brings so much embarrassment and loss on the
|
|
genuine citizen, and so much danger to the nation of being involved
|
|
in war, that no endeavor should be spared to detect and suppress it.
|
|
|
|
These, fellow citizens, are the matters respecting the state of
|
|
the nation, which I have thought of importance to be submitted to
|
|
your consideration at this time. Some others of less moment, or not
|
|
yet ready for communication, will be the subject of separate
|
|
messages. I am happy in this opportunity of committing the arduous
|
|
affairs of our government to the collected wisdom of the Union.
|
|
Nothing shall be wanting on my part to inform, as far as in my power,
|
|
the legislative judgment, nor to carry that judgment into faithful
|
|
execution. The prudence and temperance of your discussions will
|
|
promote, within your own walls, that conciliation which so much
|
|
befriends national conclusion; and by its example will encourage
|
|
among our constituents that progress of opinion which is tending to
|
|
unite them in object and in will. That all should be satisfied with
|
|
any one order of things is not to be expected, but I indulge the
|
|
pleasing persuasion that the great body of our citizens will
|
|
cordially concur in honest and disinterested efforts, which have for
|
|
their object to preserve the general and State governments in their
|
|
constitutional form and equilibrium; to maintain peace abroad, and
|
|
order and obedience to the laws at home; to establish principles and
|
|
practices of administration favorable to the security of liberty and
|
|
prosperity, and to reduce expenses to what is necessary for the
|
|
useful purposes of government.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_To Messrs. Nehemiah Dodge and Others, a Committee of the
|
|
Danbury Baptist Association, in the State of Connecticut_
|
|
|
|
January 1, 1802
|
|
|
|
GENTLEMAN,
|
|
The affectionate sentiments of esteem and approbation which you
|
|
are so good as to express towards me, on behalf of the Danbury
|
|
Baptist Association, give me the highest satisfaction. My duties
|
|
dictate a faithful and zealous pursuit of the interests of my
|
|
constituents, and in proportion as they are persuaded of my fidelity
|
|
to those duties, the discharge of them becomes more and more
|
|
pleasing.
|
|
|
|
Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely
|
|
between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for his
|
|
faith or his worship, that the legislative powers of government reach
|
|
actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign
|
|
reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that
|
|
their legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of
|
|
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof," thus building a
|
|
wall of separation between church and State. Adhering to this
|
|
expression of the supreme will of the nation in behalf of the rights
|
|
of conscience, I shall see with sincere satisfaction the progress of
|
|
those sentiments which tend to restore to man all his natural rights,
|
|
convinced he has no natural right in opposition to his social duties.
|
|
|
|
I reciprocate your kind prayers for the protection and blessing
|
|
of the common Father and Creator of man, and tender you for
|
|
yourselves and your religious association, assurances of my high
|
|
respect and esteem.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Third Annual Message_
|
|
|
|
October 17, 1803
|
|
|
|
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED
|
|
STATES:
|
|
In calling you together, fellow citizens, at an earlier day
|
|
than was contemplated by the act of the last session of Congress, I
|
|
have not been insensible to the personal inconve-niences necessarily
|
|
resulting from an unexpected change in your arrangements. But
|
|
matters of great public concernment have rendered this call
|
|
necessary, and the interest you feel in these will supersede in your
|
|
minds all private considerations.
|
|
|
|
Congress witnessed, at their last session, the extraordinary
|
|
agitation produced in the public mind by the suspension of our right
|
|
of deposit at the port of New Orleans, no assignment of another place
|
|
having been made according to treaty. They were sensible that the
|
|
continuance of that privation would be more injurious to our nation
|
|
than any consequences which could flow from any mode of redress, but
|
|
reposing just confidence in the good faith of the government whose
|
|
officer had committed the wrong, friendly and reasonable
|
|
representations were resorted to, and the right of deposit was
|
|
restored.
|
|
|
|
Previous, however, to this period, we had not been unaware of
|
|
the danger to which our peace would be perpetually exposed while so
|
|
important a key to the commerce of the western country remained under
|
|
foreign power. Difficulties, too, were presenting themselves as to
|
|
the navigation of other streams, which, arising within our
|
|
territories, pass through those adjacent. Propositions had,
|
|
therefore, been authorized for obtaining, on fair conditions, the
|
|
sovereignty of New Orleans, and of other possessions in that quarter
|
|
interesting to our quiet, to such extent as was deemed practicable;
|
|
and the provisional appropriation of two millions of dollars, to be
|
|
applied and accounted for by the president of the United States,
|
|
intended as part of the price, was considered as conveying the
|
|
sanction of Congress to the acquisition proposed. The enlightened
|
|
government of France saw, with just discernment, the importance to
|
|
both nations of such liberal arrangements as might best and
|
|
permanently promote the peace, friendship, and interests of both; and
|
|
the property and sovereignty of all Louisiana, which had been
|
|
restored to them, have on certain conditions been transferred to the
|
|
United States by instruments bearing date the 30th of April last.
|
|
When these shall have received the constitutional sanction of the
|
|
senate, they will without delay be communicated to the
|
|
representatives also, for the exercise of their functions, as to
|
|
those conditions which are within the powers vested by the
|
|
constitution in Congress. While the property and sovereignty of the
|
|
Mississippi and its waters secure an independent outlet for the
|
|
produce of the western States, and an uncontrolled navigation through
|
|
their whole course, free from collision with other powers and the
|
|
dangers to our peace from that source, the fertility of the country,
|
|
its climate and extent, promise in due season important aids to our
|
|
treasury, an ample provision for our posterity, and a wide-spread
|
|
field for the blessings of freedom and equal laws.
|
|
|
|
With the wisdom of Congress it will rest to take those ulterior
|
|
measures which may be necessary for the immediate occupation and
|
|
temporary government of the country; for its incorporation into our
|
|
Union; for rendering the change of government a blessing to our
|
|
newly-adopted brethren; for securing to them the rights of conscience
|
|
and of property: for confirming to the Indian inhabitants their
|
|
occupancy and self-government, establishing friendly and commercial
|
|
relations with them, and for ascertaining the geography of the
|
|
country acquired. Such materials for your information, relative to
|
|
its affairs in general, as the short space of time has permitted me
|
|
to collect, will be laid before you when the subject shall be in a
|
|
state for your consideration.
|
|
|
|
Another important acquisition of territory has also been made
|
|
since the last session of Congress. The friendly tribe of Kaskaskia
|
|
Indians with which we have never had a difference, reduced by the
|
|
wars and wants of savage life to a few individuals unable to defend
|
|
themselves against the neighboring tribes, has transferred its
|
|
country to the United States, reserving only for its members what is
|
|
sufficient to maintain them in an agricultural way. The
|
|
considerations stipulated are, that we shall extend to them our
|
|
patronage and protection, and give them certain annual aids in money,
|
|
in implements of agriculture, and other articles of their choice.
|
|
This country, among the most fertile within our limits, extending
|
|
along the Mississippi from the mouth of the Illinois to and up the
|
|
Ohio, though not so necessary as a barrier since the acquisition of
|
|
the other bank, may yet be well worthy of being laid open to
|
|
immediate settlement, as its inhabitants may descend with rapidity in
|
|
support of the lower country should future circumstances expose that
|
|
to foreign enterprise. As the stipulations in this treaty also
|
|
involve matters within the competence of both houses only, it will be
|
|
laid before Congress as soon as the senate shall have advised its
|
|
ratification.
|
|
|
|
With many other Indian tribes, improvements in agriculture and
|
|
household manufacture are advancing, and with all our peace and
|
|
friendship are established on grounds much firmer than heretofore.
|
|
The measure adopted of establishing trading houses among them, and of
|
|
furnishing them necessaries in exchange for their commodities, at
|
|
such moderated prices as leave no gain, but cover us from loss, has
|
|
the most conciliatory and useful effect upon them, and is that which
|
|
will best secure their peace and good will.
|
|
|
|
The small vessels authorized by Congress with a view to the
|
|
Mediterranean service, have been sent into that sea, and will be able
|
|
more effectually to confine the Tripoline cruisers within their
|
|
harbors, and supersede the necessity of convoy to our commerce in
|
|
that quarter. They will sensibly lessen the expenses of that service
|
|
the ensuing year.
|
|
|
|
A further knowledge of the ground in the north-eastern and
|
|
north-western angles of the United States has evinced that the
|
|
boundaries established by the treaty of Paris, between the British
|
|
territories and ours in those parts, were too imperfectly described
|
|
to be susceptible of execution. It has therefore been thought worthy
|
|
of attention, for preserving and cherishing the harmony and useful
|
|
intercourse subsisting between the two nations, to remove by timely
|
|
arrangements what unfavorable incidents might otherwise render a
|
|
ground of future misunderstanding. A convention has therefore been
|
|
entered into, which provides for a practicable demarkation of those
|
|
limits to the satisfaction of both parties.
|
|
|
|
An account of the receipts and expenditures of the year ending
|
|
30th September last, with the estimates for the service of the
|
|
ensuing year, will be laid before you by the secretary of the
|
|
treasury so soon as the receipts of the last quarter shall be
|
|
returned from the more distant States. It is already ascertained
|
|
that the amount paid into the treasury for that year has been between
|
|
eleven and twelve millions of dollars, and that the revenue accrued
|
|
during the same term exceeds the sum counted on as sufficient for our
|
|
current expenses, and to extinguish the public debt within the period
|
|
heretofore proposed.
|
|
|
|
The amount of debt paid for the same year is about three
|
|
millions one hundred thousand dollars, exclusive of interest, and
|
|
making, with the payment of the preceding year, a discharge of more
|
|
than eight millions and a half of dollars of the principal of that
|
|
debt, besides the accruing interest; and there remain in the treasury
|
|
nearly six millions of dollars. Of these, eight hundred and eighty
|
|
thousand have been reserved for payment of the first instalment due
|
|
under the British convention of January 8th, 1802, and two millions
|
|
are what have been before mentioned as placed by Congress under the
|
|
power and accountability of the president, toward the price of New
|
|
Orleans and other territories acquired, which, remaining untouched,
|
|
are still applicable to that object, and go in diminution of the sum
|
|
to be funded for it.
|
|
|
|
Should the acquisition of Louisiana be constitutionally
|
|
confirmed and carried into effect, a sum of nearly thirteen millions
|
|
of dollars will then be added to our public debt, most of which is
|
|
payable after fifteen years; before which term the present existing
|
|
debts will all be discharged by the established operation of the
|
|
sinking fund. When we contemplate the ordinary annual augmentation
|
|
of imposts from increasing population and wealth, the augmentation of
|
|
the same revenue by its extension to the new acquisition, and the
|
|
economies which may still be introduced into our public expenditures,
|
|
I cannot but hope that Congress in reviewing their resources will
|
|
find means to meet the intermediate interests of this additional debt
|
|
without recurring to new taxes, and applying to this object only the
|
|
ordinary progression of our revenue. Its extraordinary increase in
|
|
times of foreign war will be the proper and sufficient fund for any
|
|
measures of safety or precaution which that state of things may
|
|
render necessary in our neutral position.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Remittances for the instalments of our foreign debt having been
|
|
found impracticable without loss, it has not been thought expedient
|
|
to use the power given by a former act of Congress of continuing them
|
|
by reloans, and of redeeming instead thereof equal sums of domestic
|
|
debt, although no difficulty was found in obtaining that
|
|
accommodation.
|
|
|
|
The sum of fifty thousand dollars appropriated by Congress for
|
|
providing gun-boats, remains unexpended. The favorable and peaceful
|
|
turn of affairs on the Mississippi rendered an immediate execution of
|
|
that law unnecessary, and time was desirable in order that the
|
|
institution of that branch of our force might begin on models the
|
|
most approved by experience. The same issue of events dispensed with
|
|
a resort to the appropriation of a million and a half of dollars
|
|
contemplated for purposes which were effected by happier means.
|
|
|
|
We have seen with sincere concern the flames of war lighted up
|
|
again in Europe, and nations with which we have the most friendly and
|
|
useful relations engaged in mutual destruction. While we regret the
|
|
miseries in which we see others involved let us bow with gratitude to
|
|
that kind Providence which, inspiring with wisdom and moderation our
|
|
late legislative councils while placed under the urgency of the
|
|
greatest wrongs, guarded us from hastily entering into the sanguinary
|
|
contest, and left us only to look on and to pity its ravages. These
|
|
will be heaviest on those immediately engaged. Yet the nations
|
|
pursuing peace will not be exempt from all evil. In the course of
|
|
this conflict, let it be our endeavor, as it is our interest and
|
|
desire, to cultivate the friendship of the belligerent nations by
|
|
every act of justice and of incessant kindness; to receive their
|
|
armed vessels with hospitality from the distresses of the sea, but to
|
|
administer the means of annoyance to none; to establish in our
|
|
harbors such a police as may maintain law and order; to restrain our
|
|
citizens from embarking individually in a war in which their country
|
|
takes no part; to punish severely those persons, citizen or alien,
|
|
who shall usurp the cover of our flag for vessels not entitled to it,
|
|
infecting thereby with suspicion those of real Americans, and
|
|
committing us into controversies for the redress of wrongs not our
|
|
own; to exact from every nation the observance, toward our vessels
|
|
and citizens, of those principles and practices which all civilized
|
|
people acknowledge; to merit the character of a just nation, and
|
|
maintain that of an independent one, preferring every consequence to
|
|
insult and habitual wrong. Congress will consider whether the
|
|
existing laws enable us efficaciously to maintain this course with
|
|
our citizens in all places, and with others while within the limits
|
|
of our jurisdiction, and will give them the new modifications
|
|
necessary for these objects. Some contraventions of right have
|
|
already taken place, both within our jurisdictional limits and on the
|
|
high seas. The friendly disposition of the governments from whose
|
|
agents they have proceeded, as well as their wisdom and regard for
|
|
justice, leave us in reasonable expectation that they will be
|
|
rectified and prevented in future; and that no act will be
|
|
countenanced by them which threatens to disturb our friendly
|
|
intercourse. Separated by a wide ocean from the nations of Europe,
|
|
and from the political interests which entangle them together, with
|
|
productions and wants which render our commerce and friendship useful
|
|
to them and theirs to us, it cannot be the interest of any to assail
|
|
us, nor ours to disturb them. We should be most unwise, indeed, were
|
|
we to cast away the singular blessings of the position in which
|
|
nature has placed us, the opportunity she has endowed us with of
|
|
pursuing, at a distance from foreign contentions, the paths of
|
|
industry, peace, and happiness; of cultivating general friendship,
|
|
and of bringing collisions of interest to the umpirage of reason
|
|
rather than of force. How desirable then must it be, in a government
|
|
like ours, to see its citizens adopt individually the views, the
|
|
interests, and the conduct which their country should pursue,
|
|
divesting themselves of those passions and partialities which tend to
|
|
lessen useful friendships, and to embarrass and embroil us in the
|
|
calamitous scenes of Europe. Confident, fellow citizens, that you
|
|
will duly estimate the importance of neutral dispositions toward the
|
|
observance of neutral conduct, that you will be sensible how much it
|
|
is our duty to look on the bloody arena spread before us with
|
|
commiseration indeed, but with no other wish than to see it closed, I
|
|
am persuaded you will cordially cherish these dispositions in all
|
|
discussions among yourselves, and in all communications with your
|
|
constituents; and I anticipate with satisfaction the measures of
|
|
wisdom which the great interests now committed to _you_ will give you
|
|
an opportunity of providing, and _myself_ that of approving and
|
|
carrying into execution with the fidelity I owe to my country.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Second Inaugural Address_
|
|
|
|
March 4, 1805
|
|
|
|
Proceeding, fellow citizens, to that qualification which the
|
|
constitution requires, before my entrance on the charge again
|
|
conferred upon me, it is my duty to express the deep sense I
|
|
entertain of this new proof of confidence from my fellow citizens at
|
|
large, and the zeal with which it inspires me, so to conduct myself
|
|
as may best satisfy their just expectations.
|
|
|
|
On taking this station on a former occasion, I declared the
|
|
principles on which I believed it my duty to administer the affairs
|
|
of our commonwealth. My conscience tells me that I have, on every
|
|
occasion, acted up to that declaration, according to its obvious
|
|
import, and to the understanding of every candid mind.
|
|
|
|
In the transaction of your foreign affairs, we have endeavored
|
|
to cultivate the friendship of all nations, and especially of those
|
|
with which we have the most important relations. We have done them
|
|
justice on all occasions, favored where favor was lawful, and
|
|
cherished mutual interests and intercourse on fair and equal terms.
|
|
We are firmly convinced, and we act on that conviction, that with
|
|
nations, as with individuals, our interests soundly calculated, will
|
|
ever be found inseparable from our moral duties; and history bears
|
|
witness to the fact, that a just nation is taken on its word, when
|
|
recourse is had to armaments and wars to bridle others.
|
|
|
|
At home, fellow citizens, you best know whether we have done
|
|
well or ill. The suppression of unnecessary offices, of useless
|
|
establishments and expenses, enabled us to discontinue our internal
|
|
taxes. These covering our land with officers, and opening our doors
|
|
to their intrusions, had already begun that process of domiciliary
|
|
vexation which, once entered, is scarcely to be restrained from
|
|
reaching successively every article of produce and property. If
|
|
among these taxes some minor ones fell which had not been
|
|
inconvenient, it was because their amount would not have paid the
|
|
officers who collected them, and because, if they had any merit, the
|
|
state authorities might adopt them, instead of others less approved.
|
|
|
|
The remaining revenue on the consumption of foreign articles,
|
|
is paid cheerfully by those who can afford to add foreign luxuries to
|
|
domestic comforts, being collected on our seaboards and frontiers
|
|
only, and incorporated with the transactions of our mercantile
|
|
citizens, it may be the pleasure and pride of an American to ask,
|
|
what farmer, what mechanic, what laborer, ever sees a tax-gatherer of
|
|
the United States? These contributions enable us to support the
|
|
current expenses of the government, to fulfil contracts with foreign
|
|
nations, to extinguish the native right of soil within our limits, to
|
|
extend those limits, and to apply such a surplus to our public debts,
|
|
as places at a short day their final redemption, and that redemption
|
|
once effected, the revenue thereby liberated may, by a just
|
|
repartition among the states, and a corresponding amendment of the
|
|
constitution, be applied, _in time of peace_, to rivers, canals,
|
|
roads, arts, manufactures, education, and other great objects within
|
|
each state. _In time of war_, if injustice, by ourselves or others,
|
|
must sometimes produce war, increased as the same revenue will be
|
|
increased by population and consumption, and aided by other resources
|
|
reserved for that crisis, it may meet within the year all the
|
|
expenses of the year, without encroaching on the rights of future
|
|
generations, by burdening them with the debts of the past. War will
|
|
then be but a suspension of useful works, and a return to a state of
|
|
peace, a return to the progress of improvement.
|
|
|
|
I have said, fellow citizens, that the income reserved had
|
|
enabled us to extend our limits; but that extension may possibly pay
|
|
for itself before we are called on, and in the meantime, may keep
|
|
down the accruing interest; in all events, it will repay the advances
|
|
we have made. I know that the acquisition of Louisiana has been
|
|
disapproved by some, from a candid apprehension that the enlargement
|
|
of our territory would endanger its union. But who can limit the
|
|
extent to which the federative principle may operate effectively?
|
|
The larger our association, the less will it be shaken by local
|
|
passions; and in any view, is it not better that the opposite bank of
|
|
the Mississippi should be settled by our own brethren and children,
|
|
than by strangers of another family? With which shall we be most
|
|
likely to live in harmony and friendly intercourse?
|
|
|
|
In matters of religion, I have considered that its free
|
|
exercise is placed by the constitution independent of the powers of
|
|
the general government. I have therefore undertaken, on no occasion,
|
|
to prescribe the religious exercises suited to it; but have left
|
|
them, as the constitution found them, under the direction and
|
|
discipline of state or church authorities acknowledged by the several
|
|
religious societies.
|
|
|
|
The aboriginal inhabitants of these countries I have regarded
|
|
with the commiseration their history inspires. Endowed with the
|
|
faculties and the rights of men, breathing an ardent love of liberty
|
|
and independence, and occupying a country which left them no desire
|
|
but to be undisturbed, the stream of overflowing population from
|
|
other regions directed itself on these shores; without power to
|
|
divert, or habits to contend against, they have been overwhelmed by
|
|
the current, or driven before it; now reduced within limits too
|
|
narrow for the hunter's state, humanity enjoins us to teach them
|
|
agriculture and the domestic arts; to encourage them to that industry
|
|
which alone can enable them to maintain their place in existence, and
|
|
to prepare them in time for that state of society, which to bodily
|
|
comforts adds the improvement of the mind and morals. We have
|
|
therefore liberally furnished them with the implements of husbandry
|
|
and household use; we have placed among them instructors in the arts
|
|
of first necessity; and they are covered with the aegis of the law
|
|
against aggressors from among ourselves.
|
|
|
|
But the endeavors to enlighten them on the fate which awaits
|
|
their present course of life, to induce them to exercise their
|
|
reason, follow its dictates, and change their pursuits with the
|
|
change of circumstances, have powerful obstacles to encounter; they
|
|
are combated by the habits of their bodies, prejudice of their minds,
|
|
ignorance, pride, and the influence of interested and crafty
|
|
individuals among them, who feel themselves something in the present
|
|
order of things, and fear to become nothing in any other. These
|
|
persons inculcate a sanctimonious reverence for the customs of their
|
|
ancestors; that whatsoever they did, must be done through all time;
|
|
that reason is a false guide, and to advance under its counsel, in
|
|
their physical, moral, or political condition, is perilous
|
|
innovation; that their duty is to remain as their Creator made them,
|
|
ignorance being safety, and knowledge full of danger; in short, my
|
|
friends, among them is seen the action and counteraction of good
|
|
sense and bigotry; they, too, have their anti-philosophers, who find
|
|
an interest in keeping things in their present state, who dread
|
|
reformation, and exert all their faculties to maintain the ascendency
|
|
of habit over the duty of improving our reason, and obeying its
|
|
mandates.
|
|
|
|
In giving these outlines, I do not mean, fellow citizens, to
|
|
arrogate to myself the merit of the measures; that is due, in the
|
|
first place, to the reflecting character of our citizens at large,
|
|
who, by the weight of public opinion, influence and strengthen the
|
|
public measures; it is due to the sound discretion with which they
|
|
select from among themselves those to whom they confide the
|
|
legislative duties; it is due to the zeal and wisdom of the
|
|
characters thus selected, who lay the foundations of public happiness
|
|
in wholesome laws, the execution of which alone remains for others;
|
|
and it is due to the able and faithful auxiliaries, whose patriotism
|
|
has associated with me in the executive functions.
|
|
|
|
During this course of administration, and in order to disturb
|
|
it, the artillery of the press has been levelled against us, charged
|
|
with whatsoever its licentiousness could devise or dare. These
|
|
abuses of an institution so important to freedom and science, are
|
|
deeply to be regretted, inasmuch as they tend to lessen its
|
|
usefulness, and to sap its safety; they might, indeed, have been
|
|
corrected by the wholesome punishments reserved and provided by the
|
|
laws of the several States against falsehood and defamation; but
|
|
public duties more urgent press on the time of public servants, and
|
|
the offenders have therefore been left to find their punishment in
|
|
the public indignation.
|
|
|
|
Nor was it uninteresting to the world, that an experiment
|
|
should be fairly and fully made, whether freedom of discussion,
|
|
unaided by power, is not sufficient for the propagation and
|
|
protection of truth -- whether a government, conducting itself in the
|
|
true spirit of its constitution, with zeal and purity, and doing no
|
|
act which it would be unwilling the whole world should witness, can
|
|
be written down by falsehood and defamation. The experiment has been
|
|
tried; you have witnessed the scene; our fellow citizens have looked
|
|
on, cool and collected; they saw the latent source from which these
|
|
outrages proceeded; they gathered around their public functionaries,
|
|
and when the constitution called them to the decision by suffrage,
|
|
they pronounced their verdict, honorable to those who had served
|
|
them, and consolatory to the friend of man, who believes he may be
|
|
intrusted with his own affairs.
|
|
|
|
No inference is here intended, that the laws, provided by the
|
|
State against false and defamatory publications, should not be
|
|
enforced; he who has time, renders a service to public morals and
|
|
public tranquillity, in reforming these abuses by the salutary
|
|
coercions of the law; but the experiment is noted, to prove that,
|
|
since truth and reason have maintained their ground against false
|
|
opinions in league with false facts, the press, confined to truth,
|
|
needs no other legal restraint; the public judgment will correct
|
|
false reasonings and opinions, on a full hearing of all parties; and
|
|
no other definite line can be drawn between the inestimable liberty
|
|
of the press and its demoralizing licentiousness. If there be still
|
|
improprieties which this rule would not restrain, its supplement must
|
|
be sought in the censorship of public opinion.
|
|
|
|
Contemplating the union of sentiment now manifested so
|
|
generally, as auguring harmony and happiness to our future course, I
|
|
offer to our country sincere congratulations. With those, too, not
|
|
yet rallied to the same point, the disposition to do so is gaining
|
|
strength; facts are piercing through the veil drawn over them; and
|
|
our doubting brethren will at length see, that the mass of their
|
|
fellow citizens, with whom they cannot yet resolve to act, as to
|
|
principles and measures, think as they think, and desire what they
|
|
desire; that our wish, as well as theirs, is, that the public efforts
|
|
may be directed honestly to the public good, that peace be
|
|
cultivated, civil and religious liberty unassailed, law and order
|
|
preserved; equality of rights maintained, and that state of property,
|
|
equal or unequal, which results to every man from his own industry,
|
|
or that of his fathers. When satisfied of these views, it is not in
|
|
human nature that they should not approve and support them; in the
|
|
meantime, let us cherish them with patient affection; let us do them
|
|
justice, and more than justice, in all competitions of interest; and
|
|
we need not doubt that truth, reason, and their own interests, will
|
|
at length prevail, will gather them into the fold of their country,
|
|
and will complete their entire union of opinion, which gives to a
|
|
nation the blessing of harmony, and the benefit of all its strength.
|
|
|
|
I shall now enter on the duties to which my fellow citizens
|
|
have again called me, and shall proceed in the spirit of those
|
|
principles which they have approved. I fear not that any motives of
|
|
interest may lead me astray; I am sensible of no passion which could
|
|
seduce me knowingly from the path of justice; but the weakness of
|
|
human nature, and the limits of my own understanding, will produce
|
|
errors of judgment sometimes injurious to your interests. I shall
|
|
need, therefore, all the indulgence I have heretofore experienced --
|
|
the want of it will certainly not lessen with increasing years. I
|
|
shall need, too, the favor of that Being in whose hands we are, who
|
|
led our forefathers, as Israel of old, from their native land, and
|
|
planted them in a country flowing with all the necessaries and
|
|
comforts of life; who has covered our infancy with his providence,
|
|
and our riper years with his wisdom and power; and to whose goodness
|
|
I ask you to join with me in supplications, that he will so enlighten
|
|
the minds of your servants, guide their councils, and prosper their
|
|
measures, that whatsoever they do, shall result in your good, and
|
|
shall secure to you the peace, friendship, and approbation of all
|
|
nations.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Sixth Annual Message_
|
|
|
|
December 2, 1806
|
|
|
|
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES
|
|
IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED:
|
|
It would have given me, fellow citizens, great satisfaction to
|
|
announce in the moment of your meeting that the difficulties in our
|
|
foreign relations, existing at the time of your last separation, had
|
|
been amicably and justly terminated. I lost no time in taking those
|
|
measures which were most likely to bring them to such a termination,
|
|
by special missions charged with such powers and instructions as in
|
|
the event of failure could leave no imputation on either our
|
|
moderation or forbearance. The delays which have since taken place
|
|
in our negotiations with the British government appears to have
|
|
proceeded from causes which do not forbid the expectation that during
|
|
the course of the session I may be enabled to lay before you their
|
|
final issue. What will be that of the negotiations for settling our
|
|
differences with Spain, nothing which had taken place at the date of
|
|
the last despatches enables us to pronounce. On the western side of
|
|
the Mississippi she advanced in considerable force, and took post at
|
|
the settlement of Bayou Pierre, on the Red river. This village was
|
|
originally settled by France, was held by her as long as she held
|
|
Louisiana, and was delivered to Spain only as a part of Louisiana.
|
|
Being small, insulated, and distant, it was not observed, at the
|
|
moment of redelivery to France and the United States, that she
|
|
continued a guard of half a dozen men which had been stationed there.
|
|
A proposition, however, having been lately made by our
|
|
commander-in-chief, to assume the Sabine river as a temporary line of
|
|
separation between the troops of the two nations until the issue of
|
|
our negotiations shall be known; this has been referred by the
|
|
Spanish commandant to his superior, and in the meantime, he has
|
|
withdrawn his force to the western side of the Sabine river. The
|
|
correspondence on this subject, now communicated, will exhibit more
|
|
particularly the present state of things in that quarter.
|
|
|
|
The nature of that country requires indispensably that an
|
|
unusual proportion of the force employed there should be cavalry or
|
|
mounted infantry. In order, therefore, that the commanding officer
|
|
might be enabled to act with effect, I had authorized him to call on
|
|
the governors of Orleans and Mississippi for a corps of five hundred
|
|
volunteer cavalry. The temporary arrangement he has proposed may
|
|
perhaps render this unnecessary. But I inform you with great
|
|
pleasure of the promptitude with which the inhabitants of those
|
|
territories have tendered their services in defence of their country.
|
|
It has done honor to themselves, entitled them to the confidence of
|
|
their fellow-citizens in every part of the Union, and must strengthen
|
|
the general determination to protect them efficaciously under all
|
|
circumstances which may occur.
|
|
|
|
Having received information that in another part of the United
|
|
States a great number of private individuals were combining together,
|
|
arming and organizing themselves contrary to law, to carry on
|
|
military expeditions against the territories of Spain, I thought it
|
|
necessary, by proclamations as well as by special orders, to take
|
|
measures for preventing and suppressing this enterprise, for seizing
|
|
the vessels, arms, and other means provided for it, and for arresting
|
|
and bringing to justice its authors and abettors. It was due to that
|
|
good faith which ought ever to be the rule of action in public as
|
|
well as in private transactions; it was due to good order and regular
|
|
government, that while the public force was acting strictly on the
|
|
defensive and merely to protect our citizens from aggression, the
|
|
criminal attempts of private individuals to decide for their country
|
|
the question of peace or war, by commencing active and unauthorized
|
|
hostilities, should be promptly and efficaciously suppressed.
|
|
|
|
Whether it will be necessary to enlarge our regular force will
|
|
depend on the result of our negotiation with Spain; but as it is
|
|
uncertain when that result will be known, the provisional measures
|
|
requisite for that, and to meet any pressure intervening in that
|
|
quarter, will be a subject for your early consideration.
|
|
|
|
The possession of both banks of the Mississippi reducing to a
|
|
single point the defence of that river, its waters, and the country
|
|
adjacent, it becomes highly necessary to provide for that point a
|
|
more adequate security. Some position above its mouth, commanding
|
|
the passage of the river, should be rendered sufficiently strong to
|
|
cover the armed vessels which may be stationed there for defence, and
|
|
in conjunction with them to present an insuperable obstacle to any
|
|
force attempting to pass. The approaches to the city of New Orleans,
|
|
from the eastern quarter also, will require to be examined, and more
|
|
effectually guarded. For the internal support of the country, the
|
|
encouragement of a strong settlement on the western side of the
|
|
Mississippi, within reach of New Orleans, will be worthy the
|
|
consideration of the legislature.
|
|
|
|
The gun-boats authorized by an act of the last session are so
|
|
advanced that they will be ready for service in the ensuing spring.
|
|
Circumstances permitted us to allow the time necessary for their more
|
|
solid construction. As a much larger number will still be wanting to
|
|
place our seaport towns and waters in that state of defence to which
|
|
we are competent and they entitled, a similar appropriation for a
|
|
further provision for them is recommended for the ensuing year.
|
|
|
|
A further appropriation will also be necessary for repairing
|
|
fortifications already established, and the erection of such works as
|
|
may have real effect in obstructing the approach of an enemy to our
|
|
seaport towns, or their remaining before them.
|
|
|
|
In a country whose constitution is derived from the will of the
|
|
people, directly expressed by their free suffrages; where the
|
|
principal executive functionaries, and those of the legislature, are
|
|
renewed by them at short periods; where under the characters of
|
|
jurors, they exercise in person the greatest portion of the judiciary
|
|
powers; where the laws are consequently so formed and administered as
|
|
to bear with equal weight and favor on all, restraining no man in the
|
|
pursuits of honest industry, and securing to every one the property
|
|
which that acquires, it would not be supposed that any safeguards
|
|
could be needed against insurrection or enterprise on the public
|
|
peace or authority. The laws, however, aware that these should not
|
|
be trusted to moral restraints only, have wisely provided punishments
|
|
for these crimes when committed. But would it not be salutary to
|
|
give also the means of preventing their commission? Where an
|
|
enterprise is meditated by private individuals against a foreign
|
|
nation in amity with the United States, powers of prevention to a
|
|
certain extent are given by the laws; would they not be as reasonable
|
|
and useful were the enterprise preparing against the United States?
|
|
While adverting to this branch of the law, it is proper to observe,
|
|
that in enterprises meditated against foreign nations, the ordinary
|
|
process of binding to the observance of the peace and good behavior,
|
|
could it be extended to acts to be done out of the jurisdiction of
|
|
the United States, would be effectual in some cases where the
|
|
offender is able to keep out of sight every indication of his purpose
|
|
which could draw on him the exercise of the powers now given by law.
|
|
|
|
The states on the coast of Barbary seem generally disposed at
|
|
present to respect our peace and friendship; with Tunis alone some
|
|
uncertainty remains. Persuaded that it is our interest to maintain
|
|
our peace with them on equal terms, or not at all, I propose to send
|
|
in due time a reinforcement into the Mediterranean, unless previous
|
|
information shall show it to be unnecessary.
|
|
|
|
We continue to receive proofs of the growing attachment of our
|
|
Indian neighbors, and of their disposition to place all their
|
|
interests under the patronage of the United States. These
|
|
dispositions are inspired by their confidence in our justice, and in
|
|
the sincere concern we feel for their welfare; and as long as we
|
|
discharge these high and honorable functions with the integrity and
|
|
good faith which alone can entitle us to their continuance, we may
|
|
expect to reap the just reward in their peace and friendship.
|
|
|
|
The expedition of Messrs. Lewis and Clarke, for exploring the
|
|
river Missouri, and the best communication from that to the Pacific
|
|
ocean, has had all the success which could have been expected. They
|
|
have traced the Missouri nearly to its source, descended the Columbia
|
|
to the Pacific ocean, ascertained with accuracy the geography of that
|
|
interesting communication across our continent, learned the character
|
|
of the country, of its commerce, and inhabitants; and it is but
|
|
justice to say that Messrs. Lewis and Clarke, and their brave
|
|
companions, have by this arduous service deserved well of their
|
|
country.
|
|
|
|
The attempt to explore the Red river, under the direction of
|
|
Mr. Freeman, though conducted with a zeal and prudence meriting
|
|
entire approbation, has not been equally successful. After
|
|
proceeding up it about six hundred miles, nearly as far as the French
|
|
settlements had extended while the country was in their possession,
|
|
our geographers were obliged to return without completing their work.
|
|
|
|
Very useful additions have also been made to our knowledge of
|
|
the Mississippi by Lieutenant Pike, who has ascended to its source,
|
|
and whose journal and map, giving the details of the journey, will
|
|
shortly be ready for communication to both houses of Congress. Those
|
|
of Messrs. Lewis and Clarke, and Freeman, will require further time
|
|
to be digested and prepared. These important surveys, in addition to
|
|
those before possessed, furnish materials for commencing an accurate
|
|
map of the Mississippi, and its western waters. Some principal
|
|
rivers, however, remain still to be explored, toward which the
|
|
authorization of Congress, by moderate appropriations, will be
|
|
requisite.
|
|
|
|
I congratulate you, fellow-citizens, on the approach of the
|
|
period at which you may interpose your authority constitutionally, to
|
|
withdraw the citizens of the United States from all further
|
|
participation in those violations of human rights which have been so
|
|
long continued on the unoffending inhabitants of Africa, and which
|
|
the morality, the reputation, and the best interests of our country,
|
|
have long been eager to proscribe. Although no law you may pass can
|
|
take prohibitory effect till the first day of the year one thousand
|
|
eight hundred and eight, yet the intervening period is not too long
|
|
to prevent, by timely notice, expeditions which cannot be completed
|
|
before that day.
|
|
|
|
The receipts at the treasury during the year ending on the 30th
|
|
of September last, have amounted to near fifteen millions of dollars,
|
|
which have enabled us, after meeting the current demands, to pay two
|
|
millions seven hundred thousand dollars of the American claims, in
|
|
part of the price of Louisiana; to pay of the funded debt upward of
|
|
three millions of principal, and nearly four of interest; and in
|
|
addition, to reimburse, in the course of the present month, near two
|
|
millions of five and a half per cent. stock. These payments and
|
|
reimbursements of the funded debt, with those which have been made in
|
|
the four years and a half preceding, will, at the close of the
|
|
present year, have extinguished upwards of twenty-three millions of
|
|
principal.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The duties composing the Mediterranean fund will cease by law
|
|
at the end of the present season. Considering, however, that they
|
|
are levied chiefly on luxuries, and that we have an impost on salt, a
|
|
necessary of life, the free use of which other-wise is so important,
|
|
I recommend to your consideration the suppression of the duties on
|
|
salt, and the continuation of the Mediterranean fund, instead
|
|
thereof, for a short time, after which that also will become
|
|
unnecessary for any purpose now within contemplation.
|
|
|
|
When both of these branches of revenue shall in this way be
|
|
relinquished, there will still ere long be an accumulation of moneys
|
|
in the treasury beyond the instalments of public debt which we are
|
|
permitted by contract to pay. They cannot, then, without a
|
|
modification assented to by the public creditors, be applied to the
|
|
extinguishment of this debt, and the complete liberation of our
|
|
revenues -- the most desirable of all objects; nor, if our peace
|
|
continues, will they be wanting for any other existing purpose. The
|
|
question, therefore, now comes forward, -- to what other objects
|
|
shall these surpluses be appropriated, and the whole surplus of
|
|
impost, after the entire discharge of the public debt, and during
|
|
those intervals when the purposes of war shall not call for them?
|
|
Shall we suppress the impost and give that advantage to foreign over
|
|
domestic manufactures? On a few articles of more general and
|
|
necessary use, the suppression in due season will doubtless be right,
|
|
but the great mass of the articles on which impost is paid is foreign
|
|
luxuries, purchased by those only who are rich enough to afford
|
|
themselves the use of them. Their patriotism would certainly prefer
|
|
its continuance and application to the great purposes of the public
|
|
education, roads, rivers, canals, and such other objects of public
|
|
improvement as it may be thought proper to add to the constitutional
|
|
enumeration of federal powers. By these operations new channels of
|
|
communication will be opened between the States; the lines of
|
|
separation will disappear, their interests will be identified, and
|
|
their union cemented by new and indissoluble ties. Education is here
|
|
placed among the articles of public care, not that it would be
|
|
proposed to take its ordinary branches out of the hands of private
|
|
enterprise, which manages so much better all the concerns to which it
|
|
is equal; but a public institution can alone supply those sciences
|
|
which, though rarely called for, are yet necessary to complete the
|
|
circle, all the parts of which contribute to the improvement of the
|
|
country, and some of them to its preservation. The subject is now
|
|
proposed for the consideration of Congress, because, if approved by
|
|
the time the State legislatures shall have deliberated on this
|
|
extension of the federal trusts, and the laws shall be passed, and
|
|
other arrangements made for their execution, the necessary funds will
|
|
be on hand and without employment. I suppose an amendment to the
|
|
constitution, by consent of the States, necessary, because the
|
|
objects now recommended are not among those enumerated in the
|
|
constitution, and to which it permits the public moneys to be
|
|
applied.
|
|
|
|
The present consideration of a national establishment for
|
|
education, particularly, is rendered proper by this circumstance
|
|
also, that if Congress, approving the proposition, shall yet think it
|
|
more eligible to found it on a donation of lands, they have it now in
|
|
their power to endow it with those which will be among the earliest
|
|
to produce the necessary income. This foundation would have the
|
|
advantage of being independent on war, which may suspend other
|
|
improvements by requiring for its own purposes the resources destined
|
|
for them.
|
|
|
|
This, fellow citizens, is the state of the public interest at
|
|
the present moment, and according to the information now possessed.
|
|
But such is the situation of the nations of Europe, and such too the
|
|
predicament in which we stand with some of them, that we cannot rely
|
|
with certainty on the present aspect of our affairs that may change
|
|
from moment to moment, during the course of your session or after you
|
|
shall have separated. Our duty is, therefore, to act upon things as
|
|
they are, and to make a reasonable provision for whatever they may
|
|
be. Were armies to be raised whenever a speck of war is visible in
|
|
our horizon, we never should have been without them. Our resources
|
|
would have been exhausted on dangers which have never happened,
|
|
instead of being reserved for what is really to take place. A
|
|
steady, perhaps a quickened pace in preparations for the defence of
|
|
our seaport towns and waters; an early settlement of the most exposed
|
|
and vulnerable parts of our country; a militia so organized that its
|
|
effective portions can be called to any point in the Union, or
|
|
volunteers instead of them to serve a sufficient time, are means
|
|
which may always be ready yet never preying on our resources until
|
|
actually called into use. They will maintain the public interests
|
|
while a more permanent force shall be in course of preparation. But
|
|
much will depend on the promptitude with which these means can be
|
|
brought into activity. If war be forced upon us in spite of our long
|
|
and vain appeals to the justice of nations, rapid and vigorous
|
|
movements in its outset will go far toward securing us in its course
|
|
and issue, and toward throwing its burdens on those who render
|
|
necessary the resort from reason to force.
|
|
|
|
The result of our negotiations, or such incidents in their
|
|
course as may enable us to infer their probable issue; such further
|
|
movements also on our western frontiers as may show whether war is to
|
|
be pressed there while negotiation is protracted elsewhere, shall be
|
|
communicated to you from time to time as they become known to me,
|
|
with whatever other information I possess or may receive, which may
|
|
aid your deliberations on the great national interests committed to
|
|
your charge.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Special Message on the Burr Conspiracy_
|
|
|
|
January 22, 1807
|
|
|
|
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED
|
|
STATES:
|
|
Agreeably to the request of the House of Representatives,
|
|
communicated in their resolution of the sixteenth instant, I proceed
|
|
to state under the reserve therein expressed, information received
|
|
touching an illegal combination of private individuals against the
|
|
peace and safety of the Union, and a military expedition planned by
|
|
them against the territories of a power in amity with the United
|
|
States, with the measures I have pursued for suppressing the same.
|
|
|
|
I had for some time been in the constant expectation of
|
|
receiving such further information as would have enabled me to lay
|
|
before the legislature the termination as well as the beginning and
|
|
progress of this scene of depravity, so far it has been acted on the
|
|
Ohio and its waters. From this the state and safety of the lower
|
|
country might have been estimated on probable grounds, and the delay
|
|
was indulged the rather, because no circumstance had yet made it
|
|
necessary to call in the aid of the legislative functions.
|
|
Information now recently communicated has brought us nearly to the
|
|
period contemplated. The mass of what I have received, in the course
|
|
of these transactions, is voluminous, but little has been given under
|
|
the sanction of an oath, so as to constitute formal and legal
|
|
evidence. It is chiefly in the form of letters, often containing
|
|
such a mixture of rumors, conjectures, and suspicions, as render it
|
|
difficult to sift out the real facts, and unadvisable to hazard more
|
|
than general outlines, strengthened by concurrent information, or the
|
|
particular credibility of the relater. In this state of the
|
|
evidence, delivered sometimes too under the restriction of private
|
|
confidence, neither safety nor justice will permit the exposing
|
|
names, except that of the principal actor, whose guilt is placed
|
|
beyond question.
|
|
|
|
Some time in the latter part of September, I received
|
|
intimations that designs were in agitation in the western country,
|
|
unlawful and unfriendly to the peace of the Union; and that the prime
|
|
mover in these was Aaron Burr, heretofore distinguished by the favor
|
|
of his country. The grounds of these intimations being inconclusive,
|
|
the objects uncertain, and the fidelity of that country known to be
|
|
firm, the only measure taken was to urge the informants to use their
|
|
best endeavors to get further insight into the designs and
|
|
proceedings of the suspected persons, and to communicate them to me.
|
|
|
|
It was not until the latter part of October, that the objects
|
|
of the conspiracy began to be perceived, but still so blended and
|
|
involved in mystery that nothing distinct could be singled out for
|
|
pursuit. In this state of uncertainty as to the crime contemplated,
|
|
the acts done, and the legal course to be pursued, I thought it best
|
|
to send to the scene where these things were principally in
|
|
transaction, a person, in whose integrity, understanding, and
|
|
discretion, entire confidence could be reposed, with instructions to
|
|
investigate the plots going on, to enter into conference (for which
|
|
he had sufficient credentials) with the governors and all other
|
|
officers, civil and military, and with their aid to do on the spot
|
|
whatever should be necessary to discover the designs of the
|
|
conspirators, arrest their means, bring their persons to punishment,
|
|
and to call out the force of the country to suppress any unlawful
|
|
enterprise in which it should be found they were engaged. By this
|
|
time it was known that many boats were under preparation, stores of
|
|
provisions collecting, and an unusual number of suspicious characters
|
|
in motion on the Ohio and its waters. Besides despatching the
|
|
confidential agent to that quarter, orders were at the same time sent
|
|
to the governors of the Orleans and Mississippi territories, and to
|
|
the commanders of the land and naval forces there, to be on their
|
|
guard against surprise, and in constant readiness to resist any
|
|
enterprise which might be attempted on the vessels, posts, or other
|
|
objects under their care; and on the 8th of November, instructions
|
|
were forwarded to General Wilkinson to hasten an accommodation with
|
|
the Spanish commander on the Sabine, and as soon as that was
|
|
effected, to fall back with his principal force to the hither bank of
|
|
the Mississippi, for the defence of the intersecting points on that
|
|
river. By a letter received from that officer on the 25th of
|
|
November, but dated October 21st, we learn that a confidential agent
|
|
of Aaron Burr had been deputed to him, with communications partly
|
|
written in cipher and partly oral, explaining his designs,
|
|
exaggerating his resources, and making such offers of emolument and
|
|
command, to engage him and the army in his unlawful enterprise, as he
|
|
had flattered himself would be successful. The general, with the
|
|
honor of a soldier and fidelity of a good citizen, immediately
|
|
despatched a trusty officer to me with information of what had
|
|
passed, proceeding to establish such an understanding with the
|
|
Spanish commandant on the Sabine as permitted him to withdraw his
|
|
force across the Mississippi, and to enter on measures for opposing
|
|
the projected enterprise.
|
|
|
|
The general's letter, which came to hand on the 25th of
|
|
November, as has been mentioned, and some other information received
|
|
a few days earlier, when brought together, developed Burr's general
|
|
designs, different parts of which only had been revealed to different
|
|
informants. It appeared that he contemplated two distinct objects,
|
|
which might be carried on either jointly or separately, and either
|
|
the one or the other first, as circumstances should direct. One of
|
|
these was the severance of the Union of these States by the Alleghany
|
|
mountains; the other, an attack on Mexico. A third object was
|
|
provided, merely ostensible, to wit: the settlement of a pretended
|
|
purchase of a tract of country on the Washita, claimed by a Baron
|
|
Bastrop. This was to serve as the pretext for all his preparations,
|
|
an allurement for such followers as really wished to acquire
|
|
settlements in that country, and a cover under which to retreat in
|
|
the event of final discomfiture of both branches of his real design.
|
|
|
|
He found at once that the attachment of the western country to
|
|
the present Union was not to be shaken; that its dissolution could
|
|
not be effected with the consent of its inhabitants, and that his
|
|
resources were inadequate, as yet, to effect it by force. He took
|
|
his course then at once, determined to seize on New Orleans, plunder
|
|
the bank there, possess himself of the military and naval stores, and
|
|
proceed on his expedition to Mexico; and to this object all his means
|
|
and preparations were now directed. He collected from all the
|
|
quarters where himself or his agents possessed influence, all the
|
|
ardent, restless, desperate, and disaffected persons who were ready
|
|
for any enterprise analogous to their characters. He seduced good
|
|
and well-meaning citizens, some by assurances that he possessed the
|
|
confidence of the government and was acting under its secret
|
|
patronage, a pretence which obtained some credit from the state of
|
|
our differences with Spain; and others by offers of land in Bastrop's
|
|
claim on the Washita.
|
|
|
|
This was the state of my information of his proceedings about
|
|
the last of November, at which time, therefore, it was first possible
|
|
to take specific measures to meet them. The proclamation of November
|
|
27th, two days after the receipt of General Wilkinson's information,
|
|
was now issued. Orders were despatched to every intersecting point
|
|
on the Ohio and Mississippi, from Pittsburg to New Orleans, for the
|
|
employment of such force either of the regulars or of the militia,
|
|
and of such proceedings also of the civil authorities, as might
|
|
enable them to seize on all the boats and stores provided for the
|
|
enterprise, to arrest the persons concerned, and to suppress
|
|
effectually the further progress of the enterprise. A little before
|
|
the receipt of these orders in the State of Ohio, our confidential
|
|
agent, who had been diligently employed in investigating the
|
|
conspiracy, had acquired sufficient information to open himself to
|
|
the governor of that State, and apply for the immediate exertion of
|
|
the authority and power of the State to crush the combination.
|
|
Governor Tiffin and the legislature, with a promptitude, an energy,
|
|
and patriotic zeal, which entitle them to a distinguished place in
|
|
the affection of their sister States, effected the seizure of all the
|
|
boats, provisions, and other preparations within their reach, and
|
|
thus gave a first blow, materially disabling the enterprise in its
|
|
outset.
|
|
|
|
In Kentucky, a premature attempt to bring Burr to justice,
|
|
without sufficient evidence for his conviction, had produced a
|
|
popular impression in his favor, and a general disbelief of his
|
|
guilt. This gave him an unfortunate opportunity of hastening his
|
|
equipments. The arrival of the proclamation and orders, and the
|
|
application and information of our confidential agent, at length
|
|
awakened the authorities of that State to the truth, and then
|
|
produced the same promptitude and energy of which the neighboring
|
|
State had set the example. Under an act of their legislature of
|
|
December 23d, militia was instantly ordered to different important
|
|
points, and measures taken for doing whatever could yet be done.
|
|
Some boats (accounts vary from five to double or treble that number)
|
|
and persons (differently estimated from one to three hundred) had in
|
|
the meantime passed the falls of the Ohio, to rendezvous at the mouth
|
|
of the Cumberland, with others expected down that river.
|
|
|
|
Not apprized, till very late, that any boats were building on
|
|
Cumberland, the effect of the proclamation had been trusted to for
|
|
some time in the State of Tennessee; but on the 19th of December,
|
|
similar communications and instructions with those of the neighboring
|
|
States were despatched by express to the governor, and a general
|
|
officer of the western division of the State, and on the 23d of
|
|
December our confidential agent left Frankfort for Nashville, to put
|
|
into activity the means of that State also. But by information
|
|
received yesterday I learn that on the 22d of December, Mr. Burr
|
|
descended the Cumberland with two boats merely of accommodation,
|
|
carrying with him from that State no quota toward his unlawful
|
|
enterprise. Whether after the arrival of the proclamation, of the
|
|
orders, or of our agent, any exertion which could be made by that
|
|
State, or the orders of the governor of Kentucky for calling out the
|
|
militia at the mouth of Cumberland, would be in time to arrest these
|
|
boats, and those from the falls of the Ohio, is still doubtful.
|
|
|
|
On the whole, the fugitives from Ohio, with their associates
|
|
from Cumberland, or any other place in that quarter, cannot threaten
|
|
serious danger to the city of New Orleans.
|
|
|
|
By the same express of December nineteenth, orders were sent to
|
|
the governors of New Orleans and Mississippi, supplementary to those
|
|
which had been given on the twenty-fifth of November, to hold the
|
|
militia of their territories in readiness to co-operate for their
|
|
defence, with the regular troops and armed vessels then under command
|
|
of General Wilkinson. Great alarm, indeed, was excited at New
|
|
Orleans by the exaggerated accounts of Mr. Burr, disseminated through
|
|
his emissaries, of the armies and navies he was to assemble there.
|
|
General Wilkinson had arrived there himself on the 24th of November
|
|
and had immediately put into activity the resources of the place for
|
|
the purpose of its defence; and on the tenth of December he was
|
|
joined by his troops from the Sabine. Great zeal was shown by the
|
|
inhabitants generally, the merchants of the place readily agreeing to
|
|
the most laudable exertions and sacrifices for manning the armed
|
|
vessels with their seamen, and the other citizens manifesting
|
|
unequivocal fidelity to the Union, and a spirit of determined
|
|
resistance to their expected assailants.
|
|
|
|
Surmises have been hazarded that this enterprise is to receive
|
|
aid from certain foreign powers. But these surmises are without
|
|
proof or probability. The wisdom of the measures sanctioned by
|
|
Congress at its last session had placed us in the paths of peace and
|
|
justice with the only powers with whom we had any differences, and
|
|
nothing has happened since which makes it either their interest or
|
|
ours to pursue another course. No change of measures has taken place
|
|
on our part; none ought to take place at this time. With the one,
|
|
friendly arrangement was then proposed, and the law deemed necessary
|
|
on the failure of that was suspended to give time for a fair trial of
|
|
the issue. With the same power, negotiation is still preferred and
|
|
provisional measures only are necessary to meet the event of rupture.
|
|
While, therefore, we do not deflect in the slightest degree from the
|
|
course we then assumed, and are still pursuing, with mutual consent,
|
|
to restore a good understanding, we are not to impute to them
|
|
practices as irreconcilable to interest as to good faith, and
|
|
changing necessarily the relations of peace and justice between us to
|
|
those of war. These surmises are, therefore, to be imputed to the
|
|
vauntings of the author of this enterprise, to multiply his partisans
|
|
by magnifying the belief of his prospects and support.
|
|
|
|
By letters from General Wilkinson, of the 14th and 18th of
|
|
September, which came to hand two days after date of the resolution
|
|
of the House of Representatives, that is to say, on the morning of
|
|
the 18th instant, I received the important affidavit, a copy of which
|
|
I now communicate, with extracts of so much of the letters as come
|
|
within the scope of the resolution. By these it will be seen that of
|
|
three of the principal emissaries of Mr. Burr, whom the general had
|
|
caused to be apprehended, one had been liberated by _habeas corpus_,
|
|
and the two others, being those particularly employed in the endeavor
|
|
to corrupt the general and army of the United States, have been
|
|
embarked by him for our ports in the Atlantic States, probably on the
|
|
consideration that an impartial trial could not be expected during
|
|
the present agitations of New Orleans, and that that city was not as
|
|
yet a safe place of confinement. As soon as these persons shall
|
|
arrive, they will be delivered to the custody of the law, and left to
|
|
such course of trial, both as to place and process, as its
|
|
functionaries may direct. The presence of the highest judicial
|
|
authorities, to be assembled at this place within a few days, the
|
|
means of pursuing a sounder course of proceedings here than
|
|
elsewhere, and the aid of the executive means, should the judges have
|
|
occasion to use them, render it equally desirable for the criminals
|
|
as for the public, that being already removed from the place where
|
|
they were first apprehended, the first regular arrest should take
|
|
place here, and the course of proceedings receive here its proper
|
|
direction.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Special Message on Gun-Boats_
|
|
|
|
February 10, 1807
|
|
|
|
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES
|
|
In compliance with the request of the House of Representatives,
|
|
expressed in their resolution of the 5th instant, I proceed to give
|
|
such information as is possessed, of the effect of gun-boats in the
|
|
protection and defense of harbors, of the numbers thought necessary,
|
|
and of the proposed distribution of them among the ports and harbors
|
|
of the United States.
|
|
|
|
Under the present circumstances, and governed by the intentions
|
|
of the legislature, as manifested by their annual appropriations of
|
|
money for the purposes of defence, it has been concluded to combine
|
|
-- 1st, land batteries, furnished with heavy cannon and mortars, and
|
|
established on all the points around the place favorable for
|
|
preventing vessels from lying before it; 2d, movable artillery which
|
|
may be carried, as an occasion may require, to points unprovided with
|
|
fixed batteries; 3d, floating batteries; and 4th, gun-boats, which
|
|
may oppose an enemy at its entrance and co-operate with the batteries
|
|
for his expulsion.
|
|
|
|
On this subject professional men were consulted as far as we
|
|
had opportunity. General Wilkinson, and the late General Gates, gave
|
|
their opinions in writing, in favor of the system, as will be seen by
|
|
their letters now communicated. The higher officers of the navy gave
|
|
the same opinions in separate conferences, as their presence at the
|
|
seat of government offered occasions of consulting them, and no
|
|
difference of judgment appeared on the subjects. Those of Commodore
|
|
Barron and Captain Tingey, now here, are recently furnished in
|
|
writing, and transmitted herewith to the legislature.
|
|
|
|
The efficacy of gun-boats for the defence of harbors, and of
|
|
other smooth and enclosed waters, may be estimated in part from that
|
|
of galleys, formerly much used, but less powerful, more costly in
|
|
their construction and maintenance, and requiring more men. But the
|
|
gun-boat itself is believed to be in use with every modern maritime
|
|
nation for the purpose of defence. In the Mediterranean, on which
|
|
are several small powers, whose system like ours is peace and
|
|
defence, few harbors are without this article of protection. Our own
|
|
experience there of the effect of gun-boats for harbor service, is
|
|
recent. Algiers is particularly known to have owed to a great
|
|
provision of these vessels the safety of its city, since the epoch of
|
|
their construction. Before that it had been repeatedly insulted and
|
|
injured. The effect of gun-boats at present in the neighborhood of
|
|
Gibraltar, is well known, and how much they were used both in the
|
|
attack and defence of that place during a former war. The extensive
|
|
resort to them by the two greatest naval powers in the world, on an
|
|
enterprise of invasion not long since in prospect, shows their
|
|
confidence in their efficacy for the purposes for which they are
|
|
suited. By the northern powers of Europe, whose seas are
|
|
particularly adapted to them, they are still more used. The
|
|
remarkable action between the Russian flotilla of gun-boats and
|
|
galleys, and a Turkish fleet of ships-of-the-line and frigates, in
|
|
the Liman sea, 1788, will be readily recollected. The latter,
|
|
commanded by their most celebrated admiral, were completely defeated,
|
|
and several of their ships-of-the-line destroyed.
|
|
|
|
From the opinions given as to the number of gun-boats necessary
|
|
for some of the principal seaports, and from a view of all the towns
|
|
and ports from Orleans to Maine inclusive, entitled to protection, in
|
|
proportion to their situation and circumstances, it is concluded,
|
|
that to give them a due measure of protection in time of war, about
|
|
two hundred gun-boats will be requisite. According to first ideas,
|
|
the following would be their general distribution, liable to be
|
|
varied on more mature examination, and as circumstances shall vary,
|
|
that is to say: --
|
|
|
|
To the Mississippi and its neighboring waters, forty gun-boats.
|
|
|
|
To Savannah and Charleston, and the harbors on each side, from
|
|
St. Mary's to Currituck, twenty-five.
|
|
|
|
To the Chesapeake and its waters, twenty.
|
|
|
|
To Delaware bay and river, fifteen.
|
|
|
|
To New York, the Sound, and waters as far as Cape Cod, fifty.
|
|
|
|
To Boston and the harbors north of Cape Cod, fifty.
|
|
|
|
The flotilla assigned to these several stations, might each be
|
|
under the care of a particular commandant, and the vessels composing
|
|
them would, in ordinary, be distributed among the harbors within the
|
|
station in proportion to their importance.
|
|
|
|
Of these boats a proper proportion would be of the larger size,
|
|
such as those heretofore built, capable of navigating any seas, and
|
|
of reinforcing occasionally the strength of even the most distant
|
|
port when menaced with danger. The residue would be confined to
|
|
their own or the neighboring harbors, would be smaller, less
|
|
furnished for accommodation, and consequently less costly. Of the
|
|
number supposed necessary, seventy-three are built or building, and
|
|
the hundred and twenty-seven still to be provided, would cost from
|
|
five to six hundred thousand dollars. Having regard to the
|
|
convenience of the treasury, as well as to the resources of building,
|
|
it has been thought that one half of these might be built in the
|
|
present year, and the other half the next. With the legislature,
|
|
however, it will rest to stop where we are, or at any further point,
|
|
when they shall be of opinion that the number provided shall be
|
|
sufficient for the object.
|
|
|
|
At times when Europe as well as the United States shall be at
|
|
peace, it would not be proposed that more than six or eight of these
|
|
vessels should be kept afloat. When Europe is in war, treble that
|
|
number might be necessary to be distributed among those particular
|
|
harbors which foreign vessels of war are in the habit of frequenting,
|
|
for the purpose of preserving order therein.
|
|
|
|
But they would be manned, in ordinary, with only their
|
|
complement for navigation, relying on the seamen and militia of the
|
|
port if called into action on sudden emergency. It would be only
|
|
when the United States should themselves be at war, that the whole
|
|
number would be brought into actual service, and would be ready in
|
|
the first moments of the war to co-operate with other means for
|
|
covering at once the line of our seaports. At all times, those
|
|
unemployed would be withdrawn into places not exposed to sudden
|
|
enterprise, hauled up under sheds from the sun and weather, and kept
|
|
in preservation with little expense for repairs or maintenance.
|
|
|
|
It must be superfluous to observe, that this species of naval
|
|
armament is proposed merely for defensive operation; that it can have
|
|
but little effect toward protecting our commerce in the open seas
|
|
even on our coast; and still less can it become an excitement to
|
|
engage in offensive maritime war, toward which it would furnish no
|
|
means.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Eighth Annual Message_
|
|
|
|
November 8, 1808
|
|
|
|
TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED
|
|
STATES:
|
|
It would have been a source, fellow citizens, of much
|
|
gratification, if our last communications from Europe had enabled me
|
|
to inform you that the belligerent nations, whose disregard of
|
|
neutral rights has been so destructive to our commerce, had become
|
|
awakened to the duty and true policy of revoking their unrighteous
|
|
edicts. That no means might be omitted to produce this salutary
|
|
effect, I lost no time in availing myself of the act authorizing a
|
|
suspension, in whole or in part, of the several embargo laws. Our
|
|
ministers at London and Paris were instructed to explain to the
|
|
respective governments there, our disposition to exercise the
|
|
authority in such manner as would withdraw the pretext on which the
|
|
aggressions were originally founded, and open a way for a renewal of
|
|
that commercial intercourse which it was alleged on all sides had
|
|
been reluctantly obstructed. As each of those governments had
|
|
pledged its readiness to concur in renouncing a measure which reached
|
|
its adversary through the incontestable rights of neutrals only, and
|
|
as the measure had been assumed by each as a retaliation for an
|
|
asserted acquiescence in the aggressions of the other, it was
|
|
reasonably expected that the occasion would have been seized by both
|
|
for evincing the sincerity of their profession, and for restoring to
|
|
the commerce of the United States its legitimate freedom. The
|
|
instructions to our ministers with respect to the different
|
|
belligerents were necessarily modified with reference to their
|
|
different circumstances, and to the condition annexed by law to the
|
|
executive power of suspension, requiring a degree of security to our
|
|
commerce which would not result from a repeal of the decrees of
|
|
France. Instead of a pledge, therefore, of a suspension of the
|
|
embargo as to her in case of such a repeal, it was presumed that a
|
|
sufficient inducement might be found in other considerations, and
|
|
particularly in the change produced by a compliance with our just
|
|
demands by one belligerent, and a refusal by the other, in the
|
|
relations between the other and the United States. To Great Britain,
|
|
whose power on the ocean is so ascendant, it was deemed not
|
|
inconsistent with that condition to state explicitly, that on her
|
|
rescinding her orders in relation to the United States their trade
|
|
would be opened with her, and remain shut to her enemy, in case of
|
|
his failure to rescind his decrees also. From France no answer has
|
|
been received, nor any indication that the requisite change in her
|
|
decrees is contemplated. The favorable reception of the proposition
|
|
to Great Britain was the less to be doubted, as her orders of council
|
|
had not only been referred for their vindication to an acquiescence
|
|
on the part of the United States no longer to be pretended, but as
|
|
the arrangement proposed, while it resisted the illegal decrees of
|
|
France, involved, moreover, substantially, the precise advantages
|
|
professedly aimed at by the British orders. The arrangement has
|
|
nevertheless been rejected.
|
|
|
|
This candid and liberal experiment having thus failed, and no
|
|
other event having occurred on which a suspension of the embargo by
|
|
the executive was authorized, it necessarily remains in the extent
|
|
originally given to it. We have the satisfaction, however, to
|
|
reflect, that in return for the privations by the measure, and which
|
|
our fellow citizens in general have borne with patriotism, it has had
|
|
the important effects of saving our mariners and our vast mercantile
|
|
property, as well as of affording time for prosecuting the defensive
|
|
and provisional measures called for by the occasion. It has
|
|
demonstrated to foreign nations the moderation and firmness which
|
|
govern our councils, and to our citizens the necessity of uniting in
|
|
support of the laws and the rights of their country, and has thus
|
|
long frustrated those usurpations and spoliations which, if resisted,
|
|
involve war; if submitted to, sacrificed a vital principle of our
|
|
national independence.
|
|
|
|
Under a continuance of the belligerent measures which, in
|
|
defiance of laws which consecrate the rights of neutrals, overspread
|
|
the ocean with danger, it will rest with the wisdom of Congress to
|
|
decide on the course best adapted to such a state of things; and
|
|
bringing with them, as they do, from every part of the Union, the
|
|
sentiments of our constituents, my confidence is strengthened, that
|
|
in forming this decision they will, with an unerring regard to the
|
|
essential rights and interests of the nation, weigh and compare the
|
|
painful alternatives out of which a choice is to be made. Nor should
|
|
I do justice to the virtues which on other occasions have marked the
|
|
character of our fellow citizens, if I did not cherish an equal
|
|
confidence that the alternative chosen, whatever it may be, will be
|
|
maintained with all the fortitude and patriotism which the crisis
|
|
ought to inspire.
|
|
|
|
The documents containing the correspondences on the subject of
|
|
the foreign edicts against our commerce, with the instructions given
|
|
to our ministers at London and Paris, are now laid before you.
|
|
|
|
The communications made to Congress at their last session
|
|
explained the posture in which the close of the discussion relating
|
|
to the attack by a British ship of war on the frigate Chesapeake left
|
|
a subject on which the nation had manifested so honorable a
|
|
sensibility. Every view of what had passed authorized a belief that
|
|
immediate steps would be taken by the British government for
|
|
redressing a wrong, which, the more it was investigated, appeared the
|
|
more clearly to require what had not been provided for in the special
|
|
mission. It is found that no steps have been taken for the purpose.
|
|
On the contrary, it will be seen, in the documents laid before you,
|
|
that the inadmissible preliminary which obstructed the adjustment is
|
|
still adhered to; and, moreover, that it is now brought into
|
|
connection with the distinct and irrelative case of the orders in
|
|
council. The instructions which had been given to our ministers at
|
|
London with a view to facilitate, if necessary, the reparation
|
|
claimed by the United States, are included in the documents
|
|
communicated.
|
|
|
|
Our relations with the other powers of Europe have undergone no
|
|
material changes since your last session. The important negotiations
|
|
with Spain, which had been alternately suspended and resumed,
|
|
necessarily experience a pause under the extraordinary and
|
|
interesting crisis which distinguished her internal situation.
|
|
|
|
With the Barbary powers we continue in harmony, with the
|
|
exception of an unjustifiable proceeding of the dey of Algiers toward
|
|
our consul to that regency. Its character and circumstances are now
|
|
laid before you, and will enable you to decide how far it may, either
|
|
now or hereafter, call for any measures not within the limits of the
|
|
executive authority.
|
|
|
|
|
|
With our Indian neighbors the public peace has been steadily
|
|
maintained. Some instances of individual wrong have, as at other
|
|
times, taken place, but in nowise implicating the will of the nation.
|
|
Beyond the Mississippi, the Iowas, the Sacs, and the Alabamas, have
|
|
delivered up for trial and punishment individuals from among
|
|
themselves accused of murdering citizens of the United States. On
|
|
this side of the Mississippi, the Creeks are exerting themselves to
|
|
arrest offenders of the same kind; and the Choctaws have manifested
|
|
their readiness and desire for amicable and just arrangements
|
|
respecting depredations committed by disorderly persons of their
|
|
tribe. And, generally, from a conviction that we consider them as
|
|
part of ourselves, and cherish with sincerity their rights and
|
|
interests, the attachment of the Indian tribes is gaining strength
|
|
daily -- is extending from the nearer to the more remote, and will
|
|
amply requite us for the justice and friendship practised towards
|
|
them. Husbandry and household manufacture are advancing among them,
|
|
more rapidly with the southern than the northern tribes, from
|
|
circumstances of soil and climate; and one of the two great divisions
|
|
of the Cherokee nation have now under consideration to solicit the
|
|
citizenship of the United States, and to be identified with us in
|
|
laws and government, in such progressive manner as we shall think
|
|
best.
|
|
|
|
In consequence of the appropriations of the last session of
|
|
Congress for the security of our seaport towns and harbors, such
|
|
works of defence have been erected as seemed to be called for by the
|
|
situation of the several places, their relative importance, and the
|
|
scale of expense indicated by the amount of the appropriation. These
|
|
works will chiefly be finished in the course of the present season,
|
|
except at New York and New Orleans, where most was to be done; and
|
|
although a great proportion of the last appropriation has been
|
|
expended on the former place, yet some further views will be
|
|
submitted by Congress for rendering its security entirely adequate
|
|
against naval enterprise. A view of what has been done at the
|
|
several places, and of what is proposed to be done, shall be
|
|
communicated as soon as the several reports are received.
|
|
|
|
Of the gun-boats authorized by the act of December last, it has
|
|
been thought necessary to build only one hundred and three in the
|
|
present year. These, with those before possessed, are sufficient for
|
|
the harbors and waters exposed, and the residue will require little
|
|
time for their construction when it is deemed necessary.
|
|
|
|
Under the act of the last session for raising an additional
|
|
military force, so many officers were immediately appointed as were
|
|
necessary for carrying on the business of recruiting, and in
|
|
proportion as it advanced, others have been added. We have reason to
|
|
believe their success has been satisfactory, although such returns
|
|
have not yet been received as enable me to present to you a statement
|
|
of the numbers engaged.
|
|
|
|
I have not thought it necessary in the course of the last
|
|
season to call for any general detachments of militia or volunteers
|
|
under the law passed for that purpose. For the ensuing season,
|
|
however, they will require to be in readiness should their services
|
|
be wanted. Some small and special detachments have been necessary to
|
|
maintain the laws of embargo on that portion of our northern frontier
|
|
which offered peculiar facilities for evasion, but these were
|
|
replaced as soon as it could be done by bodies of new recruits. By
|
|
the aid of these, and of the armed vessels called into actual service
|
|
in other quarters, the spirit of disobedience and abuse which
|
|
manifested itself early, and with sensible effect while we were
|
|
unprepared to meet it, has been considerably repressed.
|
|
|
|
Considering the extraordinary character of the times in which
|
|
we live, our attention should unremittingly be fixed on the safety of
|
|
our country. For a people who are free, and who mean to remain so, a
|
|
well-organized and armed militia is their best security. It is,
|
|
therefore, incumbent on us, at every meeting, to revise the condition
|
|
of the militia, and to ask ourselves if it is prepared to repel a
|
|
powerful enemy at every point of our territories exposed to invasion.
|
|
Some of the States have paid a laudable attention to this object; but
|
|
every degree of neglect is to be found among others. Congress alone
|
|
have power to produce a uniform state of preparation in this great
|
|
organ of defence; the interests which they so deeply feel in their
|
|
own and their country's security will present this as among the most
|
|
important objects of their deliberation.
|
|
|
|
Under the acts of March 11th and April 23d, respecting arms,
|
|
the difficulty of procuring them from abroad, during the present
|
|
situation and dispositions of Europe, induced us to direct our whole
|
|
efforts to the means of internal supply. The public factories have,
|
|
therefore, been enlarged, additional machineries erected, and in
|
|
proportion as artificers can be found or formed, their effect,
|
|
already more than doubled, may be increased so as to keep pace with
|
|
the yearly increase of the militia. The annual sums appropriated by
|
|
the latter act, have been directed to the encouragement of private
|
|
factories of arms, and contracts have been entered into with
|
|
individual undertakers to nearly the amount of the first year's
|
|
appropriation.
|
|
|
|
The suspension of our foreign commerce, produced by the
|
|
injustice of the belligerent powers, and the consequent losses and
|
|
sacrifices of our citizens, are subjects of just concern. The
|
|
situation into which we have thus been forced, has impelled us to
|
|
apply a portion of our industry and capital to internal manufactures
|
|
and improvements. The extent of this conversion is daily increasing,
|
|
and little doubt remains that the establishments formed and forming
|
|
will -- under the auspices of cheaper materials and subsistence, the
|
|
freedom of labor from taxation with us, and of protecting duties and
|
|
prohibitions -- become permanent. The commerce with the Indians,
|
|
too, within our own boundaries, is likely to receive abundant aliment
|
|
from the same internal source, and will secure to them peace and the
|
|
progress of civilization, undisturbed by practices hostile to both.
|
|
|
|
The accounts of the receipts and expenditures during the year
|
|
ending on the 30th day of September last, being not yet made up, a
|
|
correct statement will hereafter be transmitted from the Treasury.
|
|
In the meantime, it is ascertained that the receipts have amounted to
|
|
near eighteen millions of dollars, which, with the eight millions and
|
|
a half in the treasury at the beginning of the year, have enabled us,
|
|
after meeting the current demands and interest incurred, to pay two
|
|
millions three hundred thousand dollars of the principal of our
|
|
funded debt, and left us in the treasury, on that day, near fourteen
|
|
millions of dollars. Of these, five millions three hundred and fifty
|
|
thousand dollars will be necessary to pay what will be due on the
|
|
first day of January next, which will complete the reimbursement of
|
|
the eight per cent. stock. These payments, with those made in the
|
|
six years and a half preceding, will have extinguished thirty-three
|
|
millions five hundred and eighty thousand dollars of the principal of
|
|
the funded debt, being the whole which could be paid or purchased
|
|
within the limits of the law and our contracts; and the amount of
|
|
principal thus discharged will have liberated the revenue from about
|
|
two millions of dollars of interest, and added that sum annually to
|
|
the disposable surplus. The probable accumulation of the surpluses
|
|
of revenue beyond what can be applied to the payment of the public
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debt, whenever the freedom and safety of our commerce shall be
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restored, merits the consideration of Congress. Shall it lie
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unproductive in the public vaults? Shall the revenue be reduced? Or
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shall it rather be appropriated to the improvements of roads, canals,
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rivers, education, and other great foundations of prosperity and
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union, under the powers which Congress may already possess, or such
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amendment of the constitution as may be approved by the States?
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While uncertain of the course of things, the time may be
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advantageously employed in obtaining the powers necessary for a
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system of improvement, should that be thought best.
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Availing myself of this the last occasion which will occur of
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addressing the two houses of the legislature at their meeting, I
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cannot omit the expression of my sincere gratitude for the repeated
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proofs of confidence manifested to me by themselves and their
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predecessors since my call to the administration, and the many
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indulgences experienced at their hands. The same grateful
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acknowledgments are due to my fellow citizens generally, whose
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support has been my great encouragement under all embarrassments. In
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the transaction of their business I cannot have escaped error. It is
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incident to our imperfect nature. But I may say with truth, my
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errors have been of the understanding, not of intention; and that the
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advancement of their rights and interests has been the constant
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motive for every measure. On these considerations I solicit their
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indulgence. Looking forward with anxiety to their future destinies,
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I trust that, in their steady character unshaken by difficulties, in
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their love of liberty, obedience to law, and support of the public
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authorities, I see a sure guaranty of the permanence of our republic;
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and retiring from the charge of their affairs, I carry with me the
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consolation of a firm persuasion that Heaven has in store for our
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beloved country long ages to come of prosperity and happiness.
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_To the Inhabitants of Albemarle County, in Virginia_
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April 3, 1809
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Returning to the scenes of my birth and early life, to the
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society of those with whom I was raised, and who have been ever dear
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to me, I receive, fellow citizens and neighbors, with inexpressible
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pleasure, the cordial welcome you are so good as to give me. Long
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absent on duties which the history of a wonderful era made incumbent
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on those called to them, the pomp, the turmoil, the bustle and
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splendor of office, have drawn but deeper sighs for the tranquil and
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irresponsible occupations of private life, for the enjoyment of an
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affectionate intercourse with you, my neighbors and friends, and the
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endearments of family love, which nature has given us all, as the
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sweetener of every hour. For these I gladly lay down the distressing
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burthen of power, and seek, with my fellow citizens, repose and
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safety under the watchful cares, the labors, and perplexities of
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younger and abler minds. The anxieties you express to administer to
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my happiness, do, of themselves, confer that happiness; and the
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measure will be complete, if my endeavors to fulfil my duties in the
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several public stations to which I have been called, have obtained
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for me the approbation of my country. The part which I have acted on
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the theatre of public life, has been before them; and to their
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sentence I submit it; but the testimony of my native country, of the
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individuals who have known me in private life, to my conduct in its
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various duties and relations, is the more grateful, as proceeding
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from eye witnesses and observers, from triers of the vicinage. Of
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you, then, my neighbors, I may ask, in the face of the world, "whose
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ox have I taken, or whom have I defrauded? Whom have I oppressed, or
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of whose hand have I received a bribe to blind mine eyes therewith?"
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On your verdict I rest with conscious security. Your wishes for my
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happiness are received with just sensibility, and I offer sincere
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prayers for your own welfare and prosperity.
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.
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