IN the year 1740 there fell out a great European war. There was some doubt
who should fill the Austrian throne. The Emperor had just died, leaving no
son or brother to inherit his dignities. His daughter, Maria Theresa,
stepped into her father's place, and soon made it apparent that she was
strong enough to maintain what she had done. Two or three Kings thought they
had a better right than she to the throne. The other Kings ranged themselves
on this side or on that. The idea of looking on while foolish neighbours
destroyed themselves by senseless war, had not yet been suggested. Every
King took part in a great war, and sent his people forth to slay and be
slain, quite as a matter of course. So they raised great armies, fought
great battles, burned cities, wasted countries, inflicted and endured
unutterable miseries, all to settle the question about this lady's throne.
But the lady was of a heroic spirit, well worthy to govern, and she held her
own, and lived and died an Empress.
During these busy years, a Virginian mother, widowed in early life, was
training up her eldest son in the fear of God—all unaware, as she infused
the love of goodness and duty into his mind, that she was giving a colour to
the history of her country throughout all its coming ages. That boy's name
was George Washington. lie was born in 1732. His father —a gentleman of good
fortune, with a pedigree which can be traced beyond the Norman Conquest—died
when his son was eleven years of age. Upon George's mother devolved the care
of his upbringing. She was a devout woman, of excellent sense and deep
affections; but a strict disciplinarian, and of a temper which could brook
no shadow of insubordination. Under her rule—gentle, and yet strong—George
learned obedience and self-control. In boyhood he gave remarkable promise of
those excellences which distinguished his mature years. His schoolmates
recognized the calm judicial character of his mind, and he became in all
their disputes the arbiter from whose decision there was no appeal. He
inherited his mother's love of command, happily tempered by a lofty
disinterestedness and a love of justice, which seemed to render it
impossible that he should do or permit aught that was unfair. His person was
large and powerful. His face expressed the thoughtfulness and serene
strength of his character, lie excelled in all athletic exercises. His
youthful delight in such pursuits developed his physical capabilities to the
utmost, and gave him endurance to bear the hardships which lay before him.
Young gentlemen of Virginia were not educated then so liberally as they have
been since. It was presumed that Washington would be a mere Virginian
proprietor and farmer, as his father had been; and his education was no
higher than that position then demanded. He never learned any language but
his own. The teacher of his early years was also the sexton of the parish.
And even when he was taken to an institution of a more advanced description,
he attempted no higher study than the keeping of accounts and the copying of
legal and mercantile papers. A few years later, it was thought he might
enter the civil or military service of his country; and lie was put to the
study of mathematics and land-surveying.
George Washington did nothing by halves. In youth, as in manhood, lie did
thoroughly what he had to do. His school exercise-books are models of
neatness and accuracy. His plans and measurements made while he studied
land-surveying were as scrupulously exact as if great pecuniary interests
depended upon them. In his eighteenth year lie was employed by Government as
surveyor of public lands. Many of his surveys were recorded in the county
offices, and remain to this day. Long experience has established their
unvarying accuracy. In all disputes to which they have any relevancy, their
evidence is accepted as decisive. During the years which preceded the
Revolution he managed his estates, packed and shipped his own tobacco and
flour, kept his own books, conducted his own correspondence. His books may
still be seen. Perhaps no clearer or more accurate record of business
transactions has been kept in America since the Father of American
Independence rested from book-keeping. The flour which he shipped to
foreign. ports came to be known as his, and the Washington brand was
habitually exempted from inspection. A most reliable man; his words and his
deeds, his professions and his practice, are ever found in most perfect
harmony. By some he has been regarded as a stolid, prosaic person, wanting
in those features of character which captivate the minds of men. Not so. In
an earlier age George Washington would have been a true knight- errant with
an insatiable thirst for adventure and a passionate love of battle. He had
in high degree those qualities which make ancient knighthood picturesque.
But higher qualities than these bore rule within him. lie had wisdom beyond
most, giving him deep insight into the wants of his time. He had clear
perceptions of the duty which lay to his hand. What he saw to be right, the
strongest impulses of his soul constrained him to do. A massive intellect
and an iron strength of will were given to him, with a gentle, loving heart,
with dauntless courage, with purity and loftiness of aim. lie had a work of
extraordinary difficulty to perform. History rejoices to recognize in him a
revolutionary leader against whom no questionable transaction has ever been
alleged.
The history of America presents, in one important feature, a very striking
contrast to the history of nearly all older countries. In the old countries,
history gathers round some one grand central figure—some judge, or priest,
or king—whose biography tells all that has to be told concerning the time in
which he lived. That one predominating person—David, Alexander, Ceasar,
Napoleon—is among his people what the sun is in the planetary system. All
movement originates and terminates in him, and the history of the people is
merely a record of what he has chosen to do or caused to be done. In America
it has not been so. The American system leaves no room for predominating
persons. It affords none of those exhibitions of solitary, all-absorbing
grandeur which are so picturesque, and have been so pernicious. Her history
is a history of her people, and of no conspicuous individuals. Once only in
her career is it otherwise. During the lifetime of George Washington Tier
history clings very closely to him; and the biography of her great chief
becomes in a very unusual degree the history of the country. |