WASHINGTON saw from the beginning that his country was
without a government. Congress was a mere name. There were still thirteen
sovereign States—in league for the moment, but liable to be placed at
variance by the differences which time would surely bring. Washington was
satisfied that without a central government they could never be powerful or
respected. Such a government, indeed, was necessary in order even to their
existence. European powers would, in its absence, introduce dissensions
among them. Men's minds would revert to that form of government with which
they were familiar. Some ambitious statesman or soldier would make himself
King, and the great experiment, based upon the equality of rights, would
prove an ignominious failure.
The more sagacious Americans
shared Washington's belief on this question. Conspicuous among these was
Alexander Hamilton—perhaps, next to Washington, the greatest American of
that age. Hamilton was a brave and skilful soldier, a brilliant debater, a
persuasive writer, a wise statesman. In his nineteenth year he entered the
army, at the very beginning of time war. The quick eye of Washington
discovered the remarkable promise of the lad. lie raised him to high command
in the army, and afterwards to high office in the government. It was
Hamilton who brought order out of time financial chaos which followed the
war. It was Hamilton who suggested the convention to consider the framing of
a new Constitution. Often, during the succeeding years, Hamilton's temperate
and sagacious words calmed the storms which marked the infancy of the great
Republic. His career had a dark and bloody close.
In his forty-seventh year he stood face to face, one bright July morning,
with a savage politician named Aaron Burr—a grandson of Jonathan Edwards the
great divine. Burr had fastened a quarrel upon him, in the hope of murdering
bun in a duel. Hamilton had resolved not to fire. Burr fired with careful
aim, and Hamilton fell, wounded to death. One of the ablest men America has
ever possessed was thus lost to her.
Immediately after the
close of the war, Hamilton began to discuss the weakness of the existing
form of government. He was deeply convinced that the union of the States, in
order to be lasting, must be established on a solid basis; and his writings
did much to spread this conviction among his fellow-countrymen. Washington
never ceased from his retirement to urge the same views. Gradually the
urgent need of a better system was recognized. It indeed soon became too
obvious to be denied. Congress found it utterly impossible to get money.
Between 1781 and 1786, ten millions of dollars were called for from the
States, but only two millions and a half were obtained. The interest on the
debt was unpaid. The ordinary expenses of the government were unprovided
for. The existing form of government was an acknowledged failure. Something
better had to he devised, or the tie which bound the thirteen States would
be severed.
Hamilton obtained the sanction of Congress to
his proposal that a convention of delegates from the several States should
be held. This convention was to review the whole subject of the governing
arrangement, and to recommend such alterations as should he considered
adequate to the exigencies of the time. Philadelphia, as usual, was the
place of meeting. Thither, in the month of May, came the men who were
charged with the weighty task of framing a government under which the
thirteen States should become a nation.
Fifty-five men
composed this memorable council. Among them were the wisest men of whom
America, or perhaps any other country, could boast. Washington himself
presided. Benjamin Franklin brought to this—his latest and his greatest
task—the ripe experience of eighty-two years. New York sent
Hamilton—regarding whom Prince TaIleyand said, long after- wards, that he
had known nearly all the leading men of his time, but he had never known one
on the whole equal to Hamilton. With these came many others whose names are
held in enduring honour. Since the meeting of that first Congress which
pointed the way to independence, America had seen no such assembly.
The convention sat for four months. The great work which occupied it divided
the country into two parties. One party feared most the evils which arise
from weakness of the governing power, and sought relief from these in a
close union of the States under a strong government. Another party dwelt
more upon the miserable condition of the over-governed nations of Europe,
and feared the creation of a government which might grow into a despotism.
The aim of the one was to vest the largest possible measure of power in a
central government. Hamilton, indeed—to whom the British Constitution seemed
the most perfect on earth—went so far as to desire that the States should be
merely great municipalities, attending only, like an English corporation, to
their own local concerns. The aim of the other was to circumscribe the
powers accorded to the general government—to vindicate the sovereignty of
the individual States, and give to it the widest possible scope. These two
sets of opinions continued to exist and conflict for three-quarters of a
century, till that which assigned an undue dominion to what were called
State Rights, perished in the overthrow of the great Rebellion.
Slowly and through endless debate the convention worked out its plan of a
government. The scheme was submitted to Congress, and thence sent down to
the several States. Months of fiery discussion ensued. Somewhat reluctantly,
by narrow majorities, in the face of vehement protests, the Constitution was
at length adopted under which the thirteen States were to become so great.
Great Britain has no written Constitution. She has her laws; and it is
expected that all future laws shall be in tolerable harmony with the
principles on which her past legislation has been founded. But if Parliament
were to enact, and the Sovereign to sanction, any law at variance with these
principles, there is no help for it. Queen, Lords, and Commons are our
supreme authority, from whose decisions there lies no appeal. In America it
is different. There the supreme authority is a written Constitution.
Congress may unanimously enact, and the President may cordially sanction, a
new law. Two or three judges, sitting in the same building where Congress
meets, may compare that law with the Constitution. If it is found at
variance with the Constitution, it is unceremoniously declared to be no law,
and entitled to no man's obedience. With a few alterations, this
Constitution remains in full force now—gathering around it, as it increases
in age, the growing reverence of the people. The men who framed it must have
been very wise. The people for whom it was framed must possess in high
degree the precious Anglo-Saxon veneration for law. Otherwise the American
paper Constitution must long ago have shared the fate of the numerous
documents of this class under which the French vainly sought rest during
their first Revolution.
Each of the thirteen States was
sovereign, and the government of America hitherto had been merely a league
of independent powers. Now the several States parted with a certain amount
of their sovereignty, and vested it in a General Government. The General
Government was to levy taxes, to coin money, to regulate commercial
relations with foreign countries, to establish post-offices and post-roads,
to establish courts of law, to declare war, to raise and maintain armies and
navies, to make treaties, to borrow money on the credit of the United
States. The individual States expressly relinquished the right to perform
these sovereign functions.
These powers were intrusted to
two Houses of Legislation and a President. The House of Representatives is
composed of two hundred and forty-three members. The members hold their
seats for two years, and are paid five thousand dollars annually. Black men
and Indians were not allowed to vote; but all white men had a voice in the
election of their representatives. To secure perfect equality of
representation, members are distributed according to population. Thus, in
1863 a member was given to every 124,000 inhabitants. Every ten years a
redjustment takes place, and restores the equality which the growth of the
intervening period has disturbed.
The large States send
necessarily a much larger number of members to the Lower House than the
small States do. Thus New York sends thirty-one, while Rhode Island sends
only two, Delaware and Florida only one. The self-love of the smaller States
was wounded by an arrangement which resembled absorption into the larger
communities. The balance was redressed in the constitution of the Upper
Chamber—the Senate. That body is composed of seventy-six members, elected by
the legislatures of the States. Every State, large or small, returns two
members. The small States were overborne in the Lower I louse, but in the
Senate they enjoyed an importance equal to that of their most populous
neighbours. The senators are elected for six years, and are paid at the same
rate as the members of the House of Representatives.
The
head of the American Government is the President. He holds office for four
years. Each State chooses a number of persons equal to the total number of
members whom it returns to the houses of Legislation. These persons elect
the President. They elect also a Vice-President, lest the President should
be removed by death or otherwise during his term of office. All laws enacted
by Congress must be submitted to the President. lie may refuse to pass
them—sending them back with a state- merit of his objections. But should
both houses, by a vote of two-thirds of their number, adhere to the rejected
measures, they become law in spite of the President's veto. The President
appoints his own Cabinet Ministers, and these have no seats in Congress.
Their annual reports upon the affairs of their depart- merits are
communicated to Congress by the President, along with his own Message. The
President is Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy. With concurrence of
the Senate, he appoints ambassadors, judges of the Supreme Court, and other
public officers.
Every State has a government after the
same pattern, composed of two Houses of Legislation and a Governor. These
authorities occupy themselves with the management of such affairs as
exclusively concern their own State, and have, therefore, not been
relinquished to time General Government. They legislate in regard to railway
and other public companies. They see to the administration of justice within
their own territory, unless in the ease of crimes committed against the
Government. They pass such laws as are required in regard to private
property and rights of succession. Above all, they retain all the powers of
which they were ever possessed in regard to slavery. The Constitution gave
Congress authority to suppress the importation of slaves after the year
1808. Not otherwise was the slave- question interfered with. That remained
wholly under the control of the individual States.
But the
men who framed this Constitution, however wise, were liable to err. And if
they were found in after years to have erred, what provision—other than a
revolution—was made for correcting their mistakes l Avery simple and very
effective one. When two-thirds of both houses of Legislation deem it
necessary that some amendment of the Constitution should be made, they
propose it to the legislatures of the several States. When three-fourths of
these judicatories adopt the proposal, it becomes a part of the
Constitution. There have been in all fifteen amendments adopted, most of
them very soon after the Constitution itself came into existence.
And now the conditions of the great experiment are adjusted. Three millions
of Americans have undertaken to govern themselves. Europe does not believe
that any people can prosper in such an undertaking. Europe still chugs to
the belief that, in every country, a few Heaven-sent families must guide the
destinies of the incapable, child-like millions. America—having no faith in
Heaven-sent families—believes that the millions are the best and safest
guides of their own destinies, and means to act on that belief. On her
success great issues wait. If the Americans show that they can govern
themselves, all the other nations will gradually put their hands to the same
ennobling work.
The first step to be taken under the new
Constitution was to elect a President. There was but one man who was thought
of for this high and untried office. George Washington was unanimously
chosen. Congress was summoned to meet in New York on the 4th of March. But
the members had to travel far on foot, or on horseback. Roads were bad,
bridges were few; streams, in that spring-time, were swollen. It was some
weeks after the appointed time before business could be commenced.
That Congress had difficult work to do, and it was done patiently, with much
plain sense and honesty. As yet there was no revenue. Everywhere there was
debt. The General Government had debt, and each of the States had debt.
There was the Foreign Debt—due to France, Holland, and Spain There was the
Army Debt—for arrears of pay and pensions. There was the Debt of the Five
Great Departments—for supplies obtained during the war. There was a vast
issue of paper money to be redeemed. There were huge arrears of interest.
And, on the other hand, there was no provision whatever for these enormous
obligations.
Washington, with a sigh, asked a friend, "What
is to be done about this heavy debt?" "There is but one man in America can
tell you," said his friend, "and that is Alexander Hamilton." Washington
made Hamilton Secretary to the Treasury. The success of his financial
measures was immediate and complete. "lie smote the rock of the national
resources," said Daniel Webster, "and abundant streams of revenue gushed
forth. He touched the dead corpse of the public credit, and it sprang upon
its feet." All the war debts of the States were assumed by the General
Government. Efficient provision was made for the regular payment of
interest, and for a sinking fund to liquidate the principal. Duties were
imposed on shipping, on goods imported from abroad, and on spirits
manufactured at home. The vigour of the Government inspired public
confidence. Commerce began to revive. In a few years the American flag was
seen on every sea. The simple manufactures of the country resumed their long
interrupted activity. A National Bank was established. Courts were set up,
and judges were appointed. The salaries of the President and the great
functionaries were settled. A. home was chosen for the General Government on
the banks of the Potomac; where the capital of the Union was to supplant the
little wooden village— remote from the agitations which arise in the great
centres of population. Innumerable details connected with the establishment
of a new government were discussed and fixed. Novel as the circumstances
were, little of the work then done has required to be undone. Succeeding
generations of Americans have approved the wisdom of their early
legislators, and continue unaltered the arrangements which were framed at
the outset of the national existence.
Thirty years of peace
succeeded the War of Independence. There were, indeed, passing troubles with
the Indians, ending always in the sharp chastisement of those disagreeable
savages.
There was an expedition against Tripoli, to avenge
certain indignities which the barbarians of that region had offered to
American shipping. There was a misunderstanding with the French Directory,
which was carried to a somewhat perilous extreme. A desperate fight took
place between a French frigate and an American frigate, resulting in the
surrender of the former. But these trivial agitations did not disturb the
profound tranquillity of the nation, or hinder its progress in that career
of prosperity on which it had now entered.
Washington was
President during the first eight years of the Constitution. He survived his
withdrawal from public life only three years, dying, after a few hours'
illness, in the sixty-eighth year of his age. His countrymen mourned him
with a sorrow sincere and deep. Their reverence for him has not diminished
with the progress of the years.
Each new generation of
Americans catches up the veneration—calm, intelligent, but profound—with
which its fathers regarded the blameless Chief. To this day there is an
affectionate watchfulness for opportunities to express the honour in which
his name is held. To this clay the steamers which ply upon the Potomac
strike mournful notes upon the bell as they sweep past Mount Vernon, where
Washington spent the happiest days of his life, and where he died.
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