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December 1902
The Ideals of America
by Woodrow Wilson
We do not think or speak of the War for Independence as if we were aged men who,
amidst alien scenes of change, comfort themselves with talk of great things
done in days long gone by, the like of which they may never hope to see again.
The spirit of the old days is not dead. If it were, who amongst us would care
for its memory and distant, ghostly voice? It is the distinguishing mark, nay
the very principle of life in a nation alive and quick in every fibre, as ours
is, that all its days are great days,—are to its thought single and of a piece.
Its past it feels to have been but the prelude and earnest of its present.
It is from its memories of days old and new that it gets its sense of identity,
takes its spirit of action, assures itself of its power and its capacity, and
knows its place in the world. Old colony days, and those sudden days of revolution
when debate turned to action and heady winds as if of destiny blew with mighty
breath the long continent through, were our own days, the days of our childhood
and our headstrong youth. We have not forgotten. Our memories make no effort
to recall the time. The battle of Trenton is as real to us as the battle of
San Juan hill.
We remember the chill, and the ardor too, of that gray morning when
we came upon the startled outposts of the town, the driving sleet beating at our backs; the cries and hurrying
of men in the street, the confused muster at our front, the sweeping
fire of our guns and the rush of our men, Sullivan coming up by the
road from the river, Washington at the north, where the road to
Princeton is; the showy Hessian colonel shot from his horse
amidst his bewildered men; the surrender; the unceasing storm. And
then the anxious days that followed the recrossing of the icy river
before even we had rested; the troop of surly prisoners to be cared
for and sent forward to Philadelphia; the enemy all the while to be
thought of, and the way to use our advantage.
How much it meant a third time to cross the river, and wait here in
the town for the regiments Sir William Howe should send against us!
How sharp and clear the night was when we gave Cornwallis the slip
and took the silent, frosty road to Allentown and Princeton! Those
eighteen miles between bedtime and morning are not easily forgot, nor
that sharp brush with the redcoats at Princeton: the moving fight upon
the sloping hillside, the cannon planted in the streets, the gray old
building where the last rally was made,—and then the road to
Brunswick, Cornwallis at our heels!
How the face of things was changed in those brief days! There had
been despair till then. It was but a few short weeks since the men of
the Jersey towns and farms had seen us driven south across the river like fugitives;
now we came back an army again, the
Hessians who had but the other day harried and despoiled that
countryside beaten and scattered before us, and they knew not whether
to believe their eyes or not. As we pushed forward to the heights at
Morristown we drew in the British hues behind us, and New Jersey was
free of the redcoats again. The Revolution had had its turning point.
It was easy then to believe that General Washington could hold his
own against any adversary in that terrible game of war. A new heart
was in everything!
And yet what differences of opinion there were, and how hot and emphatic every
turn of the war made them among men who really spoke their
minds and dissembled nothing! It was but six months since the
Congress had ventured its Declaration of Independence, and the brave
words of that defiance halted on many lips that read them. There were
men enough and to spare who would not speak them at all; who deemed
the whole thing madness and deep folly, and even black treason. Men
whose names all the colonies knew held off and would take no part in
armed resistance to the ancient crown whose immemorial sovereignty
kept a great empire together. Men of substance at the ports of trade
were almost all against the Revolution; and where men of means and principle led, base men who played for
their own interest were sure to follow. Every movement of the
patriotic leaders was spied upon and betrayed; everywhere the army
moved there were men of the very countryside it occupied to be kept
close watch against.
Those were indeed "times that tried men's souls"! It was no light matter to put the footing as of a
nation into those scattered settlements: to bring the high-spirited
planters of the Carolinas, who thought for themselves, or their
humble neighbors on the upland farms, who ordered their lives as they pleased, to
the same principles and point of view
that the leaders of Virginia and Massachusetts professed and occupied,—this
point of view from which everything
wore so obvious an aspect of hopeful
revolt, where men planned the war at the north. There were great
families at Philadelphia and in Boston itself who were as hard to
win, and plain men without number in New York and the Jerseys who
would not come for the beckoning. Opinion was always making and to
be made, and the campaign of mind was as hard as that of arms.
To think of those days of doubt and stress, of the swaying of
opinion this way and that, of counsels distracted and plans to be
made anew at every turn of the arduous business, takes one's thoughts
forward to those other days, as full of doubt, when the war had at
last been fought out and a government was to be made. No doubt that
crisis was the greatest of all. Opinion will form for a war, in the
face of manifest provocation and of precious rights called into
question. But the making of a government is another matter. And the
government to be made then was to take the place of the government
cast off: there was the rub. It
was difficult to want any common government at all after fighting to
be quit of restraint and overlordship altogether; and it went
infinitely hard to be obliged to make it strong, with a right to
command and a power to rule. Then it was that we knew that even
the long war, with its bitter training of the thoughts and its hard
discipline of union, had not made a nation, but only freed a group of
colonies. The debt is the more incalculable which we owe to the
little band of sagacious men who labored the summer through, in that
far year 1787, to give us a constitution that those heady
little commonwealths could be persuaded to accept,
and which should yet be a framework within which the real
powers of a nation might grow in the fullness of time,
and gather head with the growth of a mighty people.
They gave us but the outline, the formula, the broad and general programme of our life, and left us to
fill it in with such rich store of achievement and sober experience
as we should be able to gather in the days to come. Not battles or
any stirring scene of days of action, but the slow processes by which
we grew and made our thought and formed our purpose in quiet days
of peace, are what we find it hard to make real to our minds again,
now that we are mature and have fared far upon the road. Our life is
so broad and various now, and was so simple then; the thoughts of
those first days seem crude to us now and unreal. We smile upon the
simple dreams of our youth a bit incredulously, and seem cut off
from them by a great space. And yet it was by those dreams we were
formed. The lineage of our thoughts is unbroken. The nation that was
making then was the nation which yesterday intervened in the affairs
of Cuba, and to-day troubles the trade and the diplomacy of the
world.
It was clear to us even then, in those first days when we were at
the outset of our life, with what spirit and mission we had come into
the world. Clear-sighted men over sea saw it too, whose eyes were not
holden by passion or dimmed by looking steadfastly only upon things
near at hand. We shall not forget those deathless passages of great
speech, compact of music and high sense, in which Edmund Burke
justified us and gave us out of his riches our philosophy of right
action in affairs of state. Chatham rejoiced that we had resisted.
Fox clapped his hands when he heard that Cornwallis had been trapped
and taken at Yorktown. Dull men without vision, small men who stood
upon no place of elevation in their thoughts, once cried treason
against these men,—though no man dared speak such a taunt to the
passionate Chatham's face; but now all men speak as Fox spoke, and
our Washington is become one of the
heroes of the English race. What did it mean that the greatest
Englishmen should thus cheer us to revolt at the very moment of our
rebellion? What is it that has brought us at last the verdict of the
world?
It means that in our stroke for independence we struck a blow for all
the world. Some men saw it then; all men see it now. The very
generation of Englishmen who stood against us in that day of our
struggling birth lived to see the liberating light of that day shine
about their own path before they made an end and were gone. They had
deep reason before their own day was out to know what it was that
Burke had meant when he said, "We cannot falsify the pedigree of
this fierce people, and persuade them that they are not sprung from a
nation in whose veins the blood of freedom circulates. The language
in which they would hear you tell them this tale would detect the
imposition, your speech would betray you. An Englishman is the unfittest
person on earth to argue another Englishman into slavery." ... "For, in order to prove that the Americans have no right to
their liberties, we are every day endeavoring to subvert the maxims
which preserve the whole spirit of our own. To prove that the
Americans ought not to be free, we are obliged to depreciate the
value of freedom itself; and we never seem to gain a paltry advantage
over them in debate without attacking some of those principles, or
deriding some of those feelings, for which our ancestors have shed
their blood."
It turned out that the long struggle in America had been the first
act in the drama whose end and culmination should be the final
establishment of constitutional government for England and for
English communities everywhere. It is easy now, at this quiet
distance, for the closeted student to be puzzled how to set up the
legal case of the colonists against the authority of Parliament. It
is possible now to respect the scruples of the
better loyalists, and even to give all honor to the sober ardor of
self-sacrifice with which they stood four-square against the
Revolution. We no longer challenge their right. Neither do we search
out the motives of the mass of common men who acted the one side or the other.
Like men in all ages and at every crisis of
affairs, they acted each according to his sentiment, his fear, his
interest, or his lust. We ask, rather, why did the noble gentlemen to
whom it fell to lead America seek great action and embark all their
honor in such a cause? What was it they fought for?
A lawyer is puzzled to frame the answer; but no statesman need be. "If I
were sure," said Burke, "that the colonists had, at their leaving
this country, sealed a regular compact of servitude,
that they had solemnly abjured all the rights of citizens, that they
had made a vow to renounce all ideas of liberty for them and their
posterity to all generations, yet I should hold myself obliged to
conform to the temper I found universally prevalent in my own day,
and to govern two millions of men, impatient of servitude, on the
principles of freedom. I am not determining a point of law; ...
the general character and situation of a people must determine
what sort of government is fit for them." It was no abstract point of
governmental theory the leaders of the colonies took the field to
expound. Washington, Henry, Adams, Hancock, Franklin, Morris,
Boudinot, Livingston, Ruledge, Pinckney,—these were men of
affairs, who thought less of books than of principles of action. They
fought for the plain right of self-government, which any man could
understand. The government over sea had broken faith with them,—not
the faith of law, but the faith that is in
precedents and ancient understandings,
though they be tacit and nowhere spoken in any charter. Hitherto the
colonies had been let live their own lives according
to their own genius, and vote their own
supplies to the crown as if their assemblies were so many
parliaments. Now, of a sudden, the Parliament in England was to thrust
their assemblies aside and itself pay their taxes. Here was too new
a thing. Government without precedent was government without license
or limit. It was government by innovation, not government by
agreement. Old ways were the only ways acceptable to English feet.
The revolutionists stood for no revolution at all, but for the
maintenance of accepted practices, for the inviolable understandings
of precedent,—in brief, for Constitutional government.
That sinister change which filled the air of America with storm
darkened the skies of England too. Not in America only did
George, the king, and his counselors make light of and willfully
set aside the ancient understandings which were the very stuff of
liberty in English eyes. That unrepresentative Parliament, full of
place-men, which had taxed America, contained majorities which the
king could bestow at his will upon this minister or that; and the men
who set America by the ears came or went from their places at his
bidding. It was he, not the Parliament, that made and unmade
ministries. Behind the nominal ministers of
the crown stood men whom Parliament did not deal with, and the nation
did not see who were the king's favorites, and therefore the actual
rulers of England. There was here the real revolution. America, with
her sensitive make-up, her assemblies that were the real
representatives of her people, had but felt sooner than the mass of
Englishmen at home, the unhappy change of air which seemed about to
corrupt the constitution itself. Burke felt it in England, and Fox,
and every man whose thoughts looked soberly forth upon the signs of
the times. And presently, when the American war was over, the nation
itself began to see what light the notable thing done in America
shed upon its own affairs. The king was to be grappled with at
home, the Parliament was to be freed from his
power, and the ministers who ruled England were to be made the real servants of the people. Constitutional government was to be made a reality again. We had begun the work of freeing England when we completed the work of freeing ourselves.
The great contest which followed over sea, and which was nothing less than the capital and last process of making and confirming the constitution of England, kept covert beneath the surface of affairs while the wars of the French Revolution swept the world. Not until 1832 was representation in Parliament at last reformed, and the Commons made a veritable instrument of the nation's will. Days of revolution, when ancient kingdoms seemed tottering to their fall, were no days in which to be tinkering the constitution of old England. Her statesmen grew slow and circumspect and moved in all things with infinite prudence, and even with a novel timidity. But when the times fell quiet again, opinion, gathering head for a generation, moved forward at last to its object; and government was once more by consent in England. The Parliament spoke the real mind of the nation, and the leaders whom the Commons approved were of necessity also the ministers of the crown. Men could then look back and see that America had given England the shock, and the crown the opportune defeat, which had awakened her to save her constitution from corruption.
Meanwhile, what of America herself? How had she used the independence she had demanded and won? For a little while she had found it a grievous thing to be free, with no common power set over her to hold her to a settled course of life which should give her energy and bring her peace and honor and increase of wealth. Even when the convention at Philadelphia had given her the admirable framework of a definite constitution, she found it infinitely hard to hit upon a common way of progress under a mere printed law which had no sanction of custom or affection, which no ease of
old habit sustained, and no familiar light of old tradition made plain to follow. This new law had yet to be filled with its meanings, had yet to be given its texture of life. Our whole history, from that day of our youth to this day of our glad immaturity, has been filled with the process.
It took the war of 1812 to give its spirit and full consciousness and pride of station as a nation. That was the real war of independence for our political parties. It was then we cut our parties and our passions loose from politics over sea, and set ourselves to make a career which should be indeed our own. That accomplished, and our weak youth turned to callow manhood, we stretched our hand forth again to the West, set forth with a new zest and energy upon the western rivers amid the rough trails that led across the mountains and down to the waters of the Mississippi. There lay a commitment to be possessed. In the very day of first union Virginia and her sister states had ceded to the common government all the great stretches of western land that lay between the mountains and that mighty river into which all the western waters gathered head. While we were yet weak and struggling for our place among the nations, Mr. Jefferson had added the vast bulk of Louisiana, beyond the river, whose boundaries no man certainly knew. All the great spaces of the continent from Canada round about by the great Rockies to the warm waters of the southern Gulf lay open to the feet of our young men. The forests rang with their noisy march. What seemed a new race deployed into those broad valleys and out upon those long, unending plains which were the common domain, where no man knew any government but the government of the whole people. That was to be the real making of the nation.
There sprang up the lusty status which now, in these days of our full
stature, outnumber almost threefold the thirteen commonwealths which
formed the Union. Their growth set the pace of our life; forced the
slavery question to a final issue; gave us the civil war with its
stupendous upheaval and its resettlement of the very foundations
of the government; spread our strength from sea to sea; created us
a free and mighty people, whose destinies daunt the imagination of
the Old World looking on. That increase, that endless accretion, that
rolling, restless tide, incalculable in its strength, infinite in
its variety, has made us what we are, has put the resources of a huge
continent at our disposal; has provoked us to invention and given us
mighty captains of industry. This great pressure of a people moving
always to new frontiers, in search of new lands, new power, the full
freedom of a virgin world, has ruled our course and formed our
policies like a Fate. It gave us, not Louisiana alone, but Florida
also. It forced war with Mexico upon us, and gave us the coasts of
the Pacific. It swept Texas into the Union. It made far Alaska a
territory of the United States. Who shall say where it will end?
The census takers of 1890 informed us, when their task was done, that
they could no longer find any frontier upon this continent; that
they must draw their maps as if the mighty process of settlement that had gone on,
ceaseless, dramatic, the century through, were now ended and
complete, the nation made from sea to sea. We had not pondered their
report a single decade before we made new frontiers for ourselves
beyond the seas, accounting the seven thousand miles of ocean that
lie between us and the Philippine Islands no more than the three
thousand which once lay between us and the coasts of the Pacific. No
doubt there is here a great revolution in our lives. No war ever
transformed us quite as the war with Spain transformed
us. No previous years ever ran with so swift a change as the years
since 1898. We have witnessed a new revolution. We have seen the
transformation of America completed. That little group of states,
which one hundred and twenty-five years ago cast the sovereignty of
Britain off, is now grown into a mighty power. That little
confederation has now massed and organized its energies. A
confederacy is transformed into a nation. The battle of Trenton was
not more significant than the battle of Manila. The nation that
was one hundred and twenty-five years in the making has now
stepped forth into the open arena of the world.
I ask you to stand with me at this
new turning-point of our life, that we may look before and after, and
judge ourselves alike in the light of that old battle fought here in
these streets, and in the light of all the mighty processes of our
history that have followed. We cannot too often give ourselves such
challenge of self-examination. It will hearten, it will steady, it
will moralize us to reassess our hopes, restate our ideals, and make
manifest to ourselves again the principles and the purposes upon
which we act. We are else without chart upon a novel voyage.
What are our thoughts now, as we
look back from this altered age to the Revolution which to-day we
celebrate? How do we think of its principles and of its example? Do
they seem remote and of a time not our own, or do they still seem
stuff of our thinking, principles near and intimate, and woven into
the very texture of our institutions? What say we now of liberty and
of self-government, its embodiment? What lessons have we read of it
on our journey hither to this high point of outlook at the beginning
of a new century? Do those old conceptions seem to us now an ideal
modified, of altered face, and of a mien not shown in the simple
days when the government was formed?
Of course forms have changed. The form of the Union itself is
altered, to the model that was in Hamilton's thought rather than to
that which Jefferson once held before us, adorned, transfigured, in
words that led the mind captive. Our ways of life are profoundly
changed since that dawn. The balance of the states against the
Federal government, however it may strike us now as of capital
convenience in the distribution of powers and the quick and various
exercise of the energies of the people, no longer seems central to
our conceptions of governmental structure, no longer seems of the
essence of the people's liberty. We are no longer strenuous about the
niceties of constitutional law; no longer dream that a written law
shall save us, or that by ceremonial cleanliness we may lift our
lives above corruption. But has the substance of things changed with
us, also? Wherein now do we deem the life and very vital principle
of self-government to be? Where is that point of principle at which
we should wish to make our stand and take again the final risk of
revolution? What other crisis do we dream of that might bring in
its train another battle of Trenton?
These are intensely practical questions. We fought but the other day to give Cuba self-government. It
is a point of conscience with us that the Philippines shall have
it, too, when our work there is done and they are ready. But when
will our work there be done, and how shall we know when they are
ready? How, when our hand is withdrawn from her capitals and site
plays her game of destiny apart and for herself, shall we be sure
that Cuba has this blessing of liberty and self-government, for which
battles are justly fought and revolutions righteously set afoot? If
we be apostles of liberty and of self-government, surely we know what
they are, in their essence and without disguise of form, and shall
not be deceived in the principles of their
application by mere differences between this race and that. We have
given pledges to the world and must redeem them as we can.
Some nice tests of theory are before
us, —are even now at hand. There are those amongst us who have
spoken of the Filipinos as standing where we stood when we were in
the throes of that great war which was turned from fear to hope again
in that battle here in the streets of Trenton which we are met to
speak of, and who have called Aguinaldo, the winning, subtle youth
now a prisoner in our hands at Manila, a second Washington. Have
they, then, forgot that tragic contrast upon which the world gazed
in the days when our Washington was President on the one side of the
sea, in America, an ordered government, a people busy with the
tasks of mart and home, a group of commonwealths bound together by
strong cords of their own weaving, institutions sealed and confirmed
by debate and the suffrages of free men, but not by the pouring out
of blood in civil strife,—on the other, in France, a nation
frenzied, distempered, seeking it knew not what,
a nation which poured its best blood out in a vain sacrifice, which
cried of liberty and self-government until the heavens rang and yet
ran straight and swift to anarchy, to give itself at last, with an
almost glad relief, to the masterful tyranny of a soldier? "I
should suspend my congratulations on the new liberty of France," said
Burke, the master who had known our liberty for what it was, and knew
this set up in France to be spurious,—"I should suspend my
congratulations on the new liberty of France until I was informed how
it had been combined with government; with public force; with the
discipline and obedience of armies; with the collection of an
effective and well-distributed revenue;
with morality and religion; with the solidity of property; with
peace and order; with social and civil manners." Has it not taken France a century to effect the combination; and
are all men sure that she has found it even now? And yet were not
these things combined with liberty amongst us from the very first?
How interesting a light shines upon the matter of our thought out of
that sentence of Burke's! How liberty had been combined with
government! Is there here a difficulty, then? Are the two things
not kindly disposed toward one another? Does it require any nice art
and adjustment to unite and reconcile them? Is there here some
cardinal test which those amiable persons have overlooked, who have
dared to cheer the Filipino rebels on in their stubborn resistance to
the very government they themselves live under and owe fealty to?
Think of Washington's passion for order, for authority, for some
righteous public force which should teach individuals their place
under government, for the solidity of property, for morality and
sober counsel. It was plain that he cared not a whit for liberty
without these things to sustain and give it dignity. "You talk, my
good sir," he exclaimed, writing to Henry Lee in Congress, '' you
talk of employing influence to appease the present tumults in
Massachusetts. I know not where that influence is to be found, or,
if attainable, that it would be a proper remedy for the disorders.
Influence is no government. Let us have one by which our lives,
liberties, and properties will be secured, or let us know the worst
at once." In brief, the fact is this, that liberty is the privilege
of maturity, of self-control, of self-mastery and a thoughtful care
for righteous dealings,—that some peoples may have it, therefore,
and others may not.
We look back to the great men who made our government as to a
generation, not of revolutionists, but of statesmen. They fought, not
to pull down, but to preserve,—not for some fair and far-off thing they
wished for, but for a familiar thing they had and meant to keep.
Ask any candid student of the history
of English liberty, and he will tell you
that these men were of the lineage of
Pym and Hampden, of Pitt and Fox;
that they were men who consecrated their lives to the preservation
intact of what had been wrought out in blood and sweat by the
countless generations of sturdy freemen who had gone before
them.
Look for a moment at what self-government really meant in their
time. Take English history for your test. I know not where else you
may find an answer to the question. We speak, all the world speaks,
of England as the mother of liberty and self-government, and the
beginning of her liberty we place in the great year that saw Magna
Charta signed, that immortal document whose phrases ring again in all
our own Bills of Rights. Her liberty is in fact older than that
signal year; but 1215
we set up as a shining mark to hold the
eye. And yet we know, for all we boast
the date so early, for how many a long generation after that the
monarch ruled and the commons cringed; haughty Plantagenets had
their way, and indomitable Tudors played the master to all men's
fear, till the fated Stuarts went their stupid way to exile and the
scaffold. Kings were none the less kings
because their subjects were free men.
Local self-government in England
consisted until 1888 of government by almost omnipotent Justices of
the Peace appointed by the Lord Chancellor. They were laymen,
however. They were country gentlemen and served without pay. They
were of the neighborhood and used their power for its benefit as
their lights served them; but no man had a vote or choice as to which
of the country gentlemen of his county should be set over him; and
the power of the Justices sitting in Quarter Sessions covered almost
every point of justice and
administration not directly undertaken by the officers of the crown
itself. "Long ago," laughs an English writer, "lawyers abandoned the
hope of describing the duties of a Justice in any methodic fashion,
and the alphabet has become the only possible connecting thread. A
Justice must have something to do with 'Railroads, Rape, Rates,
Recognizances, Records, and Recreation Grounds
with Perjury, Petroleum, Piracy, and
Playhouses;' with 'Disorderly Houses,
Dissentions, Dogs, and Drainage.'" And
yet Englishmen themselves called their life under those lay masters
self-government.
The English House of Commons was for many a generation, many a
century even, no House of the Commons at all, but a house full of
country gentlemen and rich burghers, the aristocracy of the English
counties and the English towns
and yet it was from this House, and not from that reformed since
1832, that the world drew, through Montesquieu, its models of
representative self-government in the days when our own Union was
set up.
In America, and in America alone, did self-government mean an organization
self-originated, and of the stuff of the people themselves.
America had gone a stop beyond her mother country. Her people were
for the most part picked men; such men as have the energy and the
initiative to leave old homes and old friends, and go to far
frontiers to make a new life for themselves. They were men of a
certain initiative, to take the world into their own hands. The king
had given them their charters, but within the broad definitions of
those charters they had built as they pleased, and common men were
partners in the government of their little commonwealths. At home, in
the old country, there was need, no doubt, that the hand of the
king's government should keep men within its reach. The countrysides
were full of yokels who would have been
brutes to deal with else. The counties
were in fact represented very well by
the country gentlemen who ruled them,
for they were full of broad estates where men were tenants, not
freehold farmers, and the interests of masters were generally enough
the interests of their men. The towns had charters of their
own. There was here no democratic community, and no one said or thought
that the only self-government was democratic self-government. In America the
whole constitution of society was democratic, inevitably and of
course. Men lay close to their simple governments, and the new life
brought to a new expression the immemorial English principle,
that the intimate affairs of local administration and the common
interests that were to be served in the making of laws should be
committed to laymen, who would look at the government critically and
from without, and not to the king's agents, who would look at it
professionally and from within. England had had self-government
time out of mind; but in America English self-government had become
popular self-government.
"Almost all the civilized states derive their national unity," says
a great English writer of our generation, "from common subjection,
past or present, to royal power; the Americans of the United States,
for example, are a nation because they once obeyed a king." That
example in such a passage comes upon us with a shock: it is very
unexpected,—"the Americans of the United States, for example, are a
nation because they once obeyed a king!" And yet, upon reflection,
can we deny the example? It is plain enough that the
reason why the English in America got self-government and knew how to
use it, and the French in America did not, was
that the English had had a training under the kings of England and
the French under the kings of France. In the one country men did all
things at the bidding of officers of the crown; in the
other, officers of the crown listened, were constrained to listen, to the
counsels of laymen drawn out of the general body of the nation.
And yet the kings of England were no less kings than the kings of
France. Obedience is everywhere the basis of government, and the
English were not ready either in their life or in their thought for a
free regime under which they should choose their kings by ballot. For
that regime they could be made ready only by the long drill which
should make them respect above all things the law and the
authority of governors. Discipline—discipline generations deep—had
first to give them all ineradicable love of order, the poise
of men self-commanded, the spirit of men who obey and yet speak
their minds and are free, before they could be Americans.
No doubt a king did hold us together until we learned how to hold
together of ourselves. No doubt our unity as a nation does come
from the fact that we once obeyed a king. No one can look at the
processes of English history and doubt that the throne has been its
centre of poise, though not in our days its centre of force.
Steadied by the throne, the effective part of the nation has, at
every stage of its development, dealt with and controlled the
government in the name of the whole. The king and his subjects
have been partners in the great undertaking. At last, in our country,
in this best trained portion of the nation, set off by itself, the
whole became fit to act for itself, by veritable popular
representation, without the makeweight of a throne. That is the
history of our liberty. You have the spirit of English history, and
of English royalty, from King Harry's mouth upon the field of
Agincourt:—
"We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition:
And gentlemen in England now a-bed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day."
It is thus the spirit of English life has made comrades of us all to be a nation. This is what Burke meant by
combining government with liberty,—the spirit of obedience with
the spirit of free election. Liberty is not itself government. In the wrong hands,—in hands unpracticed, undisciplined,—it is incompatible with government. Discipline must precede it,—if
necessary, the discipline of being under masters. Then will
self-control make it a thing of life and not a thing of tumult, a
tonic, not an insurgent madness in the blood. Shall we doubt, then,
what the conditions precedent to liberty and self-government are, and what their
invariable support and accompaniment must be, in the countries whose
administration we have taken over in trust, and particularly in those far Philippine Islands whose government is our chief anxiety? We cannot give them any quittance of the debt ourselves have
paid. They can have liberty no cheaper than we got it. They must
first take the discipline of law, must first love order and
instinctively yield to it. It is the heathen, not the free citizen of
a self-governed country, who "in his blindness bows down to wood
and stone, and don't obey no orders unless they is his own." We are
old in this learning and must be their tutors.
But we may set them upon the way with an advantage we did not have
until our hard journey was more than half made. We can see to it
that the law which teaches them obedience is just law and
even-handed. We can see to it that justice be free and
unpurchasable among them. We can make order lovely by making it the
friend of every man and not merely the shield of some. We can teach
them by our fairness in administration that there may be a
power in government which, though imperative and irresistible by those who would cross or thwart it, does not act for its own aggrandizement,
but is the guarantee that all shall fare alike. That will
infinitely shorten their painful tutelage. Our pride, our conscience
will not suffer us to give them less.
And, if we are indeed bent upon service and not mastery, we shall
give them more. We shall take them into our confidence and suffer them to
teach us, as our critics. No man can deem himself free from whom the
government hides its action, or who is forbidden to speak his mind
about affairs, as if government were a private thing which concerned
the governors alone. Whatever the power of government, if it is just,
there may be publicity of governmental action and freedom of opinion
and public opinion gathers head effectively only by concerted public
agitation. Those are the things—knowledge of what the government
is doing and liberty to speak of it—that have made Englishmen feel
like free men, whether they liked their governors or not: the right to
know and the right to speak out,—to speak out in plain words and in
open counsel. Privacy, official reticence, governors hedged about
and inaccessible, —these are the marks of arbitrary government, under
which spirited men grow restive and resentful. The mere right to
criticise and to have matters explained to them cools men's tempers and gives them understanding in affairs. This is what we seek among our new subjects: that they shall understand us, and after free
conference shall trust us: that they shall perceive that we are not
afraid of criticism, and that we are ready to explain and to take
suggestions from all who are ready, when the conference is over, to
obey.
There will be a. wrong done, not if we govern and govern as we will,
govern with a strong hand that will brook no
resistance, and according to principles of might gathered from our
own experience, not from theirs, which has never yet touched the
vital matter we are concerned with; but only if we govern in the
spirit of autocrats and of those who serve themselves, not their
subjects. The whole solution lies less in our methods than in our
temper. We must govern as those who learn and they must obey as those
who are in tutelage. They are children and we are men in these
deep matters of government and justice. If we have not learned the
substance of these things, no nation is ever likely to learn it, for
it is taken from life, and not from books. But though children must
be foolish, impulsive, headstrong, unreasonable, men may be
arbitrary, self-opinionated, impervious, impossible, as the English
were in their Oriental colonies until they learned. We should be
inexcusable to repeat their blunders and wait as long as they waited
to learn how to serve the peoples whom we govern. It is plain we
shall have a great deal to learn: it is to be hoped we shall learn it
fast.
There are, unhappily, some indications that we have ourselves yet to
learn the things we would teach. You have but to think of the large
number of persons of your own kith and acquaintance who have for the
past two years been demanding, in print and out of it, with
moderation and the air of reason and without it, that we give the
Philippines independence and self-government now, at once, out of
hand. It were easy enough to give them independence, if by
independence you mean only disconnection with any government outside
the islands, the independence of a rudderless boat adrift. But
self-government? How is that "given"? Can it be given? Is it not
gained, earned, graduated into from the hard school of life? We have
reason to think so. I have just now been trying to give the reasons
we have for thinking so.
There are many things, things slow and difficult to come at, which we
have found to be conditions precedent to liberty,—to the liberty
which can be combined with government; and we cannot, in our present
situation, too often remind ourselves of these things, in order that
we may look steadily and wisely upon liberty, not in the
uncertain light of theory, but in the broad, sun-like, disillusioning
light of experience. We know, for one thing, that it rests at bottom
upon a clear experimental knowledge of what are in fact the just
rights of individuals, of what is the equal and profitable balance to
be maintained between the right of the individual to serve himself
and the duty of government to serve society. I say, not merely a
clear knowledge of these, but a clear experimental knowledge
of them as well. We hold it, for example, an
indisputable principle of law in a free state that there should be
freedom of speech, and yet we have a law of libel. No man, we say,
may speak that which wounds his neighbor's reputation unless there be
public need to speak it. Moreover we will judge of that need in a
rough and ready fashion. Let twelve ordinary men, empaneled as a
jury, say whether the wound was justly given and of necessity. "The
truth of the matter is very simple when stripped of all ornaments of
speech,'' says an eminent English judge. "It is neither more nor
less than this that a man may publish anything which twelve of his fellow countrymen
think is not blamable." It is plain, therefore, that in this case at
least we do not inquire curiously concerning the Rights of Man, which
do not seem susceptible of being stated in terms of social
obligation, but content ourselves with asking, "What are the rights
of men living together, amongst whom there must be order and fair
give and take?" And our law of libel is only one instance out of
many. We treat all rights in like practical fashion. But a people
must obviously have had experience to treat them so. You have here one
image in the mirror of self-government.
Do not leave the mirror before you see another. You cannot call a
miscellaneous people, unknit, scattered, diverse of race and speech
and habit, a nation, a community. That, at least, we got by serving
under kings: we got the feeling and the organic structure of a
community. No people can form a community or be wisely subjected to
common forms of government who are as diverse and as heterogeneous
as the people of the Philippine Islands. They are in no wise knit
together. They are of many races, of many stages of development,
economically, socially, politically disintegrate, without
community of feeling because without community of life, contrasted
alike in experience and in habit, having nothing in common except
that they have lived for hundreds of years together under a
government which held them always where they were when it first
arrested their development. You may imagine the problem of
self-government and of growth for such a people,—if so be you have
an imagination and are no doctrinaire. If there is difficulty in our
own government here at home because the several sections of our own
country are disparate and at different stages of development, what
shall we expect, and what patience shall we not demand of ourselves,
with regard to our belated wards beyond the Pacific? We have here
among ourselves hardly sufficient equality of social and economic
conditions to breed full community of feeling. We have learned of our
own experience what the problem of self-government is in such a
case.
That liberty and self-government are
things of infinite difficulty and nice accommodation we above all
other peoples ought to know who have had every adventure in their
practice. Our very discontent with the means we have taken to keep
our people clear-eyed and steady in
the use of their institutions is evidence of our appreciation of what
is required to sustain them. We have set up an elaborate system of
popular education, and have made the maintenance of that system a
function of government, upon the theory that only systematic training
can give the quick intelligence, the "variety of information and
excellence of discretion" needed by a self-governed people. We expect
as much from schoolteachers as from governors in the Philippines and
in Porto Rico we expect from them the morale that is to
sustain our work there. And yet, when teachers have done their utmost and
the school bills are paid, we doubt, and know that we have reason to
doubt, the efficacy of what we have done. Books can but set the mind
free, can but give it the freedom of the world of thought. The
world of affairs has yet to be attempted, and the schooling of action
must supplement the schooling of the written page. Men who have an
actual hand in government, men who vote and sustain by their thoughts
the whole movementof affairs, men who have the making or the
confirming of policies, must have reasonable hopes, must act within
the reasonable bounds set by hard experience.
By education, no doubt, you acquaint men, while they are yet young
and quick to take impressions, with the character and spirit of the
polity they live under: give them some sentiment of respect for it, put them in the air that
has always lain about it, and prepare them to take the experience
that awaits them. But it is from the polity itself and their own
contact with it that they must get their actual usefulness in
affairs, and only that contact, intelligently made use of, makes good
citizens. We would not have them remain children always and act
always on the preconceptions taken out of the books they have
studied. Life is their real master and tutor in affairs.
And so the character of the polity men live under has always had a
deep significance in our thoughts. Our greater statesmen have been
men steeped in a thoughtful philosophy of polities, men who pondered
the effect of this institution and that upon morals and the life of
society, and thought of character when they spoke of affairs. They
have taught us that the best polity is that which most certainly
produces the habit and the spirit of civic duty, and which calls
with the most stirring and persuasive voice to the leading characters
of the nation to come forth and give it direction. It must be a
polity which shall stimulate, which shall breed emulation, which
shall make men seek honor by seeking service. Those are the ideals
which have formed our institutions, and which shall mend them when
they need reform. We need good leaders more than an excellent
mechanism of action in charters and constitutions. We need men of
devotion as much as we need good laws. The two cannot be divorced and
self-government survive.
It is this thought that distresses us when we look upon our cities
and our states and see them ruled by bosses. Our methods of party
organization have produced bosses, and they are as natural and
inevitable a product of our politics, no doubt, at any rate for the
time being and until we can see our way to better things, as the
walking delegate and the union president are of the contest between
capital and federated labor, Both the masters of strikes and the
masters of caucuses are able men, too, with whom we must needs deal
with our best wits about us. But they are not, if they will pardon
me for saying so, the leading characters I had in mind when I said
that the excellence of a polity might be judged by the success with
which it calls the leading characters of a nation forth to its posts
of command. The polity which breeds bosses breeds managing talents
rather than leading characters,—very excellent things in themselves, but not the highest flower of
politics. The power to govern and direct primaries, combine
primaries for the control of conventions, and use conventions for the
nomination of candidates and the formulation of platforms agreed
upon beforehand is an eminently useful thing in itself, and cannot be
dispensed with, it may be, in democratic countries, where men must
act, not helter skelter, but in parties, and with a certain party
discipline, not easily thrown off; but it is not the first
product of our politics we should wish to export to Porto Rico and
the Philippines.
No doubt our study of these things which lie at the front of our own
lives, and which must be handled in our own progress, will teach us
how to be better masters and tutors to those whom we govern. We
have come to full maturity with this new century of our national
existence and to full self-consciousness as a nation. And the day of
our isolation is past. We shall learn much ourselves now that we
stand closer to other nations and compare ourselves first with one
and again with another. Moreover, the centre of gravity has shifted
in the action of our Federal government. It has shifted back to where
it was at the opening of the last century, in that early day when we
were passing from the gristle to the bone of our growth. For the
first twenty-six years that we lived under our Federal constitution
foreign affairs, the sentiment and policy of nations over sea,
dominated our politics, and our Presidents were our leaders. And now
the same thing has come about again. Once more it is our place among
the nations that we think of; once more our Presidents are our leaders.
The centre of our party management shifts accordingly. We no
longer stop upon questions of what this state wants or that, what
this section will demand of the other, what this boss or that may
do to attach his machine to the government. The scale of our
thought is rational again. We are sensitive to airs
that come to us from off the seas. The President and his advisers
stand upon our chief coign of observation, and we mark their words as
we did not till this change came. And this centring of our
thoughts, this looking for guidance in things which mere managing
talents cannot handle, this union of our hopes, will not leave us
what we were when first it came. Here is a new world for us. Here is
a new life to which to adjust our ideals.
It is by the widening of vision that nations, as men, grow and are made
great. We need not fear the expanding scene. It was plain destiny that we should come to this, and if
we have kept our ideals clean, unmarred, commanding through the
great century and the moving scenes that made us a nation, we may
keep them also through the century that shall see us a great power
in the world. Let us put our leading characters at the front; let us pray
that vision may come with power; let us ponder our duties like men
of conscience and temper our ambitions like men who seek to serve,
not to subdue, the world; let us lift our thoughts to the level of
the great tasks that await us, and bring a great age in with the
coming of our day of strength.
Volume 90, No. 6, pp. 721–734
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