SECOND REPORT ON THE SMITHSONIAN FUND.HIS SPEECH ON A BILL FOR
INSURING A MORE FAITHFUL EXECUTION OF THE LAWS RELATING TO THE
COLLECTION OF DUTIES ON IMPORTS.REMARKS ON THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN
EXTENSIVE SERIES OF MAGNETICAL AND METEOROLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS.ON
ITINERANT ELECTIONEERING.ON ABUSES IN RESPECT OF THE NAVY FUND.ON
THE POLITICAL INFLUENCES OF THE TIME.ON THE ORIGIN AND RESULTS OF THE
FLORIDA WAR.HIS DENUNCIATION OF DUELLING.HIS ARGUMENT IN THE SUPREME
COURT ON BEHALF OF AFRICANS CAPTURED IN THE AMISTAD.
On the 5th of March, 1840, Mr. Adams,
as chairman of the select committee on the Smithsonian
bequest, made a report, in which he recapitulated
all the material facts which had previously occurred
relative to the acceptance of this fund, and entered
into the motives which prevailed with the former committee
as to its disposal. It appeared from this report,
which was accompanied by a publication of all the
documents connected with the subject up to that period,
that the fund had been received, and paid into the
Treasury, and invested in state stocks, and that the
President now invited the attention of Congress to
the obligation devolving upon the United States to
fulfil the object of the bequest. While this
message was under consideration various projects for
disposing of the funds had been presented by individuals,
in memorials, concerning which the report states that
they generally contemplated the establishment of a
school, college, or university, proposing expenditures
absorbing the whole in the erection of buildings,
and leaving little or nothing for the improvement of
future ages. “In most of these projects,”
says Mr. Adams, “there might be perceived purposes
of personal accommodation and emolument to the projectors,
more adapted to the promotion of their own interest
than to the increase and diffusion of knowledge among
men.”
While these memorials and the subject
of the disposal of the whole Smithson fund were before
the select committee, a resolution came from the Senate
appointing “a joint committee, consisting of
seven members of the Senate, and such a number as
the House of Representatives should appoint, to consider
the expediency of providing an institution of learning,
to be established at the city of Washington, for the
application of the legacy bequeathed by James Smithson,
of London, to the United States, in trust for that
purpose.” The House, out of courtesy to
the Senate, concurred in their resolution, and added
on their part the members of that of which Mr. Adams
was chairman.
The propositions of the committee
on the part of the House and that on the part of the
Senate were so widely at variance, that it was found
that no result could be obtained in which both committees
would concur. It was finally agreed that the
committee on the part of the House should report their
project to the House for consideration. Mr. Adams,
thereupon, as chairman, reported a series of resolutions,
substantially of the following import: That the
whole Smithson fund should be vested in a corporate
body of trustees, to remain, under the pledge of the
faith of the United States, undiminished and unimpaired,
at an interest yielding annually six per cent., appropriated
to the declared purpose of the founder, exclusively
from the interest, and not in any part from the principal,the
first appropriation of interest to be applied for the
erection of an astronomical observatory, and for the
various objects incident to such an establishment;that
the education of youth had not for its object the
increase and diffusion of knowledge among men,
but the endowment of individuals with knowledge already
acquired; and the Smithson fund should not be applied
to the purpose of education, or to any school, college,
university, or institution of education.
The chairman of the committee of the
Senate, in their behalf, presented counter resolutions,
disapproving the application of any part of the funds
to the establishment of an astronomical observatory,
and urging the appropriation of them to the establishment
of a university. The bill prepared by the House
is presented at large in this report, accompanied
with the argument in its support, prepared by Mr. Adams
with a strength and fulness to which no abstract can
do justice. In this argument he illustrates the
reasons for preserving the principal of the fund unimpaired,
and confining all expenditures from it to the annual
interest; also those which preclude any portion of
it to be applied to any institution for education;
showing, from the peculiar expressions of the testator,
that it could not have been his intention that the
fund should be applied in this manner. He then
proceeds to set forth the reasons why the income of
the fund should in the first instance be applied to
an astronomical observatory, without intending to
exclude any branch of human knowledge from its equitable
share of this benefaction. The importance of
this object he thus eloquently illustrates: “The
express object of Mr. Smithson’s bequest is the
diffusion of knowledge among men. IT IS
KNOWLEDGE, the source of all human wisdom, and of
all beneficent power; knowledge, as far transcending
the postulated lever of Archimedes as the universe
transcends this speck of earth upon its face; knowledge,
the attribute of Omnipotence, of which man alone,
in the physical and material world, is permitted to
anticipate.”
Why astronomical science should be
the object to which the income of this fund should
be first applied he thus proceeds to set forth:
“The express object of an observatory
is the increase of knowledge by new discovery.
The physical relations between the firmament of heaven
and the globe allotted by the Creator of all to be
the abode of man are discoverable only by the
organ of the eye. Many of these relations
are indispensable to the existence of human life, and
perhaps of the earth itself. Who, that can
conceive the idea of a world without a sun, but
must connect with it the extinction of light and
heat, of all animal life, of all vegetation and production,
leaving the lifeless clod of matter to return to the
primitive state of chaos, or to be consumed by
elemental fire? The influence of the moonof
the planets, our next-door neighbors of the solar
systemof the fixed stars, scattered over
the blue expanse in multitudes exceeding the power
of human computation, and at distances of which
imagination herself can form no distinct conception;the
influence of all these upon the globe which we inhabit,
and upon the condition of man, its dying and deathless
inhabitant, is great and mysterious, and, in the
search for final causes, to a great degree inscrutable
to his finite and limited faculties. The
extent to which they are discoverable is and must
remain unknown; but, to the vigilance of a sleepless
eye, to the toil of a tireless hand, and to the
meditations of a thinking, combining, and analyzing
mind, secrets are successively revealed, not only
of the deepest import to the welfare of man in his
earthly career, but which seem to lift him from
the earth to the threshold of his eternal abode;
to lead him blindfold up to the council-chamber
of Omnipotence, and there, stripping the bandage from
his eyes, bid him look undazzled at the throne of God.
“In the history of the human species,
so far as it is known to us, astronomical observation
was one of the first objects of pursuit for the
acquisition of knowledge. In the first chapter
of the sacred volume we are told that, in the
process of creation, ’God said, Let there
be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide
the day from the night; and let them be for signs,
and for seasons, and for days, and for years.’
By the special appointment, then, of the Creator,
they were made the standards for the measurement of
time upon earth. They were made for more:
not only for seasons, for days, and for years,
but for SIGNS. Signs of what? It may be that
the word, in this passage, has reference to the
signs of the Egyptian zodiac, to mark the succession
of solar months; or it may indicate a more latent
connection between the heavens and the earth, of
the nature of judicial astrology. These relations
are not only apparent to the most superficial
observation of man, but many of them remain inexhaustible
funds of successive discovery, perhaps as long
as the continued existence of man upon earth.
What an unknown world of mind, for example, is
yet teeming in the womb of time, to be revealed
in tracing the causes of the sympathy between the magnet
and the polethat unseen, immaterial
spirit, which walks with us through the most entangled
forests, over the most interminable wilderness,
and across every region of the pathless deep, by day,
by night, in the calm serene of a cloudless sky,
and in the howling of the hurricane or the typhoon?
Who can witness the movements of that tremulous
needle, poised upon its centre, still tending to the
polar star, but obedient to his distant hand,
armed with a metallic guide, round every point
of the compass, at the fiat of his will, without feeling
a thrill of amazement approaching to superstition?
The discovery of the attractive power of the magnet
was made before the invention of the alphabet,
or the age of hieroglyphics. No record of the
event is found upon the annals of human history.
But seven hundred years have scarcely passed away
since its polarity was first known to the civilized
European man. It was by observation of the periodical
revolution of the earth in her orbit round the sun,
compared with her daily revolution round her axis,
that was disclosed the fact that her annual period
was composed of three hundred and sixty-five of
her daily revolutions; or, in other words, that
the year was composed of three hundred and sixty-five
days. But the shepherds of Egypt, watching
their flocks by night, could not but observe the
movements of the dog-star, next to the sun the most
brilliant of the luminaries of heaven. They
worshipped that star as a god; and, losing sight
of him for about forty days every year, during
his conjunction with the sun, they watched with intense
anxiety for his reaeppearance in the sky, and with
that day commenced their year. By this practice
it failed not soon to be found that, although
the reaeppearance of the star for three successive
years was at the end of three hundred and sixty-five
days, it would, on the fourth year, be delayed
one day longer; and, after repeated observation
of this phenomenon, they added six hours to the computed
duration of the year, and established the canicular
period of four years, consisting of one thousand
four hundred and sixty-one days. It was not
until the days of Julius Caesar that this computation
of time was adopted in the Roman calendar; and
fifteen centuries from that time had elapsed before
the yearly celebration of the Christian paschal
festivals, founded upon the Passover of the Levitical
law, revealed the fact that the annual revolution
of the earth in her orbit round the sun is not
precisely of three hundred and sixty-five days
and one quarter, but of between eleven and twelve minutes
less; and thus the duration of the year was ascertained,
as a measure of time, to an accuracy of three
or four seconds, more or lessa mistake
which would scarcely amount to one day in twenty thousand
years.
“It is, then, to the successive
discoveries of persevering astronomical observation,
through a period of fifty centuries, that we are
indebted for a fixed and permanent standard for the
measurement of time. And by the same science
has man acquired, so far as he possesses it, a
standard for the measurement of space. A standard
for the measurement of the dimensions and distances
of the fixed stars from ourselves is yet to be
found; and, if ever found, will be through the
means of astronomical observation.
“The influence of all these discoveries
upon the condition of man is no doubt infinitely
diversified in relative importance; but all, even
the minutest, contribute to the increase and diffusion
of knowledge. There is no richer field of
science opened to the exploration of man in search
of knowledge than astronomical observation; nor
is there, in the opinion of this committee, any duty
more impressively incumbent upon all human governments
than that of furnishing means, and facilities,
and rewards, to those who devote the labors of
their lives to the indefatigable industry, the unceasing
vigilance, and the bright intelligence, indispensable
to success in these pursuits.”
These remarks are succeeded by others
on the Royal Observatory of Greenwich, on the connection
of astronomy with the art of navigation, on the increase
of observatories in the British Islands, in France,
and in Russia; and, after repeating the objections
to applying the fund of Mr. Smithson to a school devoted
to any particular branch of science, or for general
education, Mr. Adams, in behalf of the committee, submitted
a bill for the consideration of the house, embracing
the principles maintained in his report.
On May 8th, 1840, a bill to insure
a more faithful execution of the laws relating to
the collection of duties on imports being under consideration
of the house, Mr. Adams, after commenting on the nature
and injurious consequences of the fraud which it was
the object of the bill to prevent, said that this
practice was “a sort of national thing,”
to such an extent were the citizens of Great Britain
accustomed to come over to this country to cheat us
out of our revenue, and to defraud our manufacturing
interest, and added:
“I have said that there is something
national in this matter, and I will now proceed
to state what, in my judgment, lies at the bottom
of this proceeding. It is a maxim of British
commercial law that it is lawful for the citizens
of one nation to defraud the revenues of other
nations. The author of the maxim was a man famous
throughout the civilized world,a man
of transcendent talents, who fixed, more, perhaps,
than any other man of the same century, his impress
on the age in which he lived, and upon the laws
of England,I mean Lord Mansfield.
In some respects it has been greatly to the advantage
of those laws, but in others as much to their disadvantage
and discredit, of which the maxim of which I now
speak is a signal instance. He was the first
British judge who established the principle that
it is a lawful thing for Englishmen to cheat the revenue
laws of other nations, especially those of Spain and
Portugal.
“This principle was first settled
in an act of Parliament, the object of which was
to suppress what are denominated wager policies of
insurancea species of instrument well known
to lawyers as gambling policies, being entered
into when the party insuring has no interest in
the property insured. It had been a question whether
such policies were lawful by the common law.
The practice had greatly increased, insomuch that
wager policies had become a common thing.
It was with a view to suppress these that the statute
of the nineteenth of George the Second, chapter
thirty-seventh, was passed. The object of
that statute was good; it was remedial in its character;
it went to suppress a public evil; but, while it prohibited
wager policies in all other cases, it contained an
express exception in favor of those made on vessels
trading to Spain and Portugal.”
After commenting on this act of the
British Parliament, he quotes the words of Blackstone,
who, after stating the nature of these smuggling
policies, and dwelling upon their immorality and pernicious
tendency, refers to the law above mentioned, which
enacts “that they shall be totally null and
void, except as to policies on privateers in the
Spanish and Portuguese trade, for reasons sufficiently
obvious.” (2 Blackstone, ch. XXX.,
, Se.) On this statement of Blackstone
Mr. Adams remarks:
“It is an old maxim of the schools
that frauds are always concealed under generalities.
What were these obvious reasons? Why were
they concealed? It is known to the committee
that, in the celebrated controversy of the man
in the mask,I mean Junius with Blackstone,he
said, that for the defence of law, of justice, and
of truth, let any man consult the work of that
great judge, his Commentaries upon the laws of
England; but, if a man wanted to cheat his neighbor
out of his estate, he should consult the doctor himself.
I go a little further than Junius, although I do it
with great reluctance, for I hold the book to
be one of the best books in the world. I
say that the observation of Junius applies to the
book as much as to the judge, when, from reasons
like those with which scoundrels cover their consciences,
that book evades telling why the exception was
made in regard to Spain and Portugal, and what
those reasons were which the judge declares to be
‘sufficiently obvious.’
“This exception of the
British law was infectious; it spread into
France, whose government adopted
the same provision by way of
reprisal.”
Mr. Adams then read from Emerigon,
the principal authority of French lawyers on insurance,
who denies the principles of the English statute;
and M. Pothier, not a mere lawyer, but a philosopher
and moralist, who protests against this doctrine,
and appeals to the eternal laws of morality.
He then cites the second volume Term Reports,
, in which Judge Buller states, “I have
heard Lord Mansfield say that the reason of that allowance
was to favor the smuggling of bullion from those countries.”
On which Mr. Adams remarks:
“This is the sum of the whole
matter. Judge Buller heard Lord Mansfield
say that the object of the exception in regard to Spain
and Portugal was to encourageyes, to
encouragethe smuggling trade.
The object was that smugglers should not only escape
the effect of their villany, but should be actually
encouraged by government in its perpetration.
“I think I have now established
the position which I assumed, that the lawfulness
of violating the revenue laws of other nations is a
principle of English law,a principle
sanctioned by the Legislature and the judicial
courts of Great Britain,but one which the
best elementary writers, proceeding on the great
and eternal principles of morality, have condemned
as a false principle; and I have thought it necessary
to do this with a view to trace these frauds upon our
revenue, committed by British subjects, to what
I believe to be their original source in the false
morality in the English Parliament and English
judges. What is the natural effect of the promulgation
of such principles by such authority? What can
it be but to encourage frauds on the revenue of
other nations? When a principle like this
goes out, sanctioned with the legislative authority,
it will have its effect on the nation.
“‘Quid leges sine moribus.’
The whole moral principle of a nation is contaminated
by the legislative authorization and judicial sanction
of a practice dishonest in itself, which necessarily
includes not merely a permission, but a stimulant,
to perjury. If an English merchant, subscribing
to this principle, goes to establish himself in
a foreign country, he goes as an enemy, warranted,
by the sanction of his own courts and Parliament, to
do anything that can defraud its revenue.
Perhaps this may be one of the causes of the vulgar
saying,which all must have heard, but
which, thank God, I still hope is not warranted
by the practice of the native merchants of our
country,that custom-house oaths have
no validity. There is a feeling, but too prevalent,
which distinguishes between custom-house oaths
and other oaths. It is obvious that smuggling
can not be carried on to any extent without the
commission of perjury. There must be false swearing;
and it is that false swearing which the British
laws have sanctioned. None of this bullion,
of which Justice Buller speaks, could be smuggled
out of Spain and Portugal without false oaths;
and you will find, from the details of a case
which I shall presently call to your attention,
that false swearing is at the bottom of the frauds
which this bill seeks to correctfrauds
in consequence of which seven eighths of all the
woollens imported into New York escaped the payment
of the duty charged by law. These people do not
hold themselves bound to respect our revenue laws,
and thus proceed without scruples to the perpetration
of perjury in order to carry on with success the
evasion of them.”
In the conclusion of his speech Mr.
Adams paid the following tribute to the English nation,
saying:
“That of the English nation he
entertained sentiments of the most exalted admiration;
that he was proud of being himself descended from
that stock, although two hundred years had passed away,
during which all his ancestors had been natives
of this country. He claimed the great men
of England of former ages as his countrymen, and could
say with the poet Cowper, in hearty concurrence
with the sentiment, that it is
’Praise
enough
To
fill the ambition of a common man,
That
Chatham’s language was his mother tongue,
And
Wolfe’s great name compatriot with his own.’
“He believed that no nation, of
ancient or modern times, was more entitled to
veneration for its exertion in the cause of human
improvement than the British. He thought their
code of laws admirable; but, in the discussion
of the bill before the committee, he had been
compelled, in the discharge of his duty, to expose
one great erroneous principle of morals incorporated
into their laws; a principle, the natural and
necessary consequence of which had been the occasion
of the bill now before the committee; a principle
enacted by the British Parliament, and sanctioned
by the decision of their highest judicial tribunals,
with the express and avowed purpose of encouraging
the subjects of Great Britain to the practice of
defrauding, even by the commission of perjury, the
revenues of a foreign country.”
In July, 1840, a memorial was presented
to Congress, from the American Philosophical Society
of Philadelphia, asking the aid of government to carry
on a series of magnetic and meteorological observations.
This application was made in cooeperation with the
Royal Society of Great Britain, and at their solicitation,
and had for its object an extended system of magnetic
observations at fixed magnetic observatories in different
quarters of the globe. Mr. Adams, having been
appointed chairman of a committee on the memorial,
made a report setting forth at large the motives for
concurrence, and the importance of the object asked
for. The following extracts illustrate his comprehensive
views and appreciation of the subject:
“Among the most powerful, most
wonderful, and most mysterious agents in the economy
of the physical universe, is the magnet. Its
attractive properties, its perpetual tendency to
the poles of the earth and of the heavens, and
its exclusive sympathies with one of the mineral
productions of the earth, have been brought within
the scope of human observation at different periods
of the history of mankind, separated by the distance
of many centuries from each other. The attractive
power of the magnet was known in ages of antiquity
so remote that it transcends even the remembrance of
the name of its first discoverer, and the time
of its accession to the mass of human knowledge.
Its polarity, or, at least, the application of
that property to the purposes of navigation beyond
the sight of land, was unknown in Europe, and
probably throughout the world, until the twelfth
or thirteenth century of the Christian era; and its
horizontal variation from the tendency directly to
the pole was first perceived by Christopher Columbus,
in that transcendent voyage of discovery which
gave a new hemisphere to the industry and intelligence
of civilized man;an incident then so alarming
to him and his company, that, but for the inflexible
and persevering spirit of this intrepid and daring
mariner, it would have sunk them into despair,
and buried the New World for ages upon ages longer
from the knowledge of the Old. Centuries
have again passed away, disclosing gradually new
properties of the magnet to the ardent and eager pursuit
of human curiosity, still stimulated by constant observation
of the phenomena connected with this metallic substance,
dug from the bowels of the earth, yet seeming
more and more to elude or defy all the ordinary
laws of matter. Thus, in the process of observation
to ascertain the horizontal variation of the needle
from its polar direction, it was found that it
differed in intensity in the different regions
of the earth and the seas; that its variations were
affected by different causes, some tending in the same
direction, alternately east and west, through a
succession of years, of ages, even of centuries,
and others accomplishing their circle of existence
from day to day, perhaps from hour to hour, or at stated
hours of the day. It was found that there
was a perpendicular as well as a horizontal deviation
from the polar direction; and it became a matter
of anxious inquiry to ascertain the intensity both
of the dip and variation of the needle at every
spot on the surface of the globe. It was
inferred, from the different intensities of variation
in different latitudes, that there were magnetic poles
not coincident with those of the earth; and the
northern of these poles has been recently traced
to its actual location by the British circumnavigators,
Parry and Ross.
“The attractive power, the polarity,
the deviations from the polar direction, horizontal
and perpendicular, the varieties even of these deviations,
and the detection of the northern magnetic pole, have
still left materials for further observation, and
suggested problems for solution to the perseverance
and ingenuity of the human mind.
“In the spring of 1836 that illustrious
philosopher and statesman, Baron Alexander Von
Humboldt, addressed to the Duke of Sussex, then President
of the Royal Society, a letter upon the means of perfecting
the knowledge of terrestrial magnetism, by the establishment
of magnetic stations and corresponding observations;
and solicited the powerful concurrence of the Royal
Society in favor of the labors then already undertaken
by a learned association in Germany, and which,
radiating at once from several great scientific central
points in Europe, might lead progressively to the more
precise knowledge of the laws of nature.”
Mr. Adams then proceeds to state the
subsequent proceedings of the Royal Society, and the
measures the British government had taken to carry
into effect the views of that society, earnestly recommending
the compliance with the request of the American Philosophical
Society, and adds:
“The committee would hail, with
feelings of hope and encouragement, the virtual
alliance of great and mighty nations for this union
of efforts in the promotion of the cause of science.
Long enough have the leagues and federations between
the potentates of the earth been confined to alliances,
offensive and defensive, to promote purposes of
mutual hatred and hostility. It is refreshing
to the friends of humanity to witness the rise
and progress of a spirit of common and concerted
inquiry into the secrets of material nature, the results
of which not only go to accumulate the mass of
human knowledge, but to harmonize in a community
of enjoyments the varied tribes of man throughout
the habitable globe. The invitation to participate
in these labors, and to acquire the credit and
reputation of having contributed to the beneficial
results which may confidently be expected from
them, is itself creditable to the character of our
own country.”
In conclusion, the committee recommend
the adoption of a resolution, which they report, appropriating
twenty thousand dollars for the establishment of five
several stations for making observations on terrestrial
magnetism and meteorology, conformably to the invitation
of the Royal Society of Great Britain to the American
Philosophical Society of Philadelphia.
In July, 1840, at the closing of the
congressional session, Mr. Adams thus expressed his
opinion of the state of public affairs: “The
late session of Congress has been painful to me beyond
all former experience, by the demonstration it has
given of degenerating institutions. Parties are
falling into profligate factions. I have seen
this before; but the worst symptom now is the change
in the manners of the people. The continuance
of the present administration will, if accomplished,
open wide all the floodgates of corruption. Will
a change produce a reform? Pause and ponder!
Slavery, the Indians, the public lands, the collection
and disbursement of public moneys, the tariff, and
foreign affairswhat is to become of them?”
In September, 1840, Mr. Adams remarked,
on the electioneering addresses then made, preparatory
to the next election of President: “This
practice of itinerant speech-making has suddenly broken
out in this country to a fearful extent. Electioneering
for the Presidency has spread its contagion to the
President himself, to his now only competitor, to his
immediate predecessor, to the candidates Henry Clay
and Daniel Webster, and to many distinguished members
of both branches of Congress. The tendency of
all this is to the corruption of popular elections
both by violence and fraud.”
Again, in October ensuing: “One
of the peculiarities of the present time is that the
principal leaders of the political parties are travelling
about the country from state to state, and holding
forth, like Methodist preachers, to assembled multitudes,
under the broad canopy of heaven. Webster, Clay,
W. C. Rives, Silas Wright, and James Buchanan, are
among the first and foremost in this canvassing oratory;
while Andrew Jackson, and Martin Van Buren, with his
heads of departments, are harping on another string
of the political accordion, by writing controversial
electioneering letters. Besides the principal
leaders of the parties, numerous subaltern officers
of the administration are summoned to the same service,
and, instead of attending to the duties of their offices,
roam, recite, and madden, round the land.”
In a speech made on the 28th of December,
1840, Mr. Adams severely denounced the policy pursued
by the government in respect of the navy pension fund;
stating that it amounted to one million two hundred
thousand dollars; that, without any authority, it had
been loaned to different states, and vested in their
stocks, which, for the most part, were either depreciated
in value, wholly lost, or unsalable. That fund,
he maintained, was a sacred trust, and proceeded to
state fully and at large the manner in which it had
been violated without authority.
Mr. Adams then went on to state the
proceedings of the Executive relative to the Smithsonian
fund. He said that about the 1st of September,
1838, the sum of five hundred and nine thousand dollars
had been deposited in the Mint of Philadelphia in
gold,in mint-drops;a sacred
trust, which the United States had accepted, on the
pledge of their faith to keep it whole, entire, for
the purpose for which it had been given by a foreigner.
Within three days the five hundred thousand dollars
were on their way to Arkansas to make a bank.
The members of the Senate and of the House from Arkansas
had a quick scent of these moneys coming into the
Treasury; and care had been taken to insert into a
bill for a very different object a provision authorizing
the President and Secretary of the Treasury to loan
to the states that sum of money when it should come
into the Treasury. This was three months beforehand;
and three days after the money was received the plan
was carried into execution.
“Now, we had heard,” said
Mr. Adams, “of British gold carrying the elections,
which had resulted, not in favor of the present incumbent
of the presidential chair, but against him. There
he could put his finger upon five hundred and nine
thousand dollars of British gold, which contributed,
so far as it could go, to the election of the present
executive magistrate; and he thought he had shown the
means by which it was done. Go to the State of
Arkansas. The dollars are not there, but they
were there, and they were sent there from the
Mint of the United States. Here was policyprofound
policyeconomydemocracy; and
all this accompanied with so great a horror at the
idea of assuming state debts, that the hair of the
gentlemen stood on end at the mere mention of the
possibility of such a thing. Was not here a debt
of the State of Arkansas of half a million of dollars?
Had not the general government assumed that debt?
Had they not employed trust-money? If Arkansas
should declare herself insolvent to-morrow, Congress
must pay that debt; they had assumed it.”
About this time, Mr. Adams, in some
of his writings, thus graphically illustrates the
political influences which have mainly shaped the
destinies of the United States: “A very
curious philosophical history of parties might be
made by giving a catalogue raisonne of the
candidates for the Presidency voted for in the electoral
colleges since the establishment of the constitution
of the United States. It would contain a history
of the influences of the presidential office.
Would not the retrospect furnish practical principles
concerning the operation of the constitution?1st.
That the direct and infallible path to the Presidency
is military service, coupled with demagogue policd. That, in the absence of military service,
demagogue policy is the first and most indispensable
element of success, and the art of party drilling
the second. That the drill consists in combining
the Southern interest in domestic slavery with the
Northern riotous democracth. That this policy
and drill, first organized by Thomas Jefferson, accomplished
his election, and established the Virginia dynasty
of twenty-four years;a perpetual practical
contradiction of its own principleth. That
the same policy and drill, invigorated by success
and fortified by experience, has now placed Martin
Van Buren in the President’s chair, and disclosed
to the unprincipled ambition of the North the art
of rising upon the principles of the South. And
6th. That it has exposed in broad day the overruling
influence of the institution of domestic slavery upon
the history and policy of the Union.”
In the case of a contested election
Mr. Adams remarked: “The conduct of a majority
of the House has, from beginning to end, been governed
by will, and not by judgment; and so I fear it will
be always in every case of contested elections.”
“The speech of Horace Everett,
of Vermont,” (made on the 8th June, 1836, on
the Indian annuity bill,) said Mr. Adams, “gives
a perfectly clear and distinct exposition of the origin
and causes of the Florida war, and demonstrates, beyond
all possibility of being gainsaid, that the wrong
of the war is on our side. It depresses the spirits,
and humiliates the soul, that this war is now running
into its fifth year, has cost thirty millions of dollars,
has successively baffled and disgraced all our chief
military generals,Gaines, Scott, Jesup,
and Macomb,and that our last resources
now are bloodhounds and no quarter. Sixteen millions
of Anglo-Saxons unable to subdue, in five years, by
force and by fraud, by secret treachery and by open
war, sixteen hundred savage warriors! There is
a disregard of all appearance of right, in our transactions
with the Indians, which I feel as a cruel disparagement
of the honor of my country.”
On the 1st of January, 1841, Mr. Adams,
referring to the accounts he had received that the
attendance at the Presidential levees was much smaller
than usual, and that the visitors were chiefly from
among the President’s old adversaries, the Whigs,
remarked:
“’Donec eris
felix multos numerabis amicos Témpora si fuerint
nubila solus eris.’
There is, perhaps, no occasion in
human affairs,” he added, “which more
uniformly exemplifies this propensity of human nature
than the exit of a President of the United States
from office.”
On the 4th of February, 1841, there
arose, incidentally, in the House of Representatives,
a debate upon the act to suppress duelling. Mr.
Wise, of Virginia, had said, in the course of a former
debate: “The anti-duelling law is producing
its bitter fruits. It is making this house a
bear-garden. We have an example in the present
instance. Here, with permission of the chair
and committee, and without a call to order from anybody,
we see and hear one member (Mr. Johnson) say to another
(Mr. Duncan) that he had been branded as a coward on
this floor. The other says back that ‘he
is a liar!’ And, sir, there the matter will
stop. There will be no fight.” Before
proceeding to comment, Mr. Adams called for the reading
of this statement, as reported in the National
Intelligencer. On which Mr. Wise said publicly,
in the house, “That is a correct report."
After this acknowledgment, Mr. Adams
proceeded to remark with severity on this statement
and language, occasioning an excitement in the house,
particularly among the duellists, which belongs to
the history of the period. After stating that
he understood that statement and language “as
maintaining that duelling, between members of this
house, for matters passing within this house, is a
practice that ought not to be suppressed,” he
continued: “I maintain the contrary; and
I maintain it for the independence of this house,
for my own independence, for the independence of those
with whom I act, for the independence of the members
from the Northern section of this country, who not
only abhor duelling in theory, but in practice; in
consequence of which members from other sections are
perpetually insulting them on this floor, under the
impression that the insult will not be resented.”
Here Mr. Campbell, of South Carolina,
as the reporter states, called Mr. Adams to order.
The chairman said something, of which not a word could
be heard, the house being in such a state of tempestuous
uproar. When the voice of Mr. Adams again caught
the ear of the reporter, he was proceeding as follows:
“Would you smother discussion
on the duelling law? There is not a point
in the affairs of this nation more important than this
very practice of duelling,considered
as a point of honor in one part of the Union,
and a point of infamy in another,with its
consequences. I say there is no more important
subject that can go forth, North and South, East
and West; and I therefore take my issue upon it.
I have come here determined to do so between the
different portions of this house, in order to
see whether this practice is to be continued;
whether the members from that section of the Union
whose principles are against duelling are to be
insulted, upon every topic of discussion, because
it is supposed that the insult will not be resented,
and that ‘there will be no fight.’”
Mr. Adams here called for the reading
of “the act to suppress duelling;” which
the clerk having read, he proceeded:
“I was going on to say that the
reason why I had brought this subject into the
discussion is because it is most intimately connected
with all the transactions in this house and this nation;
and because I think it time to settle this question
between the duellists and non-duellists, whoever
they may be. I say that, in consequence of
my principles, and what I believe to be the principles
of a very large portion of the people in that part
of the country from which I came, I will not,
as regards the approaching administration, put
myself under the lead of any man who considers the
duelling law in this district as having borne any bitter
fruits whatever. It may not, indeed, be sufficiently
potent in its operation to prevent the thirst
for blood which follows offensive words; but I
believe it has prevented, and will prevent, any such
occurrences as we have witnessed here. But,
as it bears upon the affairs of the nation, I
am not willing to sit any longer here, and see
other members from my own section of the country, or
those who may be my successors here, made subject
to any such law as the law of the duellist.
I am unwilling that they should not have full freedom
of speech in this house on all occasionsas
much so as the primest duellist in the land.
I do not want to hear perpetual intimations, when
a man from one part of the country means to insult
another coming from other parts of the country,
as, ’I am ready to answer here or elsewhere;’
and ’The gentleman knows where I am to be found;’
saying, as the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. W. C. Johnson)
did just now, that he would call to account any
person who dared make allusion to what had taken
place between him and another member of this house.
I do not intend to hear that any more, for myself or
others, if I can help it. Therefore I move
to bring the matter up for full discussion here,
whether we are to be twitted and taunted with
remarks that a man is ready to meet us here or elsewhere.
It goes to the independence of this house; it
goes to the independence of every individual member
of this house; it goes to the right of speech
and freedom of debate in this house; and I felt myself
bound to bear my testimony in the most decided
manner against the practice of duelling, or anything
in the shape of even a virtual challenge taking
place in this house, now and forever. If the committee
think proper to put me down, after a debate of
three weeks, involving almost every topic under
the sun, and in which not one man has been called
to order, I must submit. It shall go out to the
country, and I am willing that the sober sentiment
of the whole nation shall be my final judge on
this subject.”
Mr. Adams, after having recapitulated
his course of proceedings on various topics, and explained
his motives and their relations on former occasions,
and his present general views on those subjects, closes
his remarks on duelling by declaring that what he
had said had been from motives of pure public spirit,
with no disposition to offend any gentleman, and least
of all the gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Wise); but
that he had felt it his duty to say what he had said,
because he believed that the application of the principle
of duelling, as regards different portions of this
house, is such that it must be discarded; that duelling
must be considered as a crime, and that it must not
be countenanced by professions of any necessity for
its existence.
In January and March, 1841, Mr. Adams
delivered his celebrated argument before the Supreme
Court of the United States, in the case of the United
States, appellants, against Cinque and others, appellees.
This was afterwards published at length. In it
he publicly arraigned before that court and the civilized
world the conduct of the then existing administration,
for having, in all their proceedings relating to these
unfortunate Africans, exhibited sympathy for one of
the parties, and antipathy for the other; sympathy
for the white, antipathy to the black; sympathy for
the slaveholders, in place of protection for the unfortunate
and oppressed. It is impossible by any abstract
or outline to do justice to the laborious ability
with which this argument is sustained. The just
severity with which he scrutinizes the proceedings
of the Executive and the demands of the Spanish Minister,
the completeness with which he vindicates for these
Africans their right to freedom,the extensive
research into the law of nations, and the broad principles
of eternal justice, on which he supports their claim
to be liberated, were probably not excelled by any
public effort at that period, whether of the bar or
the senate. He concluded with the following touching
reminiscences of distinguished members of the bench
and the bar, with whom in former times he had been
associated:
“May it please your honors:
On the 7th of February, 1804, now more than thirty-seven
years past, my name was entered, and yet stands recorded,
on both the rolls, as one of the attorneys and counsellors
of this court. Five years later, in February
and March, 1809, I appeared for the last time
before this court, in defence of the cause of
justice and of important rights, in which many of my
fellow-citizens had property to a large amount
at stake. Very shortly afterwards I was called
to the discharge of other duties, first in distant
lands, and in later years within our own country,
but in different departments of her government.
Little did I imagine that I should ever again
be required to claim the right of appearing in
the capacity of an officer of this court; yet such
has been the dictate of my destiny, and I appear
again to plead the cause of justice, and now of
liberty and life, in behalf of many of my fellow-men,
before that same court which, in a former age, I had
addressed in support of rights of property.
I stand again, I trust for the last time, before
the same court. ’Hic caestus, artemque repono.’
I stand before the same court, but not before the same
judges, nor aided by the same associates, nor resisted
by the same opponents. As I cast my eyes
along those seats of honor and of public trust
now occupied by you, they seek in vain for one of those
honored and honorable persons whose indulgence
listened then to my voice. Marshall, Cushing,
Chase, Washington, Johnson, Livingston, Todd,where
are they? Where is that eloquent statesman and
learned lawyer who was my associate counsel in
the management of that cause, Robert Goodloe Harper?
Where is that brilliant luminary, so long the pride
of Maryland and of the American bar, then my opposing
counsel, Luther Martin? Where is the excellent
clerk of that day, whose name has been inscribed
on the shores of Africa as a monument of his abhorrence
of the African slave-trade, Elias B. Caldwell?
Where is the marshalwhere are the
criers of the court? Alas! where is one of
the very judges of the court, arbiter of life and death,
before whom I commenced this anxious argument,
even now prematurely closed? Where are they
all? Gonegoneall gone!
Gone from the services which in their day and
generation they faithfully tendered to their country.
From the excellent characters which they sustained
in life, so far as I have had the means of knowing,
I humbly hope, and fondly trust, they have gone
to receive the rewards of blessedness on high.
“In taking, then, my final leave
of this bar, and of this honorable court, I can
only ejaculate a fervent petition to Heaven that every
member of it may go to his final account with as
little of earthly frailty to answer for as those
illustrious dead; and that every one, after the
close of a long and virtuous career in this world,
may be received at the portals of the next with
the approving sentence, ’Well done, good
and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of thy
Lord.’”