[Speech at the Corporation Dinner,
New York, Deth, 1851.]
The Mayor having made an address to
Kossuth, closed by proposing the following toast:
“Hungary Betrayed
but not subdued. Her call for help is but the
echo of our appeal against the tread of the oppressor.”
Kossuth rose to reply. The enthusiasm
with which he was greeted was unparalleled. It
shook the building, and the chandeliers and candelabras
trembled before it. Every one present rose to
his feet, and appeared excited to frenzy. The
ladies participated in honouring the Hungarian hero.
At length the storm of applause subsided, and then
ensued a silence most intense. Every eye was
fixed on Kossuth, and when he commenced his speech,
the noise caused by the dropping of a pin could be
heard throughout the large and capacious room.
KOSSUTH’S SPEECH.
Sir, In returning you my
most humble thanks for the honour you did me by your
toast, and by coupling my name with that cause which
is the sacred aim of my life, I am so overwhelmed
with emotion by all it has been my strange lot to
experience since I am on your glorious shores, that
I am unable to find words; and knowing that all the
honour I meet with has the higher meaning of principles,
I beg leave at once to fall back on my duties, which
are the lasting topics of my reflections, my sorrows,
and my hopes. I take the present for a highly
important opportunity, which may decide the success
or failure of my visit. I must therefore implore
your indulgence for a pretty long and plain development
of my views concerning that cause which the citizens
of New York, and you particularly, gentlemen, honour
with generous interest.
When I perceive that the sympathy
of your people with Hungary is almost universal, and
that they pronounce their feelings in its favour with
a resolution such as denotes noble and great deeds
about to follow; I might feel inclined to take for
granted, at least in principle, that we shall
have your generous aid for restoring to our land its
sovereign independence. Nothing but details
of negotiation would seem to be left for me, were
not my confidence checked, by being told, that, according
to many of your most distinguished Statesmen, it is
a ruling principle of your public policy never to
interfere in European affairs.
I highly respect the source of this
conviction, gentlemen. This source is your religious
attachment to the doctrines of those who bequeathed
to you the immortal constitution which, aided by the
unparalleled benefits of nature, has raised you, in
seventy-five years, from an infant people to a mighty
nation. The wisdom of the founders of your great
republic you see in its happy results. What would
be the consequences of departing from that wisdom,
you are not sure. You therefore instinctively
fear to touch, even with improving hands, the dear
legacy of those great men. And as to your glorious
constitution, all humanity can only wish that you
and your posterity may long preserve this religious
attachment to its fundamental principles, which by
no means exclude development and progress: and
that every citizen of your great union, thankfully
acknowledging its immense benefits, may never forget
to love it more than momentary passion or selfish and
immediate interest. May every citizen of your
glorious country for ever remember that a partial
discomfort of a corner in a large, sure, and comfortable
house, may be well amended without breaking the foundation;
and that amongst all possible means of getting rid
of that partial discomfort, the worst would be to
burn down the house with his own hands.
But while I acknowledge the wisdom
of your attachment to fundamental doctrines, I beg
leave with equal frankness to state, that, in my opinion,
there can be scarcely anything more dangerous to the
progressive development of a nation, than to mistake
for a basis that which is none; to mistake for a principle
that which is but a transitory convenience; to take
for substantial that which is but accidental; or to
take for a constitutional doctrine that which is but
a momentary exigency of administrative policy.
Such a course of action would be like to a healthy
man refusing substantial food, because when he was
once weak in stomach his physician ordered him a severe
diet. Let me suppose, gentlemen, that that doctrine
of non-interference was really bequeathed to you by
your Washingtons (and that it was not, I will essay
to prove afterwards), and let me even suppose that
your Washingtons imparted to it such an interpretation,
as were equivalent to the words of Cain, “Am
I my brother’s keeper?” (which supposition
would be, of course, a sacrilege; but I am forced
to such suppositions:) I may be entitled to ask, is
the dress which suited the child, still suitable to
the full grown man? Would it not be ridiculous
to lay the man into the child’s cradle, and
to sing him to sleep by a lullaby? In the origin
of the United States you were an infant people, and
you had, of course, nothing to do but to grow, to
grow, and to grow. But now you are so far grown
that there is no foreign power on earth from which
you have anything to fear for your existence or security.
In fact, your growth is that of a giant. Of old,
your infant frame was composed of thirteen states,
and was restricted to the borders of the Atlantic:
now, your massive bulk is spread to the gulf of Mexico
and the Pacific, and your territory is a continent.
Your right hand touches Europe over the waves; your
left reaches across the Pacific to eastern Asia; and
there, between two quarters of the world, there you
stand, in proud immensity, a world yourselves.
Then you were a small people of three millions and
a half; now you are a mighty nation of twenty-four
millions. Thus you have fully entered into the
second stadium of national life, in which a nation
lives at length not for itself separately, but as a
member of the great family of human nations; having
a right to whatever is due from that family towards
every one of its full-grown members, but also engaged
to every duty which that great family may claim from
every one of its full-grown members.
A nation may, either from comparative
weakness, or by choice and policy, as Japan and China,
or by both these motives, as Paraguay under Dr. Francia, be
induced to live a life secluded from the world, indifferent
to the destinies of mankind, in which it cannot or
will not have any share. But then it must be
willing to be also excluded from the benefits of progress,
civilization and national intercourse, while disavowing
all care about all other nations in the world.
No citizen of the United States has, or ever will
have, the wish to see this country degraded to the
rotting vegetation of a Paraguay, or the mummy existence
of a Japan and China. The feeling of self-dignity,
and the expansiveness of that enterprizing spirit
which is congenial to freemen, would revolt against
the very idea of such a degrading national captivity.
But if there were even a will to live such a mummy
life, there is no possibility to do so. The very
existence of your great country, the principles upon
which it is founded, its geographical position, its
present scale of civilization, and all its moral and
material interests, would lead on your people not
only to maintain, but necessarily more and more to
develop your foreign intercourse. Then, being
in so many respects linked to mankind at large, you
cannot have the will, nor yet the power, to remain
indifferent to the outward world. And if you cannot
remain indifferent, you must resolve to throw your
weight into that balance in which the fate and condition
of man is weighed. You are a power on earth.
You must be a power on earth, and must therefore accept
all the consequences of this position. You cannot
allow that any power in the world should dispose of
the fate of that great family of mankind, of which
you are so pre-eminent a member: else you would
resign your proud place and your still prouder future,
and be a power on earth no more.
I hope I have sufficiently shown,
that should even that doctrine of non-interference
have been established by the founders of your republic,
that which might have been very proper to your infancy
would not now be suitable to your manhood. It
is a beautiful word of Montesquieu, that republics
are to be founded on virtue. And you know that
virtue between man and man, as sanctioned by our Christian
religion, is but an exercise of that great principle “Thou
shalt do to others as thou desirest others to do to
thee.” Thus I might rely simply upon your
generous republican hearts, and upon the consistency
of your principles; but I beg to add some essential
differences in material respects, between your present
condition and that of yore. Of your twenty-four
millions, more than nineteen are spread over yonder
immense territory, the richest of the world, employed
in the cultivation of the soil, that honourable occupation,
which in every time has proved to be the most inexhaustible
and most unfailing source of public welfare and private
happiness, as also the most unwavering ally of freedom,
and the most faithful fosterer of all those upright,
noble, generous sentiments which the constant intercourse
with ever young, ever great, ever beautiful virtue,
imparts to man. Now this immense agricultural
interest, desiring large markets, at the same time
affords a solid basis to your manufacturing industry,
and in consequence to your immensely developed commerce.
All this places such a difference between the republic
of Washington and your present grandeur, that though
you may well be attached to your original principles
(for the principles of liberty are everlastingly the
same), yet not so in respect to the exigencies of
your policy. For if it is to be regulated by
interest, your country has other interests to-day
than it had then; and if ever it is to be regulated
by the higher consideration of principles,
you are strong enough to feel that the time is already
come. And I, standing here before you to plead
the cause of oppressed humanity, am bold to declare
that there may never again come a crisis, at which
such an elevation of your policy would prove either
more glorious to you, or more beneficial to man:
for we in Europe are apparently on the eye of that
day, when either the hopes or the fears of oppressed
nations will be crushed for a long time.
Having stated so far the difference
of the situation, I beg leave now to assert that it
is an error to suppose that non-interference in foreign
matters has been bequeathed to the people of the United
States by your great Washington as a doctrine and
as a constitutional principle. Firstly, Washington
never even recommended to you non-interference in
the sense of indifference to the fate of other
nations. He only recommended neutrality.
And there is a mighty diversity between these two
ideas. Neutrality has reference to a state of
war between two belligerent powers, and it is this
case which Washington contemplated, when he, in his
Farewell Address, advised the people of the United
States not to enter into entangling alliances.
Let quarrelling powers, let quarrelling nations go
to war but do you consider your own concerns;
leave foreign powers to quarrel about ambitious topics,
or narrow partial interests. Neutrality is a
matter of convenience not of principle.
But while neutrality has reference to a state of war
between belligerent powers, the principle of non-interference,
on the contrary, lays down the sovereign right of
nations to arrange their own domestic concerns.
Therefore these two ideas of neutrality and non-interference
are entirely different, having reference to two entirely
different matters. The sovereign right of every
nation to rule over itself, to alter its own institutions,
to change the form of its own government, is a common
public law of nations, common to all, and, therefore,
put under the common guarantee of all. This
sovereign right of every nation to dispose of itself,
you, the people of the United States must recognize;
for it is the common law of mankind, in which, because
it is such, every nation is equally interested.
You must recognize it, secondly, because the very
existence of your great republic, as also the independence
of every nation, rests upon this ground. If that
sovereign right of nations were no common public law
of mankind, then your own independence would be no
matter of right, but only a matter of fact, which
might be subject, for all future time, to all sorts
of chances from foreign conspiracy and violence.
And where is the citizen of the United States who
would not revolt at the idea that this great republic
is not a righteous nor a lawful existence, but only
a mere accident a mere matter of fact?
If it were so, you were not entitled to invoke the
protection of God for your great country; for the protection
of God cannot, without sacrilege, be invoked but in
behalf of justice and right. You would have no
right to look to the sympathy of mankind for yourselves;
for you would profess an abrogation of the laws of
humanity upon which is founded your own independence,
your own nationality.
Now, gentlemen, if these be principles
of common law, of that law which God has given to
every nation of humanity if to organize
itself is the common lawful right of every nation;
then the interference with this common law of all
humanity, the violent act of hindering, by armed forces,
a nation from exercising that sovereign right, must
be considered as a violation of that common public
law upon which your very existence rests, and which,
being a common law of all humanity, is, by God himself,
placed under the safeguard of all humanity; for it
is God himself who commands us to love our neighbours
as we love ourselves, and to do towards others as
we desire others to do towards us. Upon this
point you cannot remain indifferent. You may well
remain neutral to war between two belligerent nations,
but you cannot remain indifferent to the violation
of the common law of humanity. That indifference
Washington has never taught you. I defy any man
to show me, out of the eleven volumes of Washington’s
writings, a single word to that effect. He could
not have recommended this indifference without ceasing
to be wise as he was; for without justice there is
no wisdom on earth. He could not have recommended
it without becoming inconsistent; for it was this
common law of mankind which your fathers invoked before
God and man when they proclaimed your independence.
It was he himself, your great Washington, who not
only accepted, but again and again asked, foreign
aid foreign help for the support of that
common law of mankind in respect to your own independence.
Knowledge and instruction are so universally spread
amongst the enlightened people of the United States,
the history of your country is such a household science
at the most lonely hearths of your remotest settlements,
that it may be sufficient for me to refer, in that
respect, to the instructions and correspondence between
Washington and the Minister at Paris the
equally immortal Franklin the modest man
with the proud epitaph, which tells the world that
he wrested the lightning from heaven, and the sceptre
from the tyrant’s hands.
I will go further. Even that
doctrine of neutrality which Washington taught and
bequeathed to you, he taught not as a constitutional
principle a lasting regulation for
all future time, but only as a matter of temporary
policy. I refer in that respect to the
very words of his Farewell Address. There he
states explicitly that “it is your policy
to steer clear of permanent alliances with any
portion of the foreign world.” These are
his very words. Policy is the word, and you know
that policy is not the science of principle, but of
exigencies; and that principles are, of course, by
a free and powerful nation, never to be sacrificed
to exigencies. The exigencies pass away like
the bubbles of a shower, but the nation is immortal:
it must consider the future also, and not only the
egotistical dominion of the passing hour: it
must be aware that to an immortal nation nothing can
be of higher importance than immortal principles.
Again, in the same address Washington explicitly says,
in reference to his policy of neutrality, that “with
him a predominant motive has been to gain time
to your country to settle and mature its institutions,
and to progress without interruption to that degree
of strength and consistency which is necessary to
give it the command of its own fortunes.”
These are highly memorable words, gentlemen.
Here I take my ground; and casting a glance of admiration
over your glorious land, I confidently ask you, gentlemen,
are your institutions settled and matured or are they
not? Are you, or are you not, come to such a degree
of strength and consistency as to be the masters of
your own fortunes? Oh! how do I thank God for
having given me the glorious view of this country’s
greatness, which answers this question for me!
Yes! you have attained that degree of strength
and consistency in which your less fortunate brethren
may well claim your protecting hand.
One word more on Washington’s
doctrines. In one of his letters, written to
Lafayette, he says: “Let us only have
twenty years of peace, and our country will come to
such a degree of power and wealth that we shall be
able, in a just cause, to defy any power on earth whatsoever.”
“In a just cause!” Now, in the name of
eternal truth, and by all that is dear and sacred
to man, since the history of mankind is recorded, there
has been no cause more just than the cause of Hungary.
Never was there a people, without the slightest reason,
more sacrilegiously, more treacherously attacked,
or by fouler means than Hungary. Never has crime,
cursed ambition, despotism, and violence, united more
wickedly to crush freedom, and the very life, than
against Hungary. Never was a country more mortally
aggrieved than Hungary is. All your sufferings all
your complaints, which, with so much right,
drove your forefathers to take up arms, are but slight
grievances in comparison with those immense deep wounds,
out of which the heart of Hungary bleeds! If
the cause of our people is not sufficiently just to
insure the protection of God, and the support of right-willing
men then there is no just cause, and no
justice on earth. Then the blood of no new Abel
will moan towards Heaven. The genius of charity,
Christian love, and justice will mourningly fly the
earth; a heavy curse will fall upon morality oppressed
men will despair, and only the Cains of mankind walk
proudly with impious brow about the ruins of liberty
on earth.
Now, allow me briefly to consider
how your Foreign Policy has grown and enlarged itself.
I will only recall to your memory the message of President
Monroe, when he clearly stated that the United States
would take up arms to protect the American Colonies
of Spain, now free republics, should the Holy (or
rather unholy) Alliance make an attempt either to
aid Spain to reduce the new American republics to their
ancient colonial state, or to compel them to adopt
political systems more conformable to the policy and
views of that alliance. I entreat you to mark
this well, gentlemen. Not only the forced introduction
of monarchy, but in general the interference of foreign
powers in the contest, was declared sufficient motive
for the United States to protect the colonies.
Let me remind you that this declaration of President
Monroe was not only approved and confirmed by the people
of the United States, but that Great Britain itself
joined the United States, in the declaration of this
decision and this policy. I further recall to
your memory the instructions given in 1826 to your
Envoys to the Congress of Panama, Richard Anderson
and John Sergeant, where it was clearly stated that
the United States would have opposed, with their whole
force, the interference of the continental powers
in that struggle for independence. It is true,
that this declaration to go even to war, to protect
the independence of foreign States against foreign
interference, was restricted to the continent of America;
for President Monroe declares in his message that
the United States can have no concern in European
straggles, being distant and separated from Europe
by the great Atlantic Ocean. But I would remark
that this indifference to European concerns is again
a matter, not of principle but of temporary exigency the
motives of which have, by the lapse of time, entirely
disappeared so much that the balance is
even turned to the opposite side.
President Monroe mentions distance
as a motive of the above-stated distinction.
Well, since the prodigious development of your Fulton’s
glorious invention, distance is no longer calculated
by miles, but by hours; and, being so, Europe is of
course less distant from you than the greater part
of the American continent. But, let even the word
distance be taken in a nominal sense. Europe is
nearer to you than the greatest part of the American
continent yea! even nearer than perhaps
some parts of your own territory. President Monroe’s
second motive is, that you are separated from Europe
by the Atlantic. Now, at the present time,
and in the present condition of navigation, the Atlantic
is no separation, but rather a link; as the means of
that commercial intercourse which brings the interest
of Europe home to you, connecting you with it by every
tie of moral as well as material interest.
There is immense truth in that which
the French Legation in the United States expressed
to your government in an able note of 27th October
past: “America is closely connected
with Europe, being only separated from the latter
by a distance scarcely exceeding eight days’
journey, by one of the most important of general interests the
interest of commerce. The nations of America
and Europe are at this day so dependent upon one another,
that the effects of any event, prosperous or otherwise,
happening on one side of the Atlantic, are immediately
felt on the other side. The result of this community
of interests, commercial, political, and moral, between
Europe and America of this frequency and
rapidity of intercourse between them, is, that it becomes
as difficult to point out the geographical degree where
American policy shall terminate, and European policy
begin, as it is to trace out the line where American
commerce begins and European commerce terminates.
Where may be said to begin or terminate the ideas which
are in the ascendant in Europe and in America?”
It is chiefly in New York that I feel
induced to urge this, because New York is, by innumerable
ties, connected with Europe more connected
than several parts of Europe itself. It is the
agricultural interest of this great country which
chiefly wants an outlet and a market. Now, it
is far more to Europe than to the American continent
that you have to look in that respect. On this
account you cannot remain indifferent to the fate
of freedom on the European continent: for be sure,
gentlemen and I would say this chiefly
to the gentlemen of trade should absolutism
gain ground in Europe, it will, it must, put every
possible obstacle in the way of commercial intercourse
with republican America: for commercial intercourse
is the most powerful convoyer of principles, and
be sure the victory of absolutism on the European
continent will in no quarter have more injurious national
consequences than against your vast agricultural and
commercial interests. Then why not prevent it,
while it is still possible to do so with comparatively
small sacrifices, rather than abide that fatal catastrophe,
and have to mourn the immense sacrifices it would
then cost?
Even in political considerations,
now-a-days, you have stronger motives to feel interested
in the fate of Europe than in the fate of the Central
or Southern parts of America. Whatever may happen
in the institutions of these parts, you are too powerful
to see your own institutions affected by it.
But let Europe become absolutistical (as, unless Hungary
be restored to its independence, and Italy become free,
be sure it will) and your children will
see those words, which your national government spoke
in 1827, fulfilled on a larger scale than they were
meant, that “the absolutism of Europe will not
be appeased, until every vestige of human freedom
has been obliterated even here.” And oh!
do not rely too fondly upon your power. It is
great, assuredly. You have not to fear any single
power on earth. But look to history. Mighty
empires have vanished. Let not the enemies of
freedom grow too strong. Victorious over Europe,
and then united, they would be too strong even for
you! And be sure they hate you most cordially.
They consider you as their most dangerous opponent.
Absolutism cannot sleep tranquilly, while the republican
principle has such a mighty representative as your
country is. Yes, gentlemen, it was the fear of
driving the absolutists to fanatical effort, which
induced your great Statesmen not to extend to Europe
the principle on which they acted towards the New World,
and by no means the publicly avowed feeble motives.
Every manifestation of your public life in those times
shows that I am right to say so. The European
nations were, about 1823, in such a degraded situation,
that indeed you must have felt anxious not to come
into any political contact with that pestilential
atmosphere, when, as Mr. Clay said in 1818, in his
speech about the emancipation of South America, “Paris
was transferred to St. Petersburg.” But
scarcely a year later, the Greek nation came in its
contest to an important crisis, which gave you hope
that the spirit of freedom was waking again, and at
once you abandoned the principle of political indifference
for Europe. You know, your Clays and your Websters
spoke, as if really they were speaking for my very
cause. You know how your citizens acted in behalf
of that struggle for liberty in a part of Europe which
is more distant than Hungary: and again when Poland
fell, you know what spirit pervaded the United States.
I have shown you how Washington’s
policy has been gradually changed: but one mighty
difference I must still commemorate. Your population
has, since Monroe’s time, nearly doubled, I
believe; or at least has increased by millions.
And what sort of men are these millions? Are they
only native-born Americans? No European emigrants?
Many are men, who though citizens of the United States
are, by the most sacred ties of relationship, attached
to the fate of Europe. That is a consideration
worthy of reflection with your wisest men, who will,
ere long agree with me, that in your present condition
you are at least as much interested in the state of
Europe, as twenty-eight years ago your fathers were
in the fate of Central and Southern America.
And really so it is. The unexampled sympathy
for the cause of my country which I have met with in
the United States proves that it is so. Your generous
interference with the Turkish captivity of the Governor
of Hungary, proves that is so. And this progressive
development in your foreign policy, is, in fact, no
longer a mere instinctive ebullition of public opinion,
which is about hereafter to direct your governmental
policy; the opinion of the people is already
avowed as the policy of the government. I have
a most decisive authority to rely upon in saying so.
It is the message of the President of the United States.
His Excellency, Millard Fillmore, made a communication
to Congress, a few days ago, and there I read the
paragraph: “The deep interest which
we feel in the spread of liberal principles, and the
establishment of free governments, and the sympathy
with which we witness every struggle against oppression,
forbid that we should be indifferent to a case
in which the strong arm of a foreign power is invoked
to stifle public sentiment and repress the spirit
of freedom in any country.”
Now, gentlemen, here is the ground
which I take for my earnest endeavours to benefit
the cause of Hungary. I have only respectfully
to ask: Is a principle which the public opinion
of the United States so resolutely professes, and
which the government of the United States, with the
full sentiment of its responsibility, declares to your
Congress to be a ruling principle of your national
government is that principle meant to be
serious? Indeed, it would be a most impertinent
outrage towards your great people and your national
government, to entertain the insulting opinion, that
what the people of the United States and its national
government profess in such a solemn diplomatic manner
could be meant as a mere sporting with the most sacred
interests of humanity. God forbid that I should
think so. Therefore, I take the principle of your
policy as I find it established and I come
in the name of oppressed humanity to claim the unavoidable,
practical, consequences of your own freely chosen
policy, which you have avowed to the whole world; to
claim the realization of those expectations which
you, the sovereign people of the United States, have
chosen, of your own accord, to raise in the bosom
of my countrymen and of all the oppressed.
You will excuse me, gentlemen, for
having dwelt so long upon that principle of non-interference
with European measures: but I have found it to
be the stone of stumbling thrown in my way when I spoke
of what I humbly request from the United States.
I have been charged as arrogantly attempting to change
your existing policy, and since I cannot in one speech
exhaust the complex and mighty whole of my mission,
I choose on the present opportunity to develop my
views about that fundamental principle: and having
shown, not theoretically, but practically, that it
is a mistake to think that you had, at any time, such
a principle, and having shown that if you ever entertained
such a policy, you have been forced to abandon it so
much, at least, I hope I have achieved. My humble
requests to your active sympathy may be still opposed
by I know not what other motives; but the
objection, that you must not interfere with European
concerns this objection is disposed of,
once and for ever, I hope. It remains now to
inquire, whether, since you have professed not to
be indifferent to the cause of European freedom the
cause of Hungary is such as to have just claims to
your active and effectual assistance and support.
It is, gentlemen.
To prove this I do not now intend
to enter into an explanation of the particulars of
our struggle, which I had the honour to conduct, as
the chosen Chief Magistrate of my native land.
It is highly gratifying to me to find that the cause
of Hungary is excepting some ridiculous
misrepresentations of ill-will correctly
understood here. I will only state now one fact,
and that is, that our endeavours for independence
were crushed by the armed interference of a foreign
despotic power the principle of all evil
on earth Russia. And stating this fact,
I will not again intrude upon you with my own views,
but recall to your memory the doctrines established
by your own statesmen. Firstly I return
to your great Washington. He says, in one of
his letters to Lafayette, “My policies are plain
and simple; I think every nation has a right to establish
that form of government under which it conceives it
can live most happy; and that no government ought
to interfere with the internal concerns of another.”
Here I take my ground: upon a principle
of Washington a principle, not a
mere temporary policy calculated for the first twenty
years of your infancy. Russia has interfered
with the internal concerns of Hungary, and by doing
so has violated the policy of the United States, established
as a lasting principle by Washington himself.
It is a lasting principle. I could appeal in my
support to the opinion of every statesman of the United
States, of every party, of every time; but to save
time, I pass at once from the first President of the
United States to the last, and recall to your memory
this word of the present annual message of his Excellency
President Fillmore: “Let every people
choose for itself, and make and alter its political
institutions to suit its own condition and convenience.”
I beg leave also to quote the statement of your present
Secretary of State, Mr. Webster, who, in his speech
on the Greek question, speaks thus: “The
law of nations maintains that in extreme cases resistance
is lawful, and that one nation has no right to interfere
in the affairs of another.” Well, that
precisely is the ground upon which we Hungarians stand.
But I may perhaps meet the objection
(I am sorry to say I have met it already) “Well,
we own that it has been violated by Russia in the case
of Hungary, but after all what is Hungary to us?
Let every people take care of itself, what is that
to us?” So some speak: it is the old doctrine
of private egotism, “Every one for himself, and
God for us all.” I will answer the objection
again by the words of Mr. Webster, who, in his speech
on the Greek question, having professed that the internal
sovereignty of every nation is a law of nations thus
goes on, “But it may be asked ‘what is
all that to us?’ The question is easily answered.
We are one of the nations, and we as a nation
have precisely the same interest in international
law as a private individual has in the laws of his
country.” The principle which your honourable
Secretary of State professes, is a principle of eternal
truth. No man can disavow it, no political party
can disavow it. Thus happily I am able to address
my prayers, not to a party, but to the whole people
of the United States, and will go on to do so as long
as I have no reason to regard one party as opposed
or indifferent to my country’s cause.
But from certain quarters it may be
avowed, “Well, we acknowledge every nation’s
sovereign right; we acknowledge it to be a law of nations
that no foreign power interfere in the affairs of
another, and we are determined to respect this common
law of mankind; but if others do not respect that
law it is not ours to meddle with them.”
Let me answer by an analysis: Every
nation has the same interest in international, law
as a private individual has in the laws of his country.
That is an acknowledged principle with your statesmen.
What then is the latter relation? Does it suffice
that an individual do not himself violate the law?
Must he not so far as is in his power also prevent
others from violating the law? Suppose you see
that a wicked man is about to rob to murder
your neighbour, or to burn his house, will you wrap
yourself in your own virtuous lawfulness, and say,
“I myself neither rob, nor murder, nor burn;
but what others do is not my concern. I am not
my brother’s keeper. I sympathize with him;
but I am not called on to save him from being robbed,
murdered, or burnt.” What honest man of
the world would answer so? None of you.
None of the people of the United States, I am sure.
That would be the damned maxim of the Pharisees of
old, who thanked God that they were not as others were.
Our Saviour was not content himself to avoid trading
in the hall of the temple, but he drove out those
who were trading there.
The duty of enforcing observance to
the common law of nations has no other limit
than the power to fulfil it. Of course the republic
of St. Marino, or the Prince of Monaco, cannot stop
the Czar of Russia in his ambitious annoyance.
It was ridiculous when the Prince of Modena refused
to recognize the government of Louis Philippe “but
to whom much is given, from him will much be expected,”
says the Lord. Every condition has not only its
rights, but also its own duties; and whatever exists
as a power on earth, is in duty a part of the executive
government of mankind, called to maintain the law of
nations. Woe, a thousandfold woe to humanity,
should there be no force on earth to maintain the
laws of humanity. Woe to humanity, should those
who are as mighty as they are free, not feel interested
to maintain the laws of mankind, because they are
rightful laws, but only in so far as some
partial money-interests would desire it. Woe to
mankind if every despot of the world may dare to trample
down the laws of humanity, and no free nation make
these laws respected. People of the United States,
humanity expects that your glorious republic will
prove to the world, that republics are founded
on virtue it expects to see you the
guardians of the laws of humanity.
I will come to the last possible objection.
I may be told, “You are right in your principles,
your cause is just, and you have our sympathy, but,
after all, we cannot go to war for your country;
we cannot furnish you armies and fleets; we cannot
fight your battle for you.” There is the
rub! Who can exactly tell what would have been
the issue of your own struggle for independence (though
your country was in a far happier geographical position
than we, poor Hungarians), had France given such an
answer to your forefathers in 1778 and 1781, instead
of sending to your aid a fleet of thirty-eight men-of-war,
and auxiliary troops, and 24,000 muskets, and a loan
of nineteen millions? And what was far more than
all this, did it not show that France resolved with
all its power to espouse the cause of your independence?
But, perhaps, I shall be told that France did this,
not out of love of freedom, but out of hatred against
England. Well, let it be; but let me then ask,
shall the curse of olden times hatred be
more efficient in the destinies of mankind than love
of freedom, principles of justice, and the laws of
humanity? And is America in the days of steam
navigation more distant from Europe to-day, than France
was from America seventy-three years ago? However,
I most solemnly declare that it is not my intention
to rely literally upon this example. It is not
my wish to entangle the United States in war, or to
engage your great people to send out armies and fleets
to raise up and restore Hungary. Not at all, gentlemen;
I most solemnly declare that I have never entertained
such expectations or such hopes; and here I come to
the practical point.
The principle of evil in Europe is
the enervating spirit of Russian absolutism.
Upon this rests the daring boldness of every petty
tyrant to trample upon oppressed nations, and to crush
liberty. To this Moloch of ambition has my native
land fallen a victim. It is with this that Montalembert
threatens the French republicans. It was Russian
intervention in Hungary which governed French intervention
in Rome, and gave German tyrants hardihood to crush
all the endeavours for freedom and unity in Germany.
The despots of the European continent are leagued
against the freedom of the world. That is A MATTER
OF FACT. The second matter of fact is that the
European continent is on the eve of a new revolution.
It is not necessary to be initiated in the secret
preparations of the European democracy to be aware
of that approaching contingency. It is pointed
out by the French constitution itself, prescribing
a new Presidential election for the next spring.
Now, suppose that the ambition of Louis Napoleon,
encouraged by Russian secret aid, awaits this time
(which I scarcely believe), and suppose that
there should be a Republic in France; of course the
first act of the new French President must be, at
least, to recall the French troops from Rome.
Nobody can doubt that a revolution in Italy will follow.
Or if there is no peaceful solution in France, but
a revolution, then every man knows that whenever the
heart of France boils up, the pulsation is felt throughout
Europe, and oppressed nations once more rise, and
Russia again interferes.
Now I humbly ask, with the view of
these circumstances before your eyes, can it be convenient
to such a great power as this glorious Republic, to
await the very outbreak, and not until then to discuss
and decide on your foreign policy? There may
come, as under the last President, at a late hour,
agents to see how matters stand in Hungary. Russian
interference and treason achieved what the sacrilegious
Hapsburg dynasty failed to achieve. You know
the old words, “While Rome debated, Saguntum
fell.” So I respectfully press upon you
my FIRST entreaty: it is, that your people will
in good time express to your central government what
course of foreign policy it wishes to be pursued in
the case of the approaching events I have mentioned.
And I most confidently hope that there is only one
course possible, consistently with the above recorded
principles. If you acknowledge that the right
of every nation to alter its institutions and government
is a law of nations if you acknowledge
the interference of foreign powers in that sovereign
right to be a violation of the law of nations, as
you really do if you are forbidden to
remain indifferent to this violation of international
law (as your President openly professes that you are) then
there is no other course possible than neither to
interfere in that sovereign right of nations, nor
to allow any other powers whatever to interfere.
But you will perhaps object to me,
“That amounts to going to war.” I
answer: no that amounts to preventing
war. What is wanted to that effect? It is
wanted, that, being aware of the precarious condition
of Europe, your national government should, as soon
as possible, send instructions to your Minister at
London, to declare to the English government that
the United States, acknowledging the sovereign right
of every nation to dispose of its own domestic concerns,
have resolved not to interfere, but also not to let
any foreign power whatever interfere with this sovereign
right in order to repress the spirit of freedom in
any country. Consequently, to invite the Cabinet
of St. James’s into this policy, and declare
that the United States are resolved to act conjointly
with England in that decision, in the approaching crisis
of the European continent. Such is my FIRST humble
request. If the citizens of the United States,
instead of honouring me with the offers of their hospitality,
would be pleased to pass convenient resolutions, and
to ratify them to their national government if
the press would hasten to give its aid, and in consequence
the national government instructed its Minister in
England accordingly, and by communication to the Congress,
as it is wont, give publicity to this step, I am entirely
sure that you would find the people of Great Britain
heartily joining this direction of policy. No
power could feel peculiarly offended by it; no existing
relation would be broken or injured: and still
any future interference of Russia against the restoration
of Hungary to that independence which was formally
declared in 1849 would be prevented, Russian arrogance
and preponderance would be checked, and the oppressed
nations of Europe soon become free.
There may be some over-anxious men,
who perhaps would say, “But if such a declaration
of your government were not respected, and Russia still
did interfere, then you would be obliged by this previous
declaration, to go to war; and you don’t desire
to have a war.” That objection seems to
me as if somebody were to say, “If the vault
of heaven breaks down, what shall we do?” My
answer is, “But it will not break down.”
Even so I answer. But your declaration will
be respected Russia will not interfere you
will have no occasion for war you will have
prevented war. Be sure Russia would twice, thrice
consider, before provoking against itself, besides
the roused judgment of nations (to say nothing
of the legions of republican France) the
English “Lion” and the star-surrounded
“Eagle” of America. Remember that
you, in conjunction with England, once before declared
that you would not permit European absolutism to interfere
with the formerly Spanish colonies of America.
Did this declaration bring you to a war? quite the
contrary; it prevented war. So it would be in
our case also. Let me therefore most humbly entreat
you, people of the United States, to give such practical
direction to your generous sympathy for Hungary, as
to arrange meetings and pass such resolutions, in
every possible place of this Union, as I took the
liberty to mention above.
The SECOND measure which I beg leave
to mention, has reference to commercial interest.
In later times a doctrine has stolen into the code
of international law, which is as contrary to the commercial
interests of nations as to their independence.
The pettiest despot of the world is permitted to exclude
your commerce from whatever port he pleases. He
has only to arrange the blockade, and your commerce
is shut out; or, if captured Venice, bleeding Lombardy,
or my prostrate but resolute Hungary, rises to shake
off the Austrian tyrant’s yoke (as surely they
will), that tyrant believes he has the right, from
that very moment, to exclude your commerce from the
uprisen nation. Now, this is an absurdity a
tyrannical invention of tyrants violating your interest your
independence. The United States have not always
regarded things from the despotic point of view.
I find, in a note of Mr. Everett, Minister of the
United States in Spain, dated “Madrid, Ja,
1826,” these words: “In the
war between Spain and the Spanish American colonies,
the United States have freely granted to both
parties the hospitality of their ports and territory,
and have allowed the agents of both to procure
within their jurisdiction, in the way of lawful trade,
any supplies which suited their convenience.”
Now, gentlemen, this is the principle which humanity
expects, for your own and for mankind’s benefit,
to see maintained by you, and not yonder fatal course,
which permits tyrants to draw from your country every
facility for the oppression of their nations, but forbids
nations to buy the means of defence. That was
not the principle of your Washington. When he
speaks of harmony, of friendly intercourse, and of
peace, he always takes care to apply his ideas to
nations, and not to governments still
less to tyrants who subdue nations by foreign arms.
The sacred word Nation, with all its natural rights,
should not be blotted out, at least from your
political dictionary: and yet I am sorry to see
that the word nation is often replaced by the word
Government. Gentlemen, I humbly wish that the
public opinion of the people of the United States,
conscious of its own rights, should loudly and resolutely
declare that the people of the United States will
continue its commercial intercourse with any or every
nation, be it in revolution against its oppressors
or be it not; and that the people of the United States
expect confidently, that its government will provide
for the protection of your trade. I feel assured,
that your national government, seeing public opinion
so pronounced, will judge it convenient to augment
your naval forces in the Mediterranean: and to
look for some such station for it as would not force
the navy of republican America to make disavowals
inconsistent with republican principles or republican
dignity, only because King So-and-So, be he even the
cursed King of Naples, grants the favour of an anchoring
place for the naval forces of your republic.
I believe your illustrious country should everywhere
freely unfurl the star-spangled banner of liberty,
with all its congenial principles, and not make itself
in any respect dependent on the glorious smiles of
the Kings Bomba et Compagne.
The THIRD object of my wishes, gentlemen,
is the recognition of the independence of Hungary
when the critical moment arrives. Your own declaration
of independence proclaims the right of every nation
to assume among the powers of the earth the separate
and equal station to which “the laws of nature
and nature’s God” entitle them. The
political existence of your glorious republic is founded
upon this principle, upon this right. Our nation
stands upon the same ground: there is a striking
resemblance between your cause and that of my country.
On the 4th July, 1776, John Adams spoke thus in your
Congress, “Sink or swim, live or die, survive
or perish, I am for this declaration. In the beginning
we did not go so far as separation from the Crown,
but ’there is a divinity which shapes our ends.’”
These noble words were present to my mind on the 14th
April, 1849, when I moved the forfeiture of the Crown
by the Hapsburgs in the National Assembly of Hungary.
Our condition was the same; and if there be any difference,
I venture to say it is in favour of us. Your
country, before this declaration, was not a self-consisting
independent State. Hungary was. Through
the lapse of a thousand years, through every vicissitude
of this long period, while nations vanished and empires
fell, the self-consisting independence of Hungary
was never disputed, but was recognized by all
powers of the earth, sanctioned by treaties made with
the Hapsburg dynasty, at the era when this dynasty,
by the freewill of my nation, which acted as one of
two contracting parties, was invested with the kingly
crown of Hungary. Even more, this independence
of the kingdom was acknowledged to make a part of
the international law of Europe, and was guaranteed
not only by foreign European governments, such as Great
Britain, but also by several of those once constitutional
states which belonged formerly to the German, and
after its dissolution, to the Austrian empire.
This independent condition of Hungary
is clearly defined in one of our fundamental laws
of 1791, in these words: “Hungary
is a free and independent kingdom, having its own
self-consistent existence and constitution, and not
subject to any other nation or country in the world.”
This therefore was our ancient right. We were not
dependent on, nor a part of, the Austrian empire,
as your country was dependent on England. It was
clearly defined that we owed to Austria nothing but
good neighbourhood, and the only tie between us and
Austria was, that we elected to be our kings the same
dynasty which were also the sovereigns of Austria,
and occupied the same line of hereditary succession
as our kings; but by accepting this; our forefathers,
with the consent of the King, again declared, that
though Hungary accepts the dynasty as our hereditary
kings, all the other franchises, rights, and laws of
the nation shall remain in full power and intact;
and our country shall not be governed like the other
dominions of that dynasty, but according to our constitutionally
established authorities. We could not belong to
“the Austrian Empire,” for that empire
did not then as yet exist, while Hungary had already
existed as a substantive kingdom for many centuries,
and for some two hundred and eighty years under the
government of that Hapsburgian dynasty. The Austrian
Empire, as you know, was established only in 1806,
when the Rhenish confederacy of Napoleon struck the
deathblow of the German empire, of which Francis II.
of Austria, was not hereditary but elected
Emperor. That Hungary had belonged to the German
empire is a thing which no man in the world ever imagined
yet. It is only now that the Hapsburgian tyrant
professes an intention to melt Hungary into the German
Confederation; but you know this intention to be in
so striking opposition to the European public law,
that England and France solemnly protested against
it, so that it is not carried out even to-day.
The German Empire having died, its late Emperor Francis,
also King of Hungary, chose to entitle himself Austrian
Emperor, in 1806; but even in that fundamental charter
he solemnly declared that Hungary and its annexed
provinces are not intended to make, and will not
make, a part of the Austrian Empire. Subsequently
he entered with this empire into the German Confederation,
but Hungary, as well as Lombardy and Venice, not making
part of the Austrian empire, still remained separated,
and were not received into the confederacy.
The laws which we succeeded to carry
in 1848, of course altered nothing in that old chartered
condition of Hungary. We transformed the peasantry
into freeholders, and abolished feudal incumbrances.
We replaced the political privileges of aristocracy
by the common liberty of the whole people; gave to
the people at large representation in the legislature;
transformed our municipalities into democratic corporations;
introduced equality before the law for the whole people
in rights and duties, and abolished the immunity of
taxation which had been enjoyed by the class called
Noble; secured equal religious liberty to all,
secured liberty of the press and of association, provided
for public gratuitous instruction of the whole people
of every confession and of whatever tongue. In
all this we did no wrong. All these were, as
you see, internal reforms which did not at all interfere
with our allegiance to the king and were carried lawfully
in peaceful legislation with the king’s own
sanction. Besides this there was one other
thing which was carried. We were formerly governed
by a Board of Council, which had the express duty
to govern according to our laws, and be responsible
for doing so; but we found by long experience that
a Corporation cannot really be responsible; and that
this was the reason why the absolutist tendency of
the dynasty succeeded in encroaching upon our liberty.
So we replaced the Board of Council by Ministers; the
empty responsibility of a Board by the individual
responsibility of men and the king consented
to it. I myself was named by him Minister
of the Treasury. That is all. But precisely
here was the rub. The dynasty could not bear
the idea that we would not give to its ambition the
life sweat of our people; it was not contented with
the 1,500,000 dollars which were generously appropriated
to it yearly. It dreaded that it would be disabled
in future from using our brave army, against our will,
to crush the spirit of freedom in the world. Therefore
it resorted to the most outrageous conspiracy, and
attacked us by arms, and upon receiving a false report
of a great victory this young usurper issued a proclamation
declaring that Hungary shall no more exist that
its independence, its constitution, its very existence
is abolished, and it shall be absorbed, like a farm
or fold, into the Austrian Empire. To all this
Hungary answered, “Thou shalt not exist, tyrant,
but we will;” and we banished him, and issued
the declaration of the deposition of his dynasty,
and of our separate independence.
So you see, gentlemen, that there
is a very great difference between your declaration
and ours it is in our favour. There
is another difference; you declared your independence
of the English crown when it was yet very doubtful
whether you would be successful. We declared our
independence of the Austrian crown only after we, in
legitimate defence, were already victorious; when
we had actually beaten the pretender, and had thus
already proved that we had strength to become an independent
power. One thing more: our declaration of
independence was not only overwhelmingly voted in
our Congress, but every county, every municipality,
solemnly declared its consent and adherence to it;
so it became sanctioned, not by mere representatives,
but by the whole nation positively, and by the fundamental
institutions of Hungary. And so it still remains.
Nothing has since happened on the part of the nation
contrary to this declaration. One thing only happened, a
foreign power, Russia, came with its armed bondsmen,
and, aided by treason, has overthrown us for a while.
Now, I put the question before God and humanity to
you, free sovereign people of America, can this violation
of international law abolish the legitimate character
of our declaration of independence? If not, then
here I take my ground, because I am in this very manifesto
entrusted with the charge of Governor of my fatherland.
I have sworn, before God and my nation, to endeavour
to maintain and secure this act of independence.
And so may God the Almighty help me as I will I
will, until my nation is again in the condition to
dispose of its government, which I confidently trust, yea,
more, I know, will be republican.
And then I retire to the humble condition of my former
private life, equalling, in one thing at least, your
Washington, not in merits, but in honesty. That
is the only ambition of my life. Amen. Here,
then, is my THIRD humble wish: that the people
of the United States would, by all constitutional
means of its wonted public life, declare that, acknowledging
the legitimacy of our independence, it is anxious
to greet Hungary amongst the independent powers of
the earth, and invites the government of the United
States to recognize this independence at the earliest
convenient time. That is all. Let me
see the principle announced: the rest may well
be left to the wisdom of your government, with some
confidence in my own respectful discretion also.
So much for the people of the United
States, in its public and political capacity.
But if that sympathy which I have the honour to meet
with is really intended to become beneficial, there
is one humble wish more which I entertain: it
is a respectful appeal to generous feeling. Gentlemen,
I would rather starve than rely, for myself and family,
on foreign aid; but for my country’s Freedom,
I would not be ashamed to go begging from door to
door. I have taken the advice of some kind friends
whether it be lawful to express such a humble request,
for I feel it an honourable duty neither to offend
nor to evade your laws. I am told it is lawful.
There are two means to see this my humble wish accomplished.
The first is, by spontaneous subscription; the second
is, by a loan. The latter may require private
consultation in a narrower circle. As to subscriptions,
the idea was brought home to my mind by a plain but
very generous letter, which I had the honour to receive,
and which I beg to read. It is as follows:
CINCINNATI, O., No, 1851.
M. LOUIS KOSSUTH, Governor of Hungary: Sir I
have authorized the office of the Ohio Life Insurance
and Trust Company, in New York, to honour your draft
on me for one thousand dollars. Respectfully yours,
W. SMEAD.
I beg leave here publicly to return
my most humble thanks to the gentleman, for his ample
aid, and the delicate manner in which he offered it;
and it came to my mind, that where one individual is
ready to make such sacrifices to my country’s
cause, there may perhaps be many who would give their
small share to it, if they were only apprised that
it will be thankfully accepted, however small it may
be. And it came to my mind, that millions of
drops make an ocean, and the United States number
many millions of inhabitants, all warmly attached to
liberty. A million dollars, paid singly, would
be to me far more precious than paid in one
single draft; for it would practically show the sympathy
of the people at large. Would I were so happy
as your Washington was, when he also, for your glorious
country’s sake, in the hours of your need, called
to France for money.
Sir, I have done. I came to your
shores an exile: you have poured upon me the
triumph of a welcome such as the world has never yet
seen. And why? Because you took me for the
representative of that principle of liberty which
God has destined to become the common benefit of all
humanity. It is glorious to see a free and mighty
people so greet the principle of freedom, in the person
of one who is persecuted and helpless. Be blessed
for it! Your generous deed will be recorded; and
as millions of Europe’s oppressed nations will,
even now, raise their thanksgiving to God for this
ray of hope, which by this act you have thrown on
the dark night of their fate; even so, through all
posterity, oppressed men will look to your memory
as to a token of God that there is a hope for freedom
on earth, since there is a people like you to feel
its worth and to support its cause.