<h2><SPAN href="#Contents">CHAPTER III</SPAN></h2>
<h3>Independence</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Well-meaning</span> people in England found it
difficult to understand the intensity of feeling in America. Britain had
piled up a huge debt in driving France from America. Landowners were
paying in taxes no less than twenty per cent of their incomes from land.
The people who had chiefly benefited by the humiliation of France were the
colonists, now freed from hostile menace and secure for extension over a
whole continent. Why should not they pay some share of the cost of their
own security? Certain facts tended to make Englishmen indignant with the
Americans. Every effort had failed to get them to pay willingly for their
defense. Before the Stamp Act had become law in 1765 the colonies were
given a whole year to devise the raising of money in any way which they
liked better. The burden of what was asked would be light. Why should not
they agree to bear it? Why this talk,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</SPAN></span>
repeated by the Whigs in the British Parliament, of brutal
tyranny, oppression, hired minions imposing slavery, and so on. Where were
the oppressed? Could any one point to a single person who before war broke
out had known British tyranny? What suffering could any one point to as
the result of the tax on tea? The people of England paid a tax on tea four
times heavier than that paid in America. Was not the British Parliament
supreme over the whole Empire? Did not the colonies themselves admit that
it had the right to control their trade overseas? And if men shirk their
duty should they not come under some law of compulsion?</p>
<p>It was thus that many a plain man reasoned in England. The plain man in
America had his own opposing point of view. Debts and taxes in England
were not his concern. He remembered the recent war as vividly as did the
Englishman, and, if the English paid its cost in gold, he had paid his
share in blood and tears. Who made up the armies led by the British
generals in America? More than half the total number who served in America
came from the colonies, the colonies which had barely a third of the
population of Great Britain. True, Britain paid the bill in money but why
not? She
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</SPAN></span>
was rich with a vast accumulated capital. The war, partly in
America, had given her the key to the wealth of India. Look at the
magnificence, the pomp of servants, plate and pictures, the parks and
gardens, of hundreds of English country houses, and compare this opulence
with the simple mode of life, simplicity imposed by necessity, of a
country gentleman like George Washington of Virginia, reputed to be the
richest man in America. Thousands of tenants in England, owning no acre of
land, were making a larger income than was possible in America to any
owner of broad acres. It was true that America had gained from the late
war. The foreign enemy had been struck down. But had he not been struck
down too for England? Had there not been far more dread in England of
invasion by France and had not the colonies by helping to ruin France
freed England as much as England had freed them? If now the colonies were
asked to pay a share of the bill for the British army that was a matter
for discussion. They had never before done it and they must not be told
that they had to meet the demand within a year or be compelled to pay. Was
it not to impose tyranny and slavery to tell a people that their property
would be taken by force if they did not choose to give it?
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</SPAN></span>
What free man
would not rather die than yield on such a point?</p>
<p>The familiar workings of modern democracy have taught us that a great
political issue must be discussed in broad terms of high praise or severe
blame. The contestants will exaggerate both the virtue of the side they
espouse and the malignity of the opposing side; nice discrimination is not
possible. It was inevitable that the dispute with the colonies should
arouse angry vehemence on both sides. The passionate speech of Patrick
Henry in Virginia, in 1763, which made him famous, and was the forerunner
of his later appeal, <q>Give me Liberty or give me Death,</q> related to so
prosaic a question as the right of disallowance by England of an act
passed by a colonial legislature, a right exercised long and often before
that time and to this day a part of the constitutional machinery of the
British Empire. Few men have lived more serenely poised than Washington,
yet, as we have seen, he hated the British with an implacable hatred. He
was a humane man. In earlier years, Indian raids on the farmers of
Virginia had stirred him to <q>deadly sorrow,</q> and later, during his retreat
from New York, he was moved by the cries of the weak and infirm. Yet the
same man felt no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</SPAN></span>
touch of pity for the Loyalists of the Revolution. To him
they were detestable parricides, vile traitors, with no right to live.
When we find this note in Washington, in America, we hardly wonder that
the high Tory, Samuel Johnson, in England, should write that the proposed
taxation was no tyranny, that it had not been imposed earlier because <q>we
do not put a calf into the plough; we wait till he is an ox,</q> and that the
Americans were <q>a race of convicts, and ought to be thankful for anything
which we allow them short of hanging.</q> Tyranny and treason are both ugly
things. Washington believed that he was fighting the one, Johnson that he
was fighting the other, and neither side would admit the charge against
itself.</p>
<p>Such are the passions aroused by civil strife. We need not now, when they
are, or ought to be, dead, spend any time in deploring them. It suffices
to explain them and the events to which they led. There was one and really
only one final issue. Were the American colonies free to govern themselves
as they liked or might their government in the last analysis be regulated
by Great Britain? The truth is that the colonies had reached a condition
in which they regarded themselves as British states with their own
parliaments, exercising
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</SPAN></span>
complete jurisdiction in their own affairs. They
intended to use their own judgment and they were as restless under
attempted control from England as England would have been under control
from America. We can indeed always understand the point of view of
Washington if we reverse the position and imagine what an Englishman would
have thought of a claim by America to tax him.</p>
<p>An ancient and proud society is reluctant to change. After a long and
successful war England was prosperous. To her now came riches from India
and the ends of the earth. In society there was such lavish expenditure
that Horace Walpole declared an income of twenty thousand pounds a year
was barely enough. England had an aristocracy the proudest in the world,
for it had not only rank but wealth. The English people were certain of
the invincible superiority of their nation. Every Englishman was taught,
as Disraeli said of a later period, to believe that he occupied a position
better than any one else of his own degree in any other country in the
world. The merchant in England was believed to surpass all others in
wealth and integrity, the manufacturer to have no rivals in skill, the
British sailor to stand in a class by himself, the British officer to
express the last word in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</SPAN></span>
chivalry. It followed, of course, that the
motherland was superior to her children overseas. The colonies had no
aristocracy, no great landowners living in stately palaces. They had
almost no manufactures. They had no imposing state system with places and
pensions from which the fortunate might reap a harvest of ten or even
twenty thousand pounds a year. They had no ancient universities thronged
by gilded youth who, if noble, might secure degrees without the trying
ceremony of an examination. They had no Established Church with the
ancient glories of its cathedrals. In all America there was not even a
bishop. In spite of these contrasts the English Whigs insisted upon the
political equality with themselves of the American colonists. The Tory
squire, however, shared Samuel Johnson's view that colonists were either
traders or farmers and that colonial shopkeeping society was vulgar and
contemptible.</p>
<p>George III was ill-fitted by nature to deal with the crisis. The King was
not wholly without natural parts, for his own firm will had achieved what
earlier kings had tried and failed to do; he had mastered Parliament, made
it his obedient tool and himself for a time a despot. He had some
admirable virtues. He was a family man, the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</SPAN></span>
father of fifteen children. He
liked quiet amusements and had wholesome tastes. If industry and belief in
his own aims could of themselves make a man great we might reverence
George. He wrote once to Lord North: <q>I have no object but to be of use:
if that is ensured I am completely happy.</q> The King was always busy.
Ceaseless industry does not, however, include every virtue, or the author
of all evil would rank high in goodness. Wisdom must be the pilot of good
intentions. George was not wise. He was ill-educated. He had never
traveled. He had no power to see the point of view of others.</p>
<p>As if nature had not sufficiently handicapped George for a high part, fate
placed him on the throne at the immature age of twenty-two. Henceforth the
boy was master, not pupil. Great nobles and obsequious prelates did him
reverence. Ignorant and obstinate, the young King was determined not only
to reign but to rule, in spite of the new doctrine that Parliament, not
the King, carried on the affairs of government through the leader of the
majority in the House of Commons, already known as the Prime Minister.
George could not really change what was the last expression of political
forces in England. The rule of Parliament
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</SPAN></span>
had come to stay. Through it and
it alone could the realm be governed. This power, however, though it could
not be destroyed, might be controlled. Parliament, while retaining all its
privileges, might yet carry out the wishes of the sovereign. The King
might be his own Prime Minister. The thing could be done if the King's
friends held a majority of the seats and would do what their master
directed. It was a dark day for England when a king found that he could
play off one faction against another, buy a majority in Parliament, and
retain it either by paying with guineas or with posts and dignities which
the bought Parliament left in his gift. This corruption it was which
ruined the first British Empire.</p>
<p>We need not doubt that George thought it his right and also his duty to
coerce America, or rather, as he said, the clamorous minority which was
trying to force rebellion. He showed no lack of sincerity. On October 26,
1775, while Washington was besieging Boston, he opened Parliament with a
speech which at any rate made the issue clear enough. Britain would not
give up colonies which she had founded with severe toil and nursed with
great kindness. Her army and her navy, both now increased in size, would
make her power respected.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</SPAN></span>
She would not, however, deal harshly with her
erring children. Royal mercy would be shown to those who admitted their
error and they need not come to England to secure it. Persons in America
would be authorized to grant pardons and furnish the guarantees which
would proceed from the royal clemency.</p>
<p>Such was the magnanimity of George III. Washington's rage at the tone of
the speech is almost amusing in its vehemence. He, with a mind conscious
of rectitude and sacrifice in a great cause, to ask pardon for his course!
He to bend the knee to this tyrant overseas! Washington himself was not
highly gifted with imagination. He never realized the strength of the
forces in England arrayed on his own side and attributed to the English,
as a whole, sinister and malignant designs always condemned by the great
mass of the English people. They, no less than the Americans, were the
victims of a turn in politics which, for a brief period, and for only a
brief period, left power in the hands of a corrupt Parliament and a
corrupting king.</p>
<p>Ministers were not all corrupt or place-hunters. One of them, the Earl of
Dartmouth, was a saint in spirit. Lord North, the king's chief minister,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
was not corrupt. He disliked his office and wished to leave it. In truth
no sweeping simplicity of condemnation will include all the ministers of
George III except on this one point that they allowed to dictate their
policy a narrow-minded and ignorant king. It was their right to furnish a
policy and to exercise the powers of government, appoint to office, spend
the public revenues. Instead they let the King say that the opinions of
his ministers had no avail with him. If we ask why, the answer is that
there was a mixture of motives. North stayed in office because the King
appealed to his loyalty, a plea hard to resist under an ancient monarchy.
Others stayed from love of power or for what they could get. In that
golden age of patronage it was possible for a man to hold a plurality of
offices which would bring to himself many thousands of pounds a year, and
also to secure the reversion of offices and pensions to his children.
Horace Walpole spent a long life in luxurious ease because of offices with
high pay and few duties secured in the distant days of his father's
political power. Contracts to supply the army and the navy went to friends
of the government, sometimes with disastrous results, since the contractor
often knew nothing of the business he undertook. When,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></span>
in 1777, the
Admiralty boasted that thirty-five ships of war were ready to put to sea
it was found that there were in fact only six. The system nearly ruined
the navy. It actually happened that planks of a man-of-war fell out
through rot and that she sank. Often ropes and spars could not be had when
most needed. When a public loan was floated the King's friends and they
alone were given the shares at a price which enabled them to make large
profits on the stock market.</p>
<p>The system could endure only as long as the King's friends had a majority
in the House of Commons. Elections must be looked after. The King must
have those on whom he could always depend. He controlled offices and
pensions. With these things he bought members and he had to keep them
bought by repeating the benefits. If the holder of a public office was
thought to be dying the King was already naming to his Prime Minister the
person to whom the office must go when death should occur. He insisted
that many posts previously granted for life should now be given during his
pleasure so that he might dismiss the holders at will. He watched the
words and the votes in Parliament of public men and woe to those in his
power if they displeased him. When he knew that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</SPAN></span>
Fox, his great antagonist,
would be absent from Parliament he pressed through measures which Fox
would have opposed. It was not until George III was King that the buying
and selling of boroughs became common. The King bought votes in the
boroughs by paying high prices for trifles. He even went over the lists of
voters and had names of servants of the government inserted if this seemed
needed to make a majority secure. One of the most unedifying scenes in
English history is that of George making a purchase in a shop at Windsor
and because of this patronage asking for the shopkeeper's support in a
local election. The King was saving and penurious in his habits that he
might have the more money to buy votes. When he had no money left he would
go to Parliament and ask for a special grant for his needs and the bought
members could not refuse the money for their buying.</p>
<p>The people of England knew that Parliament was corrupt. But how to end the
system? The press was not free. Some of it the government bought and the
rest it tried to intimidate though often happily in vain. Only fragments
of the debates in Parliament were published. Not until 1779 did the House
of Commons admit the public
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</SPAN></span>
to its galleries. No great political meetings
were allowed until just before the American war and in any case the masses
had no votes. The great landowners had in their control a majority of the
constituencies. There were scores of pocket boroughs in which their
nominees were as certain of election as peers were of their seats in the
House of Lords. The disease of England was deep-seated. A wise king could
do much, but while George III survived—and his reign lasted sixty
years—there was no hope of a wise king. A strong minister could
impose his will on the King. But only time and circumstance could evolve a
strong minister. Time and circumstance at length produced the younger
Pitt. But it needed the tragedy of two long wars—those against the
colonies and revolutionary France—before the nation finally threw
off the system which permitted the personal rule of George III and caused
the disruption of the Empire. It may thus be said with some truth that
George Washington was instrumental in the salvation of England.</p>
<p>The ministers of George III loved the sports, the rivalries, the ease, the
remoteness of their rural magnificence. Perverse fashion kept them in
London even in April and May for <q>the season,</q> just
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</SPAN></span>
when in the country
nature was most alluring. Otherwise they were off to their estates
whenever they could get away from town. The American Revolution was not
remotely affected by this habit. With ministers long absent in the country
important questions were postponed or forgotten. The crisis which in the
end brought France into the war was partly due to the carelessness of a
minister hurrying away to the country. Lord George Germain, who directed
military operations in America, dictated a letter which would have caused
General Howe to move northward from New York to meet General Burgoyne
advancing from Canada. Germain went off to the country without waiting to
sign the letter; it was mislaid among other papers; Howe was without
needed instructions; and the disaster followed of Burgoyne's surrender.
Fox pointed out, that, at a time when there was a danger that a foreign
army might land in England, not one of the King's ministers was less than
fifty miles from London. They were in their parks and gardens, or hunting
or fishing. Nor did they stay away for a few days only. The absence was
for weeks or even months.</p>
<p>It is to the credit of Whig leaders in England, landowners and aristocrats
as they were, that they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</SPAN></span>
supported with passion the American cause. In
America, where the forces of the Revolution were in control, the Loyalist
who dared to be bold for his opinions was likely to be tarred and
feathered and to lose his property. There was an embittered intolerance.
In England, however, it was an open question in society whether to be for
or against the American cause. The Duke of Richmond, a great grandson of
Charles II, said in the House of Lords that under no code should the
fighting Americans be considered traitors. What they did was <q>perfectly
justifiable in every possible political and moral sense.</q> All the world
knows that Chatham and Burke and Fox urged the conciliation of America and
hundreds took the same stand. Burke said of General Conway, a man of
position, that when he secured a majority in the House of Commons against
the Stamp Act his face shone as the face of an angel. Since the bishops
almost to a man voted with the King, Conway attacked them as in this
untrue to their high office. Sir George Savile, whose benevolence,
supported by great wealth, made him widely respected and loved, said that
the Americans were right in appealing to arms. Coke of Norfolk was a
landed magnate who lived in regal style. His seat of Holkham was one of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</SPAN></span>
those great new palaces which the age reared at such elaborate cost. It
was full of beautiful things—the art of Michelangelo, Raphael,
Titian, and Van Dyke, rare manuscripts, books, and tapestries. So
magnificent was Coke that a legend long ran that his horses were shod with
gold and that the wheels of his chariots were of solid silver. In the
country he drove six horses. In town only the King did this. Coke despised
George III, chiefly on account of his American policy, and to avoid the
reproach of rivaling the King's estate, he took joy in driving past the
palace in London with a donkey as his sixth animal and in flicking his
whip at the King. When he was offered a peerage by the King he denounced
with fiery wrath the minister through whom it was offered as attempting to
bribe him. Coke declared that if one of the King's ministers held up a hat
in the House of Commons and said that it was a green bag the majority of
the members would solemnly vote that it was a green bag. The bribery which
brought this blind obedience of Toryism filled Coke with fury. In youth he
had been taught never to trust a Tory and he could say <q>I never have and,
by God, I never will.</q> One of his children asked their mother whether
Tories were born wicked or after birth became wicked.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</SPAN></span>
The uncompromising
answer was: <q>They are born wicked and they grow up worse.</q></p>
<p>There is, of course, in much of this something of the malignance of party.
In an age when one reverend theologian, Toplady, called another
theologian, John Wesley, <q>a low and puny tadpole in Divinity</q> we must
expect harsh epithets. But behind this bitterness lay a deep conviction of
the righteousness of the American cause. At a great banquet at Holkham,
Coke omitted the toast of the King; but every night during the American
war he drank the health of Washington as the greatest man on earth. The
war, he said, was the King's war, ministers were his tools, the press was
bought. He denounced later the King's reception of the traitor Arnold.
When the King's degenerate son, who became George IV, after some special
misconduct, wrote to propose his annual visit to Holkham, Coke replied,
<q>Holkham is open to <em>strangers</em> on Tuesdays.</q> It was an
independent and irate England which spoke in Coke. Those who paid taxes,
he said, should control those who governed. America was not getting fair
play. Both Coke and Fox, and no doubt many others, wore waistcoats of blue
and buff because these were the colors of the uniforms of Washington's
army.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</SPAN></span>
Washington and Coke exchanged messages and they would have been congenial
companions; for Coke, like Washington, was above all a farmer and tried to
improve agriculture. Never for a moment, he said, had time hung heavy on
his hands in the country. He began on his estate the culture of the
potato, and for some time the best he could hear of it from his stolid
tenantry was that it would not poison the pigs. Coke would have fought the
levy of a penny of unjust taxation and he understood Washington. The
American gentleman and the English gentleman had a common outlook.</p>
<hr class="break" />
<p>Now had come, however, the hour for political separation. By reluctant but
inevitable steps America made up its mind to declare for independence. At
first continued loyalty to the King was urged on the plea that he was in
the hands of evil-minded ministers, inspired by diabolical rage, or in
those of an <q>infernal villain</q> such as the soldier, General Gage, a second
Pharaoh; though it must be admitted that even then the King was <q>the
tyrant of Great Britain.</q> After Bunker Hill spasmodic declarations of
independence were made here and there by local bodies. When Congress
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</SPAN></span>
organized an army, invaded Canada, and besieged Boston, it was hard to
protest loyalty to a King whose forces were those of an enemy. Moreover
independence would, in the eyes at least of foreign governments, give the
colonies the rights of belligerents and enable them to claim for their
fighting forces the treatment due to a regular army and the exchange of
prisoners with the British. They could, too, make alliances with other
nations. Some clamored for independence for a reason more sinister—that
they might punish those who held to the King and seize their property.
There were thirteen colonies in arms and each of them had to form some
kind of government which would work without a king as part of its
mechanism. One by one such governments were formed. King George, as we
have seen, helped the colonies to make up their minds. They were in no
mood to be called erring children who must implore undeserved mercy and
not force a loving parent to take unwilling vengeance. <q>Our plantations</q>
and <q>our subjects in the colonies</q> would simply not learn obedience. If
George III would not reply to their petitions until they laid down their
arms, they could manage to get on without a king. If England, as Horace
Walpole admitted, would not take them
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</SPAN></span>
seriously and speakers in Parliament
called them obscure ruffians and cowards, so much the worse for England.</p>
<p>It was an Englishman, Thomas Paine, who fanned the fire into unquenchable
flames. He had recently been dismissed from a post in the excise in
England and was at this time earning in Philadelphia a precarious living
by his pen. Paine said it was the interest of America to break the tie
with Europe. Was a whole continent in America to be governed by an island
a thousand leagues away? Of what advantage was it to remain connected with
Great Britain? It was said that a united British Empire could defy the
world, but why should America defy the world? <q>Everything that is right or
natural pleads for separation.</q> Interested men, weak men, prejudiced men,
moderate men who do not really know Europe, may urge reconciliation, but
nature is against it. Paine broke loose in that denunciation of kings with
which ever since the world has been familiar. The wretched Briton, said
Paine, is under a king and where there was a king there was no security
for liberty. Kings were crowned ruffians and George III in particular was
a sceptered savage, a royal brute, and other evil things. He had inflicted
on America injuries not
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</SPAN></span>
to be forgiven. The blood of the slain, not less
than the true interests of posterity, demanded separation. Paine called
his pamphlet <i>Common Sense</i>. It was published on January 9, 1776. More
than a hundred thousand copies were quickly sold and it brought decision
to many wavering minds.</p>
<p>In the first days of 1776 independence had become a burning question. New
England had made up its mind. Virginia was keen for separation, keener
even than New England. New York and Pennsylvania long hesitated and
Maryland and North Carolina were very lukewarm. Early in 1776 Washington
was advocating independence and Greene and other army leaders were of the
same mind. Conservative forces delayed the settlement, and at last
Virginia, in this as in so many other things taking the lead, instructed
its delegates to urge a declaration by Congress of independence. Richard
Henry Lee, a member of that honored family which later produced the ablest
soldier of the Civil War, moved in Congress on June 7, 1776, that <q>these
United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, Free and Independent
States.</q> The preparation of a formal declaration was referred to a
committee of which John Adams and Thomas Jefferson were members. It is
interesting
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</SPAN></span>
to note that each of them became President of the United
States and that both died on July 4, 1826, the fiftieth anniversary of the
Declaration of Independence. Adams related long after that he and
Jefferson formed the sub-committee to draft the Declaration and that he
urged Jefferson to undertake the task since <q>you can write ten times
better than I can.</q> Jefferson accordingly wrote the paper. Adams was
delighted <q>with its high tone and the flights of Oratory</q> but he did not
approve of the flaming attack on the King, as a tyrant. <q>I never
believed,</q> he said, <q>George to be a tyrant in disposition and in nature.</q>
There was, he thought, too much passion for a grave and solemn document.
He was, however, the principal speaker in its support.</p>
<p>There is passion in the Declaration from beginning to end, and not the
restrained and chastened passion which we find in the great utterances of
an American statesman of a later day, Abraham Lincoln. Compared with
Lincoln, Jefferson is indeed a mere amateur in the use of words. Lincoln
would not have scattered in his utterances overwrought phrases about
<q>death, desolation and tyranny</q> or talked about pledging <q>our lives, our
fortunes and our sacred honour.</q> He indulged in no <q>Flights
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</SPAN></span>
of Oratory.</q>
The passion in the Declaration is concentrated against the King. We do not
know what were the emotions of George when he read it. We know that many
Englishmen thought that it spoke truth. Exaggerations there are which make
the Declaration less than a completely candid document. The King is
accused of abolishing English laws in Canada with the intention of
<q>introducing the same absolute rule into these colonies.</q> What had been
done in Canada was to let the conquered French retain their own laws—which
was not tyranny but magnanimity. Another clause of the Declaration, as
Jefferson first wrote it, made George responsible for the slave trade in
America with all its horrors and crimes. We may doubt whether that not too
enlightened monarch had even more than vaguely heard of the slave trade.
This phase of the attack upon him was too much for the slave owners of the
South and the slave traders of New England, and the clause was struck out.</p>
<p>Nearly fourscore and ten years later, Abraham Lincoln, at a supreme crisis
in the nation's life, told in Independence Hall, Philadelphia, what the
Declaration of Independence meant to him. <q>I have never,</q> he said, <q>had a
feeling politically
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</SPAN></span>
which did not spring from the sentiments in the
Declaration of Independence</q>; and then he spoke of the sacrifices which
the founders of the Republic had made for these principles. He asked, too,
what was the idea which had held together the nation thus founded. It was
not the breaking away from Great Britain. It was the assertion of human
right. We should speak in terms of reverence of a document which became a
classic utterance of political right and which inspired Lincoln in his
fight to end slavery and to make <q>Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness</q>
realities for all men. In England the colonists were often taunted with
being <q>rebels.</q> The answer was not wanting that ancestors of those who now
cried <q>rebel</q> had themselves been rebels a hundred years earlier when
their own liberty was at stake.</p>
<p>There were in Congress men who ventured to say that the Declaration was a
libel on the government of England; men like John Dickinson of
Pennsylvania and John Jay of New York, who feared that the radical
elements were moving too fast. Radicalism, however, was in the saddle, and
on the 2d of July the <q>resolution respecting independency</q> was adopted. On
July 4, 1776, Congress debated and finally adopted the formal
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</SPAN></span>
Declaration
of Independence. The members did not vote individually. The delegates from
each colony cast the vote of the colony. Twelve colonies voted for the
Declaration. New York alone was silent because its delegates had not been
instructed as to their vote, but New York, too, soon fell into line. It
was a momentous occasion and was understood to be such. The vote seems to
have been reached in the late afternoon. Anxious citizens were waiting in
the streets. There was a bell in the State House, and an old ringer waited
there for the signal. When there was long delay he is said to have
muttered: <q>They will never do it! they will never do it!</q> Then came the
word, <q>Ring! Ring!</q> It is an odd fact that the inscription on the bell,
placed there long before the days of the trouble, was from Leviticus:
<q><i>Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants
thereof.</i></q> The bells of Philadelphia rang and cannon boomed. As the news
spread there were bonfires and illuminations in all the colonies. On the
day after the Declaration the Virginia Convention struck out <q>O Lord, save
the King</q> from the church service. On the 10th of July Washington, who by
this time had moved to New York, paraded the army and had the Declaration
read at the head of each brigade.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</SPAN></span>
That evening the statue of King George
in New York was laid in the dust. It is a comment on the changes in human
fortune that within little more than a year the British had taken
Philadelphia, that the clamorous bell had been hid away for safety, and
that colonial wiseacres were urging the rescinding of the ill-timed
Declaration and the reunion of the British Empire.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"></SPAN></p>
<div class="chapterhead">
<br/><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</SPAN></span>
<br/><br/><br/></div>
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