Chapter 2:
ORIGIN OF THE ANGLO-AMERICANS, AND IMPORTANCE OF THIS ORIGIN IN
RELATION TO THEIR FUTURE CONDITION
UTILITY of knowing the origin of nations, in order to
understand their social condition and their laws--America the
only country in which the starting-point of a great people has
been clearly observable--In what respects all who emigrated to
British America were similar--In what they differed--Remark
applicable to all the Europeans who established themselves on
the shores of the New World--colonization of
Virginia--Colonization of New England--Original character of the
first inhabitants of New England--Their arrival--Their first
laws-Their social contract--Penal code borrowed from the Hebrew
--Religious Fervor--Republican spirit--Intimate union of the
spirit of religion with the spirit of liberty.
A MAN has come into the world; his early years are spent
without notice in the pleasures and activities of childhood. As
he grows up, the world receives him when his manhood begins, and
he enters into contact with his fellows. He is then studied for
the first time, and it is imagined that the germ of the vices
and the virtues of his maturer years is then formed.
This, if I am not mistaken, is a great error. We must
begin higher up; we must watch the infant in his mother's arms;
we must see the first images which the external world casts upon
the dark mirror of his mind, the first occurrences that he
witnesses, we must hear the first words which awaken the
sleeping powers of thought, and stand by his earliest efforts if
we would understand the prejudices, the habits, and the passions
which will rule his life. The entire man is, so to speak, to be
seen in the cradle of the child.
The growth of nations presents something analogous to
this; they all bear some marks of their origin. The
circumstances that accompanied their birth and contributed to
their development affected the whole term of their being.
If we were able to go back to the elements of states and
to examine the oldest monuments of their history, I doubt not
that we should discover in them the primal cause of the
prejudices, the habits, the ruling passions, and, in short, all
that constitutes what is called the national character. We
should there find the explanation of certain customs which now
seem at variance with the prevailing manners; of such laws as
conflict with established principles; and of such incoherent
opinions as are here and there to be met with in society, like
those fragments of broken chains which we sometimes see hanging
from the vaults of an old edifice, supporting nothing. This
might explain the destinies of certain nations which seem borne
on by an unknown force to ends of which they themselves are
ignorant. But hitherto facts have been lacking for such a study:
the spirit of analysis has come upon nations only as they
matured; and when they at last conceived of contemplating their
origin, time had already obscured it, or ignorance and pride had
surrounded it with fables behind which the truth was hidden.
America is the only country in which it has been possible
to witness the natural and tranquil growth of society, and where
the influence exercised on the future condition of states by
their origin is clearly distinguishable.
At the period when the peoples of Europe landed in the New
World, their national characteristics were already completely
formed; each of them had a physiognomy of its own; and as they
had already attained that stage of civilization at which men are
led to study themselves, they have transmitted to us a faithful
picture of their opinions, their manners, and their laws. The
men of the sixteenth century are almost as well known to us as
our contemporaries. America, consequently, exhibits in the broad
light of day the phenomena which the ignorance or rudeness of
earlier ages conceals from our researches. The men of our day
seem destined to see further than their predecessors into human
events; they are close enough to the founding of the American
settlements to know in detail their elements, and far enough
away from that time already to be able to judge what these
beginnings have produced. Providence has given us a torch which
our forefathers did not possess, and has allowed us to discern
fundamental causes in the history of the world which the
obscurity of the past concealed from them. If we carefully
examine the social and political state of America, after having
studied its history, we shall remain perfectly convinced that
not an opinion, not a custom, not a law, I may even say not an
event is upon record which the origin of that people will not
explain. The readers of this book will find in the present
chapter the germ of all that is to follow and the key to almost
the whole work.
The emigrants who came at different periods to occupy the
ter- ritory now covered by the American Union differed from each
other in many respects; their aim was not the same, and they
governed themselves on different principles.
These men had, however, certain features in common, and
they were all placed in an analogous situation. The tie of
language is, perhaps, the strongest and the most durable that
can unite mankind. All the emigrants spoke the same language;
they were all children of the same people. Born in a country
which had been agitated for centuries by the struggles of
faction, and in which all parties had been obliged in their turn
to place themselves under the protection of the laws, their
political education had been perfected in this rude school; and
they were more conversant with the notions of right and the
principles of true freedom than the greater part of their
European contemporaries. At the period of the first emigrations
the township system, that fruitful germ of free institutions,
was deeply rooted in the habits of the English; and with it the
doctrine of the sovereignty of the people had been introduced
into the very bosom of the monarchy of the house of Tudor.
The religious quarrels which have agitated the Christian
world were then rife. England had plunged into the new order of
things with headlong vehemence. The character of its
inhabitants, which had always been sedate and reflective, became
argumentative and austere. General information had been
increased by intellectual contests, and the mind had received in
them a deeper cultivation. While religion was the topic of
discussion, the morals of the people became more pure. All these
national features are more or less discoverable in the
physiognomy of those Englishmen who came to seek a new home on
the opposite shores of the Atlantic.
Another observation, moreover, to which we shall have
occasion to return later, is applicable not only to the English,
but to the French, the Spaniards, and all the Europeans who
successively established themselves in the New World. All these
European colonies contained the elements, if not the
development, of a complete democracy. Two causes led to this
result. It may be said that on leaving the mother country the
emigrants had, in general, no notion of superiority one over
another. The happy and the powerful do not go into exile, and
there are no surer guarantees of equality among men than poverty
and misfortune. It happened, however, on several occasions, that
persons of rank were driven to America by political and
religious quarrels. Laws were made to establish a gradation of
ranks; but it was soon found that the soil of America was
opposed to a territorial aristocracy. It was realized that in
order to clear this land, nothing less than the constant and
self-interested efforts of the owner himself was essential; the
ground prepared, it became evident that its produce was not
sufficient to enrich at the same time both an owner and a
farmer. The land was then naturally broken up into small
portions, which the proprietor cultivated for himself. Land is
the basis of an aristocracy, which clings to the soil that
supports it; for it is not by privileges alone, nor by birth,
but by landed property handed down from generation to generation
that an aristocracy is constituted. A nation may present immense
fortunes and extreme wretchedness; but unless those fortunes are
territorial, there is no true aristocracy, but simply the class
of the rich and that of the poor.
All the British colonies had striking similarities at the
time of their origin. All of them, from their beginning, seemed
destined to witness the growth, not of the aristocratic liberty
of their mother country, but of that freedom of the middle and
lower orders of which the history of the world had as yet
furnished no complete example. In this general uniformity,
however, several marked divergences could be observed, which it
is necessary to point out. Two branches may be distinguished in
the great Anglo-American family, which have hitherto grown up
without entirely commingling; the one in the South, the other in
the North.
Virginia received the first English colony; the immigrants
took possession of it in 1607. The idea that mines of gold and
silver are the sources of national wealth was at that time
singularly prevalent in Europe; a fatal delusion, which has done
more to impoverish the European nations who adopted it, and has
cost more lives in America, than the united influence of war and
bad laws. The men sent to Virginia 1 were seekers of gold,
adventurers without resources and without character, whose
turbulent and restless spirit endangered the infant colony 2 and
rendered its progress uncertain. Artisans and agriculturists
arrived afterwards; and, although they were a more moral and
orderly race of men, they were hardly in any respect above the
level of the inferior classes in England.3 No lofty views, no
spiritual conception, presided over the foundation of these new
settlements. The colony was scarcely established when slavery
was introduced;4 this was the capital fact which was to exercise
an immense influence on the character, the laws, and the whole
future of the South. Slavery, as I shall afterwards show,
dishonors labor; it introduces idleness into society, and with
idleness, ignorance and pride, luxury and distress. It enervates
the powers of the mind and benumbs the activity of man. The
influence of slavery, united to the English character, explains
the manners and the social condition of the Southern states.
On this same English foundation there developed in the
North very different characteristics. Here I may be allowed to
enter into some details.
In the English colonies of the North, more generally known
as the New England states,5 the two or three main ideas that now
constitute the basis of the social theory of the United States
were first combined. The principles of New England spread at
first to the neighboring states; they then passed successively
to the more distant ones; and at last, if I may so speak, they
interpenetrated the whole confederation. They now extend their
influence beyond its limits, over the whole American world. The
civilization of New England has been like a beacon lit upon a
hill, which, after it has diffused its warmth immediately around
it, also tinges the distant horizon with its glow.
The foundation of New England was a novel spectacle, and
all the circumstances attending it were singular and original.
Nearly all colonies have been first inhabited either by men
without education and without resources, driven by their poverty
and their misconduct from the land which gave them birth, or by
speculators and adventurers greedy of gain. Some settlements
cannot even boast so honorable an origin; Santo Domingo was
founded by buccaneers; and at the present day the criminal
courts of England supply the population of Australia.
The settlers who established themselves on the shores of
New England all belonged to the more independent classes of
their native country. Their union on the soil of America at once
presented the singular phenomenon of a society containing
neither lords nor common people, and we may almost say neither
rich nor poor. These men possessed, in proportion to their
number, a greater mass of intelligence than is to be found in
any European nation of our own time All, perhaps without a
single exception, had received a good education, and many of
them were known in Europe for their talents and their
acquirements. The other colonies had been founded by adventurers
without families; the immigrants of New England brought with
them the best elements of order and morality; they landed on the
desert coast accompanied by their wives and children. But what
especially distinguished them from all others was the aim of
their undertaking. They had not been obliged by necessity to
leave their country; the social position they abandoned was one
to be regretted, and their means of subsistence were certain.
Nor did they cross the Atlantic to improve their situation or to
increase their wealth; it was a purely intellectual craving that
called them from the comforts of their former homes; and in
facing the inevitable sufferings of exile their object was the
triumph of an idea.
The immigrants, or, as they deservedly styled themselves,
the Pilgrims, belonged to that English sect the austerity of
whose principles had acquired for them the name of Puritans.
Puritanism was not merely a religious doctrine, but corresponded
in many points with the most absolute democratic and republican
theories. It was this tendency that had aroused its most
dangerous adversaries. Persecuted by the government of the
mother country, and disgusted by the habits of a society which
the rigor of their own principles condemned, the Puritans went
forth to seek some rude and unfrequented part of the world where
they could live according to their own opinions and worship God
in freedom.
A few quotations will throw more light upon the spirit of
these pious adventurers than all that we can say of them.
Nathaniel Morton,6 the historian of the first years of the
settlement, thus opens his subject: "Gentle Reader, I have for
some lengths of time looked upon it as a duty incumbent
especially on the immediate successors of those that have had so
large experience of those many memorable and signal
demonstrations of God's goodness, viz. the first beginners of
this Plantation in New England, to commit to writing his
gracious dispensations on that behalf; having so many
inducements thereunto, not only otherwise, but so plentifully in
the Sacred Scriptures: that so, what we have seen, and what our
fathers have told us ( Psalm lxxviii. 3, 4 ), we may not hide
from our children, showing to the generations to come the
praises of the Lord; that especially the seed of Abraham his
servant, and the children of Jacob his chosen ( Psalm cv. 5, 6
), may remember his marvellous works in the beginning and
progress of the planting of New England, his wonders and the
judgments of his mouth; how that God brought a vine into this
wilderness; that he cast out the heathen, and planted it; that
he made room for it and caused it to take deep root; and it
filled the land ( Psalm lxxx. 8, 9 ) . And not only so, but also
that he hath guided his people by his strength to his holy
habitation, and planted them in the mountain of his inheritance
in respect of precious Gospel enjoyments: and that as especially
God may have the glory of all unto whom it is most due; so also
some rays of glory may reach the names of those blessed Saints,
that
The author continues, and thus describes the departure of
the first Pilgrims: 7
"So they left that goodly and pleasant city of Leyden,
which had been their resting-place for above eleven years;
but they knew that they were pilgrims and strangers here
below, and looked not much on these things, but lifted up
their eyes to heaven, their dearest country, where God hath
prepared for them a city ( Heb. xi. 16), and therein quieted
their spirits. When they came to Delfs-Haven they found the
ship and all things ready; and such of their friends as
could not come with them followed after them, and sundry
came from Amsterdam to see them shipt, and to take their
leaves of them. One night was spent with little sleep with
the most, but with friendly entertainment and Christian
discourse, and other real expressions of true Christian
love. The next day they went on board, and their friends
with them, where truly doleful was the sight of that sad and
mournful parting, to hear what sighs and sobs and prayers
did sound amongst them; what tears did gush from every eye,
and pithy speeches pierced each other's heart, that sundry
of the Dutch strangers that stood on the Key as spectators
could not refrain from tears. But the tide (which stays for
no man) calling them away, that were thus loth to depart,
their Reverend Pastor, falling down on his knees, and they
all with him, with watery cheeks commended them with most
fervent prayers unto the Lord and his blessing; and then
with mutual embraces and many tears they took their leaves
one of another, which proved to be the last leave to many of
them."
The emigrants were about 150 in number, including the
women and the children. Their object was to plant a colony on
the shores of the Hudson; but after having been driven about for
some time in the Atlantic Ocean, they were forced to land on the
arid coast of New England, at the spot which is now the town of
Plymouth The rock is still shown on which the Pilgrims
disembarked.8
"But before we pass on," continues our historian,9 "let
the reader with me make a pause, and seriously consider this
poor people's present condition, the more to be raised up to
admiration of God's goodness towards them in their
preservation: for being now passed the vast ocean, and a sea
of troubles before them in expectation, they had now no
friends to welcome them, no inns to entertain or refresh
them, no houses, or much less towns, to repair unto to seek
for succour: and for the season it was winter, and they that
know the winters of the country know them to be sharp and
violent, subject to cruel and fierce storms, dangerous to
travel to known places, much more to search unknown coasts.
Besides, what could they see but a hideous and desolate
wilderness, full of wilde beasts, and wilde men? and what
multitudes of them there were, they then knew not: for which
way soever they turned their eyes ( save upward to Heaven)
they could have but little solace or content in respect of
any outward object; for summer being ended, all things stand
in appearance with a weather-beaten face, and the whole
country, full of woods and thickets, represented a wild and
savage hew; if they looked behind them, there was the mighty
ocean which they had passed, and was now as a main bar or
gulph to separate them from all the civil parts of the
world."
It must not be imagined that the piety of the Puritans was
merely speculative, or that it took no cognizance of the course
of worldly affairs. Puritanism, as I have already remarked, was
almost as much a political theory as a religious doctrine. No
sooner had the immigrants landed on the barren coast described
by Nathaniel Morton than it was their first care to constitute a
society, by subscribing the following Act: 10 IN THE NAME OF GOD
AMEN. We, whose names are underwritten, the loyal subjects of
our dread Sovereign Lord King James, &c. &c., Having undertaken
for the glory of God, and advancement of the Christian Faith,
and the honour of our King and country, a voyage to plant the
first colony in the northern parts of Virginia; Do by these
presents solemnly and mutually, in the presence of God and one
another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civil
body politick, for our better ordering and preservation, and
furtherance of the ends aforesaid: and by virtue hereof do
enact, constitute, and frame such just and equal laws,
ordinances, acts, constitutions, and offices, from time to time,
as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general
good of the Colony: unto which we promise all due submission and
obedience," etc.
This happened in 1620, and from that time forwards the
emigration went on. The religious and political passion which
ravaged the British Empire during the whole reign of Charles I
drove fresh crowds of sectarians every year to the shores of
America. In England the stronghold of Puritanism continued to be
in the middle classes; and it was from the middle classes that
most of the emigrants came. The population of New England
increased rapidly; and while the hierarchy of rank despotically
classed the inhabitants of the mother country, the colony
approximated more and more the novel spectacle of a community
homogeneous in all its parts. A democracy more perfect than
antiquity had dared to dream of started in full size and panoply
from the midst of an ancient feudal society.
The English government was not dissatisfied with a large
emigration which removed the elements of fresh discord and
further revolutions. On the contrary, it did everything to
encourage it and seemed to have no anxiety about the destiny of
those who sought a shelter from the rigor of their laws on the
soil of America. It appeared as if New England was a region
given up to the dreams of fancy and the unrestrained experiments
of innovators.
The English colonies (and this is one of the main causes
of their prosperity) have always enjoyed more internal freedom
and more political independence than the colonies of other
nations; and this principle of liberty was nowhere more
extensively applied than in the New England states. It was
generally allowed at that period that the territories of the New
World belonged to that European nation which had been the first
to discover them. Nearly the whole coast of North America thus
became a British possession towards the end of the sixteenth
century. The means used by the English government to people
these new domains were of several kinds: the king sometimes
appointed a governor of his own choice, who ruled a portion of
the New World in the name and under the immediate orders of the
crown; 11 this is the colonial system adopted by the other
countries of Europe. Sometimes grants of certain tracts were
made by the crown to an individual or to a company,12 in which
case all the civil and political power fell into the hands of
one or more persons, who, under the inspection and control of
the crown, sold the lands and governed the inhabitants. Lastly,
a third system consisted in allowing a certain number of
emigrants to form themselves into a political society under the
protection of the mother country and to govern themselves in
whatever was not contrary to her laws. This mode of
colonization, so favorable to liberty, was adopted only in New
England.13
In 162814 a charter of this kind was granted by Charles I
to the emigrants who went to form the colony of Massachusetts.
But, in general, charters were not given to the colonies of New
England till their existence had become an established fact.
Plymouth, Providence, New Haven, Connecticut, and Rhode Island
15 were founded without the help and almost without the
knowledge of the mother country. The new settlers did not derive
their powers from the head of the empire, although they did not
deny its supremacy; they constituted themselves into a society,
and it was not till thirty or forty years afterwards, under
Charles II, that their existence was legally recognized by a
royal charter.
This frequently renders it difficult, in studying the
earliest historical and legislative records of New England, to
detect the link that connected the emigrants with the land of
their forefathers. They continually exercised the rights of
sovereignty; they named their magistrates, concluded peace or
declared war, made police regulations, and enacted laws, as if
their allegiance was due only to God.16 Nothing can be more
curious and at the same time more instructive than the
legislation of that period; it is there that the solution of the
great social problem which the United States now presents to the
world is to be found.
Among these documents we shall notice as especially
characteristic the code of laws promulgated by the little state
of Connecticut in 1650.17
The legislators of Connecticut 18 begin with the penal
laws, and, strange to say, they borrow their provisions from the
text of Holy Writ.
'Whosoever shall worship any other God than the Lord,"
says the preamble of the Code, "shall surely be put to death."
This is followed by ten or twelve enactments of the same kind,
copied verbatim from the books of Exodus, Leviticus, and
Deuteronomy~ Blasphemy, sorcery, adultery,19 and rape were
punished with death; an outrage offered by a son to his parents
was to be expiated by the same penalty. The legislation of a
rude and half-civilized people was thus applied to an
enlightened and moral community. The consequence was, that the
punishment of death was never more frequently prescribed by
statute, and never more rarely enforced.
The chief care of the legislators in this body of penal
laws was the maintenance of orderly conduct and good morals in
the community; thus they constantly invaded the domain of
conscience, and there was scarcely a sin which was not subject
to magisterial censure. The reader is aware of the rigor with
which these laws punished rape and adultery; intercourse between
unmarried persons was likewise severely repressed. The judge was
empowered to inflict either a pecuniary penalty, a whipping, or
marriage 20 on the misdemeanants, and if the records of the old
courts of New Haven may be believed, prosecutions of this kind
were not infrequent. We find a sentence, bearing the date of May
1, 1660, inflicting a fine and reprimand on a young woman who
was accused of using improper language and of allowing herself
to be kissed.21 The Code of 1650 abounds in preventive measures.
It punishes idleness and drunkenness with severity.22 Innkeepers
were forbidden to furnish more than a certain quantity of liquor
to each consumer; and simple lying, whenever it may be
injurious,23 is checked by a fine or a flogging. In other places
the legislator, entirely forgetting the great principles of
religious toleration that he had himself demanded in Europe,
makes attendance on divine service compulsory,24 and goes so far
as to visit with severe punishment,25 and even with death,
Christians who chose to worship God according to a ritual
differing from his own.26 Sometimes, indeed, the zeal for
regulation induces him to descend to the most frivolous
particulars: thus a law is to be found in the same code which
prohibits the use of tobacco.27 It must not be forgotten that
these fantastic and oppressive laws were not imposed by
authority, but that they were freely voted by all the persons
interested in them, and that the customs of the community were
even more austere and puritanical than the laws. In 1649 a
solemn association was formed in Boston to check the worldly
luxury of long hair.28
These errors are no doubt discreditable to human reason;
they attest the inferiority of our nature, which is incapable of
laying firm hold upon what is true and just and is often reduced
to the alternative of two excesses. In strict connection with
this penal legislation, which bears such striking marks of a
narrow, sectarian spirit and of those religious passions which
had been warmed by persecution and were still fermenting among
the people, a body of political laws is to be found which,
though written two hundred years ago, is still in advance of the
liberties of our age.
The general principles which are the groundwork of modern
constitutions, principles which, in the seventeenth century,
were imperfectly known in Europe, and not completely triumphant
even in Great Britain, were all recognized and established by
the laws of New England: the intervention of the people in
public affairs, the free voting of taxes, the responsibility of
the agents of power, personal liberty, and trial by jury were
all positively established without discussion.
These fruitful principles were there applied and developed
to an extent such as no nation in Europe has yet ventured to
attempt.
In Connecticut the electoral body consisted, from its
origin, of the whole number of citizens; and this is readily to
be understood.29 In this young community there was an almost
perfect equality of fortune, and a still greater uniformity of
opinions.30 In Connecticut at this period all the executive
officials were elected, including the governor of the state.31
The citizens above the age of sixteen were obliged to bear arms;
they formed a national militia, which appointed its own
officers, and was to hold itself at all times in readiness to
march for the defense of the country.32
In the laws of Connecticut, as well as in all those of New
England, we find the germ and gradual development of that
township independence which is the life and mainspring of
American liberty at the present day. The political existence of
the majority of the nations of Europe commenced in the superior
ranks of society and was gradually and imperfectly communicated
to the different members of the social body. In America, on the
contrary, it may be said that the township was organized before
the county, the county before the state, the state before the
union.
In New England, townships were completely and definitely
constituted as early as 1650. The independence of the township
was the nucleus round which the local interests, passions,
rights, and duties collected and clung. It gave scope to the
activity of a real political life, thoroughly democratic and
republican. The colonies still recognized the supremacy of the
mother country; monarchy was still the law of the state; but the
republic was already established in every township.
The towns named their own magistrates of every kind,
assessed themselves, and levied their own taxes.33 In the New
England town the law of representation was not adopted; but the
affairs of the community were discussed, as at Athens, in the
marketplace, by a general assembly of the citizens.
In studying the laws that were promulgated at this early
era of the American republics, it is impossible not to be struck
by the legislator's knowledge of government and advanced
theories. The ideas there formed of the duties of society
towards its members are evidently much loftier and more
comprehensive than those of European legislators at that time;
obligations were there imposed upon it which it elsewhere
slighted. In the states of New England, from the first, the
condition of the poor was provided for; 34 strict measures were
taken for the maintenance of roads, and surveyors were appointed
to attend to them; 35 records were established in every town, in
which the results of public deliberations and the births,
deaths, and marriages of the citizens were entered; 36 clerks
were directed to keep these records; 37 officers were appointed
to administer the properties having no claimants, and others to
determine the boundaries of inherited lands, and still others
whose principal functions were to maintain public order in the
community.38 The law enters into a thousand various details to
anticipate and satisfy a crowd of social wants that are even now
very inadequately felt in France.
But it is by the mandates relating to public education
that the original character of American civilization is at once
placed in the clearest light.39 "Whereas," says the law, "Satan,
the enemy of mankind, finds his strongest weapons in the
ignorance of men, and whereas it is important that the wisdom of
our fathers shall not remain buried in their tombs, and whereas
the education of children is one of the prime concerns of the
state, with the aid of the Lord...." Here follow clauses
establishing schools in every township and obliging the
inhabitants, under pain of heavy fines, to support them. Schools
of a superior kind were founded in the same manner in the more
populous districts. The municipal authorities were bound to
enforce the sending of children to school by their parents; they
were empowered to inflict fines upon all who refused compliance;
and in cases of continued resistance, society assumed the place
of the parent, took possession of the child, and deprived the
father of those natural rights which he used to so bad a
purpose.40 The reader will undoubtedly have remarked the
preamble of these enactments: in America religion is the road to
knowledge, and the observance of the divine laws leads man to
civil freedom.
If, after having cast a rapid glance over the state of
American society in 1650, we turn to the condition of Europe,
and more especially to that of the Continent, at the same
period, we cannot fail to be shuck with astonishment. On the
continent of Europe at the beginning of the seventeenth century
absolute monarchy had everywhere triumphed over the ruins of the
oligarchical and feudal liberties of the Middle Ages. Never
perhaps were the ideas of right more completely overlooked than
in the midst of the splendor and literature of Europe; never was
there less political activity among the people; never were the
principles of true freedom less widely circulated; and at that
very time those principles which were scorned or unknown by the
nations of Europe were proclaimed in the deserts of the New
World and were accepted as the future creed of a great people.
The boldest theories of the human mind were reduced to practice
by a community so humble that not a statesman condescended to
attend to it; and a system of legislation without a precedent
was produced offhand by the natural originality of men's
imaginations. In the bosom of this obscure democracy, which had
as yet brought forth neither generals nor philosophers nor
authors, a man might stand up in the face of a free people, and
pronounce with general applause the following fine definition of
liberty:
"Concerning liberty, I observe a great mistake in the
country about that. There is a twofold liberty, natural (I
mean as our nature is now corrupt) and civil or federal. The
first is common to man with beasts and other creatures. By
this, man, as he stands in relation to man simply, hath
liberty to do what he lists; it is a liberty to evil as well
as to good. This liberty is incompatible and inconsistent
with authority, and cannot endure the least restraint of the
most just authority. The exercise and maintaining of this
liberty makes men grow more evil, and in time to be worse
than brute beasts: omnes sumus licentia deteriores. This is
that great enemy of truth and peace, that wild beast, which
all the ordinances of God are bent against, to restrain and
subdue it. The other kind of liberty I call civil or
federal; it may also be termed moral, in reference to the
covenant between God and man, in the moral law, and the
politic covenants and constitutions, among men themselves.
This liberty is the proper end and object of authority, and
cannot subsist without it; and it is a liberty to that only
which is good, just, and honest. This liberty you are to
stand for, with the hazard not only of your goods, but of
your lives, if need be. Whatsoever crosseth this, is not
authority, but a distemper thereof. This liberty is
maintained and exercised in a way of subjection to
authority; it is of the same kind of liberty wherewith
Christ hath made us free." 41
I have said enough to put the character of Anglo-American
civilization in its true light. It is the result ( and this
should be constantly kept in mind) of two distinct elements,
which in other places have been in frequent disagreement, but
which the Americans have succeeded in incorporating to some
extent one with the other and combining admirably. I allude to
the spirit of religion and the spirit of liberty.
The settlers of New England were at the same time ardent
sectarians and daring innovators. Narrow as the limits of some
of their religious opinions were, they were free from all
political prejudices.
Hence arose two tendencies, distinct but not opposite,
which are everywhere discernible in the manners as well as the
laws of the country.
Men sacrifice for a religious opinion their friends, their
family, and their country; one can consider them devoted to the
pursuit of intellectual goals which they came to purchase at so
high a price. One sees them, however, seeking with almost equal
eagerness material wealth and moral satisfaction; heaven in the
world beyond, and well-being and liberty in this one.
Under their hand, political principles, laws, and human
institutions seem malleable, capable of being shaped and
combined at will. As they go forward, the barriers which
imprisoned society and behind which they were born are lowered;
old opinions, which for centuries had been controlling the
world, vanish; a course almost without limits, a field without
horizon, is revealed: the human spirit rushes forward and
traverses them in every direction. But having reached the limits
of the political world, the human spirit stops of itself; in
fear it relinquishes the need of exploration; it even abstains
from lifting the veil of the sanctuary; it bows with respect
before truths which it accepts without discussion.
Thus in the moral world everything is classified,
systematized, foreseen, and decided beforehand; in the political
world everything is agitated, disputed, and uncertain. In the
one is a passive though a voluntary obedience; in the other, an
independence scornful of experience, and jealous of all
authority. These two tendencies, apparently so discrepant, are
far from conflicting; they advance together and support each
other.
Religion perceives that civil liberty affords a noble
exercise to the faculties of man and that the political world is
a field prepared by the Creator for the efforts of mind. Free
and powerful in its own sphere, satisfied with the place
reserved for it, religion never more surely establishes its
empire than when it reigns in the hearts of men unsupported by
aught beside its native strength.
Liberty regards religion as its companion in all its
battles and its triumphs, as the cradle of its infancy and the
divine source of its claims. It considers religion as the
safeguard of morality, and morality as the best security of law
and the surest pledge of the duration of freedom.42
:
REASONS FOR CERTAIN ANOMALIES WHICH THE LAWS AND
CUSTOMS OF THE ANGLO-AMERICANS PRESENT
Remains of aristocracy institutions amid the most
complete democracy--Why?--Careful distinction to be drawn
between what is of Puritanical and what of English origin.
THE reader is cautioned not to draw too general or too
absolute an inference from what has been said. The social
condition, the religion, and the customs of the first immigrants
undoubtedly exercised an immense influence on the destiny of
their new country. Nevertheless, they could not found a state of
things originating solely in themselves: no man can entirely
shake off the influence of the past; and the settlers,
intentionally or not, mingled habits and notions derived from
their education and the traditions of their country with those
habits and notions that were exclusively their own. To know and
to judge the Anglo-Americans of the present day, it is therefore
necessary to distinguish what is of Puritanical and what of
English origin.
Laws and customs are frequently to be met with in the
United States which contrast strongly with all that surrounds
them. These laws seem to be drawn up in a spirit contrary to the
prevailing tenor of American legislation; and these customs arc
no less opposed to the general tone of society. If the English
colonies had been founded in an age of darkness, or if their
origin was already lost in the lapse of years, the problem would
be insoluble.
I shall quote a single example to illustrate my meaning.
The civil and criminal procedure of the Americans has only two
means of action, committal or bail. The first act of the
magistrate is to exact security from the defendant or, in case
of refusal, to incarcerate him; the ground of the accusation and
the importance of the charges against him are then discussed.
It is evident that such a legislation is hostile to the
poor and favorable only to the rich. The poor man has not always
security to( produce, even in a civil case; and if he is obliged
to wait for justice in prison, he is speedily reduced to
distress. A wealthy person, on the contrary, always escapes
imprisonment in civil cases; nay, more, if he has committed a
crime, he may readily elude punishment by breaking his bail.
Thus all the penalties of the law are, for him, reduced to
fines.43 Nothing can be more aristocratic than this system of
legislation. Yet in America it is the poor who make the law, and
they usually reserve the greatest advantages of society to
themselves. The explanation of the phenomenon is to be found in
England; the laws of which I speak are English,44 and the
Americans have retained them, although repugnant to the general
tenor of their legislation and the mass of their ideas.
Next to its habits the thing which a nation is least apt
to change is its civil legislation. Civil laws are familiarly
known only to lawyers, whose direct interest it is to maintain
them as they are, whether good or bad, simply because they
themselves are conversant with them. The bulk of the nation is
scarcely acquainted with them; it sees their action only in
particular cases, can with difficulty detect their tendency, and
obeys them without thought.
I have quoted one instance where it would have been easy
to adduce many others. The picture of American society has, if I
may so speak, a surface covering of democracy, beneath which the
old aristocratic colors sometimes peep out.
Footnotes
1 The charter granted by the crown of England in 1609
stipulated, among other conditions that the adventurers should
pay to the crown a fifth of the produce of all gold and silver
mines. See Life of Washington, by Marshall Vol. I, pp. 18-66.
2 A large portion of the adventurers, says Stith ( History
of Virginia ), were unprincipled young men of family, whom their
parents were glad to ship off in order to save them from an
ignominious fate, discharged servants, fraudulent bankrupts,
debauchees, and others of the same class, people more apt to
pillage and destroy than to promote the welfare of the
settlement. Seditious leaders easily enticed this band into every
kind of extravagance and excess. See for the history of Virginia
the following works: History of Virginia, from the First
Settlements in the Year 1624, by Smith; History of Virginia, by
William Stith; History of Virginia, from the Earliest Period by
Beverley, translated into French in 1807.
3 It was not till some time later that a certain number of
rich English landholders came to establish themselves in the
colony.
4 Slavery was introduced about the year 1620, by a Dutch
vessel, which landed twenty Negroes on the banks of the James
River. See Chalmer.
5 The New England states are those situated to the east of
the Hudson. They are now six in number: (1) Connecticut, (2)
Rhode Island, (3) Massachussetts, (4) New Hampshire, (5) Vermont,
(6) Maine.
6 New England's Memorial (Boston, 1826), p. 14. See also
Hutchison's History, Vol. II, p. 440.
7 New England's Memorial, p. 22.
8 This rock has become an object of veneration in the United
States I have seen bits of it carefully preserved in several
towns of the Union. Does not this sufficiently show how all human
power and greatness are entirely in the soul? Here is a stone
which the feet of a few poor fugitives pressed for an instant,
and this stone becomes famous- it is treasured by a great nation,
a fragment is prized as a relic. But what has become of the
doorsteps of a thousand palaces Who troubles himself about them?
9 New England's Memorial, p. 35.
10 The emigrants who founded the state of Rhode Island in
1638, those who landed at New Haven in 1637, the first settlers
in Connecticut in 1639, and the founders of Providence in 1640
began in like manner by drawing up a social contract, which was
acceded to by all the interested parties. See Pitkin's History,
pp. 42 and 47.
were the main instruments and the beginning of this happy enterprise."
It is impossible to read this opening paragraph without an
involuntary feeling of religious awe; it breathes the very savor
of Gospel antiquity. The sincerity of the author heightens his
power of language. In our eyes, a well as in his own, it was not
a mere party of adventurers gone forth to seek their fortune
beyond seas, but the germ of a great nation wafted by Providence
to a predestined shore. 11 This was the case in the state of New
York. 12 Maryland, the Carolinas, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey
were in this situation. see Pitkin's History, Vol. I, pp. 11-31.
13 see the work entitled Historical Collection of State Papers
and Other Authentic Documents Intended as Materials for a
History of the United States of America, by Ebenezer Hazard,
printed at Philadelphia, 1792, for a great number of documents
relating to the commencement of the colonies, which are valuable
for their contents and their authenticity, among them are the
various charters granted by the English crown, and the first
acts of the local governments. See also the analysis of all
these charters given by Mr. story, Judge of the supreme court of
the United states, in the Introduction to his Commentaries on
the Constitution of the United States. It is proved by these
documents that the principles of representative government and
the external forms of political liberty were introduced into all
the colonies almost from their origin. These principles were
more fully acted upon in the North than in the South, but they
existed everywhere. 14 see Pitkin's History, p. 35. Also, the
History of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay, by Hutchinson, Vol.
I, p. 9. 15 ibid., pp. 42, 47. 16 The inhabitants of
Massachusetts had deviated from the forms that are preserved in
the criminal and civil procedure of England; in 1650 the name of
the king was not yet put at the head of the decrees of justice.
See Hutchinson, Vol. I, p. 452. 17 Code of 1650, p. 28
(Hartford, 1830). 18 See also in Hutchinson's History, Vol. I,
pp. 435-6, the analysis of the penal code adopted in 1648 by the
colony of Massachusetts. This code is drawn up on the same
principles as that of Connecticut. 19 Adultery was also punished
with death by the law of Massachusetts: and Hutchinson (Vol. I,
p. 441) says that several persons actually suffered for this
crime. On this subject he quotes a curious anecdote of what took
place m the year 1663. A married woman had had criminal
intercourse with a young man; her husband died, and she married
the lover. Several years had elapsed when the public began to
suspect the previous intercourse of this couple; they were
thrown into prison, put to trial, and very narrowly escaped
capital punishment. 20 Code of 1650, p. 48. It appears sometimes
to have happened that the judges inflicted these punishments
cumulatively, as is seen in a sentence pronounced in 1643 (New
Haven Antiquities p. 114), by which Margaret Bedford, convicted
of loose conduct, was condemned to be whipped and afterwards to
marry Nicolas Jemmings, her accomplice. 21 New Haven
Antiquities, p. 104. See also Hutchinson's History, Vol. I, p.
435, for several causes equally extraordinary. 22.Code of 1650,
pp. 50, 57. 23 Ibid., p. 64. 24 Ibid., p. 44. 25 This was not
peculiar to Connecticut. See, for instance, the law which, on
September 13, 1644, banished the Anabaptists from Massachusetts
(Historical Collection of State Papers, Vol. I, p. 538). See
also the law against the Quakers, passed on October 14, 1656.
"Whereas," says the preamble, "an accursed race of heretics
called Quakers has sprung up," etc. The clauses of the statute
inflict a heavy fine on all captains of ships who should import
Quakers into the country. The Quakers who may be found there
shall be whipped and imprisoned with hard labor. Those members
of the sect who should defend their opinions shall be first
fined, then imprisoned, and finally driven out of the province.
Historical Collection of State Papers, Vol.I, p.630. 26 By the
penal law of Massachusetts, any Catholic priest who should set
foot in the colony after having been once driven out of it was
liable to capital punishment. 27 Code of 1650, p. 96. 28 New
England's Memorial, p. 316. See Appendix E. 29 Constitution of
1638 p. 17. 30 In 1641 the General Assembly of Rhode Island
unanimously declared that the government of the state was a
democracy, and that the power was vested in the body of free
citizens, who alone had the right to make the laws and to watch
their execution. Code of 1650, p. 70. 31 Pitkin s History, P 47
32 Constitution of 1638, p. 12. 33 Code of 1050, p. 80. 34
Ibid., p. 78. 35 Ibid., p. 49. 36 See Hutchinson's History, Vol.
I, p. 455. 37 Code of 1650, p. 86. 38 Ibid., p. 40. 39 Ibid., p.
90. 40 Ibid.. p. 83. 41 Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana,
Vol. II, p. 13. This speech was made by Winthrop; he was accused
of having committed arbitrary actions during his magistracy, but
after having made the speech, of which the above is a fragment,
he w as acquitted by acclamation, and from that time forwards he
was always re-elected Governor of the state. See Marshall, Vol.
I, p. 166. 42 See Appendix F. 43 Crimes no doubt exist for which
bail is inadmissable, but they are few in number. 44 See
Blackstone and Delolme, Bk. I, ch. 10
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