<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0052" id="link2HCH0052"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XVIII: Future Condition Of Three Races—Part VIII </h2>
<p>It is difficult to imagine a durable union of a people which is rich and
strong with one which is poor and weak, even if it were proved that the
strength and wealth of the one are not the causes of the weakness and
poverty of the other. But union is still more difficult to maintain at a
time at which one party is losing strength, and the other is gaining it.
This rapid and disproportionate increase of certain States threatens the
independence of the others. New York might perhaps succeed, with its
2,000,000 of inhabitants and its forty representatives, in dictating to
the other States in Congress. But even if the more powerful States make no
attempt to bear down the lesser ones, the danger still exists; for there
is almost as much in the possibility of the act as in the act itself. The
weak generally mistrust the justice and the reason of the strong. The
States which increase less rapidly than the others look upon those which
are more favored by fortune with envy and suspicion. Hence arise the
deep-seated uneasiness and ill-defined agitation which are observable in
the South, and which form so striking a contrast to the confidence and
prosperity which are common to other parts of the Union. I am inclined to
think that the hostile measures taken by the Southern provinces upon a
recent occasion are attributable to no other cause. The inhabitants of the
Southern States are, of all the Americans, those who are most interested
in the maintenance of the Union; they would assuredly suffer most from
being left to themselves; and yet they are the only citizens who threaten
to break the tie of confederation. But it is easy to perceive that the
South, which has given four Presidents, Washington, Jefferson, Madison,
and Monroe, to the Union, which perceives that it is losing its federal
influence, and that the number of its representatives in Congress is
diminishing from year to year, whilst those of the Northern and Western
States are increasing; the South, which is peopled with ardent and
irascible beings, is becoming more and more irritated and alarmed. The
citizens reflect upon their present position and remember their past
influence, with the melancholy uneasiness of men who suspect oppression:
if they discover a law of the Union which is not unequivocally favorable
to their interests, they protest against it as an abuse of force; and if
their ardent remonstrances are not listened to, they threaten to quit an
association which loads them with burdens whilst it deprives them of their
due profits. "The tariff," said the inhabitants of Carolina in 1832,
"enriches the North, and ruins the South; for if this were not the case,
to what can we attribute the continually increasing power and wealth of
the North, with its inclement skies and arid soil; whilst the South, which
may be styled the garden of America, is rapidly declining?" *q</p>
<p class="foot">
q <br/> [ See the report of its committee to the Convention which
proclaimed the nullification of the tariff in South Carolina.]</p>
<p>If the changes which I have described were gradual, so that each
generation at least might have time to disappear with the order of things
under which it had lived, the danger would be less; but the progress of
society in America is precipitate, and almost revolutionary. The same
citizen may have lived to see his State take the lead in the Union, and
afterwards become powerless in the federal assemblies; and an
Anglo-American republic has been known to grow as rapidly as a man passing
from birth and infancy to maturity in the course of thirty years. It must
not be imagined, however, that the States which lose their preponderance,
also lose their population or their riches: no stop is put to their
prosperity, and they even go on to increase more rapidly than any kingdom
in Europe. *r But they believe themselves to be impoverished because their
wealth does not augment as rapidly as that of their neighbors; any they
think that their power is lost, because they suddenly come into collision
with a power greater than their own: *s thus they are more hurt in their
feelings and their passions than in their interests. But this is amply
sufficient to endanger the maintenance of the Union. If kings and peoples
had only had their true interests in view ever since the beginning of the
world, the name of war would scarcely be known among mankind.</p>
<p class="foot">
r <br/> [ The population of a country assuredly constitutes the first
element of its wealth. In the ten years (1820-1830) during which Virginia
lost two of its representatives in Congress, its population increased in
the proportion of 13.7 per cent.; that of Carolina in the proportion of
fifteen per cent.; and that of Georgia, 15.5 per cent. (See the "American
Almanac," 1832, p. 162) But the population of Russia, which increases more
rapidly than that of any other European country, only augments in ten
years at the rate of 9.5 per cent.; in France, at the rate of seven per
cent.; and in Europe in general, at the rate of 4.7 per cent. (See "Malte
Brun," vol. vi. p. 95)]</p>
<p class="foot">
s <br/> [ It must be admitted, however, that the depreciation which has
taken place in the value of tobacco, during the last fifty years, has
notably diminished the opulence of the Southern planters: but this
circumstance is as independent of the will of their Northern brethren as
it is of their own.]</p>
<p>Thus the prosperity of the United States is the source of the most serious
dangers that threaten them, since it tends to create in some of the
confederate States that over-excitement which accompanies a rapid increase
of fortune; and to awaken in others those feelings of envy, mistrust, and
regret which usually attend upon the loss of it. The Americans contemplate
this extraordinary and hasty progress with exultation; but they would be
wiser to consider it with sorrow and alarm. The Americans of the United
States must inevitably become one of the greatest nations in the world;
their offset will cover almost the whole of North America; the continent
which they inhabit is their dominion, and it cannot escape them. What
urges them to take possession of it so soon? Riches, power, and renown
cannot fail to be theirs at some future time, but they rush upon their
fortune as if but a moment remained for them to make it their own.</p>
<p>I think that I have demonstrated that the existence of the present
confederation depends entirely on the continued assent of all the
confederates; and, starting from this principle, I have inquired into the
causes which may induce the several States to separate from the others.
The Union may, however, perish in two different ways: one of the
confederate States may choose to retire from the compact, and so forcibly
to sever the federal tie; and it is to this supposition that most of the
remarks that I have made apply: or the authority of the Federal Government
may be progressively entrenched on by the simultaneous tendency of the
united republics to resume their independence. The central power,
successively stripped of all its prerogatives, and reduced to impotence by
tacit consent, would become incompetent to fulfil its purpose; and the
second Union would perish, like the first, by a sort of senile inaptitude.
The gradual weakening of the federal tie, which may finally lead to the
dissolution of the Union, is a distinct circumstance, that may produce a
variety of minor consequences before it operates so violent a change. The
confederation might still subsist, although its Government were reduced to
such a degree of inanition as to paralyze the nation, to cause internal
anarchy, and to check the general prosperity of the country.</p>
<p>After having investigated the causes which may induce the Anglo-Americans
to disunite, it is important to inquire whether, if the Union continues to
subsist, their Government will extend or contract its sphere of action,
and whether it will become more energetic or more weak.</p>
<p>The Americans are evidently disposed to look upon their future condition
with alarm. They perceive that in most of the nations of the world the
exercise of the rights of sovereignty tends to fall under the control of a
few individuals, and they are dismayed by the idea that such will also be
the case in their own country. Even the statesmen feel, or affect to feel,
these fears; for, in America, centralization is by no means popular, and
there is no surer means of courting the majority than by inveighing
against the encroachments of the central power. The Americans do not
perceive that the countries in which this alarming tendency to
centralization exists are inhabited by a single people; whilst the fact of
the Union being composed of different confederate communities is
sufficient to baffle all the inferences which might be drawn from
analogous circumstances. I confess that I am inclined to consider the
fears of a great number of Americans as purely imaginary; and far from
participating in their dread of the consolidation of power in the hands of
the Union, I think that the Federal Government is visibly losing strength.</p>
<p>To prove this assertion I shall not have recourse to any remote
occurrences, but to circumstances which I have myself witnessed, and which
belong to our own time.</p>
<p>An attentive examination of what is going on in the United States will
easily convince us that two opposite tendencies exist in that country,
like two distinct currents flowing in contrary directions in the same
channel. The Union has now existed for forty-five years, and in the course
of that time a vast number of provincial prejudices, which were at first
hostile to its power, have died away. The patriotic feeling which attached
each of the Americans to his own native State is become less exclusive;
and the different parts of the Union have become more intimately connected
the better they have become acquainted with each other. The post, *t that
great instrument of intellectual intercourse, now reaches into the
backwoods; and steamboats have established daily means of communication
between the different points of the coast. An inland navigation of
unexampled rapidity conveys commodities up and down the rivers of the
country. *u And to these facilities of nature and art may be added those
restless cravings, that busy-mindedness, and love of pelf, which are
constantly urging the American into active life, and bringing him into
contact with his fellow-citizens. He crosses the country in every
direction; he visits all the various populations of the land; and there is
not a province in France in which the natives are so well known to each
other as the 13,000,000 of men who cover the territory of the United
States.</p>
<p class="foot">
t <br/> [ In 1832, the district of Michigan, which only contains 31,639
inhabitants, and is still an almost unexplored wilderness, possessed 940
miles of mail-roads. The territory of Arkansas, which is still more
uncultivated, was already intersected by 1,938 miles of mail-roads. (See
the report of the General Post Office, November 30, 1833.) The postage of
newspapers alone in the whole Union amounted to $254,796.]</p>
<p class="foot">
u <br/> [ In the course of ten years, from 1821 to 1831, 271 steamboats
have been launched upon the rivers which water the valley of the
Mississippi alone. In 1829 259 steamboats existed in the United States.
(See Legislative Documents, No. 140, p. 274.)]</p>
<p>But whilst the Americans intermingle, they grow in resemblance of each
other; the differences resulting from their climate, their origin, and
their institutions, diminish; and they all draw nearer and nearer to the
common type. Every year, thousands of men leave the North to settle in
different parts of the Union: they bring with them their faith, their
opinions, and their manners; and as they are more enlighthned than the men
amongst whom they are about to dwell, they soon rise to the head of
affairs, and they adapt society to their own advantage. This continual
emigration of the North to the South is peculiarly favorable to the fusion
of all the different provincial characters into one national character.
The civilization of the North appears to be the common standard, to which
the whole nation will one day be assimilated.</p>
<p>The commercial ties which unite the confederate States are strengthened by
the increasing manufactures of the Americans; and the union which began to
exist in their opinions, gradually forms a part of their habits: the
course of time has swept away the bugbear thoughts which haunted the
imaginations of the citizens in 1789. The federal power is not become
oppressive; it has not destroyed the independence of the States; it has
not subjected the confederates to monarchial institutions; and the Union
has not rendered the lesser States dependent upon the larger ones; but the
confederation has continued to increase in population, in wealth, and in
power. I am therefore convinced that the natural obstacles to the
continuance of the American Union are not so powerful at the present time
as they were in 1789; and that the enemies of the Union are not so
numerous.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, a careful examination of the history of the United States
for the last forty-five years will readily convince us that the federal
power is declining; nor is it difficult to explain the causes of this
phenomenon. *v When the Constitution of 1789 was promulgated, the nation
was a prey to anarchy; the Union, which succeeded this confusion, excited
much dread and much animosity; but it was warmly supported because it
satisfied an imperious want. Thus, although it was more attacked than it
is now, the federal power soon reached the maximum of its authority, as is
usually the case with a government which triumphs after having braced its
strength by the struggle. At that time the interpretation of the
Constitution seemed to extend, rather than to repress, the federal
sovereignty; and the Union offered, in several respects, the appearance of
a single and undivided people, directed in its foreign and internal policy
by a single Government. But to attain this point the people had risen, to
a certain extent, above itself.</p>
<p class="foot">
v <br/> [ [Since 1861 the movement is certainly in the opposite direction,
and the federal power has largely increased, and tends to further
increase.]]</p>
<p>The Constitution had not destroyed the distinct sovereignty of the States;
and all communities, of whatever nature they may be, are impelled by a
secret propensity to assert their independence. This propensity is still
more decided in a country like America, in which every village forms a
sort of republic accustomed to conduct its own affairs. It therefore cost
the States an effort to submit to the federal supremacy; and all efforts,
however successful they may be, necessarily subside with the causes in
which they originated.</p>
<p>As the Federal Government consolidated its authority, America resumed its
rank amongst the nations, peace returned to its frontiers, and public
credit was restored; confusion was succeeded by a fixed state of things,
which was favorable to the full and free exercise of industrious
enterprise. It was this very prosperity which made the Americans forget
the cause to which it was attributable; and when once the danger was
passed, the energy and the patriotism which had enabled them to brave it
disappeared from amongst them. No sooner were they delivered from the
cares which oppressed them, than they easily returned to their ordinary
habits, and gave themselves up without resistance to their natural
inclinations. When a powerful Government no longer appeared to be
necessary, they once more began to think it irksome. The Union encouraged
a general prosperity, and the States were not inclined to abandon the
Union; but they desired to render the action of the power which
represented that body as light as possible. The general principle of Union
was adopted, but in every minor detail there was an actual tendency to
independence. The principle of confederation was every day more easily
admitted, and more rarely applied; so that the Federal Government brought
about its own decline, whilst it was creating order and peace.</p>
<p>As soon as this tendency of public opinion began to be manifested
externally, the leaders of parties, who live by the passions of the
people, began to work it to their own advantage. The position of the
Federal Government then became exceedingly critical. Its enemies were in
possession of the popular favor; and they obtained the right of conducting
its policy by pledging themselves to lessen its influence. From that time
forwards the Government of the Union has invariably been obliged to
recede, as often as it has attempted to enter the lists with the
governments of the States. And whenever an interpretation of the terms of
the Federal Constitution has been called for, that interpretation has most
frequently been opposed to the Union, and favorable to the States.</p>
<p>The Constitution invested the Federal Government with the right of
providing for the interests of the nation; and it had been held that no
other authority was so fit to superintend the "internal improvements"
which affected the prosperity of the whole Union; such, for instance, as
the cutting of canals. But the States were alarmed at a power, distinct
from their own, which could thus dispose of a portion of their territory;
and they were afraid that the central Government would, by this means,
acquire a formidable extent of patronage within their own confines, and
exercise a degree of influence which they intended to reserve exclusively
to their own agents. The Democratic party, which has constantly been
opposed to the increase of the federal authority, then accused the
Congress of usurpation, and the Chief Magistrate of ambition. The central
Government was intimidated by the opposition; and it soon acknowledged its
error, promising exactly to confine its influence for the future within
the circle which was prescribed to it.</p>
<p>The Constitution confers upon the Union the right of treating with foreign
nations. The Indian tribes, which border upon the frontiers of the United
States, had usually been regarded in this light. As long as these savages
consented to retire before the civilized settlers, the federal right was
not contested: but as soon as an Indian tribe attempted to fix its
dwelling upon a given spot, the adjacent States claimed possession of the
lands and the rights of sovereignty over the natives. The central
Government soon recognized both these claims; and after it had concluded
treaties with the Indians as independent nations, it gave them up as
subjects to the legislative tyranny of the States. *w</p>
<p class="foot">
w <br/> [ See in the Legislative Documents, already quoted in speaking of
the Indians, the letter of the President of the United States to the
Cherokees, his correspondence on this subject with his agents, and his
messages to Congress.]</p>
<p>Some of the States which had been founded upon the coast of the Atlantic,
extended indefinitely to the West, into wild regions where no European had
ever penetrated. The States whose confines were irrevocably fixed, looked
with a jealous eye upon the unbounded regions which the future would
enable their neighbors to explore. The latter then agreed, with a view to
conciliate the others, and to facilitate the act of union, to lay down
their own boundaries, and to abandon all the territory which lay beyond
those limits to the confederation at large. *x Thenceforward the Federal
Government became the owner of all the uncultivated lands which lie beyond
the borders of the thirteen States first confederated. It was invested
with the right of parcelling and selling them, and the sums derived from
this source were exclusively reserved to the public treasure of the Union,
in order to furnish supplies for purchasing tracts of country from the
Indians, for opening roads to the remote settlements, and for accelerating
the increase of civilization as much as possible. New States have,
however, been formed in the course of time, in the midst of those wilds
which were formerly ceded by the inhabitants of the shores of the
Atlantic. Congress has gone on to sell, for the profit of the nation at
large, the uncultivated lands which those new States contained. But the
latter at length asserted that, as they were now fully constituted, they
ought to enjoy the exclusive right of converting the produce of these
sales to their own use. As their remonstrances became more and more
threatening, Congress thought fit to deprive the Union of a portion of the
privileges which it had hitherto enjoyed; and at the end of 1832 it passed
a law by which the greatest part of the revenue derived from the sale of
lands was made over to the new western republics, although the lands
themselves were not ceded to them. *y</p>
<p class="foot">
x <br/> [ The first act of session was made by the State of New York in
1780; Virginia, Massachusetts, Connecticut, South and North Carolina,
followed this example at different times, and lastly, the act of cession
of Georgia was made as recently as 1802.]</p>
<p class="foot">
y <br/> [ It is true that the President refused his assent to this law;
but he completely adopted it in principle. (See Message of December 8,
1833.)]</p>
<p>The slightest observation in the United States enables one to appreciate
the advantages which the country derives from the bank. These advantages
are of several kinds, but one of them is peculiarly striking to the
stranger. The banknotes of the United States are taken upon the borders of
the desert for the same value as at Philadelphia, where the bank conducts
its operations. *z</p>
<p class="foot">
z <br/> [ The present Bank of the United States was established in 1816,
with a capital of $35,000,000; its charter expires in 1836. Last year
Congress passed a law to renew it, but the President put his veto upon the
bill. The struggle is still going on with great violence on either side,
and the speedy fall of the bank may easily be foreseen. [It was soon
afterwards extinguished by General Jackson.]]</p>
<p>The Bank of the United States is nevertheless the object of great
animosity. Its directors have proclaimed their hostility to the President:
and they are accused, not without some show of probability, of having
abused their influence to thwart his election. The President therefore
attacks the establishment which they represent with all the warmth of
personal enmity; and he is encouraged in the pursuit of his revenge by the
conviction that he is supported by the secret propensities of the
majority. The bank may be regarded as the great monetary tie of the Union,
just as Congress is the great legislative tie; and the same passions which
tend to render the States independent of the central power, contribute to
the overthrow of the bank.</p>
<p>The Bank of the United States always holds a great number of the notes
issued by the provincial banks, which it can at any time oblige them to
convert into cash. It has itself nothing to fear from a similar demand, as
the extent of its resources enables it to meet all claims. But the
existence of the provincial banks is thus threatened, and their operations
are restricted, since they are only able to issue a quantity of notes duly
proportioned to their capital. They submit with impatience to this
salutary control. The newspapers which they have bought over, and the
President, whose interest renders him their instrument, attack the bank
with the greatest vehemence. They rouse the local passions and the blind
democratic instinct of the country to aid their cause; and they assert
that the bank directors form a permanent aristocratic body, whose
influence must ultimately be felt in the Government, and must affect those
principles of equality upon which society rests in America.</p>
<p>The contest between the bank and its opponents is only an incident in the
great struggle which is going on in America between the provinces and the
central power; between the spirit of democratic independence and the
spirit of gradation and subordination. I do not mean that the enemies of
the bank are identically the same individuals who, on other points, attack
the Federal Government; but I assert that the attacks directed against the
bank of the United States originate in the same propensities which
militate against the Federal Government; and that the very numerous
opponents of the former afford a deplorable symptom of the decreasing
support of the latter.</p>
<p>The Union has never displayed so much weakness as in the celebrated
question of the tariff. *a The wars of the French Revolution and of 1812
had created manufacturing establishments in the North of the Union, by
cutting off all free communication between America and Europe. When peace
was concluded, and the channel of intercourse reopened by which the
produce of Europe was transmitted to the New World, the Americans thought
fit to establish a system of import duties, for the twofold purpose of
protecting their incipient manufactures and of paying off the amount of
the debt contracted during the war. The Southern States, which have no
manufactures to encourage, and which are exclusively agricultural, soon
complained of this measure. Such were the simple facts, and I do not
pretend to examine in this place whether their complaints were well
founded or unjust.</p>
<p class="foot">
a <br/> [ See principally for the details of this affair, the Legislative
Documents, 22d Congress, 2d Session, No. 30.]</p>
<p>As early as the year 1820, South Carolina declared, in a petition to
Congress, that the tariff was "unconstitutional, oppressive, and unjust."
And the States of Georgia, Virginia, North Carolina, Alabama, and
Mississippi subsequently remonstrated against it with more or less vigor.
But Congress, far from lending an ear to these complaints, raised the
scale of tariff duties in the years 1824 and 1828, and recognized anew the
principle on which it was founded. A doctrine was then proclaimed, or
rather revived, in the South, which took the name of Nullification.</p>
<p>I have shown in the proper place that the object of the Federal
Constitution was not to form a league, but to create a national
government. The Americans of the United States form a sole and undivided
people, in all the cases which are specified by that Constitution; and
upon these points the will of the nation is expressed, as it is in all
constitutional nations, by the voice of the majority. When the majority
has pronounced its decision, it is the duty of the minority to submit.
Such is the sound legal doctrine, and the only one which agrees with the
text of the Constitution, and the known intention of those who framed it.</p>
<p>The partisans of Nullification in the South maintain, on the contrary,
that the intention of the Americans in uniting was not to reduce
themselves to the condition of one and the same people; that they meant to
constitute a league of independent States; and that each State,
consequently retains its entire sovereignty, if not de facto, at least de
jure; and has the right of putting its own construction upon the laws of
Congress, and of suspending their execution within the limits of its own
territory, if they are held to be unconstitutional and unjust.</p>
<p>The entire doctrine of Nullification is comprised in a sentence uttered by
Vice-President Calhoun, the head of that party in the South, before the
Senate of the United States, in the year 1833: could: "The Constitution is
a compact to which the States were parties in their sovereign capacity;
now, whenever a compact is entered into by parties which acknowledge no
tribunal above their authority to decide in the last resort, each of them
has a right to judge for itself in relation to the nature, extent, and
obligations of the instrument." It is evident that a similar doctrine
destroys the very basis of the Federal Constitution, and brings back all
the evils of the old confederation, from which the Americans were supposed
to have had a safe deliverance.</p>
<p>When South Carolina perceived that Congress turned a deaf ear to its
remonstrances, it threatened to apply the doctrine of nullification to the
federal tariff bill. Congress persisted in its former system; and at
length the storm broke out. In the course of 1832 the citizens of South
Carolina, *b named a national Convention, to consult upon the
extraordinary measures which they were called upon to take; and on
November 24th of the same year this Convention promulgated a law, under
the form of a decree, which annulled the federal law of the tariff,
forbade the levy of the imposts which that law commands, and refused to
recognize the appeal which might be made to the federal courts of law. *c
This decree was only to be put in execution in the ensuing month of
February, and it was intimated, that if Congress modified the tariff
before that period, South Carolina might be induced to proceed no further
with her menaces; and a vague desire was afterwards expressed of
submitting the question to an extraordinary assembly of all the
confederate States.</p>
<p class="foot">
b <br/> [ That is to say, the majority of the people; for the opposite
party, called the Union party, always formed a very strong and active
minority. Carolina may contain about 47,000 electors; 30,000 were in favor
of nullification, and 17,000 opposed to it.]</p>
<p class="foot">
c <br/> [ This decree was preceded by a report of the committee by which
it was framed, containing the explanation of the motives and object of the
law. The following passage occurs in it, p. 34:—"When the rights
reserved by the Constitution to the different States are deliberately
violated, it is the duty and the right of those States to interfere, in
order to check the progress of the evil; to resist usurpation, and to
maintain, within their respective limits, those powers and privileges
which belong to them as independent sovereign States. If they were
destitute of this right, they would not be sovereign. South Carolina
declares that she acknowledges no tribunal upon earth above her authority.
She has indeed entered into a solemn compact of union with the other
States; but she demands, and will exercise, the right of putting her own
construction upon it; and when this compact is violated by her sister
States, and by the Government which they have created, she is determined
to avail herself of the unquestionable right of judging what is the extent
of the infraction, and what are the measures best fitted to obtain
justice."]</p>
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