Posted on 11/25/2010 1:05:54 PM PST by Publius
Philip Freneau had set the deadline for the December 22nd edition of the National Gazette, and James Madison found himself racing the hourglass. Freneau published the newspaper, dedicated to the positions of Thomas Jeffersons faction within the Congress and the council around His Excellency, while working for the red-haired Secretary of State as a translator. Mr. Jefferson saw neither difficulty nor conflict with this arrangement.
Freneau had labeled the men of Alexander Hamiltons faction as Monarchists, Tories, and Anti-Republicans, claiming their role was to reverse the results of 1776. The Secretary of the Treasury had labeled the men around Mr. Jefferson as sympathizers of the ongoing unpleasantness in France.
Though relations between Hamilton and Madison had grown testy of late, there was enough residual friendship for Alec to invite Jemmy to the tavern just off Philadelphias High Street for dinner and Christmas libations. Always hungry for spirited discussion and debate, Jemmy had accepted with alacrity.
Following a bottle of Madeira, Hamilton was always moved to loquacity. Because of this he was a highly sought after guest at dinners in New York, where he would hold the attention of a room with his conviviality. It was Jemmys earnest hope that Alec would say something to inspire the article he was to deliver to Freneau.
In addition to Madison and Hamilton, seated around the table were Fisher Ames of Massachusetts, Elias Boudinot of New Jersey, and the young, dashing Nicholas Gilman of New Hampshire.
As Jemmy swallowed his first glass of Madeira, the feeling of warmth spread from his stomach to his loins. He was going to have to be careful tonight.
James Madison was a man of abstemious habits who did not smoke, and drank only in moderation with meals. He recalled a dinner at the home of James Wilson some five years earlier during the late Convention where Wilson attempted to school Madison on his idea of direct election of the president by the people without regard to state. When that idea failed for good reason Wilson had designed the Electoral College on the spot. Jemmy remembered speaking with Wilson in his dining room after far too much Madeira and Port, then suddenly standing in Wilsons yard with his hands on a wooden club on something called a putting green. Wilson was standing behind him, his arms wrapped around him, telling him in his soft Scottish burr of the proper way to wield a golf club against a ball. How he had gone from Wilsons dining room to his yard was still shrouded in mystery. Jemmy made a mental note to stop drinking at a reasonable time.
Alec was working on his second bottle, and Jemmy could not help but joust with Ames and Boudinot. Would not the people be best served by the maintenance of their own vigilance?
Hamilton snorted. The people? They are stupid and licentious. A mob. Once they have established a government, they should think of obedience, leaving the care of their liberties to their betters.
Alec, you are in fine fettle tonight, he thought. I must write that one down.
I will stipulate that slavery has been the general lot of humanity, answered Jemmy, like the earnest student of history that he was. People have been ignorant, asleep and divided. But what does that prove? Are you saying that because people may betray themselves, they ought to give themselves up to those who have an interest in betraying them? Should it not make more sense to conclude that the people ought to be enlightened, awakened and united? Then, after establishing a government, they should watch over it.
Boudinot laughed. Youre only looking at the surface, Mr. Madison. The truth is in the depths.
It is not the government that will fly off from the people, but the people that will fly off from the government, Hamilton interjected acidly. Enlighten the government, warn it to be vigilant, give it influence and arm it with force. To the people I have only one word obey.
Gilman looked askance at Hamilton. It was apparent to the young former officer that Hamilton was winding himself up in preparation for a five hour oration like the one he had delivered at the first session of the Philadelphia Convention. Gilman painfully remembered those five hours without a break at the pissing trough.
Colonel Hamilton, Gilman interjected carefully, I should think that the centrifugal tendency is with the people, not the government. The secret lies in restraining that tendency by increasing the attractive principle of government. I should find it a perversion of the natural order of things to make power the primary and central object of the social system and liberty but a satellite.
Hamilton swallowed a bit and deflated briefly. Jemmy made a mental note to have Jefferson speak with Gilman; he could become an ally. He swallowed another glass of Madeira in spite of the warning voice in his head. Hamilton thought a bit before responding to his young political ally.
Colonel Gilman, the more you increase the attractive force of power, the more you enlarge the sphere of liberty. The more you make government independent from the people, the better security you provide for their rights and interests.
Alec, old friend, said Jemmy with a smile, I find that line of thought at least mysterious, if not illogical. This is not religion. This is about the institutions of man.
But Jemmy, Hamilton said, with the genuine friendship shown to an intellectual equal, this is about religion. Citizens, or subjects, require the light of faith and the spirit of obedience. Without that, government becomes the accomplice of atheism and anarchy.
Madison, who had been trained for the ministry, found himself on familiar ground. Alexander Hamilton had just hanged himself with a noose of his own making. The article for Freneau could be written in jig time. All it required was the sting of a wasp for a conclusion. The sentence shaped itself in Madisons brain long before his quill pen touched hemp paper.
I denounce you to the people as a blasphemer of their rights and an idolater of tyranny.
There! A bit too strong for an old friend, but the article would be published under a pseudonym.
Jemmy staggered out of the tavern a few hours later as the knot behind his forehead expanded to cover most of his brain. This would be a bad one, he knew. He quietly climbed the spiral staircase of Mrs. Swintons boarding house, entered his room and lit a candle. He had to begin the article at once before the thoughts fled him.
Who are the best keepers of the peoples liberties? he wrote. As he labored, his presto jig time slowed to an adagio, and then a stately largo. But he had to finish this now. Freneau was waiting.
When Mrs. Swinton rang the bell for breakfast, its tiny sound echoed in his head like the great bells of the Gloria Dei church down the street.
James Madison promised himself he would never drink again.
Republican: The people themselves. The sacred trust can be nowhere so safe as in the hands most interested in preserving it.
Anti-Republican: The people are stupid, suspicious, licentious. They cannot safely trust themselves. When they have established government they should think of nothing but obedience, leaving the care of their liberties to their wiser rulers.
Republican: Although all men are born free, and all nations might be so, yet too true it is that slavery has been the general lot of the human race. Ignorant, they have been cheated; asleep, they have been surprised; divided, the yoke has been forced upon them. But what is the lesson? That because the people may betray themselves, they ought to give themselves up, blindfold, to those who have an interest in betraying them? Rather conclude that the people ought to be enlightened, to be awakened, to be united, that after establishing a government they should watch over it, as well as obey it.
Anti-Republican: You look at the surface only, where errors float, instead of fathoming the depths where truth lies hid. It is not the government that is disposed to fly off from the people, but the people that are ever ready to fly off from the government. Rather say then, enlighten the government, warn it to be vigilant, enrich it with influence, arm it with force, and to the people never pronounce but two words: submission>/i< and confidence.
Republican: The centrifugal tendency then is in the people, not in the government, and the secret art lies in restraining the tendency by augmenting the attractive principle of the government with all the weight that can be added to it. What a perversion of the natural order of things to make power the primary and central object of the social system and liberty but its satellite.
Anti-Republican: The science of the stars can never instruct you in the mysteries of government. Wonderful as it may seem, the more you increase the attractive force of power, the more you enlarge the sphere of liberty; the more you make government independent and hostile towards the people, the better security you provide for their rights and interests. Hence the wisdom of the theory, which, after limiting the share of the people to a third of the government, and lessening the influence of that share by the mode and term of delegating it, establishes two grand hereditary orders with feelings, habits, interests and prerogatives all inveterately hostile to the rights and interests of the people, yet by a mysterious operation all combining to fortify the people in both.
Republican: Mysterious indeed! But mysteries belong to religion, not to government; to the ways of the Almighty, not to the works of man. And in religion itself there is nothing mysterious to its author; the mystery lies in the dimness of the human sight. So in the institutions of man let there be no mystery, unless for those inferior beings endowed with a ray perhaps of the twilight vouchsafed to the first order of terrestrial creation.
Anti-Republican: You are destitute, I perceive, of every quality of a good citizen, or rather of a good subject. You have neither the light of faith nor the spirit of obedience. I denounce you to the government as an accomplice of atheism and anarchy.
Republican: And I forbear to denounce you to the people, though a blasphemer of their rights and an idolater of tyranny. Liberty disdains to persecute.
Happy Thanksgiving to the members of our FReeper Book Club.
And Happy Thanksgiving to you as well. May you have so many blessings that it takes you all day to count them.
Have a wonderful Thanksgiving! AND thanks for your work of this day!
Worth the read. Thanks.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and fellow FReepers. Thanks for your work.
The people are stupid and licentious. The error is in assuming that there is a fiction such as "betters" to turn to. There's only us. The long faces you see on the current Left are from the realization that Mr. 0bama isn't the philosopher-king they painted him to be, and that no one could ever be. The country will survive his pretense and their disappointment. "Do not put your trust in princes, in men who cannot save."
Now off through a snowstorm to a warm hearth and family. They're all liberal fools but I love them anyway. Happy Thanksgiving, all!
Bravo. May you enjoy all the blessings of ordered liberty.
Give my regards to “frodolives”. Her foolish liberal twaddle has been missed at FR.
Thank you for this post. And a happy Thanksgiving to you and yours.
Thanks! Same to you and fellow members.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family and friends also. I made a wonderful traditional meal (if I do say so myself) and enjoyed it with two of my sons, one girlfriend who is very sweet and I want her for a daughter-in-law, and my oldest grandson and his dear little wife who is very ill with cancer. I was so happy that she felt up to being with us and I think everyone had a really good time. And I got to share with them some of their American history which always makes me happy. So I feel very thankful this evening for all of my uncountable blessings.
BTW... Is Libertina still amongst us? Since I moved to the Northern Midwest, I haven't been able to keep up with the local board of Puget Sound Freeperdom!
JD
Burr should have shot Hamilton again.
I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving.
Fortunately, I'd had my real Thanksgiving the previous Saturday when a circle of friends got together and roasted a goose.
The Saturday meal sounds very nice. Thanksgiving doesn’t have to be on Thursday. :-) Being snowed-in can be nice, too.
And Happy Holidays including Christmas and New Year to you. Thanks and keep me on your list.
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