This document was second only to the Federalist Papers in influencing ratification of the Constitution. It contains the often quoted passage from Noah Webster:
The context is the regular army versus the militia. There is no mention of private individuals defending themselves against each other or against their state governments. The words in context are still very ambiguous. The preceding sentences are:
Webster goes on to discuss property as the foundation of all political liberty. Possession of arms does not enter into consideration. For property to be secure there has to be some governmental authority to maintain order.
Webster was examining a frame of government not a prescription for anarchy. In his pamphlet from before the Constitutional Convention "Sketches of American Policy" he characterized the "people at large" without a frame of government as anarchy. See the NRA's amicus brief in Perpich. Our present extreme individualist rightwing ideologies want the people at large to be armed outside of any governmental authority as a balance of power against any and all government authority.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, Esq.
PRESIDENT OFTHE COMMONWEALTH OF
PENNSYLVANIA,
AND
MEMBER OF THE LATE CONVENTION,
HELD AT PHILADEPHIA FOR THE PURPOSE OF
DEVISING A CONSTITUTION FOR THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES,
THE FOLLOWING REMARKS UPON THE SYSTEM
RECOMMENDED BY THAT CONVENTION,
ARE MOST HUMBLY INSCRIBED
BY
HIS EXCELLENCY'S MOST OBDIENT AND
HUMBLE SERVANT
THE AUTHOR.
Philadelphia,
October 10, 1787.
Noah Webster
OF all the memorable eras that have marked the progress of men from the savage state to the refinements of luxury, that which has combined them into society, under a wise system of government, and given form to a nation, has ever been recorded and celebrated as the most important. Legislators have ever been deemed the greatest benefactors of mankind respected when living, and often deified after their death. Hence the fame of Fohi and Confucius of Moses, Solon and Lycurgus of Romulus and Numa of Alfred, Peter the Great, and Mango Capac; whose names will be celebrated through all ages, for framing and improving constitutions of government, which introduced order into society and secured the benefits of law to millions of the human race.
But the origin of the AMERICAN REPUBLIC is distinguished by peculiar circumstances. Other nations have been driven together by fear and necessity the governments have generally been the result of a single man’s observations; or the offspring of particular interests. In the formation of our constitution, the wisdom of all ages is collected the legislators of antiquity are consulted as well as the opinions and interests of the millions who are concerned. In short, it is an empire of reason.
* A division of the legislature has been adopted in the new Constitution of every state except Pennsylvania and Georgia.
some of the arguments and facts which incline me to favor the proposed division.
and the desire of improving upon the systems of government in the old world, would operate powerfully in its favor.
the pride, irritability and stubborness of mankind. This will ever be the case, while men possess passions, easily inflamed, which may bias their reason and lead them to erroneous conclusions.
less frequently than the other house: Had the old senate in Rhode Island held their seats for three years; had they not been chosen, amidst a popular rage for paper money, the honor of that state would probably have been saved. The old senate would have stopped the measure for a year or two, till the people could have had time to deliberate upon its consequences. I consider it as a capital excellence of the proposed constitution, that the senate can be wholly renewed but once in six years.
Several states, since the war, have experienced the necessity of a division of the legislature. Maryland was saved from a most pernicious measure, by her senate. A rage for paper money, bordering on madness, prevailed in their house of delegates an emission of £.5000,000 was proposed; a sum equal to the circulating medium of the State. Had the sum been emitted, every shilling of specie would have been driven from circulation, and most of it from the state. Such a loss would not have been repaired in seven years not to mention the whole catalogue of frauds which would have followed the measure. The senate, like honest, judicious men, and the protectors of the interests of the state, firmly resisted the rage, and gave the people time to cool and to think. Their resistance was effectual the people acquiesced, and the honor and interest of the state were secured.
and within two months, every representative was ashamed of the conduct of the house. All public bodies have these fits of passion, when their conduct seems to be perfectly boyish; and in these paroxisms, a check is highly necessary.
* I cannot help remarking the singular jealousy of the constitution of Pennsylvania, which requires that a bill shall be published for the consideration of the people, before It Is enacted into a law, except in extraordinary cases. This annihilates the legislature, and reduces it to an advisory body. It almost wholly supersedes the uses of representation, the most excellent improvement in modern governments. Besides the absurdity of constituting a legislature, without supreme power, such a system will keep the state perpetually embroiled. It carries the spirit of discussion into all quarters, without the means of reconciling the opinions of men, who are not assembled to hear each others’ arguments. They debate with themselves form their own opinions, without the reasons which influence others, and without the means of Information. Thus the warmth of different opinions, which, in other states, dies In the legislature, Is diffused through the state of Pennsylvania, and becomes personal and permanent. The seeds of dissension are sown in the constitution, and no state, except Rhode Island, is so distracted by factions.
A thousand examples similar to the foregoing may be produced, both in ancient and modern history. Many plausible things may be said in favor of pure democracy many in favor of uniting the representatives of the people in one single house but uniform experience proves both to be inconsistent with the peace of society, and the rights of freemen.
from a superior and independent order of men.
missed from his office, as soon as he is acquainted with business he continues four years, and is re-eligible, if the people approve his conduct. Nor can he canvass for his office, by reason of the distance of the electors; and the pride and jealousy of the states will prevent his continuing too long in office.
*In the decline of the republic, bribery or military force obtained this office for persons who had not attained this age Augustus was chosen at the age of twenty; or rather obtained It with his sword.
One half the evils in a state arise from a lax execution of the laws; and it is impossible that an executive officer can act with vigor and impartiality, when his office depends on the popular voice. An annual popular election of executive officers is the sure source of a negligent, partial and corrupt administration. The independence of the judges in England has produced a course of the most just, impartial and energetic judicial decisions, for many centuries, that can be exhibited in any nation on earth. In this point therefore I conceive the plan proposed in America to be an improvement on the Roman constitution. In all free governments, that is, in all countries, where laws govern, and not men, the supreme magistrate should have it in his power to execute any law, however unpopular, without hazarding his person or office. The laws are the sole guardians of right, and when the magistrate dares not act, every person is insecure.
* I say the senate was elective but
this must be understood with some exceptions; or
rather qualifications. The constitution of the
Roman senate has been a subject of enquiry, with
the first men in modern ages. Lord Chesterfield
requested the opinion of the learned Vertot,
upon the manner of chusing senators in Rome; and
it was a subject of discussion between Lord
Harvey and Dr. Middleton. The most probable
account of the manner of forming the senate, and
filling up vacancies, which I have collected
from the best writers on this subject, is here
abridged for the consideration of the
reader.
The proposed senate in America is constituted on principles more favorable to liberty: The members are elective, and by the separate legislatures: They hold their seats for six years they are thus rendered sufficiently dependent on their constituents; and yet are not dismissed from their office as soon as they become acquainted with the forms of proceeding.
Should it be said that such an event is desirable,.I answer; the states are all entitled to their respective sovereignties, and while they claim, independence in international jurisdiction, the federal constitution ought to guarantee their sovereignty.
false principle in the vulgar idea of representation, that a man delegated by a particular district in a state, is the representative of that district only; whereas in truth a member of the legislature from any town or county, is the representative of the whole state. In passing laws, he is to view the whole collective interest of the state, and act from that view; not from a partial regard to the interest of the town or county where he is chosen.
and consider themselves as acting for the whole confederacy. Hence in the senate we may expect union and firmness here we may find the general good the object of legislation, and a check upon the more partial and interested acts of the other branch.
*It is a capital defect of most of the
state-constitutions, that the senators, like the
representatives, are chosen in particular
districts, They are thus inspired with local
views, and however wrong it may be to entertain
them, yet snch is the constitution of human
nature, that men are almost involuntarily
attached to the interest of the district which
has reposed confidence in their abilities and
integrity. Some partiality therefore for
constituents is always expectable. To destroy it
as much as possible, a political constitution
should remove the grounds of local attachment.
Connecticut and Maryland have wisely destroyed
this attachment in their senates, by ordaining
that the members shall be chosen in the state
at large. The senators hold their seats by
the suffrages of the state, not of a
district; hence they have no particular
number of men to fear or to oblige. They
represent the state; hence that union and
firmness which the senates of those states have
manifested on the most trying occasions, and by
which they have prevented the most rash and
iniquitous measures.
The house of representatives is the more immediate voice of the separate states here the states are represented in proportion to their number of inhabitants here the separate interests will operate with their full force, and the violence of parties and the jealousies produced by interfering interests, can be restrained and quieted only by a body of men, less local and dependent.
tuated among the people, and with their persons, subject to the same laws. No title can be granted, but the temporary titles of office, bestowed by the voluntary election of the people; and no pre-eminence can be acquired but by the same means.
house of commons is chosen by a small part of the people of England, and continues for seven years. The Romans never discovered the secret of representation the whole body of citizens assembled for the purposes of legislation a circumstance that exposed their government to frequent convulsions, and to capricious measures. The federal house of representatives is chosen by the people qualified to vote for state representatives,* and continues two years.
* It is said by some, that no property should be
required as a qualification for an elector. I
shall not enter into a discussion of the
subject; but remark that In most free
governments, some property has been thought
requisite, to prevent corruption and secure
government from the influence of an unprincipled
multitude.
Some may object to their continuance in power two years. But I cannot see any danger arising from this quarter. On the contrary, it creates less trouble for the representatives, who by such choice are taken from their professions and obliged to attend Congress, some of them at the distance of at least seven hundred miles. While men are chosen by the people, and responsible to them, there is but little danger from ambition or corruption.
the senators almost wholly, in the power of Congress.
his approbation; but it must be returned in ten days, whether approved by him or not ; and the concurrence of two thirds of both houses passes the bill into a law, notwithstanding any objections of the president. The constitution therefore gives the supreme executive a check but no negative, upon the sense of Congress.
do not respect the general interest and welfare of the United States. If these powers intrench upon the present sovereignty of any state, without having for an object the collective interest of the whole, the powers are too extensive. But if they do not extend to all concerns, in which the states have a mutual interest, they are too limited. If in any instance, the powers necessary for protecting the general interest, interfere with the constitutional rights of an individual state, such state has assumed powers that are inconsistent with the safety of the United States, and which ought instantly to be resigned. Considering the states as individuals, on equal terms, entering into a social compact, no state has a right to any power which may prejudice its neighbors. If therefore the federal constitution has collected into the federal legislature no more power than is necessary for the common defence and interest, it should be recognized by the states, however particular clauses may supersede the exercise of certain powers by the individual states.
a private or provincial nature, must still rest on the ground of the respective state constitutions.
depends solely on faction. To seek the insidious and detestable nature of these insinuations, it is necessary to mention, and to remark on a few particulars.
the Americans, one of the principal excellencies of the constitution.
the liberty of the press, or any other fundamental privilege, and make it an immutable condition of the grant, that such rights shall never be violated. All objections therefore on this score are “baseless visions.”
deral power that shall be sufficient to oblige a delinquent state to comply with the requisition. Such power must exist somewhere, or the debts of the United States can never be paid. For want of such power, our credit is lost and our national faith is a bye-word.
more confidence be reposed in a member of one legislature than of another? Why should we choose the best men in the state to represent us in Congress, and the moment they are elected arm ourselves against them as against tyrants and robbers? Do we not, in this conduct, act the part of a man, who, as soon as he has married a woman of unsuspected chastity, locks her up in a dungeon? Is there any spell or charm, that instantly changes a delegate to Congress from an honest man into a knave a tyrant? I confess freely that I am willing to trust Congress with any powers that I should dare lodge in a state-legislature. I believe life, liberty, and property is as safe in the hands of a federal legislature, organized in the manner proposed by the convention, as in the hands of any legislature, that has ever been or ever will be chosen in any particular state.
fence and general welfare of the United States.* For these purposes money must be collected, and the power of collection must be lodged, sooner or later, in a federal head; or the common defence and general welfare must be neglected.
* The clause may at first appear ambiguous. It may be uncertain whether we should read and understand it thus "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises in order to stay the debts," &c. or whether the meaning is ”The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, and shall have power to pay the debts," &c. On considering the construction of the clause, and comparing it with the preamble, the last sense seems to be improbable and absurd. But it is not very material; for no powers are vested in Congress but what are included under the general expressions, of providing for the common defence and general welfare of the United States. Any powers not promotive of these purposes, will be unconstitutional;_consequently any appropriations of money to any other purpose will expose the Congress to the resentment of the states, and the members to Impeachment and loss of their seats.
selves, with a force at their command, superior to the whole yeomanry of the country.
necessity to guard against them by positive constitutions, as to prohibit the establishment of the Mahometan religion. But the constitution provides for our safety; and while it gives Congress power to raise armies, it declares that no appropriation of money to their support shall be for a longer term than two years.
lation of a barefaced falsehood, respecting a privilege, dear to freemen, can proceed only from a depraved heart and the worst intentions.
twelve men, seated upon twelve stones, arranged in a circular form, under a huge oak, there was great propriety in submitting causes to men in the vicinity. The difficulty of collecting evidence, in those rude times, rendered it necessary that juries should judge mostly from their own knowledge of facts or from information obtained out of court. But in these polished ages, when juries depend almost wholly on the testimony of witnesses; and when a complication of interests, introduced by commerce and other causes, renders it almost impossible to collect men, in the vicinity of the parties, who are wholly disinterested, it is no disadvantage to have a cause tried by a jury of strangers. Indeed the latter is generally the most eligible.
The truth is, Congress cannot prohibit the importation of slaves during that period; but the laws against the importation into particular states, stand unrepealed. An immediate abolition of slavery would bring ruin upon the whites, and misery upon the blacks, in the southern states. The constitution has therefore wisely left each state to pursue its own measures, with respect to this article of legislation, during the period of twenty-one years.
acting conformably to a sense of a majority of the society. In a free government every man binds himself to obey the public voice, or the opinions of a majority; and the whole society engages to protect each individual. In such a government a man is free and safe. But reverse the case; suppose every man to act without control or fear of punishment. every man would be free, but no man would be sure of his freedom one moment. Each would have the power of taking his neighbor’s life, liberty, or property; and no man would command more than, his own strength to repel the invasion. The case is the same with states. If the states should not unite into one compact society, every state may trespass upon its neighbor, and the injured state has no means of redress but its own military force.
their liberties, while they retain in their own hands, a power sufficient to any other power in the state. This position leads me directly to enquire, in what consists the power of a nation or of an order of men?
* "Quod nemo plebelus auspicia haberet, ideoque
decemviros connubium diremisse, ne incerta prole
auspicia turbarentur." Tit. Liv. lib. 4. cap.
6.
Auguriis certe sacerdotisque augurum
tantus honos accessit. ut nihil belli domique
postea, nisi auspicato, gereretur: concilia
populi, exercitus vocati, summa rerum, ubi ayes
non admisissent, dirimerentur. Liv. lib. x. cap.
37.
we want any proofs of this, which are not exhibited in this country, the uniform testimony of history will furnish us with multitudes. But I will go no farther for proof, than the two governments already mentioned, the Roman and the British.
* Essay on the Roman government.
the nominal authority of the patricians, proceeded regularly in enlarging their own powers. They first extorted from the senate, the right of electing tribunes, with a negative upon the proceed- ings of the senate.* They obtained the right of proposing and debating laws; which before had been vested in the senate; and finally advanced to the power of enacting laws, without the authority of the senate. They regained the rights of election in their comitia, of which they had been deprived by Servius Tullius They procured a permanent body of laws, collected from the Grecian institutions. They destroyed the influence of augurs, or diviners, by establishing the tributa comitia, in which they were not allowed to consult the gods. They increased their power by large accessions of conquered lands. They procured a repeal of the law which prohibited marriages between the patricians and plebians.§ The Licinian law limited all possessions to five hundred acres of land; which, had it been fully executed, would have secured the commonwealth.**
* Livy, 2. 33. Livy, 3. 54. Livy, 3. 33. § Livy, 4. 6, ** Livy,6.35. 42. "Ne quis plus quingenta jugera agri possideret."
other advantages from the patricians, generally held the power of governing in their own hands.
tions no man can obtain dominion over a large territory the laborious and saving, who are generally the best citizens, will possess each his share of property and power, and thus the balance of wealth and power will continue where it is, in the body of the people.
Virtue, patriotism, or love of country, never was and never will be, till mens’ natures are changed, a fixed, permanent principle and support of government. But in an agricultural country, a general possession of land in fee simple, may be rendered perpetual, and the inequalities introduced by commerce, are too fluctuating to endanger government. An equality of property, with a necessity of alienation, constantly operating to destroy combinations of powerful families, is the very soul of a republic While this continues, the people will inevitably possess both power and freedom; when this is lost, power departs, liberty expires, and a commonwealth will inevitably assume some other form.
every class of people.* The power of entailing estates is more dangerous to liberty and republican government, than all the constitutions that can be written on paper, or even than a standing army. Let the people have property, and they will have power a power that will for ever be exerted to prevent a restriction of the press, and abolition of trial by jury, or the abridgement of any other privilege. The liber.. ties of America, therefore, and her forms of government, stand on the broadest basis. Removed from the fears of a foreign invasion and conquest, they are
* Montesquieu supposed virtue to be the
principle of a republic. He derived his notions
of this form of government, from the astonishing
firmness, courage and patriotism which
distinguished the republics of Greece and Rome.
But this virtue consisted in pride,
contempt of strangers and a martial enthusiasm
which sometimes displayed itself in defence of
their country. These principles are never
permanent they decay with refinement,
intercourse with other nations and increase of
wealth. No wonder then that these republics
declined, for they were not founded on fixed
principles; and hence authors imagine that
republics cannot be durable. None of the
celebrated writers on government seems to have
laid sufficient stress on a general possession
of real property in fee-simple. Even the authors
of the Political Sketches, in the Museum
for the month of September, seems to have passed
it over in silence; although he combats
Montesquieu’s system, and to prove it false,
enumerates some of the principles which
distinguish our governments from others, and
which he supposes constitutes the support of
republics.
not exposed to the convulsions that shake other
governments; and the principles of freedom are
so general and energetic, as to exclude the
possibility of a change in our republican
constitutions.
I repeat it reject the clause with
decency, but with unanimity and firmness.
the state pays in duties, at least 100,000
dollars annually, on goods consumed by its own
people, but imported by New York. This sum,
could it be saved to the state by an equal
system of revenue, would enable that state to
gradually sink its debt.*
*The state debt of Connecticut is about
3,500,000 dollars, its proportion of the federal
debt about the same sum. The annual interest of
the whole 420,000 dollars.
will survive the scrutiny. A painter, after
executing a masterly piece, requested every
spectator to draw a pencil mark over the part
that did not please him; but to his surprise, he
soon found the whole piece defaced. Let
every man examine the most perfect building by
his own taste, and like some microscopic
critics, condemn the whole for small
deviations from the rules of architecture, and
not a part of the best constructed fabric
would escape. But let any man take a
comprehensive view of the whole, and he
will be pleased with the general beauty and
proportions, and admire the structure. The same
remarks apply to the new constitution. I have no
doubt that every member of the late
convention has exceptions to some part of
the system proposed. Their constituents have the
same, and if every objection must be
removed, before we have a national government,
the Lord have mercy on us.
of our divisions, and wade to a throne through
streams of blood.
Let us then consider the New Federal
Constitution, as it really is, an
improvement on the best constitutions
that the world ever saw. In the house of
representatives, the people of America have an
equal voice and suffrage. The choice of men is
placed in the freemen or electors at large; and
the frequency of elections, and the
responsibility of the members, will render them
sufficiently dependent on their constituents.
The senate will be composed of older men; and
while their regular dismission from office, once
in six years, will preserve their dependence on
their constituents, the duration of their
existence will give firmness to their decisions,
and temper the factions which must necessarily
prevail in the other branch. The president of
the United States is elective, and what is a
capital improvement on the best governments, the
mode of chusing him excludes the danger of
faction and corruption. As the supreme
executive, he is invested with power to enforce
the laws of the union and give energy to the
federal government.
interwoven into the feelings and habits of the
Americans; liberty stands on the
immoveable basis of a general distribution of
property and diffusion of knowledge; but the
Americans must cease to contend, to fear, and to
hate, before they can realize the benefits of
independence and government, or enjoy the
blessings, which heaven has lavished, in rich
profusion, upon this western world.
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