Название: The Life of John Marshall (Volume 2 of 4)
Автор: Beveridge Albert Jeremiah
Издательство: Public Domain
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
isbn:
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At this celebration an ox with gilded horns, one bearing the French flag and the other the American; carts of bread and two or three hogsheads of rum; and other devices of fancy and provisions for good cheer were the material evidence of the radical spirit. (See
38
It is certain that Madison could not possibly have continued in public life if he had remained a conservative and a Nationalist. (See next chapter.)
39
Marshall, ii, 239.
40
Jefferson to Martha Jefferson Randolph, May 26, 1793;
41
Marshall, ii, 249-51.
42
Marshall, ii, 251-52.
43
Jefferson to T. M. Randolph, Jan. 7, 1793;
44
Mass. Hist. Collections (7th Series), i, 138.
45
Typical excerpts from Short's reports to Jefferson are: July 20, 1792: "Those mad & corrupted people in France who under the name of liberty have destroyed their own government [French Constitution of 1791] & disgusted all … men of honesty & property… All the rights of humanity … are daily violated with impunity … universal anarchy prevails… There is no succour … against mobs & factions which have assumed despotic power."
July 31: "The factions which have lately determined the system … for violating all the bonds of civil society … have disgusted all, except the
August 15: "The Swiss guards have been massacred by the people & … streets literally are red with blood."
October 12: "Their [French] successes abroad are unquestionably evils for humanity. The spirit which they will propagate is so destructive of all order … so subversive of all ideas of justice – the system they aim at so absolutely visionary & impracticable – that their efforts can end in nothing but despotism after having bewildered the unfortunate people, whom they render free in their way, in violence & crimes, & wearied them with sacrifices of blood, which alone they consider worthy of the furies whom they worship under the names of
August 24: "I shḍ not be at all surprized to hear of the present leaders being hung by the people. Such has been the moral of this revolution from the beginning. The people have gone farther than their leaders… We may expect … to hear of such proceedings, under the cloak of liberty,
These are examples of the statements to which Jefferson's letter, quoted in the text following, was the reply. Short's most valuable letters are from The Hague, to which he had been transferred. They are all the more important, as coming from a young radical whom events in France had changed into a conservative. And Jefferson's letter is conclusive of American popular sentiment, which he seldom opposed.
46
Almost at the same time Thomas Paine was writing to Jefferson from Paris of "the Jacobins who act without either prudence or morality." (Paine to Jefferson, April 20, 1793;
47
Jefferson to Short, Jan. 3, 1793;
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Madison to Jefferson, June 17, 1793;
49
Paine to Danton, May 6, 1793;
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"Truth," in the
51
See
52
Jefferson to Madison, April 28, 1793;
53
For examples of these, see Hazen, 220-45.
54
Graydon, 363.
55
Freneau's
56
See next chapter.
57
Fenno to Hamilton, Nov. 9, 1793; King, i, 501-02. "The hand of benevolence &
58
Cobbett, i, footnote to 114. Curiously enough Louis XVI had believed that he was leading the French people in the reform movement. Thomas Paine, who was then in Paris, records that "The King … prides himself on being the head of the revolution." (Paine to Washington, May 1, 1790;
59
Cobbett, i, 113-14; and see Hazen, 258. For other accounts of the "feasts" in honor of
60
Cobbett, i, 113.
61
For instance, the younger Adams wrote that the French Revolution had "contributed more to … Vandalic ignorance than whole centuries can retrieve… The myrmidons of Robespierre were as ready to burn libraries as the followers of Omar; and if the principle is finally to prevail which puts the sceptre of Sovereignty in the hands of European Sans Culottes, they will soon reduce everything to the level of their own ignorance." (John Quincy Adams to his father, July 27, 1795;
And James A. Bayard wrote that: "The Barbarians who inundated the Roman Empire and broke to pieces the institutions of the civilized world, in my opinion innovated the state of things not more than the French revolution." (Bayard to Bassett, Dec. 30, 1797;
62
Freneau, iii, 86.
63
Marshall, ii, 387.
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Austria.