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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Marshall, ii, 387.
66
"They have long considered the Mis de lafayette as really the firmest supporter of the principles of liberty in France – & as they are for the most part no friends to these principles anywhere, they cannot conceal the pleasure they [the aristocracy at The Hague] feel at their [principles of liberty] supporters' being thus expelled from the country where he laboured to establish them." (Short to Jefferson, Aug. 24, 1792; Short MSS., Lib. Cong.)
67
Cobbett, i, 112.
68
69
Hazen, 218.
70
J. Q. Adams, to T. B. Adams, Feb. 1, 1792;
71
Stuart to Washington, July 14, 1789;
72
See Hazen, 209-15.
73
74
See Hazen, 215.
75
Cobbett, i, 111.
76
For an impartial and comprehensive account of these clubs see Hazen, 188-208; also, Marshall, ii, 269
77
Washington to Thruston, Aug. 10, 1794;
78
Washington to Randolph, Oct. 16, 1794;
79
Cabot to Parsons, Aug. 12, 1794; Lodge:
80
J. Q. Adams to John Adams, Oct. 19, 1790;
81
Jefferson to Rutledge, Aug. 29, 1791;
82
See Hazen, 203-07.
83
September 18, 1794.
84
Ames to Dwight, Sept. 11, 1794;
85
Cabot to King, July 25, 1795; Lodge:
86
Ames to Gore, March 26, 1794;
87
Ames to Minot, Feb. 20, 1793;
88
Ames to Gore, Jan. 28, 1794;
89
Ames to Dwight, Sept. 3, 1794;
90
Henry to Washington, Oct. 16, 1795; Henry, ii, 559.
91
92
Marshall, ii, 353.
93
94
Marshall, ii, 353-54.
95
Marshall, ii, 150-51. "The agitation had been too great to be suddenly calmed; and for the active opponents of the system [Constitution] to become suddenly its friends, or even indifferent to its fate, would have been a victory of reason over passion." (
96
"The effort was made to fill the legislature with the declared enemies of the government, and thus to commit it, in its infancy, to the custody of its foes." (Marshall, ii, 151.)
97
Madison to Hamilton, June 27, 1788; Hamilton MSS., Lib. Cong. Madison adds this cryptic sentence: "This hint may not be unworthy of your attention."
98
Madison to Washington, June 27, 1788;
Randolph was still more apprehensive. "Something is surely meditated against the new Constitution more animated, forcible, and violent than a simple application for calling a Convention." (Randolph to Madison, Oct. 23, 1788; Conway, 118.)
99
When Jefferson left Virginia for France, his political fortunes were broken. (Eckenrode:
Seldom has any man achieved such a recovery as that of Jefferson in the period now under review. Perhaps Talleyrand's rehabilitation most nearly approaches Jefferson's achievement. From the depths of disfavor this genius of party management climbed to the heights of popularity and fame.
100
Jefferson to Hopkinson, March 13, 1789;
101
Jefferson to Washington, Paris, Dec. 4, 1788;
102
Jefferson to Short, Dec. 14, 1789;
103
The Legislature which met on the heels of the Virginia Constitutional Convention hastened to adjourn in order that its members might attend to their harvesting. (Monroe to Jefferson, July 12, 1788; Monroe's
104
Marshall, ii, 205-26. Throughout this chapter the terms "Nationalist" and "Anti-Nationalist" are used instead of the customary terms "Federalist" and "Anti-Federalist," the latter not clearly expressing the fundamental difference between the contending political forces at that particular time.
105
Carrington to Madison, Oct. 19, 1788; quoted in Henry, ii, 415.
106
107
Journal, H.D. (Oct. 30, 1788), 16-17; see Grigsby, ii, 319; also see the vivid description of the debate under these resolutions in Henry, ii, 418-23.
108
Carrington to Madison, Oct. 19, 1788; quoted in Henry, ii, 415.
109
Madison to Randolph, Oct. 17, 1788; to Pendleton, Oct. 20, 1788;
110
Madison to Randolph, Nov. 2, 1788;
111
See vol. i of this work.
112
Henry, ii, 427; see also Scott, 172.
113
Journal, H.D. (Nov. 8, 1788), 32; see also Conway, 120; and Henry, ii, 427-28.
114
Madison to Randolph, Nov. 2, 1788;
115
Monroe became a candidate against Madison and it was "thought that he [would] … carry his election." (Mason to John Mason, Dec. 18, 1788; Rowland, ii, 304.) But so ardent were Madison's assurances of his modified Nationalist views that he was elected. His majority, СКАЧАТЬ