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CHAPTER XVIII.

THE STATE AND THE NEW UNION.

THE great civil war had been fought on the part of the government to preserve the Union, and for no ulterior purpose whatever. "The constitution as it is and the Union as it was " was the rallying cry of the people, and the platform upon which Mr. Lincoln in his inaugural address proposed to found the policy of his administration. The acts of secession being deemed altogether void, the government would endeavor to hold, occupy, and possess the property and places belonging to it in all the states, and to enforce everywhere its laws, and thereby bring the people everywhere to a recognition and observance of federal authority and of their duties in respect to it. The political departments of the federal government disclaimed altogether the right to interfere with any constitutional exercise of state authority, even in respect to the institution of slavery, though slavery had become the occasion of civil war. Loyal parties, whatever had been their political affiliations before, agreed in pledging devotion to the constitution as it had been formulated and adopted at the

VALUE OF A WRITTEN CONSTITUTION.

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beginning, and their purpose to maintain it unimpaired.

The peculiar excellence of the American constitutions was supposed to consist in the fact that they had been deliberately framed as written charters of government, so that they expressed all that was within the intent of the framers, and would stand as agreed upon without being subject to that gradual modification and change which is an inherent quality when the constitution is unwritten. In the latter case, as in the conspicuous instance of the constitution of England, there will be gradual building up and growth, which may at the time be wholly imperceptible, and only apparent in results; but the written instrument comes into existence with the understanding and purpose that its several paragraphs and provisions shall mean forever exactly what they mean when adopted; and if a change is to take place in the constitution, it must be brought about by the steps which in the instrument itself are provided for, and must consist in such modification of the language and provisions of the instrument, or of such emendations or additions as shall be formally and deliberately made. By this means we are supposed to have at all times a written instrument which embodies the whole constitution; and when we reach a proper interpretation of the powers it confers and the limitations it imposes upon those powers, as they stood in the minds of the people when

adopting it, we are to give effect to that interpretation, in whatever may be done under the constitution at any time in the future.

Such is the theory underlying American governments. But the theory can be true only in the most general sense. No instrument can be the same in meaning to-day and forever, and in all men's minds. Its interpretation must take place in the light of the facts which preceded and led to it; in the light of contemporaneous history, and of what was said by the actors and the ends they had in view. And as men will differ upon facts and differ in mental constitution, so will they differ in interpretation; and in the case of a written constitution, the divergences are certain to increase when it comes to receive practical application. And if at any time the people are subjected to a great constitutional crisis, they are not thereafter precisely the same in ideas, sentiments, desires, hopes, and aspirations that they were before their experience works changes in their views and in their habits of thought, and these may be so radical that they seem altogether a new people. But as the people change, so does their written constitution change also: they see it in new lights and with different eyes; events may have given unexpected illumination to some of its provisions, and what they read one way before they read a very different way now. Then the logic of events may for all practical purposes

SCHOOLS OF INTERPRETATION.

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have settled some questions before in dispute; and nobody, in his contemplation of the constitution, can separate it if he would from the history in which its important provisions have had a part, or be unaffected in his own views by that history.

In constitutional countries there must be schools of interpretation and construction, in which men will range themselves according to the spirit and intent which they respectively discover in the charter of government. In the United States these have existed from the first; and they have been given the names of Hamilton and Jefferson, because those great statesmen, when called to the performance of important functions in government which involved a construction of the constitution, discovered respectively a different spirit and tendency in that instrument. Hamilton discovered in it a purpose to create and give vigorous energy to a great nation; and in so far as the administration of the government fell to him, he deemed it his duty to give effect to this purpose. He was the ablest man of the day holding these views; and being eminently endowed with the qualities of a leader, he became the natural head of the great national party. Jefferson read in the constitution a purpose to preserve the states in their integrity with all their powers, so far as was consistent with the existence of a confederacy having such authority as a strict construction of the constitution would give it. He also was a natural leader of

men, and became the head of the state-rights school in constitutional interpretation. Holding such antagonistic views, it was natural and perhaps inevitable that these great leaders should suspect each other's motives and actions; and that while Hamilton should come to think it was the purpose of Jefferson to set the states above the nation to the destruction of effective unity, Jefferson on the other hand should believe that his great rival was endeavoring to do whatever should be possible, in perverting the constitution to a concentration of power in the federal government which the states had never agreed upon, and which if deliberately proposed would never have had their assent. From them the mutual suspicions extended to their friends and followers; and their several public measures were regarded with jealous eyes as having purposes in view which their authors would not venture to avow. The funding schemes of Hamilton for federal and state debts were not, in the eyes of Jefferson, so much vicious in themselves, as vicious in their purpose and tendency to concentrate power and rob the states of their due importance; and when, under the administration of John Adams, affairs with France assumed a threatening aspect, other persons besides Jefferson were ready to suspect that Hamilton was willing war should result, not so much because the conduct of France seemed imperatively to require it, as because he expected from the

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