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August 1873
The Art of Being President, Gathered From the Experience of Thomas Jefferson
by James Parton
One thing only is indisputable with regard to the administration of Thomas
Jefferson, from 1801 to 1809: it satisfied the people of the United States. The
proof of this is not merely that he was re-elected by a vastly increased
majority; nor that the Federalists, once so powerful and so confident, were
reduced in the House to twenty-seven, and in the Senate to one less than half a
dozen; nor that the legislatures of Vermont, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Maryland, and Georgia, the Senate of new York, and the House of Delegates of
Virginia requested him to stand for a third term; nor that, at last, fourteen
States out of seventeen were ranged in the Republican line, and Jefferson
himself thought the opposition was getting too weak for the country's good.
These were remarkable facts, but they were only a part of his triumph. At the
end of eight years, without an effort of his own, without so much as the
expression of a preference, he handed over the government to the man of all
others in the world whom he would have chosen for a successor; and that man, at
the end of his eight years, passed it on to another of Jefferson's disciples
and allies; under whom opposition died, only to live again when Federalism
started into a semblance of life in the messages of John Quincy Adams.
Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe were three men and one system. The era of good
feeling in Monroe's time, which would have come in Madison's but for the War of
1812, was the completion of Jefferson's success. It is this twenty-four years
of public content that renders an inquiry into the conduct of President
Jefferson interesting.
For, as all readers know, there are two ways of explaining it. To Republicans,
indeed, it requires no explanation. It is of the essence of their faith that
there is nothing occult or mysterious in the art of government, but that it
consists in doing right. Their simple conviction is,--and they desire the
Coming Party to ponder well the truth,--that the old Democratic party ruled the
United States for sixty years for no other reason than that, on every leading
issue except one--the extension of slavery, the Rock on which it struck and
went to pieces--the old Democratic party was right. The other theory is, that
Mr. Jefferson and his successors were wonderfully skillful and perfectly
unscrupulous in flattering what the polite Federalists used to style the Mob.
Readers remember, perhaps, Tom Moore's verses on this subject, written soon
after his visit to Washington, in which, putting into rhyme the gossip and
sniff of Federalist drawing-rooms, he spoke of President Jefferson as
"That inglorious soul,
Which creeps and winds beneath a mob's control,
Which courts the rabble's smile, the rabble's nod,
And makes, like Egypt, every beast its god."
This was the Federalists' opinion better expressed; and they used to point to
Aaron Burr's skill in political management as a proof of its correctness. Aaron
Burr, however, was too knowing a politician ever to waste time upon the dozen
loafers in each ward of New York who alone could then be justly called rabble;
and his skill, such as it was, did not prevent his own downfall and hopeless
ruin. America had no rabble. America has no rabble. Except in a few large
cities, there is no considerable class that even bears any outward resemblance
to a rabble; and never has that class been important in a general election. The
voters that kept the Tweeds in power were, for the most part, well-meaning,
industrious men, whom a Tweed could reach through their prejudices, their
vanity, and their interest, but who could not be reached by honest men because
education had opened no road to their minds accessible to disinterested
intelligence. But let me recall the leading traits of Mr. Jefferson's
administration, with a view to getting light upon the question, whether he
satisfied the people of his time by doing right, or by adroitly pretending to
do right.
He was faithful to the party that elected him.
As soon as his election was known, some of his friends urged him to conciliate
the Federalists by appointing a few of their leaders to office. His answer was,
No; the mass of the party, being Republican at heart, will be conciliated by a
consistent adherence to Republican principles, and, as to the chiefs, they
cannot be conciliated! Besides, every office in the country in the gift of the
President was already filled by a Federalist; for that party, said he, had at
an early period adopted the principle of "excluding from office every shade of
opinion that was not theirs"; and he thought it only right that all vacancies
should be given to Republicans, until there should be at least as many of them
in office as Federalists. He meant, as he said early in his first term, to
"sink Federalism into an abyss from which there should be no resurrection for
it." He accomplished this purpose; and his clear adherence both to the men and
principles of his own party was among the means which he employed.
But he would not appoint men to office merely because they were conspicuous
partisans.
The notorious Callender was a case in point. He was a scurrilous, fertile,
forcible writer of the day, who had been prosecuted under the Sedition Law, and
so made a dirty martyr of. Republicans had been compelled to give him aid and
comfort in his distress, because he was the victim of a law they abhorred. Upon
the triumph of the Republican party, he came to Jefferson, asking as a reward
for party services the Richmond post-office, worth fifteen hundred dollars a
year. Jefferson relieved his necessities with money, but refused him the place,
simply because he was unfit for it, and thus gained one of the most implacable
and indecent vituperators a public servant ever had. George Rogers Clarke, too,
a hero whom he revered, he often longed to employ, as the most skilful manager
of all Indian affairs the country possessed. But he did not. The reason was,
Whiskey. He gave the General Clarke's brother a commission and an appointment:
but not the man who had aided to give his country liberty, only to become
himself a slave. Nor did Thomas Paine realize his joke of shocking the bishops
and old ladies of the English court by going as Secretary of Legation to
London. Jefferson gave him a safe-passage home in a man-of-war, received him
with honor at the White House, with cordiality at Monticello, and exchanged
philosophic news with him; but did not send him to do what he could not
do,--represent a clean, sober, orderly people in a foreign land. And when it
became apparent that Chancellor Livingston's growing deafness rendered him an
inefficient minister at the Court of Napoleon, Jefferson risked losing the
support of the State of New York, first, by sending Monroe to help him, and
afterwards by recalling him. But the most remarkable case was that of John
Randolph, the sharp-tongued leader of the Republican party in the House of
Representatives. He was suggested by a friend for the English mission. Mr.
Jefferson was silent. Mr. Madison, also, waived the subject. Then the friend
pressed his claims, and other members of the House added solicitations. The
President withheld the appointment. John Randolph went into opposition, in
which his single small talent shone like a thin, keen rapier in the sun. The
only objection to his appointment was, that he was ludicrously unfit for a post
requiring patience, prudence, self-control, industry, and address.
Jefferson took great care to get the right man for the right place.
In fact, a ruler of men, whether he is a private or a public person, has but
two duties to perform,--to select the right assistants, and to treat them so as
to get out of them the best service they have in them. That is the whole art of
governing, and Jefferson knew it. "There is nothing," he wrote to a friend in
May, 1801, "I am so anxious about as making the best possible appointments."
but how difficult the task in a country so extensive as the United States,
where personal knowledge is impossible! His chief reliance seems to have been
upon the unsolicited recommendation of men in whom he had confidence. Thus, he
wrote to Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina very early in his first year: "In
all cases when an office becomes vacant in your State, I shall be much obliged
to you to recommend the best characters." Jefferson was curiously happy in his
appointments, and the reason was that he never slighted this chief duty, and
was, from the first, on his guard against the recommendations of thoughtless,
unprincipled good-nature. He would have made more successes of this kind even
than he did, but for the inadequate compensation attached to the most important
posts; which limits a President's choice to a few individuals exceptionally
circumstanced. Many of his letters offering appointments show how much he
lamented his inability to offer "due remuneration."
He would not give an appointment to a relative.
At the first view, this seems unjust to the honorable and capable families who
were related to the President. It has the air of courting cheap and easy
popularity, and it is open to the objection of pitching the note too high for
the limited range of human nature. But his convictions on the point were clear
and strong; and Professor Tucker records that he acted on this principle
throughout life in the administration of trusts. Thus, as Rector of the
University of Virginia, he opposed the appointment of a nephew to a
professorship, though he was well qualified for the place; dreading lest it
should open a door to the system which has made universities and Church
endowments in other lands mere appendages to the estates of governing families.
He was nobly seconded in his resolution by his own kindred. Imagine his delight
on receiving from one of them, George Jefferson, a few days after his
inauguration, a letter spontaneously declining to be a candidate for a Federal
office to which his neighbors and friends desired to recommend him. "The
public," wrote the President, "will never be made to believe that an
appointment of a relative is made on the ground of merit alone, uninfluenced by
family views; nor can they ever see with approbation offices, the disposal of
which they intrust to their Presidents for public purposes, divided out as
family property." He owned that the rule bore hardly upon a President's
relations; but the public good, he thought, required the sacrifice; for which
their share in the public esteem might be considered some compensation. "I
could not be satisfied," said he, "until I assured you of the increased esteem
with which this transaction fills me for you."
His two sons-in-law did not suffer from the rule, since their neighbors kept
them both in the House of Representatives. Here, again, the President showed
his nice regard for the mental integrity of others. In his intercourse with
these gentlemen, it was a thing understood between them, that measures pending
in their House were not to be a topic of conversation; and if, by chance,
conversation took that turn, "I carefully avoid," says Jefferson, "expressing
an opinion on them in their presence, that we may all be at our ease." The
rule, happily, did not exclude friends, and he thus had the pleasure of
appointing to the place of Commissioner of Loans at Richmond, the beloved
comrade of his youth, John Page.
But he would not exempt friends from the operation of a good rule.
It was an old opinion of his, which now became a rule of his administration,
that a foreign minister should not remain abroad more than seven or eight
years. He drew this opinion from his own experience. "When I returned from
France," he once explained, "after an absence of six or seven years, I was
astonished at the change which I found had taken place in the United States in
that time. No more like the same people; their notions, their habits and
manners, the course of their commerce, so totally changed, that I, who stood in
those of 1784, found myself not at all qualified to speak of their sentiments,
or forward their views, in 1790." Hence the rule. But it excluded from the
public service two of his oldest friends, David Humphreys and William Short,
both of whom had served under him as Secretary of Legation before attaining the
rank of plenipotentiary which they then held. Humphreys had been absent from
home eleven years, and Short seventeen years. One of Jefferson's first acts was
to recall Humphreys' which he soon followed by declining to transfer Short to
Paris, where he felt the need of just such a tried and vigilant minister. "Your
appointment," he wrote to Mr. Short, "was impossible after an absence of
seventeen years. Under any other circumstances, I should never fail to give to
yourself and the world proofs of my friendship for you, and of my confidence in
you."
He turned no man out of office because he was opposed to him in politics.
And yet he did, during the first two years of his first term, remove twenty-six
Federalists and appoint Republicans in their stead. After that, there were
scarcely any removals; and Republicans were only appointed to vacancies created
by death or resignation. And now with regard to those twenty-six. The result of
the Presidential election of 1800 was known in Washington on the 12th of
December, a little less than three months before the end of Mr. Adams's term.
During that interval, some valuable life-offices fell vacant, twenty-four
judgeships were created, and several places held during the President's
pleasure were vacated. Mr. Adams hastened to fill these offices, from that of
chief justice of the Supreme Court to postmaster, leaving not one of them to
his successor. Such was the primitive condition of the political mind in 1801,
that Republicans regarded this conduct as the last degree of indecency, and
Jefferson shared the feeling. Indeed, for so placid and placable a gentleman,
he was highly indignant, and two or three years passed before he could
"heartily forgive" his old friend Adams for yielding, in so unworthy a manner,
to the "pressure" of his partisans. He resolved not to regard those
appointments; which, he said, Mr. Adams knew he was not making for himself, but
for a successor. "This outrage on decency," he wrote to his old colleague,
General Knox, who had written to congratulate him on his election, "should not
have its effect except in the life-appointments, which are irremovable; but, as
to the others, I consider the nominations as nullities, and will not view the
persons appointed as even candidates for their office, much less as possessing
it by any title meriting respect." These offices were sixteen in number. Their
incumbents were all removed during the first year, and Republicans appointed to
fill them. The other ten removals, most of which occurred in the second year,
were for three causes: 1. Official misconduct; 2. "Active and bitter
opposition" (to use the President's own words) "to the order of things which
the public will has established." There was a third reason for removal, which
the President thus explained: "The courts being so decidedly Federal and
irremovable, it is believed that Republican attorneys and marshals, being the
doors of entrance into the courts, are indispensably necessary as a shield to
the Republican part of our fellow-citizens, which, I believe, is the main body
of the people." Accordingly, although the expiration of the Alien and Sedition
Laws rendered the Federal courts less dangerous to freedom than they had been,
four or five of these officials were removed.
The outcry caused by this moderate exercise of the President's power cannot be
imagined by readers of the present day. Jefferson, indeed, stood between two
fires,--the Federalists shrieking with most vigorous unanimity as each head
dropped into the basket; and the Republican host muttering remonstrance that
the decapitating instrument worked so slowly. The denunciation of the
Federalists he could not avoid; but he showed much tact in reconciling his own
partisans to this moderate course. To mere partisans, he would show how much
better it was to have an able Federalist passive and acquiescent in office, and
all his circle of friends quiet for his sake, than, by turning him out of
office, to convert him and his family into vigilant, embittered opponents. To
men who, like himself, desired to see the whole body of citizens restored to
good-humor, his appeal was to their sense of the just and the becoming. The
Tammany Society of Baltimore deputed a young member, who was going to
Monticello, to make known to the President the discontent of the society at
seeing so many Federalists still in office. The following conversation is
reported by the deputy.
PRESIDENT. I should be very glad to gratify my friends in Baltimore by turning
the Federalists out of office, and filling their places with men of my own
party. But there is an obstacle in the way which I cannot remove,--a question
which I have not been able to solve. Perhaps you can do this for me.
YOUNG TAMMANY. I despair of solving any problem that puzzles Mr. Jefferson, but
I desire to hear what it is.
PRESIDENT. Well, sir, we are Republicans, and we are contending for the
extension of the right of suffrage. Is it not so?
YOUNG TAMMANY. Yes, sir.
PRESIDENT. (who had not read his Plato for nothing). We would not, therefore,
put any restraint upon the right of suffrage as it already exists?
YOUNG TAMMANY. (unwarned by the fate of those who sought wisdom from Socrates).
By no means, sir.
PRESIDENT. Tell me, then, what is the difference between denying the right of
suffrage, and punishing a man for exercising it by turning him out of office?
The deputy could not answer this question. "I had to leave him where I found
him," he used to say in telling the story. The President held firmly to his
course, unmoved by the execrations of Federalists and the remonstrances of
Republicans. At a moment in his second year when the opposition was
vituperative beyond all previous experience, he wrote to a member of his
Cabinet: "I still think our original idea as to office is best; that is, to
depend for the obtaining a just participation on deaths, resignations, and
delinquencies. This will least affect the tranquillity of the people, and
prevent their giving in to the suggestion of our enemies, that ours has been a
contest for office, not for principle." I wish he could have gone one step
further, and admitted the right of every office-holder to pass his leisure
hours exactly as he chose. I wish he had not added: "To these means of
obtaining a just share in the transaction of the public business shall be added
one other, to wit, removal for electioneering activity, or open and industrious
opposition to the principles of the present government, legislative and
executive. Every officer of the government may vote at elections according to
his conscience; but we should betray the cause committed to our care were we to
permit the influence of official patronage to be used to overthrow that cause."
We must always beware of demanding too much of human nature. But I wish he
could have said, "Rail on, Federalist post-masters and Hamiltonian collectors!
Mount the stump! Berate the administration! You are not my servants, nor the
administration's servants, but the servants of the people. It is only my
concern to see that you do faithfully the duty of your places. After office
hours, you differ in no respect from citizens engaged in the ordinary pursuits
of private life." It is easy to be wise for other people; nor have we a
victorious party at our back to make wisdom difficult; and who could have
foreseen such an abuse of the president as infuriate Jackson made in 1829? No
man.
Jefferson reduced the patronage of the government to the minimum.
The strongest organization on earth is, as we all know, the Roman Catholic
Church. Viewed merely as an organization, it has but one defect,--there is no
provision in itself for limiting its expansion, and preventing its becoming an
insupportable burden. And this grievous fault belongs to all the ancient
governments, whether ecclesiastical or secular. When Louis XIV. passed a few
weeks at Versailles, accommodation had to be provided in the palace for three
thousand persons; and I have myself possessed an octavo volume of four hundred
pages which was filled with the mere catalogue of the servants of George III.,
stating only their titles, duties, and salaries. Burke's Reform Bill abolished
six hundred court offices, without making a gap in the mighty host large enough
to attract the notice of a disinterested public. Nobody appears to have missed
any of them. This tendency of governments to become excessive is so strong,
constant, and insidious, that no head of a government will ever resist it
unless the ambition that controls him is something nobler than personal.
Jefferson was one of those who gave this best proof of a disinterested love of
right principles. Every office in his control that was not necessary was
suppressed, and the whole apparatus of government--military, naval, judicial,
executive--was reduced in quantity. We might sum up his policy in this
particular in a sentence: The men you do employ, pay adequately; make it worth
the ablest men's while to serve the government; but employ no two men to do one
man's work.
Thus, while no branch of the public service was increased in cost or in
importance, most departments were diminished. Mr. Gallatin co-operated heartily
with the President in reducing the extensive corps of officials which Colonel
Hamilton had created. In 1802, the office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue
and that of Superintendent of Stamps were suppressed; which only whetted the
President's appetite for further reductions. "It remains," he wrote to
Gallatin, "to amalgamate the comptroller and auditor into one, and reduce the
register to a clerk of accounts; and then the organization will consist, as it
should at first, of a keeper of money, a keeper of accounts, and the head of
the department." Details do not concern us now; it is the spirit of the
administration which I desire to exhibit. "Let us deserve well of our country,"
he concluded, "by making her interests the end of all our plans, and not our
pomp, patronage, and irresponsibility." It is this disinterested spirit, which
shines from all the documents, the correspondence, the hasty notes of the
President and his Cabinet, that renders the administration of Jefferson so
remarkable. Bitter John Randolph conceded this merit to Jefferson. "I have
never seen," said he, in 1828, "but one administration which, seriously and in
good faith, was disposed to give up its patronage, and was willing to go
further than Congress, or even the people themselves, so far as Congress
represents their feelings, desired; and that was the first administration of
Thomas Jefferson. He, sir, was the only man I knew, or ever heard of, who
really, truly, and honestly, not only said Nolo episcopari, but actually
refused the mitre."
He endeavored to simplify the apparatus and the operations of government, so
that the rural member of Congress and his constituents might understand them.
His heart was much set on this, particularly in the finances, which, he
thought, Hamilton had purposely complicated. What we can now all see was merely
a defect of Hamilton's mind (or the inevitable failure of a third-rate man in a
first-rate place), Jefferson, stung by his calumnious vituperation, and alarmed
at the pernicious tendency of his influence, regarded as intentional
mystification. He thought that Hamilton began by puzzling the President and
Congress, and ended by getting the finances into such a snarl that he could not
"unravel" them himself. Thus he explained his meaning to Mr. Gallatin:
"Hamilton gave to the debt, in the first instance, in funding it, the most
artificial and mysterious form he could devise. He then moulded up his
appropriations of a number of scraps and fragments, many of which were nothing
at all, and applied them to different objects in reversion and remainder, until
the whole system was involved in an impenetrable fog; and while he was giving
himself the airs of providing for the payment of the debt, he left himself free
to add to it continually, as he did, in fact, instead of paying it."
Jefferson's idea was to let the money received into the treasury form one mass,
from which all payments should be made, only giving precedence to such claims
as involved the honor of the nation: that is, reserve, first, the interest of
the public debt; next, any portion of the principal of the debt due within the
year; and, finally, if there is any money left, discharge part of the debt
payable at pleasure. This was his idea, which he desired the Secretary to
"approach by every tack which previous arrangements force upon us"; until the
finances should be "as clear and intelligible as a merchant's books; so that
every member of Congress, and every man of any mind in the Union, should be
able to comprehend them, to investigate abuses, and consequently to control
them."
He abolished court etiquette, and every usage that resembled it.
Any one who passed an hour at the head-quarters of a commanding general during
the late war had an opportunity of discovering that court etiquette originated
in necessity. So many people desire access to the officer in command of a large
force in active service, that unless he is hedged about by rules, usages,
sentinels, aide-de-camps, he would, not merely be useless as an officer, but he
would soon be destroyed. Kingship began in generalship. The king was once the
ablest man in defending his people, who were always menaced by other
barbarians. The first time an ancient border chief told one of his tribe to
answer questions for him while he devoured his dinner, or persuaded two or
three to stand guard over him with their clubs while he caught an hour's sleep
between two fights, court etiquette began. It was the invention of "Divine
Right" that exaggerated the necessary regulations of a camp into a system of
adulation and semi-worship. How absurd, how oppressive, how impious, how
ridiculous, it had become in the last century, we can still partly see by the
relics of it that remain. We know how it "riled" the generous mind of Thackeray
(who was no democrat) to see prince Albert attended in shooting by a
gentleman-equerry to hand the Prince his gun, when it had been loaded by a
servant, and give it back to the servant after it had been discharged. This
trifle represents the system which was founded on the assumption that the king
and the class whom the king honored were of an essence or blood superior to
others, as the Brahmin is supposed to be innately and eternally superior to the
pariah. It all grew out of the theory, that the king is the divinely designated
Master. Jefferson regarded himself as the chosen servant of the people of his
country, entitled, if he was faithful to his trust, to the honor due from all
the worthy to all the worthy, and to no more. His person, his time, his house,
could justly claim the protection which is the right and necessity of all men
engaged in affairs numerous and important, and no more.
Accordingly, the weekly levee was at once abolished. On two days in the year,
the Fourth of July and the 1st of January, when houses and hearts are usually
open in the United States, he opened his to all who chose to visit him. On
other days, he was accessible to visitors on the terms and conditions which his
duties imposed; all were welcome who had claims upon his attention of regard,
except so far as the superior claim of the whole people restricted him. Some of
the Federalists in Washington, we are told, hit upon an expedient to balk the
President's intention of abolishing the levee. On the usual day, at the usual
hour,--two in the afternoon,--ladies and gentlemen began to arrive at the
President's house, attired in the manner customary at the levees. The President
was not at home. He was enjoying his regular two hours' ride on horseback,
which nothing but absolute necessity could make him forego. When he returned at
three o'clock, and learned that the great rooms were filled with company
waiting to see him, he guessed their object, and frustrated it gracefully, and
with perfect good-humor, by merely going among them, all accoutred as he was,
booted, spurred, splashed with mud, riding-whip in hand, and greeting them as
though the conjunction of so many guests were merely a joyous coincidence.
They, in their turn, caught the spirit of the joke, and the affair ended
happily. But it was the last of the levees.
In the great matter of dinners, he adopted, or rather he continued, the style
of Old Virginia, which proved to be to him a grievous, if not a ruinous burden,
as it had been to many a wealthier planter. The Virginia style was, simply;
Come one, come all, come again, keep coming, and bring your friends. In
President Washington's time, the business of entertaining members of Congress,
officers of the government, and distinguished strangers had been assumed by the
four members of the Cabinet; and it became so oppressive, Jefferson tells us,
that "it was among the motives for their retirement." Their successors, he
adds, profited by the experiment, and lived altogether as private individuals,
leaving to the President the whole burden of that representative hospitality
supposed then to be incumbent upon the head of a government. In Washington,
too, the President was then the only man who had a house large enough for the
entertainment of a dozen people at dinner, or fifty persons in the evening;
and, hence, there could be little social life in the place unless the President
kept open house. Shut out from all the world, ill-lodged and ill-attended, the
circle of officials, the foreign legations, and members of Congress could only
meet in an agreeable manner at the President's mansion. To the last year of
Jefferson's second term, Washington was still only a spoiled wilderness.
Francis Jackson, the English plenipotentiary, described it, in 1809, as more
resembling Hampstead Heath than any place he had ever seen, consisting of
scattered houses intersected with heath, forest, and gravel-pits. He declares
that he started a covey of partridges "about three hundred yards from the House
of Congress." In such circumstances, what could a hospitable Virginian do but
convert his residence into a general rendezvous and free club?
All would have gone well but for the dinners, to which the salary was fatally
inadequate. We get an insight into the way of life at the White House from the
recollections of Edmund Bacon of Kentucky (Jefferson at Monticello, p.113), who
was, for twenty years, Mr. Jefferson's manager. He visited Washington several
times, and always lived at the White House during his stay, dining daily at the
President's table. There were eleven servants in the house from Monticello, he
tells us, besides a French cook, a French steward, and an Irish coachman. "When
I was there," Mr. Bacon reports, "the President's house was surrounded by a
high rock wall, and there was an iron gate immediately in front of it, and from
that gate to the Capitol the street was just as straight as a gun-barrel.
Nearly all the houses were on that street." This is Mr. Bacon's recollection of
the dinners:--
"Mr. Jefferson often told me that the office of Vice-President was far
preferable to that of President. He was perfectly tired out with company. He
had a very long dining-room, and his table was chock-full every one of the
sixteen days I was there. There were Congressmen, foreigners, and all sorts of
people to dine with him. He dined at four o'clock, and they generally sat and
talked until night. It used to worry me to sit so long, and I finally quit when
I got through eating, and went off and left them. The first thing in the
morning, there was to go to market. Mr. Jefferson's steward was a very smart
man, well educated, and as much of a gentleman in his appearance as any man.
His carriage-driver would get out the wagon early in the morning, and Lamar
would go with him to Georgetown to market. I have all my life been in the habit
of getting up about four o'clock in the morning, and I went with them very
often. Lamar told me that it often took fifty dollars to pay for what marketing
they would use in a day."
At these dinners, which so wearied the soul of Mr. Bacon, there was no
etiquette except that which would have been observed at the table of any
private person of the time. Mr. Jefferson, however, as his friend, Professor
Tucker, reports, was well aware of the sensitiveness of self-love, and was most
careful never to wound it. At his more public dinners, if he found that he
could not recall the name of a member of Congress who was present, he would
give a sign to his secretary to go into the next room, where the President
would join him to get the information desired.
The system of precedence was abolished.
This was settled at a Cabinet meeting early in the first term, when the whole
barbarous code of precedence was swept away. These Rules were substituted: 1.
Residents to pay the first visit to strangers; and, among strangers, whether
native or foreign, first comers call first upon later comers. To this rule
there was allowed one exception: "Foreign ministers, from the necessity of
making themselves known, pay the first visit to the Secretary of State, which
is returned." 2. "When brought together in society, all are perfectly equal,
whether foreign or domestic, titled or untitled, in or out of office." The
President amplified these rules thus: "The families of foreign ministers,
arriving at the seat of government, receive the first visit from those of the
national ministers, as from all other residents. Members of the Legislature and
of the judiciary, independent of their offices, have a right as strangers to
receive the first visit. No title being admitted here, those of foreigners give
no precedence. Difference of grade among the diplomatic members gives no
precedence. At public ceremonies, to which the government invites the presence
of foreign ministers and their families, a convenient seat or station will be
provided for them, with any other strangers invited and the families of the
national ministers, each taking place as they arrive, and without any
precedence. To maintain the principle of equality, or of pele mele, and prevent
the growth of precedence out of courtesy, the members of the executive will
practice at their own houses, and recommend an adherence to the ancient usage
of the country, of gentlemen in mass giving precedence to the ladies in mass,
in passing from one apartment where they are assembled into another."
All this, with the friendly, humane usages that grew out of it, or were akin to
it, agreeable as it was to most persons, shocked some ladies, and offended all
men who owed their importance solely to rank or office. Mr. Jackson, English
minister in 1809, being a gentleman of sense and good-humor, was amused and
pleased, during his first conference with President Madison (which proved to be
very long), when a "negro servant brought in some glasses of punch and a
seed-cake," just as might have been done in a farm-house of the day; but his
wife lamented that her husband, after having been accustomed "to treat with the
civilized governments of Europe," should have to negotiate with the "savage
democrats" of America. It so chanced that the British Minister from 1803 to
1809, with whom Jefferson had most to do, Merry by name but not by nature, was
a fanatic of etiquette; and it appears that, previous to his presentation to
the President, he had not heard of the business-like manner in which the
affairs of the White House were conducted. He was stunned at the manner of his
reception! It made an impression upon his mind which neither explanation nor
the lapse of years could even soften, much less obliterate. And, really, when
we consider that he had passed his life at courts where the nod, the smile, the
frown, the glance, the tone, the silence, the presence, the absence, of the
head of the government were matters of importance, to be noted, recorded,
transmitted, and weighed, we ought not to laugh at this Mr. Merry as we do.
Besides, as Mr. Jefferson remarks, "Poor Merry had learned nothing of diplomacy
but its suspicions without head enough to distinguish when they were
misplaced." Nevertheless, he comes down to us borne on a billow of laughter,
and he remains to this day one of the stock jests of Washington. Thus he
recounted his woes, three years after the event, to Mr. Josiah Quincy of
Massachusetts, the ablest Federalist in Congress, and one of the worthiest:--
"I called on Mr. Madison, who accompanied me officially to introduce me to the
President. We went together to the mansion-house, I being in full official
costume, as the etiquette of my place required on such a formal introduction of
a minister from Great Britain to the President of the United States. On
arriving at the hall of audience, we found it empty, at which Mr. Madison
seemed surprised, and proceeded to an entry leading to the President's study. I
followed him, supposing the introduction was to take place in the adjoining
room. At this moment Mr. Jefferson entered the entry at the other end, and all
three of us were packed in this narrow space, from which, to make room, I was
obliged to back out. In this awkward position my introduction to the President
was made by Mr. Madison. Mr. Jefferson's appearance soon explained to me that
the general circumstances of my reception had not been accidental, but studied.
I, in my official costume, found myself, at the hour of reception he had
himself appointed, introduced to a man as President of the United States, not
merely in an undress, but ACTUALLY STANDING IN SLIPPERS DOWN AT THE HEELS, and
both pantaloons, coat, and underclothes indicative of utter slovenliness and
indifference to appearances, and in a state of negligence actually studied. I
could not doubt that the whole scene was prepared and intended as an insult,
not to me personally, but to the sovereign I represented."
It is just possible that Mr. Jefferson thought, that morning, of the time when
Gouverneur Morris kicked his heels four months in London waiting for the
promised answer of the British government to as reasonable and urgent a
communication from President Washington as one government ever made to another,
and then had to leave England without getting it. Possibly, also, it did happen
to occur to his memory, that Mr. Adams had been kept vainly waiting three years
in England for a reply to the same proposals. Perhaps, too, he remembered the
period when he was himself presented to the king of England by Mr. Adams, and
the king froze to them both; an example which was followed by the "king's
friends," and society generally; so that it required courage for a courtier to
show them anything more than cold civility at an evening party. And this, while
they were only asking the king to stay the bloody ravages of the Indians by
giving up the seven posts within the boundaries of their country. He may, too,
have thought of the time when he, as Secretary of State, would send an
important communication to the British Minister at Philadelphia, and wait many
months for an answer; but if he failed to answer a letter within three or four
days, he would be "goaded" by a second. Perhaps he thought the time had come to
show the Federalists that he did not accept Great Britain at her own valuation,
and did not believe she was fighting the battle of man and liberty against
Bonaparte. It may be, too, that he, knowing the childish politics of Europe,
and what ridiculous importance was attached there to trifles, may have paused
before ringing for a pair of shoes not down at the heels, and wondered if his
old slippers, duly reported to Bonaparte, might not drive another nail into the
bargain for Louisiana, just concluded by Mr. Livingston and Mr. Monroe, to the
great joy of President and people. All these thoughts may have flitted through
the President's mind, and held back his hand from the bell rope; but, in all
probability, he had no thoughts of any kind, and only wore the clothes he
usually did while at work.
A few weeks after, arrived in Washington the young Irish poet, Thomas Moore,
who had crossed the Atlantic in the same ship with Mr. and Mrs. Merry. To him,
also, the affronted Briton related his sorrows, and even exhibited the
President clad in the same style. Mr. Merry presented Mr. Moore to the
President at the White House. "I found him," the poet records, "sitting with
General Dearborn, and one or two other officers, and in the same homely
costume, comprising slippers and Connemara stockings, in which Mr. Merry had
been received by him, much to that formal minister's horror, when waiting on
him in full dress to deliver his credentials. My single interview with this
remarkable person was of very short duration; but to have seen and spoken to
the man who drew up the Declaration of Independence was an event not to be
forgotten." The poet did not approve of the President, and said so in several
satirical stanzas and poems in his next publication, at which Mr. Jefferson was
amused, and even surprised; for he had not before heard of this new light in
literature. Mr. Randall relates a pleasing incident to show how little he had
come to regard the stings and arrows of outrageous politics. A few years after
his retirement, a grand-daughter placed in his hands Moore's Irish Melodies, as
the book of the season, which was having a great run on both sides of the
ocean. The young lady, curious and expectant, watched him as he opened the work
and turned over the leaves. Said Jefferson, "This is the little man who
satirized me so." Reading on, he was won by the flowing music and patriotic
feeling of the verse, "Why," he said at length, "he is a poet, after all"; and,
ever after, even to the end of his life, he was fond of reading certain
favorites among the poems of Thomas Moore.
But poor Merry's troubles were not yet at an end. He and his wife dined one day
at the White House; and, when dinner was announced, the President offered his
arm to the lady nearest him at the moment, Mrs. Madison,--not to Mrs. Merry,
who was on the other side of the room! Insult upon insult! "Poor Merry" made
such an outcry at this in Washington, that Mr. Madison deemed it best to
explain the circumstances to Munroe, the American Minister in London, that he
might be prepared to meet Merry's version. Mr. Merry did relate his grievances
to the English Minister for Foreign Affairs; who, however, forebore to mention
the matter to Monroe. If he had, Monroe was ready for him; for, besides being
fully alive to the humor of the affair, he had seen, a few weeks before, in an
official London drawing-room, the wife of an under-secretary of state accorded
precedence over his own. Mrs. Merry went no more to the White House, and her
husband only went when official duty compelled. But nothing could tire the
placable good-nature of Jefferson. Some time after, desirous to restore social
intercourse, he caused Mr. Merry to be informally asked whether he and his wife
would accept an invitation to a family dinner at the President's house; and
receiving, as he understood, an affirmative intimation, Mr. Jefferson sent the
invitation, written with his own hand. Merry rose to his opportunity. He wrote
to the Secretary of State, asking whether the President of the United States
had invited him as a private gentleman or a British plenipotentiary; for, if as
a private gentleman, he must obtain the king's permission before he could
accept; if in his official character, he must have an assurance that he would
be treated with the respect due to it. Madison, with short civility, waived the
solution of this problem, and the matter dropped. But it was not till 1809 that
British interests in America were confided to abler hands.
Some other points of public etiquette were now settled on rational principles,
once and forever. The fussy incompetents recently in power had been concerned
to know the relation which the President sustained to the governors of
States,--precisely how much more exalted a President was than a governor, the
exact degree of deference a governor should show to a President, and the forms
in which that deference should be expressed. In July, 1801, the governor of
Virginia asked the President to indicate the etiquette which he thought should
regulate the communications between the State governments and the general
government. His reply in substance was: Let there be no special etiquette.
Between President and governor, each being the supreme head of an independent
government, no difference of rank can be admitted. They are equals. Let us
continue, then, as in General Washington's time, to write freely, just as
public business requires and with no more ceremony than obvious propriety and
convenience dictate. If it be possible," he said, "to be certainly conscious of
anything, I am conscious of feeling no difference between writing to the
highest and lowest being on earth."
The two miles of tenacious, yellow mud that lay "straight as a gun-barrel"
between the White House and the Capitol, assisted to reconcile all but the
extreme Federalists to a change in the mode of intercourse between the
President and Congress. Hitherto the President had opened Congress by a speech,
framed on the model of a king of England's speech, and delivered it to both
houses assembled in the Senate Chamber. He had been wont to ride to and from
the Capitol in a coach and six, which was followed by coaches and four bearing
members of the government and others, the whole forming a considerable
procession. When the President had retired, the houses separated, and each
appointed a committee to prepare an address in reply. Of late years, these
addresses had furnished the pretext for long and impassioned debates on party
politics, lasting one, two, and even three weeks, the minority always striving
to reduce the eulogy of the address to the minimum. When, after this desperate
struggle, an address had been agreed upon, the House voting it rode in such
state as members could command to the abode of the President, and stood around
him in a solemn semicircle, while one of their number read to him what he had
already read fifty times for himself, besides fifty columns of debate upon it.
Then, the President read a short, formal acknowledgment of the address; after
which the members returned to their chamber and began the business of the
session.
Federalist gentlemen discovered, on the morning of December 8, 1801, that this
fine opportunity for oratorical display and partisan recrimination was not to
be afforded them. Scene, the Senate Chamber; the chairman in his revolving
chair; members in their seats. Enter a young gentleman, Meriwether Lewis,
perhaps, private secretary to the President, bearing a mass of documents, and a
note from the President to the Vice-President:--
"SIR,--The circumstances under which we find ourselves at this place rendering
inconvenient the mode heretofore practised, of making, by personal address, the
first communications between the legislative and executive branches, I have
adopted that by message, as used on all subsequent occasions through the
session. In doing this, I have had principal regard to the convenience of the
legislature, to the economy of their time, to their relief from the
embarrassment of immediate answers on subjects not yet fully before them, and
to the benefits thence resulting to the public affairs. Trusting that a
procedure founded on these motives will meet their approbation, I beg leave
through you, sir, to communicate the inclosed copy with the documents
accompanying it, to the honorable the Senate, and pray you to accept for
yourself and them the homage of my high regard and consideration."
Thus the present usage was established, to the great content of all rational
beings. He was himself well pleased with the first results of the experiment.
"Our winter campaign," he wrote to Dr. Rush, "has opened with more good-humor
than I expected. By sending a message, instead of making a speech, at the
opening of the session, I have prevented the bloody conflict to which the
making an answer would have committed them."
Other changes of this nature were these: He discontinued the practice of
assigning a frigate for the conveyance of ministers across the ocean. He
declined to write official letters of condolence to the widows or families of
deceased officers. He would not have his birthday celebrated by the usual
balls; and, to prevent this, refused to let the date of his birth be
communicated. He would not deny himself any innocent pleasure, such as
attending the races near Washington, from any false ideas of official dignity.
He refused to appoint days of fasting or thanksgiving, on the ground that to do
so would be indirectly to assume an authority over religious exercises, which
the Constitution has expressly forbidden. A recommendation from the chief
magistrate, he thought, would carry with it so much authority that any person
or sect disregarding it would suffer some degree of odium. "Fasting and
prayer," said he, "are religious exercises; the enjoining them an act of
discipline." "And does the change in the nature of the penalty make the
recommendation less a law of conduct for those to whom it is directed?" He
declined to make anything resembling an official tour or progress, or to
receive while travelling attentions directed to his office. To secularize and
to rebublicanize the government completely, remaining himself a plain American
citizen,--these were among the objects which he steadily pursued and which he
accomplished.
He was resolved not to be a personage. He would be Thomas Jefferson, and
nothing else. Pleasing anecdotes are those which Mr. Randall relates in
illustration of this point, particularly that one in which the President
figures as the thoughtful and affectionate grandfather to his namesake, Thomas
Jefferson Randolph, who stopped at Washington a few days on his way to attend
the scientific lectures at Philadelphia. The President came into his room one
day, had him unpack his trunk, took pencil and paper, and made a list of things
he still lacked saying, "You will need this and this at Philadelphia"; and then
going about among the stores of Washington with the lad, and buying the
articles required; finishing the performance by asking to see his pocket-book,
and handing it back to him much better furnished than when he had taken it.
That story, too, of the President carrying the rough Kentuckian, sitting
solitary on the bank of a swollen stream, let the gay young men of the
President's party all pass on and flounder across the river, without making
known his desire. Last of all rode the President. Him the rough wayfarer
addressed, and Mr. Jefferson took him up behind, without ado. Being asked why
he selected that particular individual of the party, the Kentuckian replied: "I
reckon a man carries Yes or No in his face. The young chaps' faces said, No;
the old man's said, Yes." And, one day, in his daily ride near Washington, the
president fell into conversation with a stranger. Politics becoming a topic, he
had the pleasure of hearing, not only his measures roundly denounced, but his
character most indecently reviled. "Do you know Mr. Jefferson personally?" he
asked. "No; nor do I want to." "But is it fair play to believe and repeat such
stories, and then not dare to meet the subject of them face to face, and trust
to your own senses!" "I will never shrink from meeting Mr. Jefferson if he
comes in my way." "Will you go to his house to-morrow, and be introduced to
him, if I will meet you there?" He consented, and Jefferson galloped on.
Instantly it occurred to the traveller, that it was the President himself with
whom he had been conversing. But he kept his appointment, appearing at the
hour, attired in his best. "I have called, Mr. Jefferson," said he, "to
apologize for having said to a stranger--" Here the President, laughing, broke
in and finished the sentence--"hard things of an imaginary personage who is no
relation of mine." The stranger tried to get in his apology, but the President
laughed it down, insisted on his staying to dinner, and made a friend of him
and all his family.
He declined to receive presents while in office.
But he made one exception. In 1806, he received a present of a bust of the
Emperor of Russia, Alexander, with whom he had much friendly intercourse during
his second term. He thus acknowledged the receipt of this work: "I had laid
down as a law for my conduct while in office, and hitherto scrupulously
observed to accept of no present beyond a book, a pamphlet, or other curiosity
of minor value; as well to avoid imputation on my motives of action as to shut
out a practice susceptible of such abuse. But my particular esteem for the
character of the Emperor places his image, in my mind above the scope of law.
I receive it, therefore, and shall cherish it with affection. It nourishes the
contemplation of all the good placed in his power, and of his disposition to do
it."
An instance of his scrupulousness with regard to deriving personal advantage
from his office has only lately come to light. A private letter of his to
General Muhlenburg, collector at Philadelphia, concerning a purchase of wine,
was found, a few years ago, by a descendant of that officer, and sent to Mr.
Greeley for publication. If I were a collector, I would have it printed,
framed, and hung up in my custom-house. It is dated February 6, 1803:--
"Dear Sir:--Mons. d'Yrujo, the Spanish Minister here, has been so kind as to
spare me two hundred bottles of Champagne, part of a larger parcel imported for
his own use, and consequently privileged from duty; but it would be improper
for me to take the benefit of that. I must therefore ask the favor of you to
take the proper measures for paying the duty, for which purpose I inclose you a
bank check for twenty-two and a half dollars, the amount of it. If it could be
done without mentioning my name, it would avoid ill-intended observations, as
in some such way as this, 'By duty paid on a part of such a parcel of wines not
entitled to privilege,' or in any other way you please. The wine was imported
into Philadelphia probably about midsummer last. Accept assurances of my great
esteem and respect.
"Th. Jefferson.
"General Muhlenberg."
It would be absurd to praise such an act as this, because it was simply right.
Nor ought it to be within the choice of any public officer, of any grade
whatever, to do otherwise. It will doubtless, before many years have passed, be
an impeachable offence for any man holding a public office to accept so much as
a free ride on a horsecar. This is a point that comes home to suffering sons of
Manhattan, who remember that a system of plunder which reached an average of
ten millions a year began in aldermen pocketing bundles of cigars and quires of
note-paper in the old corporation "tearoom."
He used the prestige and the opportunities of his office for the public
advantage.
His introduction of better breeds of domestic animals into Virginia is a case
in point. With the aid of Mr. Livingston, Minister at Paris, after a long
course of manoeuvering and trouble, he managed to get six merino sheep as far
on their way to Albemarle as Fredericksburg, half for himself, half for
Madison, and all for Virginia; and wrote to his manager to go with Mr.
Madison's head man to get them home. The two managers, when they caught sight
of these animals, so renowned at the time throughout the country, were wofully
disappointed. "The sheep were little bits of things," reports Mr. Bacon, "and
Graves said he would not give his riding-whip for the whole lot." Their
instructions were to divide them by tossing up for the first choice. "So,"
says Mr. Bacon, "I put my hand into my pocket, and drew out a dollar, and said,
'Head or tail?' I got the best buck. He was a little fellow, but his wool was
as fine almost as cotton. When I got home, I put a notice in the paper at
Charlottesville, that persons who wished to improve their stock could send us
two ewes, and we would keep them until the lambs were old enough to wean, and
then give the owners the choice of the lambs, and they leave the other lamb and
both of the ewes. We got the greatest lot of sheep, more than we wanted; two
or three hundred, I think; and in a few years we had an immense flock. People
came long distances to buy our full-blooded sheep. At first we sold them for
fifty dollars, but they soon fell to thirty and twenty; and before I left Mr.
Jefferson, merino sheep were so numerous that they sold about as cheap as
common ones.
Next, he imported some of the broad-tailed sheep from Barbary, which made
splendid mutton, but would not thrive in Virginia. He introduced also a
superior kind of Guinea pigs. Himself, Mr. Madison, and General Dearborn
joined in importing six hogs of a kind which Mr. Bacon tells us were called
Calcutta hogs; black and white, short-legged, long-bodied, easily kept, and not
given to rooting,--a very great success in every respect. "Mr. Jefferson,"
remarks Mr. Bacon, "didn't care about making money from his imported stock. His
great object was to get it widely scattered over the country, and he left all
the arrangements to me. I told the people to bring three sows, and when they
came for them, they might take two and leave one. In this way he soon got a
large number of hogs, and the stock was scattered over that whole country."
His neighbors derived benefit even from his salary, which, to the imagination
of primitive Virginia, seemed inexhaustible. A larger mill was among the
urgent wants of the neighborhood, Mr. Bacon relates, and the people thought
that, "as Mr. Jefferson had a large salary, he was better able to build it than
anybody else." He undertook the work, since "he was always anxious to benefit
the community as much as possible"; and Mr. Bacon, assisted by an engineer from
the North, superintended the construction. In his homely, excellent way, the
manager relates the hopeful rise of the structure, "built of rock," four
stories high, with "four run of stone," and a dam and race that cost a thousand
dollars; and he tells us what minute directions Mr. Jefferson kept sending from
Washington about it, and how he preferred it to all the works in progress on
his estate. The mill complete, grain came in in surprising quantities, until
eleven thousand bushels were stored, awaiting their turn to be ground. Coopers,
millers, and teamsters were all in full activity; when, alas! in the midst of a
great freshet, Mr. Bacon saw the dam swept away by the torrent of waters. "I
though we were ruined," he says; "I never felt worse. I did not know what we
should do." Mr. Jefferson being at home at the time, Bacon hurried off to the
mountain-top to convey to him the dreadful news. There he met the lord of the
mansion just from the breakfast table, calm as a May morning. He asked, "Have
you heard from the river?" "Yes, sir," replied the doleful manager, "I have
just come from there with very bad news. The milldam is all swept away." "Well,
sir," said Mr. Jefferson, with perfect serenity of manner, "we can't make a new
dam this summer, but we will get Lewis's ferry-boat, with our own, and get the
hands from all the quarters, and boat in rock enough in place of the dam to
answer for the present; and, next summer, I will send to Baltimore and get
ship-bolts, and make a dam that the freshet can't wash away." Which was done.
"You never saw his countenance ruffled," Mr. Bacon observes. "No odds what
happened, it always maintained the same expression."
How eagerly he availed himself of his opportunities for increasing the sum of
knowledge, his letters exhibit, and the fact is part of the history of that
age. It was his thought that sent Meriwether Lewis and William Clarke up the
Missouri to its sources in the Rocky Mountains, across those mountains to the
Columbia River, and down the Columbia until huge waves rolling in from the
ocean and tossing high their light canoes notified them that they had reached
the Pacific. Counting from the time when Captain John Smith sailed up the
Chickahominy in search of the South Sea, the world had waited two hundred years
for this exploration. Never was a piece of work of that kind better done or
better chronicled; for it was Jefferson who selected the two heroes that
conducted it. Captain Lewis was the son of one of his most valued Albemarle
neighbors. Lieutenant Clarke was the brother of that General George Rogers
Clarke who held back the Indians from joining in the war of the Revolution; and
both of them were such masters of all frontier arts, that the perilous
expedition of two years, four months, and ten days was one joyous holiday
excursion to them. Returning to St. Louis laden with spoils and trophies,
Captain Lewis, besides his journals and other official results, sends off
exultingly to the President "sixty-seven specimens of earths, salts, and
minerals, and sixty specimens of plants." It was Jefferson, too, who set on
foot the two exploring expeditions of Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike, whose
name lives in that of the peak which he discovered, and in those of ten
counties of the United States. Pike was the first American who explored the
Upper Mississippi beyond the Falls of St. Anthony; noting the sites of the
cities now rising on its banks, and shaking hands on the way with "Monsieur
Dubuque," who was working the lead-mines and lording it over a wide domain.
Lieutenant Pike was the first American to explore the valley of the Arkansas.
He said truly, in one of his letters, that the regions which he had traversed
were little more known to the world than the wilds in the interior of Africa.
In seventy years we behold them populous, and more familiar to our knowledge
than the next county.
It was Jefferson who encouraged Astor to attempt his scheme of Northwestern
trade,--a scheme which was as feasible as it was audacious, and which only the
War of 1812 frustrated. It is interesting to observe, in view of the present
importance of the western silver-mines, that, in 1808, the secret of their
existence, "seventeen hundred miles from St. Louis," was confided to the
President, who, however, considering the menacing attitude of Spain, could only
give verbal encouragement to the exploration sought. He jocularly writes to
Gallatin: "I enclose for your information the account of a silver-mine to fill
your treasury." As for the bones of the mammoth, he had enough of them at last,
and kept the Philosophical Society, of which he was still the president,
abundantly supplied with objects of curiosity and investigation. And was there
ever such an indefatigable recorder? Among his papers is a leaf thus entitled:
"Statement of the vegetable market of Washington during a period of eight
years, wherein the earliest and latest appearance of each article within the
whole eight years is noted." One small page suffices, but it is complete; the
list embraces thirty-seven articles. He could tell at a glance that the
earliest appearance of "sprouts" was on the 22d of February, and the latest,
May 8th and July 9th. He refutes Dickens's satire of red-tape. In a minute or
two, he could put his hand upon any letter or document, any entry or
memorandum, of the tens of thousands which he possessed; and of all this myriad
mass of details he was the master, not the slave.
He preserved perfect harmony in his Cabinet during the whole of both terms.
One reason was this: there was not an egotist among them. The pugnacious
traits, such as vanity, jealousy, personal ambition, and the other commonplace
forms of self-love, were extinguished, or, at least, subordinated in them all.
"Our administration," wrote Jefferson once, "now drawing to a close, I have a
sublime pleasure in believing will be distinguished as much by having placed
itself above all the passions which could disturb its harmony as by the great
operations by which it will have advanced the well-being of the nation." All of
them were modernized persons. The masters of the past were, of necessity,
soldiers and men of the soldierly spirit. The masters of our modern world are
educated men of business. These five gentlemen, Jefferson, Madison, Gallatin,
Dearborn, and Robert Smith, were all of this description; for Dearborn was only
a soldier while his country was invaded; just as the most peaceful citizen
becomes warlike when attacked by a ruffian. The military type of man, able as
it was and is, was not represented in the Cabinet at all. It is also true, that
the Jeffersonian theory of government is precisely the one that tasks the
intellect and stirs the passions least, because it excludes even from
consideration seven tenths of the questions which usually most perplex
governments, its chief object being to protect rights, not interests. Interests
are complex; rights are simple. The tariff question is a puzzler if you view it
as affecting existing interests; but if you put the case thus: Has an American
citizen a right to buy a pair of Sunday trousers, London made, for four
dollars, instead of paying twenty-two for the Broadway article?--the case is
within finite comprehension. Ralph Waldo Emerson and John G. Whittier go to
Washington demanding to be protected, at home and abroad, in their right to the
product of their lifetime's arduous and noble toil. Pirate publisher meets them
there with the thieves' natural plea: Stolen books are cheaper than books
honestly paid for. Republican government waives all that complicated nonsense
out of hearing and considers but two points, both easy: 1. Does the
Constitution give us jurisdiction? 2. Is the demand of these ornaments of their
country just? How adapted to human capacity such questions! A wayfaring man,
unless a book-peddler, need not err therein.
But there never was a time when the politics of the world were so difficult as
then. "Every country but one," as Jefferson said, "demolished; a conqueror
roaming over the earth with havoc and destruction, a pirate spreading misery
and ruin over the face of the ocean. Indeed, my friend, ours is a bed of roses.
And the system of government which shall keep us afloat amidst this wreck of
the world will be immortalized in history." It was a bed of roses, because the
simple aim of the Republican administration was to have nothing whatever to do
with this prodigious and astounding broil, except to sell refreshing provisions
to both combatants, and pick up anything in the way of Louisiana or so that
might get loose in the contest.
But, after all, it is the Arnold who makes the Rugby; it is the Fellenberg who
renders possible the "self-governing college," so pleasingly revealed to us by
Mr. Robert Dale Owen; and it was the large, benign, commanding intelligence of
the chief which alone could have united and exalted a group of men to the
height maintained by this peerless administration. Washington, Adams, and
Madison all had dissension in their Cabinets. Jefferson alone had none. He gave
them his confidence without reserve. "If I had the universe to choose from," he
said to them all, in 1801, "I could not change one of my associates to my
better satisfaction," and, in 1809, he said the same, with only a change of
tense. Nor did anything like a serious difference of opinion ever arise among
them. "All matters of importance or difficulty," he once wrote, "are submitted
to all the heads of departments composing the Cabinet, sometimes by the
President consulting them separately and successively, as they happen to call
upon him; but, in the greatest cases, by calling them together, discussing the
subject maturely, and finally taking the vote, in which the President counts
himself but as one. So that, in all important cases, the executive is in fact a
Directory, which certainly the President might control; but of this there never
was an example, either in the first or the present administration."
In his use of the pardoning power, he was governed by principles that rendered
that absurd relic of Divine Right comparatively harmless.
These principles were two in number. In a letter to Edmund Randolph, of 1808,
he stated them both: 1. To entitle a criminal to the remission of a penalty,
"extraordinary and singular considerations are necessary": otherwise, the
pardon of the criminal would be "to repeal the law" that condemned him. 2. "The
opinion of the judges who sat in the cause I have ever required as
indispensable to ground a pardon.
He submitted to the outrages of the press.
We are now too familiar with this policy to appreciate either its novelty or
its difficulty in the early years of the present century. Jefferson both
believed and proved that a public man, fit for his place and doing his duty,
cannot be injured by a hostile press. This truth we now all know, and have seen
it tested many times; but in 1801 it was a discovery. Nor was there then in
Christendom one government besides that of the United States strong and able
enough to permit freedom of the press. Bonaparte's, of course, was not. Pitt's
was not. Nor was there a government in all Europe where the idea of a free
press could be entertained. And what made Jefferson's triumph the more
remarkable was, that the Federalists were the "vocal class." It was they who
filled most pulpits, wrote most books, edited most papers, presided in most
courts, pleaded most causes, and taught in most colleges. They were denominated
the educated class. Education, at that day, did not mean the acquisition of
knowledge, but of scholarship; which, while it cultivates the communicating
talents, may leave the prejudices intact, and is compatible with the last
degree of mental servility and narrowness. A man may become a genuine scholar
and remain a Jesuit. The Federalist leaders, too, were exasperated beyond
mortal endurance. Their self-love was torn all to pieces. They had predicted
their own speedy return to power: they saw their minority dwindling at every
election. They foretold anarchy: they saw universal order and general content.
They had prophesied financial chaos; they saw every obligation of the
government met, its debt steadily diminished, its credit perfect, its only
embarrassment a surplus. They had expected a suppression of the navy; they now
saw, for the first time, the navy put to its legitimate use in terminating the
piracies of the Algerines. They had dreaded an expulsion from office of all
their adherents: they saw the right of opinion respected, and no man disturbed
in his place, except for a reason that did not include his political creed.
They had predicted a reign of loafers and scallawags: they saw the great
offices filled with men who were both refined by scholarship and enlarged by
knowledge. They had foretold a base subserviency to France: they saw the
President win from France the most valuable acquisition that one country ever
gained from another since the creation, and this without bloodshed. They had
predicted insult and rash hostility to Great Britain: they saw the moment come
when, with universal acclamation, Jefferson could have had a war with England,
and yet he held back the conflict for another four years, every month of which
made that conflict less unequal.
It is not in mortals to behold with equanimity such brilliant and triumphant
wisdom in the career of a person against whom they are publicly committed. The
leading Federalists seem to have been equally puzzled and indignant. C. C.
Pinckney could only attribute the strengthening hold Jefferson had of the
public confidence to "the infatuation of the people." John Quincy Adams thought
that Jefferson's success was owing to an unaccountable run of good luck.
"Fortune," said he, "has taken a pleasure in making Jefferson's greatest
weaknesses and follies issue more successfully than if he had been inspired
with the profoundest wisdom." (This in 1804. Before Mr. Jefferson went out of
office Adams was a Republican.) Gouverneur Morris, the jovial and witty
aristocrat, set it down, Froude-fashion, to the natural baseness of merchants
and traders. It was a favorite fiction of the class of Tories represented by
Morris, that the counting room is the centre and resort of all that is sordid
and contemptible. But Morris did not despair of the republic. "When the
people," said he, "have been long enough drunk, they will get sober; but while
the frolic lasts, to reason with them is useless. Their present leaders take
advantage of their besotted condition, and tie their hands and feet; but if
this prevents them from running into the fire, why should we, who are their
friends, complain?" Fisher Ames thought it was all a piece of impudent,
reckless imposture, which just happened to succeed. "Never before," wrote he,
"Was it attempted to play the fool on so great a scale." Hamilton solved the
enigma with the utmost ease, in his old manner; his central, immutable
principle being this: Man is an ass. In his usual high-stepping style, he
remarks: "Mankind are forever destined to be the dupes of bold and cunning
imposture." Old John Adams, "nursing his wrath to keep it warm," fulminated
comparative history, but thought the people would open their eyes at last.
"If," said he, "the talents, the policy, the address, the power, the bigotry
and tyranny of Archbishop Laud and the court of Charles the First were not able
to destroy or discredit sound principles in 1630 or 1635, there is little cause
of apprehension for them from the feeble efforts of the frivolous libertines
who are combining, conspiring, and intriguing against them in 1802."
How instructive is all this! How eloquent it is against intrusting the rights
of a nation to the custody of a class!
If the uppermost men of the opposition wrote thus in their confidential
correspondence, we can imagine the tone and style of the party press. The
falsehoods which had been accumulating for three Presidential elections, with
the new atrocities of Callender and others, formed a mass of calumny from which
the mildest and the fiercest county editor could draw every week the slanders
most congenial to his disposition. They did so. The State courts gave members
of the administration a fair means of redress, and some of them appear to have
thought of bringing suits for libel. Jefferson avowed their right to do so; but
said he, in various forms of expression, "Let us prove to the world that an
administration which has nothing to conceal has nothing to fear from the
press." It is the means which the press has of giving publicity to events which
makes it one of the great powers of the modern world. When it utters falsehood,
the party injured is itself. "I admit," he wrote to an old friend of 1808,
"that restraining the press to truth, as the present laws do, is the only way
of making it useful. But I have thought it necessary first to prove that it can
never be dangerous." Again, in his second inaugural, he spoke of the importance
to mankind of this experiment to ascertain whether a government that did no act
which it would be unwilling the whole world should witness, could be written
down. "The experiment has been tried," said he. "You have witnessed the scene;
our fellow-citizens looked on, cool and collected; they saw the latent source
from which these outrages proceeded; they gathered around their public
functionaries, and when the Constitution called them to the decision by
suffrage they pronounced their verdict, them, and consolatory to the friend of
man, who believes he may be trusted with the control of his own affairs."
Such were some of the preliminary and minor excellences of this unique
administration. Of themselves, they would not have carried it far. We are
familiar with the theological student of tradition who advertised for a home in
a family where a pious example would be considered an equivalent for his board.
Of similar absurdity we might accuse the head of a nation who should expect to
satisfy the people by being a virtuous, attentive, and rational man. That,
indeed, is highly desirable; but it was for something else that the people
assigned to Mr. Jefferson quarters in their White House at Washington.
"The Art of Being President, Gathered from the Experience of Thomas
Jefferson" by James Parton, The Atlantic Monthly, August, 1873.
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