and whose magistrates are sworn to disregard those
laws when they come in conflict with those passed
by another? What shows conclusively that the States
can not be said to have reserved an undivided sovereignty
is that they expressly ceded the right to punish treason—not
treason against their separate power, but treason
against the United States. Treason is an offense
against
sovereignty, and sovereignty must reside
with the power to punish it. But the reserved
rights of the States are not less sacred because they
have, for their common interest, made the General
Government the depository of these powers. The
unity of our political character (as has been shown
for another purpose) commenced with its very existence.
Under the royal Government we had no separate character;
our opposition to its oppressions began as
united
colonies. We were the
United States
under the Confederation, and the name was perpetuated
and the Union rendered more perfect by the Federal
Constitution. In none of these stages did we consider
ourselves in any other light than as forming one nation.
Treaties and alliances were made in the name of all.
Troops were raised for the joint defense. How,
then, with all these proofs that under all changes
of our position we had, for designated purposes and
with defined powers, created national governments,
how is it that the most perfect of those several modes
of union should now be considered as a mere league
that may be dissolved at pleasure? It is from
an abuse of terms. Compact is used as synonymous
with league, although the true term is not employed,
because it would at once show the fallacy of the reasoning.
It would not do to say that our Constitution was only
a league, but it is labored to prove it a compact
(which in one sense it is) and then to argue that as
a league is a compact every compact between nations
must of course be a league, and that from such an
engagement every sovereign power has a right to recede.
But it has been shown that in this sense the States
are not sovereign, and that even if they were, and
the national Constitution had been formed by compact,
there would be no right in any one State to exonerate
itself from its obligations.
So obvious are the reasons which forbid this secession
that it is necessary only to allude to them.
The Union was formed for the benefit of all.
It was produced by mutual sacrifices of interests and
opinions. Can those sacrifices be recalled?
Can the States who magnanimously surrendered their
title to the territories of the West recall the grant?
Will the inhabitants of the inland States agree to
pay the duties that may be imposed without their assent
by those on the Atlantic or the Gulf for their own
benefit? Shall there be a free port in one State
and onerous duties in another? No one believes
that any right exists in a single State to involve
all the others in these and countless other evils
contrary to engagements solemnly made. Everyone
must see that the other States, in self-defense, must
oppose it at all hazards.