and to the friends of good government throughout the
world. Its enemies have beheld our prosperity
with a vexation they could not conceal; it was a standing
refutation of their slavish doctrines, and they will
point to our discord with the triumph of malignant
joy. It is yet in your power to disappoint them.
There is yet time to show that the descendants of
the Pinckneys, the Sumpters, the Rutledges, and of
the thousand other names which adorn the pages of your
Revolutionary history will not abandon that Union to
support which so many of them fought and bled and
died. I adjure you, as you honor their memory,
as you love the cause of freedom, to which they dedicated
their lives, as you prize the peace of your country,
the lives of its best citizens, and your own fair
fame, to retrace your steps. Snatch from the
archives of your State the disorganizing edict of its
convention; bid its members to reassemble and promulgate
the decided expressions of your will to remain in
the path which alone can conduct you to safety, prosperity,
and honor. Tell them that compared to disunion
all other evils are light, because that brings with
it an accumulation of all. Declare that you will
never take the field unless the star-spangled banner
of your country shall float over you; that you will
not be stigmatized when dead, and dishonored and scorned
while you live, as the authors of the first attack
on the Constitution of your country. Its destroyers
you can not be. You may disturb its peace, you
may interrupt the course of its prosperity, you may
cloud its reputation for stability; but its tranquillity
will be restored, its prosperity will return, and
the stain upon its national character will be transferred
and remain an eternal blot on the memory of those who
caused the disorder.
Fellow-citizens of the United States, the threat of
unhallowed disunion, the names of those once respected
by whom it is uttered, the array of military force
to support it, denote the approach of a crisis in our
affairs on which the continuance of our unexampled
prosperity, our political existence, and perhaps that
of all free governments may depend. The conjuncture
demanded a free, a full, and explicit enunciation,
not only of my intentions, but of my principles of
action; and as the claim was asserted of a right by
a State to annul the laws of the Union, and even to
secede from it at pleasure, a frank exposition of
my opinions in relation to the origin and form of our
Government and the construction I give to the instrument
by which it was created seemed to be proper.
Having the fullest confidence in the justness of the
legal and constitutional opinion of my duties which
has been expressed, I rely with equal confidence on
your undivided support in my determination to execute
the laws, to preserve the Union by all constitutional
means, to arrest, if possible, by moderate and firm
measures the necessity of a recourse to force; and
if it be the will of Heaven that the recurrence of
its primeval curse on man for the shedding of a brother’s
blood should fall upon our land, that it be not called
down by any offensive act on the part of the United
States.