and patriotism of the people have kept pace with this
augmented responsibility. In no country has education
been so widely diffused. Domestic peace has nowhere
so largely reigned. The close bonds of social
intercourse have in no instance prevailed with such
harmony over a space so vast. All forms of religion
have united for the first time to diffuse charity and
piety, because for the first time in the history of
nations all have been totally untrammeled and absolutely
free. The deepest recesses of the wilderness
have been penetrated; yet instead of the rudeness in
the social condition consequent upon such adventures
elsewhere, numerous communities have sprung up, already
unrivaled in prosperity, general intelligence, internal
tranquillity, and the wisdom of their political institutions.
Internal improvement, the fruit of individual enterprise,
fostered by the protection of the States, has added
new links to the Confederation and fresh rewards to
provident industry. Doubtful questions of domestic
policy have been quietly settled by mutual forbearance,
and agriculture, commerce, and manufactures minister
to each other. Taxation and public debt, the
burdens which bear so heavily upon all other countries,
have pressed with comparative lightness upon us.
Without one entangling alliance, our friendship is
prized by every nation, and the rights of our citizens
are everywhere respected, because they are known to
be guarded by a united, sensitive, and watchful people.
To this practical operation of our institutions, so
evident and successful, we owe that increased attachment
to them which is among the most cheering exhibitions
of popular sentiment and will prove their best security
in time to come against foreign or domestic assault.
This review of the results of our institutions for
half a century, without exciting a spirit of vain
exultation, should serve to impress upon us the great
principles from which they have sprung—constant
and direct supervision by the people over every public
measure, strict forbearance on the part of the Government
from exercising any doubtful or disputed powers, and
a cautious abstinence from all interference with concerns
which properly belong and are best left to State regulations
and individual enterprise.
Full information of the state of our foreign affairs
having been recently on different occasions submitted
to Congress, I deem it necessary now to bring to your
notice only such events as have subsequently occurred
or are of such importance as to require particular
attention.
The most amicable dispositions continue to be exhibited
by all the nations with whom the Government and citizens
of the United States have an habitual intercourse.
At the date of my last annual message Mexico was the
only nation which could not be included in so gratifying
a reference to our foreign relations.