The diffusion of material comfort among masses of
men, on a scale and to an amount abolishing peasantry
forever; the dissemination of education, which is the
means of life to the mind as comfort is to the body,
in no more narrow bounds, but through the State universal,
abolishing ignorance; the development of human capacity
in intelligence, energy, and character, under the
stimulus of the open career, with a result in enlarging
and concentrating the available talent of the State
to a compass and with an efficiency and diversity
by which alone was possible the material subjugation
of the continent which it has made tributary to man’s
life; the planting of self-respect in millions of
men, and of respect for others grounded in self-respect,
constituting a national characteristic now first to
be found, and to be found in the bosom of every child
of our soil, and, with this, of a respect for womanhood,
making the common ways safe and honourable for her,
unknown before; the moulding of a conservative force,
so sure, so deep, so instinctive, that it has its
seat in the very vitals of the State and there maintains
as its blood and bone the principles which the fathers
handed down in institutions containing our happiness,
security, and destiny, yet maintains them as a living
present, not as a dead past; the incorporation into
our body politic of millions of half-alien people,
without disturbance, and with an assimilating power
that proves the universal value of democracy as a
mode of dealing with the race, as it now is; an enthronement
of reason as the sole arbiter in a free forum where
every man may plead, and have the judgment of all
men upon the cause; a rooted repugnance to use force;
an aversion to war; a public and private generosity
that knows no bounds of sect, race, or climate; a
devotion to public duty that excuses no man and least
of all the best, and has constantly raised the standard
of character; a commiseration for all unfortunate peoples
and warm sympathy with them in their struggles; a
love of country as inexhaustible in sacrifice as it
is unparalleled in ardour; and a will to serve the
world for the rise of man into such manhood as we have
achieved, such prosperity as earth has yielded us,
and such justice as, by the grace of heaven, is established
within our borders. Is it not a great work? and
all these blessings, unconfined as the element, belong
to all our people. In the course of these results,
the imperfection of human nature and its institutions
has been present; but a just comparison of our history
with that of other nations, ages, and systems, and
of our present with our past, shows that such imperfection
in society has been a diminishing element with us,
and that a steady progress has been made in methods,
measures, and men. No great issue, in a whole
century, has been brought to a wrong conclusion.
Our public life has been starred with illustrious
names, famous for honesty, sagacity, and humanity,
and, above all, for justice. Our Presidents in
particular have been such men as democracy should
breed, and some of them such men as humanity has seldom
bred. We are a proud nation, and justly; and,
looking to the future, beholding these things multiplied
million-fold in the lives of the children of the land
to be, we may well humbly own God’s bounty which
has earliest fallen upon us, the first fruits of democracy
in the new ages of a humaner world.