The American alliance was produced by their republican
principles and republican policy. This new relation
undoubtedly did much. The discourses and cabals
that it produced, the intercourse that it established,
and, above all, the example, which made it seem practicable
to establish a republic in a great extent of country,
finished the work, and gave to that part of the revolutionary
faction a degree of strength which required other energies
than the late king possessed, to resist, or even to
restrain. It spread everywhere; but it was nowhere
more prevalent than in the heart of the court.
The palace of Versailles, by its language, seemed a
forum of democracy. To have pointed out to most
of those politicians, from their dispositions and
movements, what has since happened, the fall of their
own monarchy, of their own laws, of their own religion,
would have been to furnish a motive the more for pushing
forward a system on which they considered all these
things as encumbrances. Such in truth they were.
And we have seen them succeed not only in the destruction
of their monarchy, but in all the objects of ambition
that they proposed from that destruction. When
I contemplate the scheme on which France is formed,
and when I compare it with these systems, with which
it is, and ever must be, in conflict, those things
which seem as defects in her polity are the very things
which make me tremble. The states of the Christian
world have grown up to their present magnitude in
a great length of time, and by a great variety of
accidents. They have been improved to what we
see them with greater or less degrees of felicity
and skill. Not one of them has been formed upon
a regular plan or with any unity of design. As
their constitutions are not systematical, they have
not been directed to any peculiar end, eminently
distinguished, and superseding every other. The
objects which they embrace are of the greatest possible
variety, and have become in a manner infinite.
In all these old countries the state has been made
to the people, and not the people conformed to the
state. Every state has pursued not only every
sort of social advantage, but it has cultivated the
welfare of every individual. His wants, his wishes,
even his tastes, have been consulted. This comprehensive
scheme virtually produced a degree of personal liberty
in forms the most adverse to it. That liberty
was found, under monarchies styled absolute, in a
degree unknown to the ancient commonwealths.
From hence the powers of all our modern states meet,
in all their movements, with some obstruction.
It is therefore no wonder, that, when these states
are to be considered as machines to operate for some
one great end, this dissipated and balanced force is
not easily concentred, or made to bear with the whole
force of the nation upon one point.