State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about State of the Union Address.

State of the Union Address eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 153 pages of information about State of the Union Address.

That it has eminently augmented our resources and added to our strength and respectability as a power is admitted by all, but it is not in these important circumstances only that this happy effect is felt.  It is manifest that by enlarging the basis of our system and increasing the number of States the system itself has been greatly strengthened in both its branches.  Consolidation and disunion have thereby been rendered equally impracticable.

Each Government, confiding in its own strength, has less to apprehend from the other, and in consequence each, enjoying a greater freedom of action, is rendered more efficient for all the purposes for which it was instituted.

It is unnecessary to treat here of the vast improvement made in the system itself by the adoption of this Constitution and of its happy effect in elevating the character and in protecting the rights of the nation as well as individuals.  To what, then, do we owe these blessings?  It is known to all that we derive them from the excellence of our institutions.  Ought we not, then, to adopt every measure which may be necessary to perpetuate them?

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State of the Union Address
James Monroe
December 7, 1824

Fellow-Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives: 

The view which I have now to present to you of our affairs, foreign and domestic, realizes the most sanguine anticipations which have been entertained of the public prosperity.  If we look to the whole, our growth as a nation continues to be rapid beyond example; if to the States which compose it, the same gratifying spectacle is exhibited.  Our expansion over the vast territory within our limits has been great, without indicating any decline in those sections from which the emigration has been most conspicuous.  We have daily gained strength by a native population in every quarter—­a population devoted to our happy system of government and cherishing the bond of union with internal affection.

Experience has already shewn that the difference of climate and of industry, proceeding from that cause, inseparable from such vast domains, and which under other systems might have a repulsive tendency, can not fail to produce with us under wise regulations the opposite effect.  What one portion wants the other may supply; and this will be most sensibly felt by the parts most distant from each other, forming thereby a domestic market and an active intercourse between the extremes and throughout every portion of our Union.

Thus by a happy distribution of power between the National and State Governments, Governments which rest exclusively on the sovereignty of the people and are fully adequate to the great purposes for which they were respectively instituted, causes which might otherwise lead to dismemberment operate powerfully to draw us closer together.

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State of the Union Address from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.