principality, “the National Convention declared
that she would afford succor and fraternity to all
nations who wished to recover their liberty, and she
gave it in charge to the executive power to give orders
to the generals of the French armies to aid all citizens
who might have been or should be oppressed in the
cause of liberty.” Here was the false step
which led to her subsequent misfortunes. She soon
found herself involved in war with all the rest of
Europe. In less than ten years her Government
was changed from a republic to an empire, and finally,
after shedding rivers of blood, foreign powers restored
her exiled dynasty and exhausted Europe sought peace
and repose in the unquestioned ascendency of monarchical
principles. Let us learn wisdom from her example.
Let us remember that revolutions do not always establish
freedom. Our own free institutions were not the
offspring of our Revolution. They existed before.
They were planted in the free charters of self-government
under which the English colonies grew up, and our
Revolution only freed us from the dominion of a foreign
power whose government was at variance with those
institutions. But European nations have had no
such training for self-government, and every effort
to establish it by bloody revolutions has been, and
must without that preparation continue to be, a failure.
Liberty unregulated by law degenerates into anarchy,
which soon becomes the most horrid of all despotisms.
Our policy is wisely to govern ourselves, and thereby
to set such an example of national justice, prosperity,
and true glory as shall teach to all nations the blessings
of self-government and the unparalleled enterprise
and success of a free people.
We live in an age of progress, and ours is emphatically
a country of progress. Within the last half century
the number of States in this Union has nearly doubled,
the population has almost quadrupled, and our boundaries
have been extended from the Mississippi to the Pacific.
Our territory is checkered over with railroads and
furrowed with canals. The inventive talent of
our country is excited to the highest pitch, and the
numerous applications for patents for valuable improvements
distinguish this age and this people from all others.
The genius of one American has enabled our commerce
to move against wind and tide and that of another has
annihilated distance in the transmission of intelligence.
The whole country is full of enterprise. Our
common schools are diffusing intelligence among the
people and our industry is fast accumulating the comforts
and luxuries of life. This is in part owing to
our peculiar position, to our fertile soil and comparatively
sparse population; but much of it is also owing to
the popular institutions under which we live, to the
freedom which every man feels to engage in any useful
pursuit according to his taste or inclination, and
to the entire confidence that his person and property
will be protected by the laws. But whatever may