On that occasion, and on his arrival in 1789, Washington was received, as is well known, by the elder Clinton, who was at both periods Governor of the State.
In the following extract, from a reliable source, we have a fine description of the effect produced by Washington"s personal appearance and manners on the mind of a highly intelligent observer:
"The beautiful effusion which the reader will find below is the production of the chaste and cla.s.sic mind of the late venerable and distinguished senator from Rhode Island, Mr. Robbins, and was occasioned by the following circ.u.mstances. During the session of 1837-8, Mr.
Webster entertained a large party of friends at dinner, among them the venerable senator we have named. The evening pa.s.sed off with much hilarity, enlivened with wit and sentiment, but, during the greater part of the time, Mr. Robbins maintained that grave but placid silence which was his habit. While thus apparently abstracted, someone suddenly called on him for a toast, which call was seconded by the company. He rose, and in his surprise asked if they were serious in making such a demand of so old a man, and being a.s.sured that they were, he said, if they would suspend their hilarity for a few moments, he would give them a toast and preface it with a few observations. Having thus secured a breathless stillness, he went on to remark, that they were then on the verge of the 22d of February, the anniversary of the birth of the great patriot and statesman of our country, whom all delighted to remember and to honor, and he hoped he might be allowed the privilege of an aged man to recur, for a few moments, to past events connected with his character and history. He then proceeded and delivered in the most happy and impressive manner the beautiful speech which now graces our columns. The whole company were electrified by his patriotic enthusiasm, and one of the guests, before they separated, begged that he would take the trouble to put on paper what he had so happily expressed and furnish a copy for publication. Mr. Robbins obligingly complied with this request on the following day, but by some accident the ma.n.u.script got mislaid and eluded all search for it until a few days ago, when it was unexpectedly recovered, and is now presented to our readers.
""On the near approach of that calendar-day which gave birth to Washington, I feel rekindling within me some of those emotions always connected with the recollection of that hallowed name. Permit me to indulge them, on this occasion, for a moment, in a few remarks, as preliminary to a sentiment which I shall beg leave to propose.
""I consider it as one of the consolations of my age, that I am old enough and fortunate enough to have seen that wonderful man. This happiness is still common to so many yet among the living, that less is thought of it now than will be in after-times; but it is no less a happiness to me on that account.
""While a boy at school, I saw him for the first time; it was when he was pa.s.sing through New England, to take command in chief of the American armies at Cambridge. Never shall I forget the impression his imposing presence then made upon my young imagination, so superior did he seem to me to all that I had seen or imagined of the human form for striking effect. I remember with what delight, in my after studies, I came to the line in Virgil that expressed all the enthusiasm of my own feelings, as inspired by that presence, and which I could not often enough repeat:
""I saw him again at his interview with Rochambeau, when they met to settle the plan of combined operations between the French fleet and the American armies against the British on the Chesapeake, and then I saw the immense crowd drawn together from all the neighboring towns, to get, if possible, one look at the man who had throned himself in every heart.
Not one of that immense crowd doubted the final triumph of his country in her arduous conflict, for everyone saw, or thought he saw, in Washington, her guardian angel, commissioned by Heaven to insure her that triumph. "Nil desperandum" was the motto with everyone.
""In after-life, when the judgment corrects the extravagance of early impressions, I saw him on several occasions, but saw nothing to admonish me of any extravagance in my early impressions. "Credo equidem, nee vana fides, genus esse Deorum." [10]
"""Nil desperandum, Teucro duce, et auspice Teucro." [11] The impression was still the same; I had the same overpowering sense of standing in the presence of some superior being.
""It is indeed remarkable, and I believe unique, in the history of men, that Washington made the same impression upon all minds, at all places, and at once. When his fame first broke upon the world, it spread at once over the whole world. By the consent of mankind, by the universal sentiment, he was placed at the head of the human species; above all envy, because above all emulation; for no one then pretended, or has pretended to be--at least who has been allowed to be--the co-rival of Washington in fame.
""When the great Frederick of Prussia sent his portrait to Washington, with this inscription upon it--"From the oldest general in Europe to the greatest general in the world," he did but echo the sentiment of all the chivalry of Europe. Nor was the sentiment confined to Europe, nor to the bounds of civilization; for the Arab of the desert talked of Washington in his tent; his name wandered with the wandering Scythian, and was cherished by him as a household word in all his migrations. No clime was so barbarous as to be a stranger to the name, but everywhere, and by all men, that name was placed at the same point of elevation, and above compare. As it was in the beginning, so it is now; of the future we cannot speak with certainty. Some future age, in the endless revolutions of time, may produce another Washington, but the greater probability is, that he is destined to remain forever, as he now is, the Phoenix of human kind.
""What a possession to his country is such a fame! Such a "Clarum et venerabile nomen gentibus?" [12]
""To all his countrymen it gives, and forever will give, a pa.s.sport to respect wherever they go, to whatever part of the globe, for his country is in every other identified with that fame.
""What, then, is inc.u.mbent upon us, his countrymen? Why, to be such a people as shall be worthy of such a fame--a people of whom it shall be said, "No wonder such a people have produced such a man as Washington."
I give you, therefore, this sentiment:
""The memory of Washington: May his countrymen prove themselves a people worthy of his fame.""
1. Footnote: Memoir of Martha Washington in Longacre"s Gallery.
2. Footnote: Mrs. Ellet, "Women of the Revolution"
3. Footnote: One of the first topics of debate in Congress was the t.i.tle by which the President should be addressed. Such t.i.tle as "His Highness," "His Mightiness," etc., having been discussed, it was finally and very properly determined that the t.i.tle of "President of the United States" should be used; and it was accordingly used in the answers to the inaugural address. No t.i.tle could be more dignified.
4. Footnote: Marshall
5. Footnote: Pitkin.
6. Footnote: Tucker"s "Life of Jefferson."
7. Footnote: "Essay on the Character and Influence of Washington."
8. Footnote: "Washington"s Writings," vols. IX, X.
9. Footnote: Marshall.
10. Footnote: I verily believe, nor is my confidence unfounded, that he is of Divine descent.
11. Footnote: Let us never despair, with Teucer to lead us, and under Teucer"s auspices.
12. Footnote: A name, ill.u.s.trious and venerable among the nations!
CHAPTER III.
THE PUBLIC CREDIT ESTABLISHED. 1789-1790.
During the recess of Congress Washington generally visited Mount Vernon, but, after the rising of the first Congress under the const.i.tution, his visit to New England consumed so much time that he remained in New York till Congress rea.s.sembled. His eastern tour commenced on the 15th of October, as we have already seen, and ended on the 13th of November.
As Congress was to meet on the 1st of January, 1790, he had no time to visit Mount Vernon. During the short time which elapsed before that day he was very earnestly engaged in the duties of his office and in correspondence with public men on political affairs. One of his letters, addressed to the Emperor of Morocco, is curious, as showing the tact with which he accommodated his style to the comprehension of the oriental sovereign. It was written in consequence of an intimation from Mr. Chiappe, the American agent at Mogadore, that the emperor was not well pleased at receiving no acknowledgment from the government in respect to the treaty with Morocco of the 28th of June, 1786, his subsequent faithful observance of the same, as well as his good offices in favor of the Americans with the bashaws of Tunis and Tripoli. The letter is as follows:
"GREAT AND MAGNANIMOUS FRIEND:
"Since the date of the last letter which the late Congress by their President addressed to your Imperial Majesty, the United States of America have thought proper to change their government and to inst.i.tute a new one, agreeably to the const.i.tution, of which I have the honor of herewith enclosing a copy. The time necessarily employed in the arduous task and the derangements occasioned by so great, though peaceable, a revolution, will apologize and account for your Majesty"s not having received those regular advices and marks of attention from the United States, which the friendship and magnanimity of your conduct toward them afforded reason to expect.
"The United States having unanimously appointed me to the supreme executive authority in this nation, your Majesty"s letter of the 17th of August, 1788, which, by reason of the dissolution of the late government, remained unanswered, has been delivered to me. I have also received the letters which your Imperial Majesty has been so kind as to write, in favor of the United States, to the bashaws of Tunis and Tripoli, and I present to you the sincere acknowledgments and thanks of the United States for this important mark of your friendship for them.
"We greatly regret that the hostile disposition of those regencies toward this nation, who have never injured them, is not to be removed on terms in our power to comply with. Within our territories there are no mines either of gold or silver, and this young nation, just recovering from the waste and desolation of a long war, has not as yet had time to acquire riches by agriculture and commerce. But our soil is bountiful and our people industrious, and we have reason to flatter ourselves that we shall gradually become useful to our friends.
"The encouragement which your Majesty has been pleased generously to give to our commerce with your dominions, the punctuality with which you have caused the treaty with us to be observed, and the just and generous measures taken in the case of Captain Proctor, make a deep impression on the United States, and confirm their respect for, and attachment to, your Imperial Majesty.
"It gives me pleasure to have this opportunity of a.s.suring your Majesty that, while I remain at the head of this nation, I shall not cease to promote every measure that may conduce to the friendship and harmony which so happily subsist between your empire and them, and shall esteem myself happy on every occasion of convincing your Majesty of the high sense which, in common with the whole nation, I entertain of the magnanimity, wisdom, and benevolence of your Majesty. In the course of the approaching winter the national Legislature, which is called by the former name of Congress, will a.s.semble, and I shall take care that nothing be omitted that may be necessary to cause the correspondence between our countries to be maintained and conducted in a manner agreeable to your Majesty and satisfactory to all parties concerned in it.
"May the Almighty bless your Imperial Majesty--our great and magnanimous friend--with his constant guidance and protection.
"Written at the city of New York, the 1st day of December, 1789."
In December, 1789, Washington was requested by Mr. Joseph Willard, the president of Harvard University, to sit to Mr. Savage for his portrait, to be placed in the philosophy chamber of the university. Washington promptly replied to the letter of the president, and the portrait was painted by Mr. Savage, and deposited in the university.
On the 8th of January, 1790, the President met both houses of Congress in the Senate chamber. In his speech, which was delivered from the chair of the Vice-President, after congratulating Congress on the accession of the important State of North Carolina to the Union and on the prosperous aspect of American affairs, he proceeded to recommend certain great objects of legislation to their more especial consideration.
"Among the many interesting objects," continued the speech, "which will engage your attention, that of providing for the common defense will merit your particular regard. To be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.
"A free people ought not only to be armed but disciplined, to which end a uniform and well-digested plan is requisite, and their safety and interest require that they should promote such manufactories as tend to render them independent on others for essential, particularly for military, supplies."
As connected with this subject a proper establishment for the troops which they might deem indispensable, was suggested for their mature deliberation, and the indications of a hostile temper given by several tribes of Indians, were considered as admonishing them of the necessity of being prepared to afford protection to the frontiers and to punish aggression.
The interests of the United States were declared to require that the means of keeping up their intercourse with foreign nations should be provided, and the expediency of establishing a uniform rule of naturalization was suggested.