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the american republic-第56章

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oid。   Acts unconstitutional in some parts and constitutional in others  are not wholly void。  The unconstitutionality vitiates only the  unconstitutional parts; the others are valid; are law; and  recognized and enforced as such by the courts。

The secession ordinances are void; because they were never passed  by the people of the State; but by a faction that overawed them  and usurped the authority of the State。  This argument implies  that; if a secession ordinance is passed by the people proper of  the State; it is valid; which is more than they who urge it  against the State suicide doctrine are prepared to concede。  But  the secession ordinances were in every instance passed by the  people of the State in convention legally assembled; therefore by  them in their highest State capacityin the same capacity in  which they ordain and ratify the State constitution itself; and  in nearly all the States they were in addition ratified and  confirmed; if the facts have been correctly reported; by a  genuine plebiscitum; or direct vote of the people。  In all cases  they were adopted by a decided majority of the political people  of the State; and after their adoption they were 295                                                  acquiesced in  and indeed actively supported by very nearly the whole people。   The people of the States adopting the secession ordinances were  far more unanimous in supporting secession than the people of the  other States were in sustaining the Government in its efforts to suppress the rebellion by coercive measures。  It will not do;  then; to ascribe the secession ordinances to a faction。  The  people are never a faction; nor is a faction ever the majority。

There has been a disposition at the North; encouraged by the few  Union men at the South; to regard secession as the work of a few  ambitious and unprincipled leaders; who; by their threats; their  violence; and their overbearing manner; forced the mass of the  people of their respective States into secession against their  convictions and their will。  No doubt there were leaders at the  South; as there are in every great movement at the North; no  doubt there were individuals in the seceding States that held  secession wrong in principle; and were conscientiously attached  to the Union; no doubt; also; there were men who adhered to the  Union; not because they disapproved secession; but because they  disliked the men at the head of the movement; or because they  were keen…sighted enough to see that it could not 296                                                   succeed; that  the Union must be the winning side; and that by adhering to it  they would become the great and leading men of their respective  States; which they certainly could not be under secession。   Others sympathized fully with what was called the Southern cause;  held firmly the right of secession; and hated cordially the  Yankees; but doubted either the practicability or the expediency  of secession; and opposed it till resolved on; but; after it was  resolved on; yielded to none in their earnest support of it。   These last comprised the immense majority of those who voted  against secession。  Never could those called the Southern leaders  have carried the secession ordinances; never could they have  carried on the war with the vigor and determination; and with  such formidable armies as they collected and armed for four  years; making at times the destiny of the Union well nigh  doubtful; if they had not had the Southern heart with them; if  they had not been most heartily supported by the overwhelming  mass of the people。  They led a popular; not a factious movement。

No State; it is said again; has seceded; or could secede。  The  State is territorial; not personal; and as no State can carry its  territory and population out of the Union; no State can 297                                                         secede。   Out of the jurisdiction of the Union; or alienate them from the  sovereign or national domain; very true; but out of the Union as  a State; with rights; powers; or franchises in the Union; not  true。  Secession is political; not territorial。

But the State holds from the territory or domain。  The people are  sovereign because attached to a sovereign territory; not the  domain because held by a sovereign people; as was established by  the analysis of the early Roman constitution。  The territory of  the States corresponds to the sacred territory of Rome; to which  was attached the Roman sovereignty。  That territory; once  surveyed and consecrated; remained sacred and the ruling  territory; and could not be divested of its sacred and governing  character。  The portions of the territory of the United States  once erected into States and consecrated as ruling territory can  never be deprived; except by foreign conquest or successful  revolution; of its sacred character and inviolable rights。

The State is territorial; not personal; and is constituted by  public; not by private wealth; and is always respublica or  commonwealth; in distinction from despotism or monarchy in its  oriental sense; which is founded on private wealth; or which  assumes that the authority to 298                               govern; or sovereignty; is the  private estate of the sovereign。  All power is a domain; but  there is no domain without a dominus or lord。  In oriental  monarchies the dominus is the monarch; in republics it is the  public or people fixed to the soil or territory; that is; the  people in their territorial; and not in their personal or  genealogical relation。  The people of The United States are  sovereign only within the territory or domain of the United  States; and their sovereignty is a state; because fixed;  attached; or limited to that specific territory。  It is fixed to  the soil; not nomadic。  In barbaric nations power is nomadic and  personal; or genealogical; confined to no locality; but attaches  to the chief; and follows wherever he goes。  The Gothic chiefs  hold their power by a personal title; and have the same authority  in their tribes on the Po or the Rhone as on the banks of the  Elbe or the Danube。  Power migrates with the chief and his  people; and may be exercised wherever he and they find  themselves; as a Swedish queen held when she ordered the  execution of one of her subjects at Paris; without asking  permission of the territorial lord。  In these nations; power is a  personal right; or a private estate; not a state which exists  only as attached to the domain; and; as attached to the domain; 299 exists independently of the chief or the government。  The  distinction is between public domain and private domain。

The American system is republican; and; contrary to what some  democratic politicians assert; the American democracy is  territorial; not personal; not territorial because the majority  of the people are agriculturists or landholders; but because all  political rights; powers; or franchises are territorial。  The  sovereign people of the United States are sovereign only within  the territory of the United States。  The great body of the  freemen have the elective franchise; but no one has it save in  his State; his county; his town; h
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