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the american republic-第61章

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thing to say on the subject; and could no more interfere  with elections in any one of them than it could with elections in  Massachusetts or New York。  But even on the doctrine here  defended it can interfere with them only by way of general  superintendence。  The citizens have; indeed; lost their political  rights; but not their private rights。  Secession has not  dissolved civil society; or abrogated any of the laws of the  disorganized State that were in force at the time of secession。   The error of the government is not in maintaining that these laws  survive the secession ordinances; and remain the territorial law;  or lex loci; but in maintaining that they do so by will of the  State; that has; as a State; really lapsed。  They do so by will  of the United States; which enacted them through the individual  State; and which has not in convention abrogated them; save the  law authorizing slavery; and its dependent laws。

This point has already been made; but as it is one of the  niceties of the American constitution; it may not be amiss to  elaborate it at 322                 greater length。  The doctrine of Mr。 Jefferson;  Mr。 Madison; and the majority of our jurists; would see to be  that the States; under God; are severally sovereign in all  matters not expressly confided to the General government; and  therefore that the American sovereignty is divided; and the  citizen owes a double allegianceallegiance to his State; and  allegiance to the United Statesas if there was a United States  distinguishable from the States。  Hence Mr。 Seward; in an  official dispatch to our minister at the court of St。 James;  says: 〃The citizen owes allegiance to the State and to the United  States。〃  And nearly all who hold allegiance is due to the Union  at all; hold that it is also due to the States; only that which  is due to the United States is paramount; as that under feudalism  due to the overlord。  But this is not the case。  There is no  divided sovereignty; no divided allegiance。  Sovereignty is one;  and vests not in the General government or in the State  government; but in the United States; and allegiance is due to  the United States; and to them alone。  Treason can be committed  only against the United States; and against a State only because  against the United States; and is properly cognizable only by the  Federal courts。  Hence the Union men committed no treason in 323 refusing to submit to the secession ordinances of their  respective States; and in sustaining the national arms against  secession。

There are two very common mistakes: the one that the States  individually possess all the powers not delegated to the General  government; and the other that the Union; or United States; have  only delegated powers。  But the United States possess all the  powers of a sovereign state; and the States individually and the  General government possess only such powers as the United States  in convention delegate to them respectively。  The sovereign is  neither the General government nor the States severally; but the  United States in convention。  The United States are the one  indivisible sovereign; and this sovereign governs alike general  matters in the General government; and particular matters in the  several State governments。  All legal authority in either  emanates from this one indivisible and plenary sovereign; and  hence the law enacted by a State are really enacted by the United  States; and derive from them their force and vitality as laws。   Hence; as the United States survive the particular State; the  lapse of the State does not abrogate the State laws; or dissolve  civil society within its jurisdiction。

324 This is evidently so; because civil society in the particular  State does not rest on the State alone; nor on Congress; but on  the United States。  Hence all civil rights of every sort created  by the individual State are really held from the United States;  and therefore it was that the people of non…slaveholding States  were; as citizens of the United States; responsible for the  existence of slavery in the States that seceded。  There is a  solidarity of States in the Union as there is of individuals in  each of the States。  The political error of the Abolitionists was  not in calling upon the people of the United States to abolish  slavery; but in calling upon them to abolish it through the  General government; which had no jurisdiction in the case; or in  their sole capacity as men; on purely humanitarian grounds; which  were the abrogation of all government and civil society itself;  instead of calling upon them to do it as the United States in  convention assembled; or by an amendment to the constitution of  the United States in the way ordained by that constitution  itself。  This understood; the constitution and laws of a defunct  State remain in force by virtue of the will of the United States;  till the State is raised from the dead; restored to life and  activity; and repeals or al… 325                            ters them; or till they are repealed  or altered by the United States or the national convention。  But  as the defunct State could not; and the convention had not  repealed or altered them; save in the one case mentioned; the  General government had no alternative but to treat them and all  rights created by them as the territorial law; and to respect  them as such。

What then do the people of the several States that seceded lose  by secession?  They lose; besides incurring; so far as disloyal;  the pains and penalties of treason; their political rights; or  right; as has just been said; to be in their own department  self…governing communities; with the right of representation in  Congress and the electoral colleges; and to sit in the national  convention; or of being counted in the ratification of amendments  to the constitutionprecisely what it was shown a Territorial  people gain by being admitted as a State into the Union。  This is  the difference between the constitutional doctrine and that  adopted by Mr。 Lincoln's and Mr。 Johnson's Administrations。  But  what authority; on this constitutional doctrine; does the General  government gain over the people of States that secede; that it  has not over others!  As to their internal 326                                            constitution; their  private rights of person or property; it gains none。  It has over  them; till they are reconstructed and restored to the Union; the  right to institute for them provisional governments; civil or  military; precisely as it has for the people of a territory that  is not and has never been one of the United States; but in their  reconstruction it has less; for the geographical boundaries and  electoral people of each are already defined by a law which does  not depend on its will; and which it can neither abrogate nor  modify。  Here is the difference between the constitutional  doctrine and that of the so…called radicals。  The State has gone;  but its laws remain; so far as the United States in convention  does not abrogate them; not because the authority of the State  survives; but because the United States so will; or are presumed  to will。  The United States have by a constitutional amendment 
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