
- LIFE LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS SONG HAMILTON HOW TO
- LIFE LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS SONG HAMILTON FULL
The reflection of these things now, after the many hours of anxious sollicitude which all of us have had, is as pleasing, as our embarrassments at the moments we encountered them, were distressing-and must console us for past sufferings & perplexities. To have had the good fortune amidst the viscissitudes of a long and arduous contest ‘never to have known a moment when I did not possess the confidence and esteem of my Country.’ And that my conduct should have met the approbation, and obtained the Affectionate regard of the State of New York (where difficulties were numerous & complicated) may be ascribed more to the effect of divine wisdom, which had disposed the minds of the people, harrassed on all sides, to make allowances for the embarrassments of my situation, whilst with fortitude & patience they sustained the loss of their Capitol, and a valuable part of their territory-and to the liberal sentiments, and great exertion of her virtuous Citizens, than to any merit of mine. The flattering expression of both, stamps value on the Acts & call for stronger language than I am master of, to convey my sense of the obligation in adequate terms. Gentlemen, I receive your Address, and the freedom of the City with which you have been pleased to present me in a golden Box, with the sensibility and gratitude which such distinguished honors have a claim to. Subsequently, this is the letter that Washington wrote “To The Honble the Mayor, Recorder, Alderman & Commonalty of the City of New York:” Mayor James Duane sent Washington “an Address of the City, and the freedom thereof in a very handsome golden Box.” It is believed that the source of New York’s moniker as “The Empire State” is from a 1785 letter from George Washington to the City of New York. Alexander Hamilton, “From Alexander Hamilton to James Duane, 3 September 1780,” National Archives Founders Online, last accessed January 28, 2022.
LIFE LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS SONG HAMILTON FULL
The manner in which Congress was appointed would warrant, and the public good required, that they should have considered themselves as vested with full power to preserve the republic from harm. (1) It may be pleaded, that Congress had never any definitive powers granted them and of course could exercise none-could do nothing more than recommend. It may however be said that it has originated from three causes-an excess of the spirit of liberty which has made the particular states show a jealousy of all power not in their own hands and this jealousy has led them to exercise a right of judging in the last resort of the measures recommended by Congress, and of acting according to their own opinions of their propriety or necessity, a diffidence in Congress of their own powers, by which they have been timid and indecisive in their resolutions, constantly making concessions to the states, till they have scarcely left themselves the shadow of power a want of sufficient means at their disposal to answer the public exigencies and of vigor to draw forth those means which have occasioned them to depend on the states individually to fulfil their engagements with the army, and the consequence of which has been to ruin their influence and credit with the army, to establish its dependence on each state separately rather than on them, that is rather than on the whole collectively.
LIFE LIBERTY AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS SONG HAMILTON HOW TO
It is hardly worth while to show in what this consists, as it seems to be universally acknowleged, or to point out how it has happened, as the only question is how to remedy it. The fundamental defect is a want of power in Congress. You will judge of them, and make what use you please of them. They may perhaps be the reveries of a projector rather than the sober views of a politician. Here is an excerpt from that letter:Īgreeably to your request and my promise I sit down to give you my ideas of the defects of our present system, and the changes necessary to save us from ruin. Alexander Hamilton, in a September 1780 letter to Founder James Duane, almost eight years before the Constitution was ratified, and the year prior to the Articles of Confederation being ratified in 1781, presciently noted the “defects” of the Articles and the “want of power in Congress.” The Articles had provided an “excess” of “liberty” to the individual states that overshadowed the Congress and, according to Hamilton, was leading the country toward “ruin.” The Constitution, which Hamilton played an important role in ratifying and served as a New York delegate, united the country by creating a more powerful Federal Government with inherent checks and balances to avoid political oppression.
