WEBSTER.
BIOGRAPHICAL
SKETCH.
WEBSTER THE MAN.
BIRTH at Salisbury,
N.H., 1782.Graduation
at Dartmouth College, 1801.
Admission to the
Bar, 1805.
First marriage (to
Grace Fletcher), 1808.
Election to the
United States House of Representatives, 1812.
Second election to
the United States House of Representatives, 1815.
Removal to Boston,
1816.
Member of the
Convention to revise the Constitution of Massachusetts, 1820.
Third election to
House of Representatives, 1822.
Fourth election to
House of Representatives, 1824.
Election to the
United States Senate, 1828.
Second marriage (to
Caroline LeRoy), 1829.
Leader of the Whig
party, 1834.
Nomination for
presidency by the Whig party of Massachusetts, 1834.
Visit to Europe,
1839.
Second election to
Senate, 1839.
Secretary of State
to Presidents Harrison and Tyler, 1841-1843.
Negotiation of
Ashburton Treaty, 1842.
Third election to
the Senate, 1844.
Secretary of State
to President Fillmore, 1850-1852.
Despatch to
Hülsemann, 1850.
Defeat by Whig
party in presidential nomination of 1852.1
Death at
Marshfield, Mass., Oct. 24, 1852.2
One
of the public buildings of Harvard University is adorned with the sculptured
heads of the world’s renowned orators. With Demosthenes and Cicero, Bossuet and
Burke, Webster finds fair companionship. The skilful jurist, the revered
senator, the judicious cabinet officer, the brilliant statesman, are outranked
when we recall in him the noble orator, who, like Wallace of Scotland, left his
name “like a wild-flower, all over his dear country.”
Daniel Webster was
born at Salisbury, N.H., Jan. 18. 1782, His father, Ebenezer Webster, served
his country both in the French and Indian War and the Revolution, thus giving
his son a natural inheritance of patriotism. No less was he indebted to his
mother for the intellectual strength and childlike simplicity which marked his
thought-habit. A delicate infancy and childhood gave no promise of the vigorous
physique or stately beauty of his middle and later years, while the gentle care
incident to the rearing of the frail boy precluded the possibility of asking
“from the season more than its timely produce.” Happily, in his wholesome
country home the Bible, Shakespeare, Pope, Addison, and Don Quixote made ample
amends for the dearth of so-called child-literature.
Young Webster’s
preparation for college, like the ghost of Hamlet’s father, was a thing “of
shreds and patches.” The scant instruction of the village school, with a few
months at Phillips Exeter Academy, was supplemented by the private tuition of
the Rev. Samuel Wood, a country parson otherwise unknown to fame. This
preliminary work consisted in a modicum of mathematics, for which he had little
taste, a smattering of Greek grammar, six books of Virgil’s Æneid, and a few of
Cicero’s Orations. His best equipment was his indomitable courage, his tireless
industry, and an ability for self- denial which John Stirling rightly says
makes the worst education better than the best that omits it.
He entered
Dartmouth College in August, 1797, taking his degree after the customary four
years of study. The education which it cost his parents sacrifice and privation
to give was valued to its utmost opportunity. It was a career of genius, but
never of idle genius. One of his biographers says of him,
His faculty for
labor was something prodigious, his memory disciplined by methods not taught
him by others, and his intellect was expanded far beyond his years. He was
abstemious, religious, of the highest sense of honor, and of the most elevated
deportment. His manners were genial, his affections warm, his conversation
brilliant and instructive, his temperament cheerful, his gayety overflowing.”
Fully believing
that his brother possessed the nobler parts, and foreseeing the gulf that would
inevitably widen between the brother at college and the brother on the farm,
Webster occupied his later college vacations and his early years after
graduation by teaching, in order to devote the proceeds to the education of
Ezekiel, whose brief but brilliant history fully justified this estimate of his
powers.
On his admission to
the bar, Webster was a tall, vigorous, finely proportioned man, whose massive
forehead and thick, black, beetling eyebrows overshadowed a pair of black eyes
as solemn-looking as they were searching. His carriage was erect and slow, his
manner moderate and reserved; and, indeed, his whole bearing, after forty years
of political life, was but the emphasis of this earlier portrait.
His career as a
lawyer, after his admission to the bar in 1805, and a brief practice in his
native State and in Boston, was soon merged in the larger life of the orator
and statesman. It fitting that a man whose first and last serious thought was
“his country, his whole country, and nothing but his country,” should have made
his first great national speech at Plymouth on the occasion of the two
hundredth anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims. The attention that this,
together with former patriotic addresses of local interest, and his interests
with the Federal party, called forth, sent him as the representative of that
party to the eighteenth Congress in 1823. These were the days of Clay and
Calhoun, and the beginning of the great debates on the tariff, of the earliest
hints of the great anti-slavery controversies of the middle of the century, of
the settling of our strained relations to England, and the proposed independence
of the South American republics.
From this period
his political advancement was without retrogression, though he continued his
legal practice, and was retained to plead before the Supreme Court of the
United States, where he won immediate fame by establishing a ruling in the
relation of States to corporate bodies in the famous Dartmouth College
decision.
From 1813, when he
took his seat as representative, to the date of his death in 1852, when he
filled the office of Secretary of State to President Fillmore, he occupied the
positions successively of re-elected representative, member of the Convention
to revise the Constitution of Massachusetts, United States senator, and cabinet
office.
No brief sketch can
enumerate the services that, in these various capacities, were done for the
country he served. The boy who could not see himself take privileges and
opportunities that were denied his elder brother was father of the man who made
the triumphant reply to Senator Hayne of South Carolina, and showed how the
larger family constitution was endangered by the monopoly of rights in a single
member; the youth whose early private necessities demanded that every penny be
invested with reflection, so thoroughly mastered the science of finance that
the record of his counsel as to the public purse is with few equals, and no
superiors. Had Mr. Webster’s advice been taken, the ruinous financial disasters
of 1837 would not to-day blot our commercial history. The country school
teacher whom recreant lads nicknamed “All-eyes,” developed a seer’s vision,
which made him for more than a quarter of a century America’s greatest
political teacher.
There is a sad
significance in the words he once uttered, and which he intended to be taken
only literally, “Whatever I have accomplished has been done early in the
morning.” Webster’s great work was done before, possessed of unrestrained
ambition and excited by the brilliancy of his own intellect and the unwise
devotion of his personal friends, he pursued unworthily the phantom of the
possible presidency, and placed himself where the temptation to a time-serving
spirit was irresistible. Remembering the losses and defeats of that later
period, one is disposed to thank God with him that no one could take away what
he had done for his country; but the just narrator will remember also that the
best was done early in the morning, before he had learned, with another wise
man, the vanity of earthly expectations. Solomon said, “All is vanity;”
Webster, “I have given my life to law and politics. Law is uncertain, and
politics is utterly vain.”
As the great
statesman recedes farther and farther in the background of our political
history, he who has an eye for perspective cannot fail to see how, like the
peak of Teneriffe, he towers above his fellows, or to recall Bacon’s aphorism,
“There is no great beauty without some strange disproportion.” The ultimate
product of his life presents all the curious contradictions which can result
from an intense love of nature and her solitudes, and the arena and its
excitements; from devoted love of family and friends, and overweening love of
personal power; from sincere regard for his country’s weal, and the ability to
hazard it and produce her woe. But he would be no profound logician, and no
clear-sighted reviewer, who could not discern that, in spite of all, by the
frequent restatement of universal truths; by reiterated appeals for the
necessity of the preserved Union; by judicious counsel in our financial
affairs, both domestic and foreign; by the creation of a political literature,
that, in the mouth of every schoolboy, becomes the unconscious sentiment of his
manhood, Daniel Webster made himself the Foster-Father of our American
nationality.
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1 Webster was three
times defeated in his presidential aspirations.
2 Only one son, of
five sons and daughters, survived him: Fletcher Webster, born in Portsmouth,
1812, was killed in the battle of Bull Run, 1862.
THE STYLE OF
WEBSTER.
BECAUSE a superior
theme gives a superior vocabulary, we find Webster’s richest words in those
orations which celebrate the glory of his country rather than in his less
famous but masterly legal pleas.
To any one familiar
with his life, the sources of his vocabulary are not far to find. He chooses
simple, strong words, largely, because in his childhood and youth he had
committed to memory so much of the Bible and Shakespeare, that in manhood he
had at his command a great exchequer of Anglo- Saxon words. No better example
in Websterian literature illustrates his indebtedness to this source than the
oration we are about to study, as severe and unadorned in its massive strength
as the monument whose erection it celebrates. It is in this stronghold, too, of
the Anglo-Saxon, that he is utterly saved from the ordinary temptation of the
civic orator; from the strained vehemence of a Calhoun, the verbal felicities
of a Clay, and the somewhat over-nice elegance of an Everett.
In the structure of
his sentences, Webster offers a pleasing variety; neither the long and
periodic, nor the short and abrupt prevails. If he has any distinct tendency,
it is either toward the short or the loose sentence, except in those famous
perorations whose very nature demanded a sustained length, because of their
sustained flight. Often he avails himself of that antithetical effect which
makes tedious the pages of Macaulay; more often he makes the happiest use of
the balanced sentence, as in, “ I mean to use my tongue in the Court, not my
pen; to be an actor, not a registrar of other men’s actions.” Most often he
delivers himself of a threefold form which seems, in his method of use,
original; as,
“I was born an American, I live an American,
I will die an American;” “we do it
once, we do it for our generation, perhaps forever;” “made for the people, made
by the people, and answerable to the people” (of the government); “Liberty and
union, one and inseparable, now and forever;”
“Sink or swim, live or die, survive or perish.”
But whether long
and sustained, or short and brilliant, there is no arrangement of words for
effect. There is always the same consistent subservience of the expression to
the thought, always the same dependence upon the certain foundations of logic
rather than the uncertain flights of rhetoric. Although finish and smoothness
do not fail in his best efforts, nor dignity and grandeur in his every effort,
it is this natural conservation of energy, the physical and intellectual
inheritance of three generations that makes Henry Hallam say, in a private
letter to Mrs. Ticknor, “ Mr. Webster approaches the beau ideal of a Republican
senator more than any man I have seen in the course of my life. He is worthy of
Rome or of Venice rather than of our noisy and wrangling generation.” To sum up
in a single word the leading characteristic of Webster’s style, one must avail
himself of the word that to him was the keynote of national strength, and which
whether found in the single sentence, or the full thought, or the entire
oration, was the ruling passion of his style and his life — unity!
THE TEN MOST FAMOUS
SPEECHES OF DANIEL WEBSTER.
ON THE
DARTMOUTH COLLEGE CASE. U. S. Supreme Court, March 10, 1818.
ON THE
CHARACTER OF THE NEW ENGLAND SETTLERS. Plymouth, Mass., Dec. 22, 1820.
ON THE
LAYING OF THE CORNER STONE OF BUNKER HILL MONUMENT. Charlestown, Mass., June
17, 1825.
ADAMS AND
JEFFERSON. Faneuil Hall, Boston, Mass., Aug. 2, 1826.
STATE’S
RIGHTS (Webster’s celebrated reply to Hayne). Washington, D. C., Jan. 26, 27,
1830.
THE
CHARACTER OF WASHINGTON. Washington, D. C., Feb. 22, 1832.
ON NATIONAL
FINANCE. Washington, D. C., July 11, 1832.
ON THE
COMPLETION OF BUNKER HILL MONUMENT. Charlestown, Mass., June 17, 1843.
ON THE
RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION OF THE YOUNG (Girard College Case). Washington, D. C.,
Feb. 20, 1844.
THE
CONSTITUTION AND THE UNION. Washington, D. C., March 7, 1850.
HINTS ON THE STUDY
OF AN ORATION.
THERE are more than
Molière’s “Bourgeois Gentilhomme” who seem to think that “All that is not
poetry is prose.” Though in its broadest sense the term includes technically
philosophic and scientific literatures, in the narrower and generally accepted
sense, it confines itself to such works as have a distinct literary form. For
example, we would not speak of an author who had written, however well, a
series of arithmetics, as a writer of English Prose. This is because a certain
artistic element must enter into the literary form, and then it becomes
Philosophical Prose, as in Leslie Stephen’s “History of English Thought;”
Historical Prose, as in Macaulay’s “History of England;” Poetic Prose, as in
Ruskin’s “Seven Lamps of Architecture;” Oratorical Prose, as in Webster’s
“Bunker Hill Orations;” Periodical Prose, as in the ordinary essay and review;
or a combination of two or more of these forms, as in the Novel or Romance.
The Oration among
prose forms is a composition, which, through argument or reason, heightened by
a presentation in person, affects the imagination or will of the hearer by
persuasion. Its best characteristics are sincerity and earnestness.
In studying an
oration, we note first to what general class it belongs: as the judicial, which
by accusation or defence presents a legal argument; the sacred, which by
exposition and exhortation presents an ethical argument; or the forensic, which
by eulogy or conviction presents a political argument. The next point to
ascertain is the circumstances under which it is delivered as affecting the
form of presentation. For example, the local color of the oration in question
is deepened both by the fact that it was given on the site of Bunker Hill and
to an audience containing individuals who had maintained a significant part in
the battle commemorated. Such environments determine whether the speaker can
appeal most successfully to the intellect, the will, or the emotions. In the
case of political oratory in general, truth is expounded, rights defended,
minds convinced, consciences persuaded, emotions excited, or sentiments
aroused; sometimes several or all these objects may be attempted, but the best
oratory has a preponderance in favor of one. In the third place a careful
student will note what branch of an especial theme is treated. For example,
under political oratory, one might discuss the constitution, or national
finance, or the empire of the state, or the responsibilities of an impending
election, or the incentives to a great future by the study of a great past.
Whatever be the theme treated, oratory worthy of a statesman must show, on the
part of the speaker, a large knowledge of general history and literature,
conversance with the science of government and constitutional law, and
enthusiasm for public interests. Such oratory not only becomes a present
incentive to public duty, but is equally valuable as a record for future
counsel. There is no country which furnishes a more interesting study of
oratorical prose than the American Republic, and no orator who has held more
securely the public mind, both in his spoken and written form of the address,
than Daniel Webster, and this is because his themes, however local, were always
made universal in their interest. Happily Mr. Webster, in his famous eulogy on
Adams and Jefferson, has given us the key to successful oratory, in a passage
only second in felicity to that of Shakespeare in his directions for “the play
within the play,” in “Hamlet.”
“When public bodies
are to be addressed on momentous occasions, when great interests are at stake,
and strong passions excited, nothing is valuable in speech further than as it
is connected with high intellectual and moral endowments. Clearness, force, and
earnestness are the qualities which produce conviction. True eloquence, indeed,
does not consist in speech. It cannot be brought from far. Labor and learning
may toil for it, but they will toil in vain. Words and phrases may be
marshalled in every way, but they cannot compass it. It must exist in the man,
in the subject, and in the occasion. Affected passion, intense expression, the
pomp of declamation, all may aspire to it; they cannot reach it. It comes, if
it come at all, like the outbreaking of a fountain from the earth, or the
bursting forth of volcanic fires, with spontaneous, original, native force. The
graces taught in the schools, the costly ornaments and studied contrivances of
speech, shock and disgust men, when their own lives, and the fate of their
wives, their children, and their country, hang on the decision of the hour.
Then words have lost their power, rhetoric is vain, and all elaborate oratory
contemptible. Even genius itself then feels rebuked and subdued, as in the
presence of higher qualities. Then patriotism is eloquent; then self-devotion
is eloquent. The clear conception, outrunning the deductions of logic, the high
purpose, the firm resolve, the dauntless spirit, speaking on the tongue,
beaming from the eye, informing every feature, and urging the whole man onward,
right onward to his object, — this, this is eloquence; or, rather, it is
something greater, and higher than all eloquence, — it is action, noble,
sublime, godlike action.” 1
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1 It is interesting to note in
connection with the orations of Webster, that his manner of public speaking was
deliberate and imposing; that he spoke, except when under great excitement, in
a low, sustained, musical tone.
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