The Union An Address By the Hon Daniel S Dickinson Delivered Before the Lite
The Union An Address By the Hon Daniel S Dickinson Delivered Before the Lite
Daniel S Daniel Stevens Dickinson
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It was adopted, . As declared in its preamble, "to form a more perfect union, to establish justice, insure domestic tranquillity, provide for the common defence, to promote the general welfare, and to secure the blessings of liberty to the people who ordained it, and their pos- terity. " But if the instrument which formed the more perfect Union with becoming solemnity contemplated its dismemberment and over- throw by the withdrawal of all or any of the States therefrom at the pleasure of their ...capricious politicians, it remained a most imperfect and pitiable Union still. If the justice it established was but tempo- rary, if the domestic tranquillity it insured was for the time being, if the common defence it provided for was until some of the States should withdraw from the Union and make war upon it, and if the blessings of liberty it secured to posterity were upon condition that those who secured them should not wish to subvert the liberty thus secured by armed force, then, our boasted Constitution, which has been hailed throughout the earth as one of the wisest emanations of man, and enjoys a world-wide fame for its humane provisions and lofty conceptions of statesmanship, should be scouted as a fraud, a delusion, and an imposture, possessing much more sound than sub- stance, and carrying by design, in its own bosom, the seeds of its dissolution.
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