Ben Domenech at Ricochet gives us the words of Calvin Coolidge to commemorate our 4th of July. Mark them. They carry even more meaning today, as we stand in danger of losing the victories of the last two centuries in the war against the privileged and the elite -- whether kings or popes or parliaments...or Congress. A war fought by common men for uncommon ideas.
Reverence is the measure not of others but of
ourselves. This assemblage on the one hundred and forty third
anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill tells not only of the spirit of
that day but of the spirit of to-day. What men worship that will they
become. The heroes and holidays of a people which fascinate their soul
reveal what they hold are the realities of life and mark out a line
beyond which they will not retreat, but at which they will stand to
overcome or die. They who reverence Bunker Hill will fight there. Your
true patriot sees home and hearthstone in the welfare of his country.
Rightly viewed, then, this day is set apart
for an examination of ourselves by recounting the deeds of the men of
long ago. What was there in the events of the seventeenth day of June
1775, which holds the veneration of Americans and the increasing
admiration of the world? There are the physical facts not too
unimportant to be unworthy of reiteration even in the learned presence
of an Historical Society. A detachment of men clad for the most part in
the dress of their daily occupations, standing with bared heads and
muskets grounded muzzle down in the twilight glow on Cambridge Common,
heard Samuel Langdon, President of Harvard College, seek divine blessing
on their cause and marched away in the darkness to a little eminence at
Charlestown, where, ere the setting of an other sun, much history was
to be made and much glory lost and won. When a new dawn had lifted the
mists of the Bay, the British, under General Howe, saw an entrenchment
on Breed's Hill, which must be taken or Boston abandoned. The works were
exposed in the rear to attack from land and sea. This was disdained by
the king's soldiers in their contempt for the supposed fighting ability
of the Americans. Leisurely, as on dress parade, they assembled for an
assault that they thought was to be a demonstration of the uselessness
of any armed resistance on the part of the Colonies. In splendid array
they advanced late in the day. A few straggling shots and all was still
behind the parapet. It was easier than they had expected. But when they
reached a point where 't is said the men behind the entrenchments could
see the whites of their eyes, they were met by a withering fire that
tore their ranks asunder and sent them back in disorder, utterly routed
by their despised foes. In time they form and advance again but the
result is the same. The demonstration of superiority was not a success.
For a third time they form, not now for dress parade, but for a
hazardous assault. This time the result was different. The patriots had
lost nothing of courage or determination but there was left scarcely one
round of powder. They had no bayonets. Pouring in their last volley and
still resisting with clubbed muskets, they retired slowly and in order
from the field. So great was the British loss that there was no pursuit.
The intensity of the battle is told by the loss of the Americans, out
of about fifteen hundred engaged, of nearly twenty percent, and of the
British, out of some thirty-five hundred engaged, of nearly thirty-three
per cent, all in one and one half hours.
It was the story of brave men bravely led but
insufficiently equipped. Their leader, Colonel Prescott, had walked the
breast works to show his men that the cannonade was not particularly
dangerous. John Stark, bringing his company, in which were his Irish
compatriots, across Charlestown Neck under the guns of the battleships,
refused to quicken his step. His Major, Andrew McCleary, fell at the
rail fence which he had held during the day. Dr. Joseph Warren, your own
son of Roxbury, fell in the retreat, but the Americans, though picking
off his officers, spared General Howe. They had fought the French under
his brother.
Such were some of the outstanding deeds of
the day. But these were the deeds of men and the deeds of men always
have an inward significance. In distant Philadelphia, on this very day,
the Continental Congress had chosen as the Commander of their Army,
General George Washington, a man whose clear vision looked into the
realities of things and did not falter. On his way to the front four
days later, dispatches reached him of the battle. He revealed the
meaning of the day with one question, "Did the militia fight?" Learning
how those heroic men fought, he said, "Then the liberties of the Country
are safe." No greater commentary has ever been made on the significance
of Bunker Hill.
We read events by what goes before and after.
We think of Bunker Hill as the first real battle for independence, the
prelude to the Revolution. Yet these were both after thoughts.
Independence Day was still more than a year away and then eight years
from accomplishment. The Revolution cannot be said to have become
established until the adoption of the Federal Constitution. No, on this
June day, these were not the conscious objects sought. They were
contending for the liberties of the country, they were not yet bent on
establishing a new nation nor on recognizing that relationship between
men which the modern world calls democracy. They were maintaining well
their traditions, these sons of Londonderry, lovers of freedom and
anxious for the fray, and these sons of the Puritans, whom Macaulay
tells us humbly abased themselves in the dust before the Lord, but
hesitated not to set their foot upon the neck of their king.
It is the moral quality of the day that
abides. It was the purpose of those plain garbed men behind the parapet
that told whether they were savages bent on plunder, living under the
law of the jungle, or sons of the morning bearing the light of
civilization. The glorious revolution of 1688 was fading from memory.
The English Government of that day rested upon privilege and corruption
at the base, surmounted by a king bent on despotism, but fortunately too
weak to accomplish any design either of good or ill. An empire still
outwardly sound was rotting at the core. The privilege which had found
Great Britain so complacent sought to establish itself over the
Colonies. The purpose of the patriots was resistance to tyranny. Pitt
and Burke and Lord Camden in England recognized this, and, loving
liberty, approved the course of the Colonies. The Tories here, loving
privilege, approved the course of the Royal Government. Bunker Hill
meant that the Colonies would save themselves and saving themselves save
the mother country for liberty. The war was not inevitable. Perhaps
wars are never inevitable. But the conflict between freedom and
privilege was inevitable. That it broke out in America rather than in
England was accidental. Liberty, the rights of man against tyranny, the
rights; of kings, was in the air. One side must give way. There might
have been a peaceful settlement by timely concessions such as the Reform
Bill of England some fifty years later, or the Japanese reforms of our
own times, but wanting that a collision was inevitable. Lacking a Bunker
Hill there had been another Dunbar.
The eighteenth century was the era of the
development of political rights. It was the culmination of the ideas of
the Renaissance. It was the putting into practice in government of the
answer to the long pondered and much discussed question, " What is
right?" Custom was giving way at last to reason. Class and caste and
place, all the distinctions based on appearance and accident were giving
way before reality. Men turned from distinctions which were temporal to
those which were eternal. The sovereignty of kings and the nobility of
peers was swallowed up in the sovereignty and nobility of all men. The
unequal in quantity became equal in quality.
The successful solution of this problem was
the crowning glory of a century and a half of America. It established
for all time how men ought to act toward each other in the governmental
relation. The rule of the people had begun. Bunker Hill had a deeper
significance. It was an example of the great law of human progress and
civilization. There has been much talk in recent years of the survival
of the fittest and of efficiency. We are beginning to hear of the
development of the superman and the claim that he has of right dominion
over the rest of his inferiors on earth. This philosophy denies the
doctrine of equality and holds that government is not based on consent
but on compulsion. It holds that the weak must serve the strong, which
is the law of slavery, it applies the law of the animal world to mankind
and puts science above morals. This sounds the call to the jungle. It
is not an advance to the morning but a retreat to night. It is not the
light of human reason but the darkness of the wisdom of the serpent.
The law of progress and civilization is not
the law of the jungle. It is not an earthly law, it is a divine law. It
does not mean the survival of the fittest, it means the sacrifice of the
fittest. Any mother will give her life for her child. Men put the women
and children in the lifeboats before they them selves will leave the
sinking ship. John Hampden and Nathan Hale did not survive, nor did
Lincoln, but Benedict Arnold did. The example above all others takes us
back to Jerusalem some nineteen hundred years ago. The men of Bunker
Hill were true disciples of civilization, because they were willing to
sacrifice themselves to resist the evils and redeem the liberties of the
British Empire. The proud shaft which rises over their battlefield and
the bronze form of Joseph Warren in your square are not monuments to
expediency or success, they are monuments to righteousness.
This is the age old story. Men are reading it
again today; written in blood. The Prussian military despotism has
abandoned the law of civilization for the law of barbarism. We could
approve and join in the scramble to the jungle, or we could resist and
sacrifice ourselves to save an erring nation. Not being beasts, but men,
we choose the sacrifice.
This brings us to the part that America is
taking at the end of its second hundred and fifty years of existence. Is
it not a part of that increasing purpose which the poet, the seer,
tells us runs through the ages? Has not our Nation been raised up and
strengthened, trained and prepared, to meet the great sacrifice that
must be made now to save the world from despotism? We have heard much of
our lack of preparation. We have been altogether lacking in preparation
in a strict military sense. We had no vast forces of artillery or
infantry, no large stores of munitions, few trained men. But let us not
forget to pay proper respect to the preparation we did have, which was
the result of long training and careful teaching. We had a mental, a
moral, a spiritual training that fitted us equally with any other people
to engage in this great contest which after all is a contest of ideas
as well as of arms. We must never neglect the military preparation
again, but we may as well recognize that we have had a preparation with
out which arms in our hands would very much resemble in purpose those
now arrayed against us.
Are we not realizing a noble destiny? The
great Admiral who discovered America bore the significant name of
Christopher. It has been pointed out that this name means Christ bearer.
Were not the men who stood at Bunker Hill bearing light to the world by
their sacrifices? Are not the men of today, the entire Nation of today,
living in accordance with the significance of that name, and by their
service and sacrifice redeeming mankind from the forces that make for
everlasting destruction? We seek no territory and no rewards. We give
but do not take. We seek for a victory of our ideas. Our arms are but
the means. America follows no such delusion as a place in the sun for
the strong by the destruction of the weak. America seeks rather, by
giving of her strength for the service of the weak, a place in eternity.
Calvin Coolidge, Have Faith in Massachusetts: A Collection of Speeches and Messages, 2nd ed.
Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1919
HAPPY 4TH OF JULY
President Coolidge was great American
ReplyDeleteMM
Yes, he was. Under-rated, IMO. Here is another brilliant speech. I struggled with which of these to post. http://teachingamericanhistory.org/library/index.asp?document=41
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