Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol II).djvu/99

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CH. IX.]
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
91

uniformity, than those of the electors, the subject was thought proper for regulation by the convention.[1] And it is observable, that the positive qualifications are few and simple. They respect only age, citizenship, and inhabitancy.[2]

§ 616. First, in regard to age. The representative must have attained twenty-five years. And certainly to this no reasonable objection can be made.[3] If experience, or wisdom, or knowledge be of value in the national councils, it can scarcely be pretended, that an earlier age could afford a certain guaranty for either. That some qualification of age is proper, no one will dispute. No one will contend, that persons, who are minors, ought to be eligible; or, that those, who have not attained manhood, so as to be entitled by the common law to dispose of their persons, or estates, at their own will, would be fit depositaries of the authority to dispose of the rights, persons, and property of others. Would the mere attainment of twenty-one years of age be a more proper qualification? All just reasoning would be against it. The characters and passions of young men can scarcely be understood at the moment of their majority. They are then new to the rights of self-government; warm in their passions; ardent in their expectations; and, just escaping from pupilage, are strongly tempted to discard the lessons of caution, which riper years inculcate. What they will become, remains to be seen; and four years beyond that period is but a very short space, in which to try their virtues, develop their talents, enlarge their resources, and give them a practical insight into the business of life ade-
  1. The Federalist, No. 52.
  2. 1 Tucker's Black. Comm. App. 197.
  3. 1 Tucker's Black. Comm. App. 213, 214; 2 Wilson's Law Lect. 139, 140.