Page:The collected works of Theodore Parker volume 8.djvu/81

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SAFEGUARDS OF SOCIETY.
77

purchase your wicked witnesses; nay, sometimes one will volunteer and “enlarge his testimony”—a man's life and liberty are not safe for a moment. The administration may grasp any man at will. The minister represents the government; the judge, the attorney, all represent the government. It has often happened that all these had something to gain by punishing unjustly some noble man who opposed their tyranny, and they used their official power to pervert justice and ruin the State, that they might exalt themselves. The jury does not represent the government, but “the country;” that is, the justice, the humanity, the mercy of mankind. This is its great value.

Have we the third safeguard, Righteous Officers? I believe no nation ever started with nobler officers than we chose at first. But I think there has been some little change from Washington down through the Tylers and the Polks to the present administration. John Adams, in coming to the presidency, found his son in a high office, and asked his predecessor if it were fit for the President to retain his own son in office. Washington replied, “It would be wrong for you to appoint him, but I hope he will not be discharged from office, and so the country be deprived of his valuable services, merely “because he is your son!” What a satire is this on the conduct of men in power at this day! We have had three “second General Washingtons” in the presidential chair since 1829; two new ones are now getting ready, “standing like greyhounds in the slips, straining upon the start,” for that bad eminence. These three past and two future “Washingtons” have never displayed any very remarkable family likeness to the original, who left no descendant in this particular.[1] I pass over the general conduct of our executive and judicial officers, which does not seem to differ much from that of similar functionaries in England,

  1. In these times of political corruption, when a postmaster in a country village is turned out of office for voting for a representative to Congress who exposed the wickedness of a prominent member of the cabinet, it is pleasant to read such letters as those of Washington to Benjamin Lincoln, March 11, 1789, and to Bushrod Washington, July 27, 1789, in Spark's “Writings of Washington,” vol. ix. p. 477, et seq., and x. p. 73, et seq.