Mr. MADISON rose and addressed the Chair; the
members rushed from their seats and crowded around him:
Although the actual posture of the subject before
the Committee might admit a full survey of it, it is not my purpose,
in rising, to enter into the wide field of discussion, which has
called forth a display of intellectual resources and varied powers
of eloquence that any country might be proud of, and which I have
witnessed with the highest gratification. Having been, for a very
long period, withdrawn from any participation in proceedings of
deliberative bodies, and under other disqualifications now, of
which I am deeply sensible, though, perhaps, less sensible than
others may perceive that I ought to be, I shall not attempt more
than a few observations, which may suggest the views I have taken
of the subject, and which will consume but little of the time
of the Committee, now become precious. It is sufficiently obvious,
that persons and property are the two great subjects on which
Governments are to act; and that the rights of persons, and the
rights of property, are the objects, for the protection of which
Government was instituted. These rights cannot well be separated.
The personal right to acquire property, which is a natural right,
gives to property, when acquired, a right to protection, as a
social right. The essence of Government is power; and power, lodged
as it must be in human hands, will ever be liable to abuse. In
Monarchies, the interests and happiness of all may be sacrificed
to the caprice and passion of a despot. In Aristocracies, the
rights and welfare of the many may be sacrificed to the pride
and cupidity of the few. In Republics, the great danger is, that
the majority may not sufficiently respect the rights of the minority.
Some gentlemen, consulting the purity and generosity of their
own minds, without adverting to the lessons of experience, would
find a security against that danger in our social feelings; in
a respect for character; in the dictates of the monitor within;
in the interests of individuals; in the aggregate interests of
the community. But man is known to be a selfish as well as a social
being. Respect for character, though often a salutary restraint,
is but too often overruled by other motives. When numbers of men
act in a body, respect for character is often lost, just in proportion
as it is necessary to control what is not right. We all know that
conscience is not a sufficient safeguard; and besides, that conscience
itself may be deluded; may be misled, by an unconscious bias,
into acts which an enlightened conscience would forbid. As to
the permanent interest of individuals in the aggregate interests
of the community, and in the proverbial maxim, that honesty is
the best policy, present temptation is too often found to be an
over-match for those considerations. These favourable attributes
of the human character are all valuable, as auxiliaries; but they
will not serve as a substitute for the coercive provisions belonging
to Government and Law. They will always, in proportion as they
prevail, be favourable to a mild administration of both; but they
can never be relied on as a guaranty of the rights of the minority
against a majority disposed to take unjust advantage of its power.
The only effectual safeguard to the rights of the minority must
be laid in such a basis and structure of the Government itself
as may afford, in a certain degree, directly or indirectly, a
defensive authority in behalf of a minority having right on its
side.
To come more nearly to the subject before the
Committee, viz: that peculiar feature in our community which calls
for a peculiar division in the basis of our Government, I mean
the coloured part of our population. It is apprehended, if the
power of the Commonwealth shall be in the hands of a majority,
who have no interest in this species of property, that, from the
facility with which it may be oppressed by excessive taxation,
injustice may be done to its owners. It would seem, therefore,
if we can incorporate that interest into the basis of our system,
it will be the most apposite and effectual security that can be
devised. Such an arrangement is recommended to me by many very
important considerations. It is due to justice; due to humanity;
due to truth; to the sympathies of our nature; in fine, to our
character as a people, both abroad and at home, that they should
be considered, as much as possible, in the light of human beings,
and not as mere property. As such, they are acted upon by our
laws, and have an interest in our laws. They may be considered
as making a part, though a degraded part, of the families to which
they belong.
If they had the complexion of the Serfs in the
north of Europe, or of the Villeins, formerly in England; in other
terms, if they were of our own complexion, much of the difficulty
would be removed. But the mere circumstance of complexion cannot
deprive them of the character of men. The Federal number, as it
is called, is particularly recommended to attention in forming
a basis of representation, by its simplicity, its certainty, its
stability, and its permanency. Other expedients for securing justice
in the case of taxation, while they amount in pecuniary effect
to the same thing, have been found liable to great objections;
and I do not believe that a majority of this Convention is disposed
to adopt them, if they can find a substitute they can approve.
Nor is it a small recommendation of the Federal number, in my
view, that it is in conformity to the ratio recognised in the
Federal Constitution. The cases, it is true, are not precisely
the same, but there is more of analogy than might at first be
supposed. If the coloured population were equally diffused through
the State, the analogy would fail; but existing as it does, in
large masses, in particular parts of it, the distinction between
the different parts of the State resembles that between the slaveholding
and non-slaveholding States; and, if we reject a doctrine in our
own State, whilst we claim the benefit of it in our relations
to other States, other disagreeable consequences may be added
to the charge of inconsistency which will be brought against us.
If the example of our sister States is to have weight, we find
that in Georgia the Federal number is made the basis of representation
in both branches of their Legislature; and I do not learn that
any dissatisfaction or inconvenience has flowed from its adoption.
I wish we could know more of the manner in which particular organizations
of Government operate in other parts of the United States. There
would be less danger of being misled into error, and we should
have the advantage of their experience as well as our own. In
the case I mention, there can, I believe, be no error.
Whether, therefore, we be fixing a basis of
representation for the one branch or the other of our Legislature,
or for both, in a combination with other principles, the Federal
ratio is a favourite resource with me. It entered into my earliest
views of the subject before this Convention was assembled; and
though I have kept my mind open, have listened to every proposition
which has been advanced, and given to them all a candid consideration,
I must say, that, in my judgment, we shall act wisely in preferring
it to others which have been brought before us. Should the Federal
number be made to enter into the basis in one branch of the Legislature
and not into the other, such an arrangement might prove favourable
to the slaves themselves. It may be, and I think it has been suggested,
that those who have themselves no interest in this species of
property, are apt to sympathize with the slaves more than may
be the case with their masters; and would, therefore, be disposed,
when they bad the ascendency, to protect them from laws of an
oppressive character; whilst the masters, who have a common interest
with the slaves, against undue taxation, which must be paid out
of their labour, will be their protectors when they have the ascendency.
The Convention is now arrived at a point where
we must agree on some common ground, all sides relaxing in their
opinions, not changing, but mutually surrendering a part of them.
In framing a Constitution, great difficulties are necessarily
to be overcome; and nothing can ever overcome them but a spirit
of compromise. Other nations are surprised at nothing so much
as our having been able to form Constitutions in the manner which
has been exemplified in this country. Even the Union of so many
States is, in the eyes of the world, a wonder; the harmonious
establishment of a common Government over them all, a miracle.
I cannot but flatter myself, that, without a miracle, we shall
be able to arrange all difficulties. I never have despaired, notwithstanding
all the threatening appearances we have passed through. I have
now more than a hope - a consoling confidence that we shall at
last find that our labours have not been in vain.