did he appear
DOCUMENT 8-5
Mercy Otis Warren Opposes the Constitution
Opponents of the new Constitution criticized its provisions and its framers, often charging
sachusetts about ratification of the Constitution prompted Mercy Otis Warren, a member
them with subverting the achievements of the American Revolution. The debate in Mas-
of a distinguished family of revolutionary leaders who traced their origins back to the
Mayflower, to publish her Observations on the New Constitution in 1788 under the
pseudonym, "a Columbian Patriot." A brilliant and exceptionally well-educated woman
who had been anonymously publishing plays, poems, and essays for fifteen years, Warren
argued that the Constitution's framers sought to undermine liberties that Americans had
only recently defended from British encroachment. Like other Antifederalists, Warren
pop-
examined specific constitutional provisions to discern Federalists' assumptions about
ular government. Her Observations disclose Antifederalists' deep suspicion of the Con-
stitution, its supporters, and their secret deliberations and hasty plan for ratification.
Observations on the New Constitution, 1788
Animated with the firmest zeal for the interest of this country, the peace and
union of the American States, and the freedom and happiness of a people who
have made the most costly sacrifices in the cause of liberty,—who have braved the
power of Britain, weathered the convulsions of war, and waded thro' the blood of
friends and foes to establish their independence and to support the freedom of the
human mind. ... obliges every one to remonstrate against the strides of ambition,
and a wanton lust of domination, and to resist the first approaches of tyranny,
which at this day threaten to sweep away the rights for which the brave sons of
America have fought with an heroism scarcely paralleled even in ancient repub-
licks.... On these shores freedom has planted her standard, (dyed) in the purple
tide that flowed from the veins of her martyred heroes; and here every uncor-
rupted American yet hopes to see it supported by the vigour, the justice, the
From Mercy Otis Warren, Observations on the New Constitution, and on the Federal
and State Conventions, by a Columbian Patriot (Boston, 1788).
BUILDING A REPUBLIC, 1775-1789
161
trated
every
republicanism is dwindled into theory that we are incapable of
[The] Constitution,
tyranny;
-
wisdom and unanimity of the people, in spite of the deep-laid plots, the secret
place, who intoxicated with the ideas of distinction and preferment, have pros-
or the bold effrontery of those interested and avaricious adventurers for
our liberties--and that we must have a master.
which, by the undefined meaning of some parts, and the ambiguities of expres-
sion in others, is dangerously adapted to the purposes of an immediate aristocratic
terminate in the most uncontrouled despotism...
that from the difficulty, if not impracticability of its operation, must soon
And it is with inexpressible anxiety, that many of the best friends to the Union
of the States -- to the peaceable and equal participation of the rights of nature, and
to the glory and dignity of this country, behold the insidious arts, and the strenu-
ous efforts of the partisans of arbitrary power, by their vague definitions of the
best established truths, endeavoring to envelope the mind in darkness the con-
comitant of slavery, and to lock the strong chains of domestic despotism on a
cipated from the sceptre of foreign dominion.
country, which by the most glorious and successful struggles is but newly eman-
principles of monarchy-a democratick branch with the features of aristocracy -
.
of
---
for office.
and the extravagance of nobility pervading the minds of many of the candidates
Some gentlemen with laboured zeal, have spent much time in urging
the necessity of government, from the embarrassments of trade — the want of
respectability abroad and confidence in the public engagements at home: - These
are obvious truths which no one denies; and there are few who do not unite in
the general wish for the restoration of public faith, the revival of commerce, arts,
agriculture, and industry, under a lenient, peaceable and energetick government:
But the most sagacious advocates for the party have not by fair discussion, and
rational argumentation, evinced the necessity of adopting this many-headed mon-
ster ... nor have its friends the courage to denominate it a Monarchy, an Aristoc-
racy, or an Oligarchy, and the favoured bantling' must have passed through the
short period of its existence without a name, had not Mr. [James] Wilson, in the
fertility of his genius, suggested the happy epithet of a Federal Republic....
[1.] It will be allowed by every one that the fundamental principle of a free
government, is the equal representation of a free people. ... And when society has
thus deputed a certain number of their equals to take care of their personal rights,
and the interest of the whole community, it must be considered that responsibility
is the great security of integrity and honour; and that annual election is the basis
of responsibility.... [T]he best political writers have supported the principles of
annual elections with a precision, that cannot be confuted, though they may be
darkened, by the sophistical arguments that have been thrown out with design, to
2. There is no security in the profered system, either for the rights of con-
undermine all the barriers of freedom.
science, or the liberty of the Press: Despotism usually while it is gaining ground,
will suffer men to think, say, or write what they please; but when once established,
162
READIN
unjust restrictions may take place in the first instance, and an
imprimator
strances of an injured and oppressed people.
po
ne
re
are replete.
tr
ey
ot
as to give
if it is thought necessary to subserve the purposes of arbitrary power, the
Press in the next, may silence the complaints, and forbid the most decent remon.
3. There are no well defined limits of the Judiciary Powers ... and as they
cannot be comprehended by the clearest capacity, or the most sagacious mind, it
would be an Herculean labour to attempt to describe the dangers with which they
4. The Executive and the Legislative are so dangerously blended
just cause of alarm, and every thing relative thereto, is couched in such ambiguous
terms — in such vague and indefinite expression, as is a sufficient ground without
5. The abolition of trial by jury in civil causes.... [S]hall this inestimable
privilege be relinquished in America -- either thro' the fear of inquistion for u
counted thousands of public monies in the hands of some who have been officious
in the fabrication of the consolidated system, or from the apprehension that some
future delinquent possessed of more power than integrity, may be called to a trial
6. Though it has been said by Mr. Wilson and many others, that a Standing-
ir
any other objection, for the reprobation of a system.
P
P
a
tl
unac.
fo
to
by his peers in the hour of investigation?
b
S
은
. Despot, may draw out his dragoons to suppress the murmurs
pro-
f
Army is necessary for the dignity and safety of America, yet freedom revolts at the
idea, when the
of a few.... By the edicts of authority vested in the sovereign power by the
posed constitution, the militia of the country, the bulwark of defence, and the
security of national liberty is no longer under the controul of civil authority; but
at the rescript of the Monarch, or the aristocracy, they may either be employed to
extort the enormous sums that will be necessary to support the civil list- to main-
tain the regalia of power-and the splendour of the most useless part of the com-
munity, or they may be sent into foreign countries for the fulfilment of treaties,
stipulated by the President and two thirds of the Senate.
7. Notwithstanding the delusory promise to guarantee a Republican form of
government to every State in the Union-If the most discerning eye could dis-
cover any meaning at all in the engagement, there are no resources left for the
support of internal government, or the liquidation of the debts of the State. Every
source of revenue is in the monopoly of Congress.
8. As the new Congress are empowered to determine their own salaries, the
requisitions for this purpose may not be very moderate, and the drain for public
moneys will probably rise past all calculation..
9. There is no provision for a rotation, nor any thing to prevent the perpetuity
of office in the same hands for life; which by a little well timed bribery, will prob-
ably be done, to the exclusion of men of the best abilities from their share in the
offices of government. ---By this neglect we lose the advantages of that check to
periods, keeps the mind of man in equilibrio, and teaches him the feelings of the
governed, and better qualifies him to govern in his turn.
the overbearing insolence of office, which by rendering him ineligible at certain
vicinity of their own county, or state, to answer to the litigious
or unjust suit of an
10. The inhabitants of the United States, are liable to be dragged from the
adversary, on the most distant borders of the Continent; in short the appelate
jurisdiction of the Supreme Federal Court, includes an unwarrantable stretch of
BUILDING A REPUBLIC, 1775-1789
163
ost
On-
ey
ever,
it
ey
our own Representatives.
nent of America.
power over the liberty, life, and property of the subject, through the wide Conti-
11. One Representative to thirty thousand inhabitants is a very inadequate
representation; and every man who is not lost to all sense of freedom to his coun-
try, must reprobate the idea of Congress altering by law, or on any pretence what-
interfering with any regulations for the time, places, and manner of choosing
12. If the sovereignty of America is designed to be elective, the circumscrib-
ing the votes to only ten electors in this State (Massachusetts), and the same pro-
portion in all the others, is nearly tantamount to the exclusion of the voice of the
the Union the most convenient instrument for despotic:
aristocratic junto,4 who may easily combine in each State to place at the head of
for life, as the influence of such a body over the minds of the people will be coequal
to the extensive powers with which they are vested, and they will not only forget,
beyond all responsibility is totally repugnant to every principle of a free
ve
us
ut
le
sway.
13. A Senate chosen for six years will
, in most instances, be an appointment
is
ne е
set
government.
B-
e
encroachments of power in too many instances to be named..
14. There is no provision by a bill of rights to guard against the dangerous
.. We are told ..
that the whole constitution is a declaration of rights” —but mankind must think
for themselves, and to many very judicious and discerning characters, the whole
'S
)-
e
constitution with very few exceptions appears to [be a] perversion of the rights of
particular states, and of private citizens. — But the gentleman goes on to tell us,
t
--
that the primary object is the general government, and that the rights of indi-
being very particular about them.
viduals are only incidentally mentioned, and that there was a clear impropriety in
The rights of individuals ought to be the
primary object of all government, and cannot be too securely guarded by the most
explicit declarations in their favor.
15. The difficulty, if not impracticability, of exercising the equal and equitable
powers of government by a single legislature over an extent of territory that
reaches from the Mississippi to the western lakes, and from them to the Atlantic
ocean, is an insuperable objection to the adoption of the new system.
16. It is an indisputed fact, that not one legislature in the United States had
the most distant idea when they first appointed members for a convention, entirely
commercial, or when they afterwards authorised them to consider on some
amendments of the Federal union, that they would without any warrant from
their constituents, presume on so bold and daring a stride, as ultimately to destroy
the state governments, and offer a consolidated system....
17. The first appearance of the article which declares the ratification of nine
states sufficient for the establishment of the new system, wears the face of dissen-
tion, is a subversion of the union of the Confederated States, and tends to the
introduction of anarchy and civil convulsions, and may be a means of involving
18. The mode in which this constitution is recommended to the people to
the whole country in blood.
judge without either the advice of Congress, or the legislatures of the several
states, is very reprehensible-- it is an attempt to force it upon them before it could
be thoroughly understood..
164
READING THE AMERICAN PAST
ject under discussion.
But it is needless to enumerate other instances, in which the proposed consti-
kind; and it is equally so to enquire into the motives that induced to so bold a step
tution appears contradictory to the first principles which ought to govern man-
as the annihilation of the independence and sovereignty of the thirteen distinct
from the first shutting up the doors of the federal convention and resolving that
states. They are but too obvious through the whole progress of the business,
no member should correspond with gentlemen in the different states on the sub-
And it is to be feared we shall soon see this country rushing into the extremes
of confusion and violence, in consequence of the proceedings of a set of gentlemen,
who disregarding the purposes of their appointment, have assumed powers un-
authorised by any commission, have unnecessarily rejected the confederation of
the United States, and annihilated the sovereignty and independence of the indi-
vidual governments.
QUESTIONS FOR READING AND DISCUSSION
1. According to Warren, why would the constitution “sweep away" Americans
rights and lead to “aristocratic tyranny" or "uncontrouled despotism"? Why was
the “Federal Republic" proposed by the Constitution in reality a “many-headed
monster"?
2. In Warren's view, what did the framers of the Constitution perceive as threats?
How did they design the Constitution to avoid those threats? In what sense did
the Constitution create a "consolidated system"?
3. How did Warren disagree with Federalists' diagnosis of threats and their
posals for remedies? What remedies did Warren propose? What constitutional
amendments, if any, might have allayed Warren's fears?
4. What assumptions did Warren make about the location and exercise of power?
5. How did Warren's view of the American Revolution influence her critique of
the constitution?
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COMPARATIVE QUESTIONS
1. How did Richard Allen's experiences compare with Thomas Jefferson's conclu-
sions about the difficulties of emancipation? How might Allen have responded
to Jefferson's arguments about slavery and race?
2. How did Jefferson's views about slavery and race compare to James Madison's
argument about the dangers of majorities? What minority rights were pro-
tected, for example, in Jefferson's and Madison's Virginia?
3. What were the principal differences between Madison's Federalist arguments
and Mercy Otis Warren's Antifederalist criticisms? To what extent did Madison
and Warren agree? How did their views of human liberty and the limits of
government compare to those in Benjamin Rush's proposal for republican
education?
4. According to the documents in this chapter, what were the most important
qualities for citizens in the new republic? How were those qualities to be cres
ated and preserved?
5. What did Allen, Jefferson, Rush, Madison, and Warren see as the most impora
tant lessons and legacies of the American Revolution?
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