Alexander H. Stephens,
"The Honor of this Country"
Speech Before the United States House of
Representatives,
2 February 1848
[Excerpts]
The honor of this country does not
and cannot require us to force and compel the people of any other to sell
theirs. I have, I trust, as high a regard for national honor
as any man. It is the brightest gem in the chaplet of a
nation's glory; and there is nothing of which I am prouder than the high
character for honor this country has acquired throughout the civilized
world -- that code of honor which was established by Washington and the
men of the Revolution and which rests upon truth, justice, and honesty,
which is the offspring of virtue and integrity, and which is seen in the
length and breadth of our land, in all the evidences of art, and
civilization, and moral advancement, and everything that tends to elevate,
dignify, and ennoble man. This is the honor of my admiration,
and it is made of "sterner," purer, nobler "stuff" than that aggressive
and degrading, yea, odious principle now avowed of waging war against a
neighboring people to compel them to sell their country. Who
is here so base as to be willing, under any circumstances, to sell his
country? For myself, I can only say, if the last funeral pile
of liberty were lighted, I would mount it and expire in its flames before
I would be coerced by any power however great and strong, to sell or
surrender the land of my home, the place of my nativity, and the graves of
my sires! Sir, the principle is not only dishonorable, but
infamous.
As the Representative upon this floor
of a high-minded and honorable constituency, I repeat, that the principle
of waging war against a neighboring people to compel them to sell their
country, is not only dishonorable, but disgraceful and
infamous. What! shall it be said that American honor aims at
nothing higher than land -- than the ground on which we tread?
Do we look no higher, in our aspirations for honor, than do the soulless
brutes? Shall we disavow the similitude of our Maker, and
disgrace the very name of man? Tell it not to the
world. Let not such an aspersion and reproach rest upon our
name. I have heard of nations whose honor could be satisfied
with gold -- that glittering dust which is so precious in the eyes of some
-- but never did I expect to live to see the day when the Executive of
this country would announce that our honor was such a loathsome, beastly
thing, that it could not be satisfied with any achievements in arms,
however brilliant and glorious, but must feed on earth -- gross, vile
dirt! -- and require even a prostrate foe to be robbed of mountain rocks
and desert plains!
SOURCE: Excerpted and reprinted in Roy
P. Basler, editor, Abraham Lincoln: His Speeches and
Writings (Cleveland: World Publishing Company, 1946), pages
215-216.
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