SIR: The seat you fill places you in a relation of credit and nearness to every citizen. By right and natural position, every citizen is your friend. Before any acts contrary to his own judgment or interest have repelled the affections of any man, each may look with trust and living anticipation to your government. Each has the highest right to call your attention to such subjects as are of a public nature, and properly belong to the chief magistrate; and the good magistrate will feel a joy in meeting such confidence. I n this belief and at the instance of a few of my friends and neighbors, I crave of your patience a short hearing for their sentiments and my own : and the circumstance that my name will be utterly unknown to you will only give the fairer chance to your equitable construction of what I have to say.
Saturday, April 19, 2014
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Letter to President Martin Van Buren Protesting the Removal of the Cherokee, April 23, 1838.
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s Letter to President Martin Van Buren Protesting the Removal of the Cherokee, April 23, 1838. The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Also here.
SIR: The seat you fill places you in a relation of credit and nearness to every citizen. By right and natural position, every citizen is your friend. Before any acts contrary to his own judgment or interest have repelled the affections of any man, each may look with trust and living anticipation to your government. Each has the highest right to call your attention to such subjects as are of a public nature, and properly belong to the chief magistrate; and the good magistrate will feel a joy in meeting such confidence. I n this belief and at the instance of a few of my friends and neighbors, I crave of your patience a short hearing for their sentiments and my own : and the circumstance that my name will be utterly unknown to you will only give the fairer chance to your equitable construction of what I have to say.
Sir, my
communication respects the sinister rumors that fill this part of the country
concerning the Cherokee people. The interest always felt in the aboriginal
population—an interest naturally growing as that decays – has been heightened
in regard to this tribe. Even in our distant State some good rumor of their
worth and civility has arrived. We have learned with joy their improvement in
the social arts. We have read their newspapers. We have seen some of them in
our schools and colleges. In common with the great body of the American people,
we have witnessed with sympathy the painful labors of these red men to redeem
their own race from the doom of eternal inferiority, and to borrow and domesticate
in the tribe the arts and customs of the Caucasian race. And notwithstanding
the unaccountable apathy with which of late years the Indians have been
some-times abandoned to their enemies, it is not to be doubted that it is the
good pleasure and the understanding of all humane persons in the Republic, of
the men and the matrons sitting in the thriving independent families all over
the land, that they shall be duly cared for; that they shall taste justice and
love from all to whom we have delegated the office of dealing with them.
The
newspapers now inform us that, in December, 1835, a treaty contracting for the
exchange of all the Cherokee territory was pre-tended to be made by an agent on
the part of the United States with some persons appearing on the part of the
Cherokees; that the fact afterwards transpired that these deputies did by no
means represent the will of the nation; and that, out of eighteen thousand
souls composing the nation, fifteen thousand six hundred and sixty-eight have
protested against the so-called treaty. It now appears that the government of
the United States choose to hold the Cherokees to this sham treaty, and are
proceeding to execute the same. Almost the entire Cherokee Nation stand up and
say, “This is not our act. Behold us. Here are we. Do not mistake that handful
of deserters for us;” and the American President and the Cabinet, the Senate
and the House of Representatives, neither hear these men nor see them, and are
contracting to put this active nation into carts and boats, and to drag them
over mountains and rivers to a wilderness at a vast distance beyond the
Mississippi. And a paper purporting to be an army order fixes a month from this
day as the hour for this doleful removal.
In the
name of God, sir, we ask you if this be so. Do the newspapers rightly inform
us? Men and women with pale and perplexed faces meet one another in the streets
and churches here, and ask if this be so. We have inquired if this be a gross
misrepresentation from the party opposed to the government and anxious to
blacken it with the people. We have looked in the newspapers of different
parties and find a horrid confirmation of the tale. We are slow to believe it.
We hoped the Indians were misinformed, and that their remonstrance was pre-mature,
and will turn out to be a needless act of terror.
The
piety, the principle that is left in the United States, if only in its coarsest
form, a regard to the speech of men, - forbid us to entertain it as a fact.
Such a dereliction of all faith and virtue, such a denial of justice, and such
deafness to screams for mercy were never heard of in times of peace and in the
dealing of a nation with its own allies and wards, since the earth was made.
Sir, does this government think that the people of the United States are become
savage and mad? From their mind are the sentiments of love and a good nature
wiped clean out? The soul of man, the justice, the mercy that is the heart's
heart in all men, from Maine to Georgia, does abhor this business.
In
speaking thus the sentiments of my neighbors and my own, perhaps I overstep the
bounds of decorum. But would it not be a higher indecorum coldly to argue a
matter like this? We only state the fact that a crime is projected that
confounds our understandings by its magnitude, -a crime that really deprives us
as well as the Cherokees of a country? for how could we call the conspiracy
that should crush these poor Indians our government, or the land that was
cursed by their parting and dying imprecations our country, any more? You, sir,
will bring down that renowned chair in which you sit into infamy if your seal
is set to this instrument of perfidy; and the name of this nation, hitherto the
sweet omen of religion and liberty, will stink to the world.
You
will not do us the injustice of connecting this remonstrance with any sectional
and party feeling. It is in our hearts the simplest commandment of brotherly
love. We will not have this great and solemn claim upon national and human
justice huddled aside under the flimsy plea of its being a party act. Sir, to
us the questions upon which the government and the people have been agitated
during the past year, touching the prostration of the currency and of trade,
seem but motes in comparison. These hard times, it is true, have brought the
discussion home to every farmhouse and poor man's house in this town; but it is
the chirping of grasshoppers beside the immortal question whether justice shall
be done by the race of civilized to the race of savage man, – whether all the
attributes of reason, of civility, of justice, and even of mercy, shall be put
off by the American people, and so vast an outrage upon the Cherokee Nation and
upon human nature shall be consummated.
One
circumstance lessens the reluctance with which I intrude at this time on your
attention my conviction that the government ought to be admonished of a new
historical fact, which the discussion of this question has disclosed, namely,
that there exists in a great part of the Northern people a gloomy diffidence in
the moral character of the government.
On the
broaching of this question, a general expression of despondency, of disbelief
that any good will accrue from a remonstrance on an act of fraud and robbery,
appeared in those men to whom we naturally turn for aid and counsel. Will the
American government steal? Will it lie? Will it kill? – We ask triumphantly.
Our counsellors and old statesmen here say that ten years ago they would have
staked their lives on the affirmation that the proposed Indian measures could
not be executed; that the unanimous country would put them down. And now the
steps of this crime follow each other so fast, at such fatally quick time, that
the millions of virtuous citizens, whose agents the government are, have no
place to interpose, and must shut their eyes until the last howl and wailing of
these tormented villages and tribes shall afflict the ear of the world.
I will
not hide from you, as an indication of the alarming distrust, that a letter
addressed as mine is, and suggesting to the mind of the Executive the plain
obligations of man, has a burlesque character in the apprehensions of some of
my friends. I, sir, will not beforehand treat you with the contumely of this
distrust. I will at least state to you this fact, and show you how plain and
humane people, whose love would be honor, regard the policy of the government,
and what injurious inferences they draw as to the minds of the governors. A man
with your experience in affairs must have seen cause to appreciate the futility
of opposition to the moral sentiment. However feeble the sufferer and however
great the oppressor, it is in the nature of things that the blow should recoil
upon the aggressor. For God is in the sentiment, and it cannot be withstood.
The potentate and the people perish before it; but with it, and as its
executor, they are omnipotent.
I write
thus, sir, to inform you of the state of mind these Indian tidings have
awakened here, and to pray with one voice more that you, whose hands are strong
with the delegated power of fifteen millions of men, will avert with that might
the terrific injury which threatens the Cherokee tribe.
With great respect, sir, I am your fellow
citizen,
RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
SIR: The seat you fill places you in a relation of credit and nearness to every citizen. By right and natural position, every citizen is your friend. Before any acts contrary to his own judgment or interest have repelled the affections of any man, each may look with trust and living anticipation to your government. Each has the highest right to call your attention to such subjects as are of a public nature, and properly belong to the chief magistrate; and the good magistrate will feel a joy in meeting such confidence. I n this belief and at the instance of a few of my friends and neighbors, I crave of your patience a short hearing for their sentiments and my own : and the circumstance that my name will be utterly unknown to you will only give the fairer chance to your equitable construction of what I have to say.