John Adams, then a young man just admitted to the bar, was present at the scene, and he dwells on it often with sympathetic delight. There, in the Old Town-House of Boston, sat the five judges of the Province, with Hutchinson as Chief Justice, in robes of scarlet, cambric bands, and judicial wigs; and there, too, in gowns, bands, and tie-wigs, were the barristers. Conspicuous on the wall were full-length portraits of two British monarchs, Charles the Second and James the Second, while in the corners were the likenesses of Massachusetts Governors. In this presence the great oration was delivered. The patriot lawyer had refused compensation. “In such a cause as this,” said he, “I despise a fee.” He spoke for country and for mankind. Firmly he planted himself on the Rights of Man, which he insisted were, by the everlasting Law of Nature, inherent and inalienable; and these rights, he nobly proclaimed, were common to all, without distinction of color. To suppose them surrendered in any other way than by equal rules and general consent was to suppose men idiot or mad, whose acts are not binding. But he especially flew at two arguments of tyranny: first, that the colonists were “virtually” represented, and, secondly, that there was such a difference between direct and indirect taxation, that, while the former might be questionable, the latter was not. To these two apologies he replied, first, that no such phrase as “virtual representation” was known in Law or Constitution,—that it is altogether subtilty and illusion, wholly unfounded and absurd,—and that we must not be cheated by any such phantom, or other fiction of law or politics, or any monkish trick of deceit and hypocrisy; and then, with the same crushing force, he said, that, in absence of representation, all taxation, whether direct or indirect, whether internal or external, whether on land or trade, was equally obnoxious to the same unhesitating condemnation.[95] The effect was electric. The judges were stunned into silence, and postponed judgment. The people were aroused to a frenzy of patriotism. “American Independence,” says John Adams, in the record of his impressions, “was then and there born; the seeds of patriots and heroes were then and there sown, to defend the vigorous youth. Every man of a crowded audience appeared to me to go away, as I did, ready to take arms against Writs of Assistance. Then and there was the first scene of the first act of opposition to the arbitrary claims of Great Britain. Then and there the child Independence was born.”[96] But this great birth is inseparably associated with the principle, then and there declared, that “Taxation without representation is Tyranny.”
From this time forward Otis dedicated himself singly to the cause he had so bravely upheld, and the popular heart clove to him. He became the favorite of his fellow-countrymen. His arguments were repeated, his words were gratefully adopted, and the saying, “Taxation without representation is tyranny,” became a maxim of patriotism. In May, 1761, only a few weeks after this utterance, he was chosen a representative of Boston in the Legislature by an almost unanimous vote. The Crown officers were dismayed by this most significant election, and one of them, speaking with prophetic lamentation, said it would “shake the Province to its foundation”; on which John Adams remarked, many years later, when some of its results were already visible, “That election has shaken two continents, and will shake four.”[97] Of course this was simply because it affirmed and invigorated a practical truth of government by which all the people are confirmed in political power. At his new post of duty, Otis became the acknowledged leader, constant, fervid, eloquent, and, according to his own language, “daring to speak plain English.” While still declaring unhesitating loyalty to the Crown, and even pledging “the last penny and the last drop of blood, rather than that by any backwardness of ours his Majesty’s measures should be embarrassed,” he made haste to announce, in words where humor blends with truth, that “God made all men naturally equal,”—that “the ideas of earthly superiority, preëminence, and grandeur are educational, at least acquired, not innate,”—that “no government has a right to make hobby-horses, asses, and slaves of the subject, Nature having made sufficient of the two former for all the lawful purposes of man, from the harmless peasant in the field to the most refined politician in the cabinet, but none of the last, which infallibly proves they are unnecessary.” But the case would have been imperfectly stated, if the patriot representative had not once more cried out against taxation without representation, and warned against the calamities that must follow from this unquestionable tyranny. This early debate is preserved in a pamphlet, printed in 1762, and entitled “A Vindication of the Conduct of the House of Representatives of the Province of the Massachusetts Bay, etc., by James Otis, Esq.,” which, we are told by an eminent authority, contains, in solid substance, all that is found in the Declaration of Rights and Wrongs issued by Congress in 1774, the Declaration of Independence in 1776, and the subsequent writings of those political philosophers who upheld the national cause.[98] Pardon me, if I dwell too minutely on this history. I do it only to illustrate the issue of principle actually made with the mother country.
The controversy still continued, when, in 1764, the orator, who by voice and pen had so bravely maintained the cause of his country, put forth another publication, entitled “The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved.” Mark, if you please, the vigor of the title. The rights of the Colonies are not only “asserted,” but “proved.” Reprinted in London, this pamphlet was read by Lord Mansfield, Chief Justice of England, and was answered by Soame Jenyns, a partisan writer of the Crown. The copy I hold in my hand has the imprint of London, and is marked “Third Edition.” All things considered, it is the most remarkable pamphlet of our country, and one of the most remarkable ever written. Recent events, verifying the truths it so early announced, elevate its place in history. Here are the same vital principles, enforced with learning and eloquence, which Otis announced at the bar, and then again in the debates of the Legislature; and here are not only the truths asserted by our fathers, but the unanswerable arguments by which they were vindicated. Even an abstract would be too long for this debate; but the character of this Defence of the American People, not unlike Milton’s famous “Defensio pro Populo Anglicano,” will appear in a few passages, where, as in gleams, may be discerned the Idea of a Republic.
I do not pause on the assertion, “that every man of a sound mind should have his vote,” or the authority he invokes, when he says, “Lord Coke declares that it is against Magna Charta and against the franchises of the land, for freemen to be taxed but by their own consent,” both of which, sounded by him elsewhere,[99] are important premises. Nor do I dwell on that admirable statement of much in little, “The first simple principle is Equality and the Power of the Whole.”[100] The Equality of All and the Power of All!—the two buttresses of a just government. I come at once to the plain statement of fundamental right.
“The supreme power cannot take from any man any part of his property without his consent in person or by representation.”
“Taxes are not to be laid on the people but by their consent in person or by deputation.”[101]
Such are “the first principles of law and justice, and the great barriers of a free state”; and then he adds, “I ask, I want no more.”[102] And these principles he claims for all, without distinction of color.
“The colonists are by the Law of Nature free-born, as indeed all men are, white or black.… Does it follow that ‘tis right to enslave a man because he is black? Will short, curled hair, like wool, instead of Christian hair, as ’tis called by those whose hearts are as hard as the nether millstone, help the argument? Can any logical inference in favor of Slavery be drawn from a flat nose, a long or a short face?”[103]
Assuming these rights as common to all, whether white or black, he insists that any taxation, whether direct or indirect, without representation, is only another form of Slavery.