At last the Stamp Act was repealed. But the pretension of taxation was suspended rather than abandoned. A ministerial partisan continued to urge the scheme in unscrupulous language:—
“All countries unaccustomed to taxes are at first violently prepossessed against them, though the price which they give for their liberty: like an ox untamed to the yoke, they show at first a very stubborn neck, but by degrees become docile and yield a willing obedience.… America must be taxed.”[113]
As time advanced, the old audacity was revived, and, under the lead of the reckless Charles Townshend, taxes were imposed by Parliament on tea, glass, lead, paper, and painters’ colors. The old opposition in the Colonies was revived also, and taxation without representation was again denounced. Committees of correspondence were established, and the work of organization began. The whole country was in a fever. Massachusetts, as in times past, did not hesitate to proclaim the true principle. At a town-meeting of Boston in 1772, there was a declaration of rights, “which no man or body of men, consistently with their own rights as men and citizens or members of society, can for themselves give up or take away from others”; and here we meet again familiar words:—
“The supreme power cannot justly take from any man any part of his property without his consent in person or by his representatives.”[114]
Against all Parliamentary taxation, as often as it showed itself, this impenetrable buckler was lifted. But the mother country was perverse. Ship-loads of tea arrived. At Boston the tea was thrown into the dock. The Colonies entered into an agreement of non-importation. Then came troops, and the Boston Port Bill, by which this harbor was vindictively closed against commerce. The whole country, including even South Carolina, made common cause with Massachusetts. Gadsden exclaimed, “Massachusetts sounded the trumpet, but to Carolina is it owing that it was attended to.”[115] And Virginia exclaimed, “We will never be taxed but by our own representatives. This is the great badge of Freedom.… Whether the people in Boston were warranted by justice, when they destroyed the tea, we know not; but this we know, that the Parliament, by their proceedings, have made us and all North America parties in the present dispute.”[116] Meanwhile more troops arrived. All things portended strife; and yet the colonists did not ask for independence. They only asked for rights, insisting always that there should be no taxation without representation. “The patriots of this Province,” said John Adams in 1774, “desire nothing new; they wish only to keep their old privileges. They were for one hundred and fifty years allowed to tax themselves, and govern their internal concerns as they thought best. Parliament governed their trade as they thought fit. This plan they wish may continue forever.”[117] Thus stood the two parties face to face.
Then came the Continental Congress, which at once put forth resolutions, where, after claiming the enjoyment of life, liberty, and property, as natural rights, it was insisted that the colonists could be bound by no law to which they had not consented by representatives. Here was the original programme of James Otis: first, the rights of men, according to Natural Law; and, secondly, the principle that government, including of course taxation, depended on the consent of the governed. “The foundation of English Liberty and of all free government,” said these resolutions, “is a right in the people to participate in their legislative council.”[118] In harmony with these resolutions were the several addresses of the Continental Congress,—to the people of Great Britain, to the inhabitants of the Province of Quebec, and to the king himself,—always pleading for Human Rights in the largest sense. The address to the people of Great Britain begins by an appeal for “the rights of men and the blessings of Liberty,” and then insists “that no power on earth has a right to take our property from us without our consent.”[119] The address to the inhabitants of the Province of Quebec, in similar spirit, says: “The first grand right is that of the people having a share in their own government by their representatives chosen by themselves, and, in consequence, of being ruled by laws which they themselves approve, not by edicts of men over whom they have no control. This is a bulwark surrounding and defending their property.”[120] And the petition to the king has the same key-note: “Duty to your Majesty, and regard for the preservation of ourselves and our posterity, the primary obligations of Nature and society, command us to entreat your royal attention.”[121] Thus constantly, down to the last moment, did our fathers set forth the principles they sought to establish as essential to free government. Thus constantly did they testify to the cause for which I now plead.
Answering voices came back from England, announcing the principles in issue. The right of taxation was asserted; but there were many who disguised the tyranny by assuming that the Colonies were “virtually represented.” Perhaps that spirit of legal technicality which is satisfied by form at the expense of reason was never more strikingly illustrated than in the argument of Sir James Marriott, the Admiralty Judge, who gravely insisted, in the House of Commons, that England “had an undoubted right to tax America, because she was represented by the members for the County of Kent, of which the thirteen provinces were a part or parcel, for in their charters they were to hold of the manor of Greenwich in Kent.”[122] The whole pretension had been scouted by the indignant eloquence of Mr. Pitt, afterward Lord Chatham. “The idea,” said he, “of a virtual representation of America in this House is the most contemptible idea that ever entered into the head of a man. It does not deserve a serious refutation.”[123] As the controversy continued, and especially as those masterly state papers, the addresses of the Continental Congress, reached England, the ministers of the king were put on the defensive. They retained as advocate none other than Samuel Johnson, who, for “small hire,” lent the pen which had written “Rasselas,” “The Vanity of Human Wishes,” and the English Dictionary, to a rancorous attack on the principles of our fathers. Its concentrated venom was all expressed in the title, “Taxation no Tyranny.” Another pamphlet appeared in reply, with the epigram, “Resistance no Rebellion,” embodying the idea, that, where there is taxation without representation, resistance is justifiable; and thus was issue joined at London. This was in 1775. Already the “embattled farmers” had gathered at Lexington and Bunker Hill; already Washington had drawn his sword at Cambridge, as commander-in-chief and generalissimo of the new-born armies; already war had begun. At last, to the defiant watchword, “Taxation no Tyranny,” hurled from London, our fathers returned that other defiant watchword, “Independence.” But they did not turn their backs upon the principles asserted throughout the long controversy. Independence was the means to an end, and that end was nothing less than a Republic, with Liberty and Equality as animating principles, where government stood on the consent of the governed, or, which is the same thing, where there should be no taxation without representation: for here was the distinctive feature of American institutions.
2. The principles heralded through fifteen years of controversy were not forgotten when Independence was declared: and here I come to the national declarations of the Fathers.