The Atlantic Monthly | September 2003
Founders Chic
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Our reverence for the Fathers has
gotten out of hand
by H. W. Brands
he history of our Revolution will be one continued lie from one end to the
other," John Adams wrote to Benjamin Rush in 1790. "The essence of the whole
will be that Dr. Franklin's electrical rod smote the Earth and out sprung
General Washington. That Franklin electrified him with his rod, and thence
forward these two conducted all the policy, negotiations, legislatures and war."
Adams never liked being wrong. Yet he, rather than George Washington or Benjamin
Franklin, is the lion of recent historical literature. David McCullough's
Pulitzer Prize-winning John Adams, with more than 1.5 million hardcover
copies in print, has enthralled American readers and elevated Adams—in the
popular mind, at least—to the very first rank of American heroes. Not that the
other Founders are faring badly. Joseph J. Ellis won a Pulitzer for his
best-selling Founding Brothers (2000), a group portrait of the
Washington-Franklin-Adams generation, which followed his American Sphinx
(1997), a National Book Award-winning study of Thomas Jefferson. Founding
Brothers describes the Founders as "America's first and, in many respects,
its only natural aristocracy." (Washington's life is next in line for the Ellis
treatment.) Richard Brookhiser has written recent appreciations of Washington,
Adams, and Alexander Hamilton. Franklin, the oldest of the Founders, lives again
in my book The First American (2000), which had the good fortune to make
the best-seller lists. Edmund Morgan's 2002 portrait of Franklin was also a hit;
Walter Isaacson's admiring Benjamin Franklin: An American Life appeared
this summer.
Why the sudden interest in the Founders? Or was it ever thus?
In fact it was not ever thus. Interest in the Founders has risen and
fallen over time, as has admiration for them and their accomplishments. Although
such things are hard to measure, it's probably fair to say that their stock is
currently at an all-time high. It's also fair, and necessary, to say that this
isn't entirely a blessing for their country. In revering the Founders we
undervalue ourselves and sabotage our own efforts to make improvements—necessary
improvements—in the republican experiment they began. Our love for the Founders
leads us to abandon, and even to betray, the very principles they fought for.
he Founders were anything but demigods to themselves and their contemporaries,
who recognized full well that the experiment in self-government had only begun.
Washington came closest to apotheosis in his time, but even he rubbed many
republicans the wrong way. His aloofness was legendary. At the Constitutional
Convention of 1787 the convivial Gouverneur Morris boasted that he could soften
up the austere general. Hamilton dared him to try, saying that if he would clap
Washington on the shoulder and make companionable small talk, Hamilton would buy
dinner for Morris and friends. Morris accepted the challenge, and greeted
Washington like an old drinking partner. Washington instantly grew stiffer than
usual; he icily removed Morris's arm from his shoulder, stepped away in disgust,
and drove Morris from the room with an ominous glower. "I have won the bet,"
Morris said at the promised dinner, "but paid dearly for it, and nothing could
induce me to repeat it."
Washington's haughtiness helped to win him the presidency: despite the
Revolution, deference to rank wasn't dead in America. But it was losing ground
to egalitarianism. Philip Freneau, the editor of the National Gazette,
regularly denounced Washington as a monarchist: "He holds levees like a King,
receives congratulations on his birthday like a King, makes treaties like a
King, answers petitions like a King, employs his old enemies like a King."
Benjamin Franklin Bache, Freneau's comrade-in-opposition (and the grandson of
Benjamin Franklin), compared Washington to Oliver Cromwell and Louis XVI. In the
columns of the Philadelphia Aurora, Bache alleged "political iniquity"
and "legalized corruption" in the Washington Administration, and called the
first President "the source of all the misfortunes of our country." Thomas
Paine, the leading propagandist of the Revolution, accused Washington of
abandoning the cause for which the Revolution was fought (not to mention
abandoning Paine in a French prison, where he languished during the French
Revolution). In an open letter to Washington, addressing him in the third
person, Paine wrote, "[Washington] has no friendships ... He is incapable of
forming any. He can serve or desert a man, or a cause, with constitutional
indifference; and it is this cold, hermaphrodite faculty that imposed itself
upon the world and was credited for a while, by enemies as by friends, for
prudence, moderation and impartiality."
Washington believed that his sacrifices and service to the country had earned
him better. His decision to step down after two terms owed much, as he put it to
Hamilton, to his "disinclination to be longer buffeted in the public prints by a
set of infamous scribblers." When he handed the presidency to John Adams, he did
so with palpable relief. "Me thought I heard him think," Adams recalled, "'Ay! I
am fairly out and you are fairly in! See which of us will be the happiest!'"
Adams soon decided, being as sensitive to criticism as Washington and even more
subject to it. Benjamin Bache tore into him as "the blasted tyrant of America"
and "a ruffian deserving of the curses of mankind." He taxed Adams for obesity,
referring to him as "His Rotundity," the possessor of a "sesquipedality of
belly."
By Adams's tenure, the hope for a politics above party—the initial dream of the
Founders—had been dashed on the twin rocks of majority rule and the French
Revolution. Majority rule required coalitions, the stabler the better; the
French Revolution ideologically polarized these coalitions. Adams's Federalists
faced off against Jefferson's Republicans and held on tightly to the levers of
power. The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 attempted to outlaw criticism and to
prevent the Republicans from recruiting new voters among recent immigrants. The
measures provoked predictable outrage. A Republican patron of a tavern in Newark
wobbled into the street in time to observe a sixteen-gun salute to President
Adams and to wish aloud that one of the rounds should find Adams's ample rear.
His arrest prompted a New York paper to worry that "joking may be very dangerous
even to a free country."
Yet the Republicans were in certain respects the least of Adams's worries. Adams
fell out with Hamilton, whom he called "the bastard brat of a Scotch pedlar,"
and Hamilton devoted a long pamphlet to cataloguing the President's
deficiencies. His defection delighted the Republicans. Describing the Hamilton
pamphlet as a "thunderbolt," James Madison told Jefferson, "I rejoice with you
that Republicanism is likely to be so completely triumphant." Indeed it
was: the split among the Federalists opened the door to Jefferson and the
Republicans in the election of 1800.
The Republican victory was even sweeter for the scurrilous things the
Federalists had said during the campaign. Jefferson was called "a mean-spirited,
low-lived fellow, the son of a half-breed Indian squaw, sired by a Virginia
mulatto father." His deism shocked pious Christians (though it wasn't much
different from that of Washington or Franklin or many other educated persons of
his day), and his early enthusiasm for the French Revolution made him a Jacobin
in Federalist eyes. Timothy Dwight, a Congregationalist minister and the
president of Yale, foresaw a lurid future of freethinking: "The Bible cast into
a bonfire ... our children ... chanting mockeries against God ... our wives and
daughters the victims of legal prostitution ... our sons the disciples of
Voltaire, and the dragoons of Marat." A Connecticut paper warned of the orgies a
Jefferson presidency would bring: "Murder, robbery, rape, adultery, and incest
will all be openly taught and practiced; the air will be rent with the cries of
the distressed; the soil will be soaked with blood, and the nation black with
crimes."
When Jefferson became President and the heavens didn't quite fall, his enemies
found other means of attack, including the charge, originated by James Callender
and avidly circulated by the Federalist press, that Jefferson had fathered
several children by one of his slaves, Sally Hemings. The steamy tales took
sundry forms, including verse: "Of all the damsels on the green / On mountain or
in valley / A lass so luscious ne'er was seen / As Monticellan Sally."
Historians and forensic geneticists would still be debating the accuracy of the
paternity charge two centuries later. In Jefferson's day, as the Federalists'
campaign of slander made plain, accuracy was beside the point.
he second generation of American independence was somewhat more respectful of
the Founders than their contemporaries had been. But it was no less critical.
The republican experiment had survived, against the forecasts of many naysayers,
and that warranted respect. But it might not survive much longer, because of
some glaring deficiencies in the Founders' work—and that warranted criticism. By
the 1820s two grave sins of omission hung ominously over the country: the
Founders' failure to deal with slavery, and their failure to specify whether
sovereignty lay with the states or with the nation.
The ambivalence toward the Founders became apparent in the celebrations
surrounding the fiftieth anniversary of independence. In cities, towns, and
villages across the country Americans congratulated themselves on "Freedom's
Jubilee." Toasts to "independence" and "the glorious Fourth" typically launched
the rounds of patriotic drinking; references to the Founders collectively, and
to General Washington himself, were often placed in the context of salutes to
"the soldiers of the Revolution." Deference to the demos, the people, at
the comparative expense of the elites reflected the most visible political trend
during that period: the dramatic expansion of the electorate. By the late 1820s
the states had eliminated most property qualifications for voting, and state
legislatures, which previously had chosen most presidential electors, handed
that task to ordinary voters. The common man came to the fore, and the old
elites—including, after the fact, the Founders—lost ground commensurately.
(Interest briefly revived when the country learned, to its astonishment, that
Jefferson and Adams had both died on the very day of the Jubilee.)
Not just democracy ate into the historical reputation of the Founders. As more
Americans gained political rights, those who lacked them became increasingly
conspicuous. Abolitionism came of age as a political and social force. Many of
the Jubilee speakers (in the North, at least) called for the current generation
to fulfill what the Founders had only promised. In Braintree, Massachusetts, the
birthplace of Adams, the Reverend Josiah Bent recalled the original meaning of a
jubilee as an occasion for freeing slaves, and challenged his audience to live
up to the biblical precedent. "Can America be glorious in freedom," he asked,
"with such a number of human beings so degraded, so oppressed, so wronged, and
so bleeding in her bosom?"
In contemplating this question, Americans of the second quarter of the
nineteenth century were compelled to confront the deficiencies of the Founding.
The landmark documents of the Revolutionary era—the Declaration of Independence
and the Constitution—were scrutinized and found wanting. The abolitionist
William Lloyd Garrison was so outraged at the Constitution and its framers for
fastening slavery upon the American body politic that he damned the federal
charter as "a covenant with death and an agreement with Hell," and publicly
burned his copy. Politicians signaled their dissatisfaction with the Founders in
other ways. Senator William Seward, of New York, described "a higher law than
the Constitution" and said that this law—the natural law of human
liberty—dictated the demise of slavery.
Abraham Lincoln chose his words more carefully, which was one reason he, rather
than Seward, eventually became President. Lincoln didn't go over the heads of
the Founders, but he did regret that they hadn't done more to restrict slavery.
He credited them with good intentions. "Our revolutionary fathers," he said, had
understood that slavery was unjust; they simply hadn't known how to eliminate it
without jeopardizing their experiment in unifying the thirteen states. Even so,
by refusing to mention slavery by name in the Constitution, they had preserved
the possibility of future change—"just as an afflicted man hides away a wen or a
cancer, which he dares not cut out at once, lest he bleed to death; with the
promise, nevertheless, that the cutting may begin at the end of a given time."
Arguments over what Congress could do naturally hinged on the
Constitution and its construction; arguments over what Congress should do
involved the Declaration of Independence. Both sides in the slavery debate drew
support from Jefferson's manifesto—but for different reasons. What, precisely,
did he mean when he said that "all men are created equal"? Which men? What kind
of equality? To the dismay of the anti-slavery forces, the Supreme Court
proclaimed in the 1857 Dred Scott case that blacks could not be citizens.
Lincoln lambasted Chief Justice Roger Taney, asserting that the slaveholding
class had seized the government, so that the Declaration was "assailed, and
sneered at, and construed, and hawked at, and torn, till, if its framers could
rise from their graves, they could not at all recognize it."
Whatever the truth of Lincoln's statement, he would have been the first to admit
that had Jefferson been more explicit in embracing blacks in his universe of
equality, or had the Continental Congress been less vigorous in excising the
parts of Jefferson's draft that dealt harshly with slavery, the abolitionists'
cause would have been strengthened. The excisions lent weight to both sides of
the argument, with slavery's foes extrapolating from them to interpret
Jefferson's "all men" as "all men," and slavery's defenders citing them
as evidence that the Continental Congress meant "all white men."
In any event, the unfinished work of the Founders burdened their successors with
determining whether slavery could exist within a republican (now democratic)
framework of government, and whether the states or the nation held the dominant
political authority. It isn't hard to understand why Americans weren't overly
impressed with the Founding generation as that debate turned bloody in the 1850s
in Kansas and within a few years provoked secession and civil war.
ix hundred thousand lives later, the Founders' work was finally completed.
Slavery was abolished, and the nation stood supreme. The cost was staggering—a
cost that by any reasonable reckoning should be charged, at least partially, to
the Founders' account. Yet the very cost of the Civil War contributed to the
emergence of a myth of the Founders—a myth that has persisted, with occasional
challenge, until today.
The myth served an obvious political purpose in the wake of the Civil War.
Reconstruction ended about the time of the American centennial, which occasioned
a backward glance to an era when the country was united and Americans directed
their anger and fire at foreigners. (This nostalgia glossed over the fact that
the bitterest fighting in the Revolution had been between Americans. But this
had always been glossed over, and generally still is.) The end of Reconstruction
marked the return to power of the southern white aristocracy, which sought to
reaffirm its attachment to the nation lest the North be tempted to reoccupy the
South. That so many of the Founders were of the southern planter class made it
easy and politically convenient for southerners to embrace them. For the North,
the end of Reconstruction signaled an exhaustion of the reforming spirit and,
with the Industrial Revolution in full tilt, a return to the business of
business. ("What is the chief end of man?" Mark Twain inquired. "To get rich. In
what way? Dishonestly if we can, honestly if we must.") The discovery of common
ground with the South, in the form of a shared reverence for the Founders,
helped to soothe those northern consciences bothered by the egregious
inequalities that still pervaded southern life. It also, by a kind of tacit
pact, discouraged the South from raising questions about increasing inequality
in the industrializing North.
James Schouler, whose seven-volume History of the United States of America
Under the Constitution commenced publication in 1880, admired nearly
everything about the Founders. Hamilton and Madison, the moving spirits behind
the Constitutional Convention, were his favorites; George Washington was a
paragon, naturally, being "not unconscious of his surpassing influence" but
becomingly modest withal. Franklin was "the sage of commonsense." John Bach
McMaster, in his similarly monumental history of the United States, shared
Schouler's conviction that the Founders were of keen mind and elevated
character. "Franklin," he wrote, "was in truth the greatest American then
living; nor would it be safe to say that our country has since his day seen his
like."
Henry Cabot Lodge joined the encomiastic chorus. A Harvard professor before
entering politics, Lodge wrote biographies of Alexander Hamilton and George
Washington, among many other books. Lodge's Hamilton was the essence of
patriotic virtue. "He was a great orator and lawyer, and he was also the ablest
political and constitutional writer of his day, a good soldier, and possessed of
a wonderful capacity for organization and practical administration. He was a
master in every field that he entered." Lodge said he had tried to find fault in
Washington but had failed, because no fault existed. Put simply, Washington
embodied "the noblest possibilities of humanity."
very generation of historians is compelled to revise the wisdom of its immediate
predecessors, even if that means reaffirming the wisdom of an earlier
generation. The Progressive era produced its own revisionist imperative, in the
form of investigative—"muckraking"—journalism that laid bare the sordid means by
which the great fortunes of Rockefeller, Carnegie, Morgan, and other capitalist
titans were amassed.
Charles Beard, a professor at Columbia University, brought both generational and
Progressive revisionism to bear on the Founders in An Economic Interpretation
of the Constitution of the United States, a 1913 study that argued that the
Constitutional Convention was guided less by patriotic genius than by material
self-interest. Much the same could be said, Beard wrote, of the groups that
backed, and won, ratification of the Constitution by the states. Many of the
creditors of the government had bought up bonds from the original buyers for
dimes on the dollar and now wished to ensure that the bonds were honored in
full. Shippers, merchants, and manufacturers wanted to override the state
governments, which got in the way of business. The result was a charter founded
on class interests. Beard couldn't deny the abilities of the Founders, but he
judged that their gifts were closer to those of Rockefeller and Morgan than of
Solon and Socrates.
It was Beard's misfortune that his book appeared just months before World War I
began and a few years before the outbreak of the Russian Revolution. As America
approached and then entered the war, anything critical of the Founders smacked
of disloyalty or even Bolshevik treason. Beard's writings upset his employers at
Columbia, whose board of trustees managed to rid the university of this
dangerous radical. His fellow historians were hardly more supportive.
For the generation that lasted from World War I to the early Cold War, the
reputation of the Founders stood firm. Carl Van Doren won a Pulitzer Prize in
1939 for a biography of Benjamin Franklin that began by describing its subject
as "unsurpassed by any man in the range of his natural gifts and of the
important uses he put them to." In the 1940s and 1950s Douglas Southall Freeman,
the editor of the Richmond News Leader, produced a seven-volume paean to
Washington, Virginia's most illustrious son, which celebrated the whole
generation of the Founders. Dumas Malone launched a similarly glowing and almost
equally lengthy life of Jefferson, in which he remarked of his subject (in words
that might have applied to the Founders as a group), "His fame is probably
greater in our generation than it has been at any other time since his death."
The title of Catherine Drinker Bowen's Miracle at Philadelphia (1966), on
the Constitutional Convention, captured the mood.
The Founders took their hits during the later 1960s and the 1970s, along with
everything else associated with the establishment. The mere idea of slave owners
declaiming about liberty seemed the height of hypocrisy to a generation
crusading for civil rights and taught to detect phoniness at five hundred paces.
Vietnam and Watergate spawned suspicion of anything associated with government,
recent or ancient. Neo-Beardians reopened the investigation into the convenient
coincidence between the professed ideals of the Founders and their pocketbooks.
Yet the sharpest insult was not criticism but neglect. Academic historians
shunned dead white males for sexier subjects, and although the old icons never
entirely lost their appeal, many readers were enticed away by tales of less
familiar, less privileged persons. Women, members of minority groups, and
ordinary people displaced the Founders, until it seemed that Abigail Adams
("Remember the ladies ...") was more familiar to schoolchildren than her
husband, and George Washington Carver more familiar than George Washington.
nd now they are back. The Founders' revival is in part a reflection of the
anti-liberal reaction that began with Ronald Reagan and continues today.
Combined with this, no doubt, is a certain roots-seeking among readers, which
increased as the new millennium approached and hasn't let up in the troubling
time since. Beyond the zeitgeist, the current revival reflects an appreciation
of some brilliant writing. McCullough and Ellis are two of the finest nonfiction
stylists now writing, and would attract readers whatever their subject.
(McCullough won his spurs, and much of his following, by recounting natural
disasters and the construction of public works.)
Shouldn't we applaud the Founders' restored popularity? Isn't patriotism a good
thing, especially amid our current difficulties? Yes—but like anything else, it
can be taken too far. And when it causes us to overvalue those who have preceded
us, it does harm. Here a personal note may be in order. Since my book on
Franklin was published, in the autumn of 2000, I have given numerous talks
around the country on Franklin and his times. Listeners are appreciative, and
they ask various questions after I finish. But one question, worded one way or
another, comes up at almost every session: How was it that America was so
blessed with intellect and virtue at the moment of its founding? And, by
implication, Why is it that the current generation falls so short?
I don't dismiss the premise. But I do point out that the Founders' work was very
much unfinished at the time the torch was passed to the next generation, and
that tidying up the loose ends took eighty years and one of the most destructive
wars in the history of the world before 1914. Whether I change many minds about
the Founders is hard to say. Most people still seem to think that God or fate or
something smiled on America in the 1770s and 1780s, and hasn't smiled that way
since.
Americans aren't alone in looking to a golden age, but in our case this inhibits
action on important public issues. We marvel that our predecessors, living at a
time when the free population of the country didn't exceed the population of
greater Chicago today, could have gained independence from Britain and fashioned
a republic that has lasted more than two centuries; and we bewail our inability,
in a population eighty times as large, to find anyone like them. Leaving aside
the statistical improbability of this supposed lack (which only confirms true
believers in their conviction of America's miraculous birth), the history of the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries doesn't bear out the golden-age idea.
The Founders got the country off to a good start, but they would have been the
first to admit that it was no more than a start. They were acutely aware of the
continuing nature of their experiment in self-government, and they expected
future generations to accomplish as much as they had. They would have dismissed
as ludicrous the notion that theirs was a blessed generation, to which others
might never compare. That notion is essentially anti-republican, too, and
therefore insults all they struggled to achieve.
In making giants of the Founders, we make pygmies of ourselves; in making saints
of them, we make sinners of ourselves. Sinners we may be, but no more so than
they (where is our Benedict Arnold? our Aaron Burr?). And although humility is a
virtue, when consciousness of our sins becomes an inferiority complex that
causes large numbers of the present generation to turn away from politics as
incomparably inept or corrupt, it does the Founders no honor. The point of their
revolution was to craft a government based on the will of the people; they would
have judged themselves failures if they thought their mechanism required saints
to run it.
Another question I hear frequently is, What would Franklin think if he were
restored to the world of the living? I answer that he would be tickled by the
technological advances since the eighteenth century. I also say that he would be
gratified by the durability of the republic that he and his fellows established,
and by some of the recent accomplishments of their successors. As an early
abolitionist, Franklin would be delighted at the civil-rights reforms of the
1960s, which transformed race relations in this country almost as thoroughly as
did the Civil War and Reconstruction, and far more positively than anything the
Founders managed. As a lifelong opponent of authoritarianism, he would be
thrilled at twentieth-century America's defeat of fascism and communism. British
imperialism was oppressive, but George III was neither as dangerous nor anywhere
near as evil as Hitler and Stalin.
But Franklin would be dismayed by the popular denigration of politics, and
exceedingly impatient with us for acting helpless in the face of problems that
the Founders would have tackled at once. To take one example, arguments over the
Second Amendment, with its almost certainly inadvertent ambiguity about the
relation of militia service to gun ownership, would largely cease if we simply
rewrote it. Gun advocates already treat the militia clause as a nullity; let
them erase the clause—or try to. Gun opponents want the clause to govern gun
ownership; let them rewrite the amendment—or try to. But almost no one suggests
such an obvious solution to the problem. Instead we treat the Constitution as
holy writ, to be parsed and glossed but not otherwise tampered with. We agonize
over "original intent" as if what the Founders believed ought to determine the
way we live two centuries later. They would have laughed, and then wept, at our
timidity.
The same applies to any number of other issues. It is fair to say that nearly
all the Founders would have been shocked at the overwhelming role of money in
modern American politics. (Franklin thought the President, for example, ought to
serve without pay.) When they decried "corruption" in British politics, and
cited it as a prime reason for their revolt against King George, they were
talking about the very thing—the golden triangle of wealth, access, and
office—that campaign-finance reformers decry today. But until now every effort
to diminish the role of money in politics has been stymied by the First
Amendment, which has been interpreted by the courts as equating political
advertising with political speech. Many other countries simply limit how much
money may be spent on campaigns. There is no reason we can't too—if we simply
recognize that we may have to rewrite the First Amendment. This rewriting would
be far closer to the true spirit of the Founders than some misplaced reverence
for their handiwork. Of course, an amendment-blocking coalition, either in
Congress or in the states, could ensure that the First Amendment was left as is.
But at least we would have had an open debate.
Or consider the Electoral College. It is surrounded by the same mystique that
befogs other aspects of the Constitution. For decades it was easy to consider
the Electoral College a harmless vestige—or to predict that should it ever again
confer victory on a popular loser, as it had in 1876 and in 1888, there would be
such an outcry that it would be abolished. But in the aftermath of the
presidential election of 2000 the outcry quickly faded into silence. Nearly
everyone agrees that the Electoral College is undemocratic, and that if modern
Americans wrote the Constitution, it wouldn't be included. But we can't get
ourselves to do anything about it. Ironically, the system we are so reluctant to
touch works not at all the way the Founders intended (they anticipated autonomy
among the individual electors—which would, in fact, have been even less
democratic). The Founders, far from being pleased at our respect for their work
(which in this case doesn't even reflect their intent), would have been appalled
at our paralysis.
Some will argue that the Constitution ought not to be tinkered with. This bears
consideration to the extent that the argument is an honest one and not simply an
apology for the status quo. One of the beauties of the federal Constitution, in
contrast to many state constitutions, is that it deals in broad and enduring
principles—principles that have allowed it to last. But an uncritical embrace of
constitutional beauty can degenerate into the same form of ancestor worship that
shapes much of our thinking about the Founders. They certainly weren't
beguiled by the past; though they spoke of their ancient rights as Englishmen,
they knew full well that they were leaping into an uncharted future. And the
last thing they intended their revolution to produce was a new orthodoxy.
The one trait the Founders shared to the greatest degree is the one most worth
striving after today—but also one that is often forgotten in the praise of their
asserted genius. These men were no smarter than the best their country can offer
now; they weren't wiser or more altruistic. They may have been more learned in a
classical sense, but they knew much less about the natural world, including the
natural basis of human behavior. They were, however, far bolder than we are.
When they signed the Declaration of Independence, they put their necks in a
noose; when they wrote the Constitution, they embarked on an audacious and
unprecedented challenge to custom and authority. For their courage they
certainly deserve our admiration. But even more they deserve our emulation.