Book/Printed Material The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
-
Image 1 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 2 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 3 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 4 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 5 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 6 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution,
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 7 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST NEW CONSTITUTION, WRITTEN IN 1788 ME. HAMILTON, MR. MADISON, AND MR. JAY AN APPENDIX CONTAINING THE LETTERS OF I^.A.OIFICXJS J^ISTJD JE3::ElXu-\rxiDXTJ- ON THE PROCLAMATION OF NEUTRALITY OP 179 3; ALSO,...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 8 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, A W C
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 9 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, PREFATORY REMARKS The present edition of the Federalist contains all the numbers of that work as revised by their authors and it is the only one to which the remark will apply....
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 10 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, iv rtlEFATORY REMARKS. be hoped that neither a mistaken zeal of friendship for departed worthy Bor an inclination to flatter living virtue, will induce any one to disturb this growing sentiment of...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 11 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, PREFATORY REMARKS. v with which, in that situation, we were regarded by foreign governments, and compare that disposition of things with the energy to which we were subsequently roused by the operation...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 12 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, vi PREFATORY REMARKS. emnly to enact that the manufactures of those states should be consid- ered as foreign, and that the acts laying a duty on goods imported and on tonnage should...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 13 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. BY ALEXANDER HAMILTON. INTRODUCTION. After full experience of the insufficiency of the existing fed- eral government, you are invited to deliberate upon a new Consti- tution for the United States...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 14 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 8 THE FEDERALIST. emolument, and consequence of the offices they hold under the State establishments and the perverted ambition of another class of men, who will either hope to aggrandize themselves by...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 15 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 9 of danger to the rights of the people, which is more commonly the fault of the head than of the heart, will be represented as mere pretence and artifice...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 16 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 10 THE FEDERALIST. which its adoption will afford to the preservation of that species of government, to liberty, and to property. In the progress of ihis discussion, I shall endeavor to give...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 17 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 11 to the head of each, the same kind of powers which they are advised to place in one national government. It has until lately been a received and uncontradicted...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 18 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 12 THE FEDERALIST. As a nation we have made peace and war as a nation we have vanquished. our common enemies as a nation we have fornied alliances and made treaties, and...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 19 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 13 with pamphlets and weekly papers against those very measures. Not only many of the officers of government, who obeyed the dic- tates of personal interest, bnt others, from a...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 20 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 14 THE FEDERALIST. reasons. They who promote the idea of substituting a number of distinct confederacies in the room of the plan of the conven- tion, seem clearly to foresee that the...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 21 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 15 provoke or invite them. If this remark be just it becomes useful to inquire, whether so many Jits^ causes of war are hkely to be given by united America,...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 22 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 16 THE FEDERALIST. governing party in one or two states to swerve from good faith and justice but those temptations not reaching the other stat)3s and consequently having Httle or no influence...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 23 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 17 them to justify all their actions, and opposes their acknowledg- ing, correcting, or repairing their errors and offences. The na- tional government in such cases will not be affected...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 24 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 18 THE FEDERALIST. sovereign, often lead him to engage in wars not sanctioned by justice, or the voice and interests of his people. But independent of these inducements to war, which are...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 25 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 19 will tend to repress and discourage it. That situation consists in the best possible state of defence, and necessarily depends on the goi -ernment, the arms and the resources...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 26 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 20 THE FEDERALIST. they ever hope to have If one was attacked, would the others fly to its succor, and spend their blood and money in its defence Wonld there be no...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 27 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 21 BY JOHN JAY. THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED. duEEN Ann, in her letter of the 1st July, 1706, to the Scotch Parliament, makes some observations on the importance of the...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 28 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 22 THE FEDERALIST. only objects of their policy and pursuits. Hence, like most other bordering nations, they would always be either involved in dis- putes and vvar, or live in the constant...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 29 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST.. 23 and mutual injuries; in short, that they would place us exactly iri th situation in wLiich some nations doubtless wish to see uSj in which we shall be formidable...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 30 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 24 THE FEDERALIST. BY ALEXANDER HAMILTON. CONCERNING DANGERS EROM WAR BETWEEN THE STATES. The three last numbers of this work have been dedicated to an enumeration of the dangers to which we...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 31 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 35 against the Magarensians, another nation of Greece, or to avoid a prosecution with which he was threatened as an accomplice in a supposed theft of the statuary Phidias, or...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 32 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 26 THE FEDERALIST. other the genius of republics, say they, is pacific the spirit of commerce has a tendency to soften the manners of men, and to extinguish those inflammable humors which...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 33 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 27 league which gave a deadly blow to the power and pride of that haughty republic. The provinces of Holland, till they were overwhelmed in debts and taxes, took a...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 34 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 28 THE FEDERALIST. war ensued, which, in its consequences, overthrew all the alliances that but twenty years before had been formed, with sanguine expectations of the most beneficial fruits. From this summary...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 35 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 29 each other It would be a full answer to this question to say precisely the same inducements which have, at different times, deluged in blood all the nations in...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 36 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 30 THE FEDERALIST. common stock, there would still be a difficulty to be surmounted, as to a proper rule of apportionment. Different principles would be set up by different states for this...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 37 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 31 be likely to embroil the states with each, other, if it should be their unpropitious destiny to become disunited. The competitions of commerce would be another fruitful source of...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 38 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 32 THE FEDERALIST. sio!i between the separate states or confederacies. The apportion- ment, in the first instance, and the progressive extinguishment, af- terwards, would be alike productive of ill-humor and animosity. How...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 39 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, THE FEDERALIST. 33 does not yield an equal and coincident benefit. For it is an ob- servation as true, as it is trite, that there is nothing men differ so readily about,...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857
-
Image 40 of The Federalist, on the new Constitution, 34 THE FEDERALIST. government, let us enter into a concise detail of some of the? consequences that would attend such a situation. War between the states, in the first periods of their...
- Contributor: Madison, James - Hamilton, Alexander - Jay, John
- Date: 1857