138

ADDRESS BY JOHN QUINCY ADAMS 1821
"An address, delivered at the request of the committee of arrangements for celebrating the anniversary of independence, at the city of Washington on the Fourth of July 1821, upon the occasion of reading the Declaration of Independence." (Cambridge, Mass.: Hilliard and Metcalf, 1821.) "Adams determined to sound a blast against such doctrines in the Fourth-of-July address that the citizens of Washington invited him to deliver in 1821. At the same time he would formulate a principle to justify colonial revolutions for independence, whether in North America or South America, without rushing in arms to their support. In short, he had discovered for his own serenity and consistency at least an ideological bond which united the cause of Latin-American independence with that of Anglo-American independence. Delivering the carefully prepared oration from the rostrum of the House of Representatives, the speaker stood before his audience clad in a professor's gown as if to veil his person from the high office of Secretary of State. He began by characterizing the last seven hundred years of English history as a continual conflict between "oppression of power and claims of right." The American Revolution had separated the claims of right from the oppressions of power, at least in the United States, and had built upon the resulting independence a stable and orderly nation based on popular sovereignty and the social compact. Amidst flights of eloquence extolling the cause of 1776, professedly without rancor in 1821, John Quincy Adams blew a "trumpet upon Zion" for two great principles of policy governing "America's" relations with all other nations and peoples" 1) the anticolonial principle; and 2) the anti-entanglement principle; or what we would call today anti-imperialism and absolute nonintervention.
Adams was reflecting in his extravagant rhetoric what he had seen happen to republican France in a previous generation when she began intervening to establish liberty in other lands. He was echoing the Farewell Address of the venerated Washington. …"

Sabin 2671; Shoemaker 4401.

"An address, delivered at the request of the committee of arrangements for celebrating the anniversary of independence, at the city of Washington on the Fourth of July 1821, upon the occasion of reading the Declaration of Independence." (Cambridge, Mass.: Hilliard and Metcalf, 1821.) "Adams determined to sound a blast against such doctrines in the Fourth-of-July address that the citizens of Washington invited him to deliver in 1821. At the same time he would formulate a principle to justify colonial revolutions for independence, whether in North America or South America, without rushing in arms to their support. In short, he had discovered for his own serenity and consistency at least an ideological bond which united the cause of Latin-American independence with that of Anglo-American independence. Delivering the carefully prepared oration from the rostrum of the House of Representatives, the speaker stood before his audience clad in a professor's gown as if to veil his person from the high office of Secretary of State. He began by characterizing the last seven hundred years of English history as a continual conflict between "oppression of power and claims of right." The American Revolution had separated the claims of right from the oppressions of power, at least in the United States, and had built upon the resulting independence a stable and orderly nation based on popular sovereignty and the social compact. Amidst flights of eloquence extolling the cause of 1776, professedly without rancor in 1821, John Quincy Adams blew a "trumpet upon Zion" for two great principles of policy governing "America's" relations with all other nations and peoples" 1) the anticolonial principle; and 2) the anti-entanglement principle; or what we would call today anti-imperialism and absolute nonintervention.
Adams was reflecting in his extravagant rhetoric what he had seen happen to republican France in a previous generation when she began intervening to establish liberty in other lands. He was echoing the Farewell Address of the venerated Washington. …"

Sabin 2671; Shoemaker 4401.
Condition: Some foxing, particularly to title page. Text entirely legible.


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October 18, 2017 10:00 AM EDT
East Dennis, MA, US

Eldred's

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