Harper's Weekly/Mr. Schurz and Mr. Blaine
MR. SCHURZ AND MR. BLAINE.
An active public man and a party leader is in an
unfortunate position when he writes the history of
affairs in which he has taken a prominent part, or
treats of other public men with whom he may not
only have differed, but who may have successfully
opposed his political projects or thwarted his personal
ambition. Gladstone's account of
Disraeli or Disraeli's
of Gladstone, Clay's view
of Webster or
Webster's of Clay,
Hamilton's of Jefferson or
Jefferson's of Hamilton, would
have been read
with interest, but they could not be accepted as more
than the views of interested political diarists of an
opponent or a rival. When Mr. Seward was asked
if he had kept even a diary during the war for the
Union, he said that he had intended to do so, and had
procured a book for the purpose, but had decided that
inevitably it would be regarded as an apologia, a
defence, however unconscious, of his own public views
and conduct, and therefore that it would be labor lost.
It was not a wise conclusion, as the diary of John
Quincy Adams shows. Such journals are most
serviceable. They are the testimonies of interested and
partisan eyewitnesses and actors. They are not history
but they are among the most valuable materials
of history. This is the way in which Mr. Blaine's
history must be regarded. His estimates of the
public men of his time are those of a party leader who is
yet engaged in party controversy and is still animated
by political ambition. They are, therefore inevitably
the pictures of a party pamphlet, moderated and
restrained by the historical tone, but not tempered by
the historical spirit.
This is especially true of his portrait of Mr. Schurz. Both Mr. Schurz and Mr. Blaine are by taste, talent, and training public men. They are of about the same age, and their public career has been devoted to the same political controversies. They have both been senators and members of the Cabinet. Mr. Blaine also has been Speaker, Mr. Schurz a foreign minister and a general in the Union army; Mr. Blaine has been also a candidate for the Presidency, and Mr. Schurz was by far the most powerful and effective of his opponents upon the stump. In no Presidential campaign has one speech been a more trenchant and terrible statement and argument against a candidate than Mr. Schurz's Brooklyn speech against Mr. Blaine. It was the armory of the campaign for Mr. Blaine's opponents, and no single speech of the campaign contributed so largely to the result. These facts were not absent from the mind of Mr. Blaine writing immediately after the election, and inevitably his personal feeling affects his view of Mr. Schurz. Again, Mr. Blaine is essentially a partisan in politics, Mr. Schurz essentially an “independent.” Like every partisan, Mr. Blaine identifies certain principles at all times and under all circumstances with a particular party, and is subject, like all other men, to the spirit which seeks the success of party rather than the triumph of principle. Mr. Schurz, regarding not only the special party policy, but general political principle, sees party tendency to be often dangerous to political honesty and good government, and holds that temporary defeat may be more serviceable to the true party policy, to public character, and to politics themselves, than success in a particular election. This difference implies a difference of personal temperament, of political philosophy, and of the true grounds of political action, which, when combined with the natural bitterness of ambition baffled by such differences, totally disqualifies Mr. Blaine to estimate Mr. Schurz fairly. He does not say, for he cannot, that Mr. Schurz has ever devoted his ability to the defence of an unsound national policy, or to the extenuation of public abuses, or to the promotion of any but the best and wisest measures, or that he has ever been accused or suspected of prostituting public place to his private advantage. An original and earnest Republican, and usually in sympathy with that party, Mr. Schurz supported Mr. Greeley in 1872 and Mr. Cleveland in 1884, and upon both occasions he acted with other conscientious, independent, and patriotic Republicans.
It cannot be truthfully said, however, that his course allows instability of political principle and vacillation of conduct, unless it be held that unwavering support of a party under all circumstances is the best test of such stability. Lord Melbourne, indeed, said that he meant by supporter one who would support him when he was wrong. But Lord Melbourne also said “that d----d morality ruins everything.” This also is a general opinion in “practical” political circles. But it was not the opinion of John Jay, with whom Mr. Schurz undoubtedly agrees. Mr. Jay was a Federalist, but in opposing a candidate of his party be said for himself and the friends who acted with him:
“We approve of the customary mode of nominating candidates, and have uniformly concurred in it; that concurrence certainly involved our tacit consent to be bound by the nominations which should be so made. But it is equally certain that such consent did, does, and ever will rest on the condition, trust, and confidence that such nominations only be made as we would or can support without transgressing the obligations we are under to preserve our characters and our minds free from humiliation and reproach. .... Adherence to party has its limits, and they are prescribed and marked by that Supreme Wisdom which has united and associated true policy with rectitude and honor and self-respect.”
This is a wiser and more manly view of party and of party relations than that which holds honor and patriotism to consist in “sticking to the party through thick and thin.”
The contemporaries of both the public men of whom we speak easily perceive the injustice and the possibly unconscious reason of Mr. Blaine's estimate of Mr. Schurz. But whatever the final history of our recent politics may say of Mr. Blaine, it will say of Mr. Schurz that his career has conspicuously illustrated the virtues of fidelity to conviction, of official integrity, and of political independence, which our public life has too often lacked, and that the highest political principle and every sound public policy and wise reform have found in him an able and fearless advocate.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.
This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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