J550W?'r 1 'J J - VEMBER 30", 1906 RACING SOME Writing: in the North American Review, Pre ssor urander Matthews attributed to Thomas Reed this remark: "When Dr. Johnson defined itriotism as the last refuee of n snmmrwi i, Id not foresee the infinite possibilities of the Professor Matthews is a member nf n Itteo which has undertaken tn "flimnitf ai. In spelling, and the New York World intimates iut uie proiessor is lleslrous of "simplifying uciittu nioiury, too,- necause he attributed to lomas B. Reed a remark which the World lys was made by Roscoe Conkling. According iuu wurm; J'The remark was made by Gonkilncr fn speech at the republican.state convention in Kocnester September 26, 1S77. Piatt, whn wn not yet a senator but already one of Conk- "ufc uauuy ei-ra.ua ooys, aced as tempor ary chairman of the convention, and in his t'speech attacked the Hayes administration, gthen only six months old. The resolutions fc'cirartea by Conkling contained no indorsement &'of the president or his policies. On the floor rof the convention George William Curtis onered an amendment to the resolutions de claring that Hayes' title to his seat was as p regular as Washington's and commending the h administration. It was in answer to Curtis' $ speech that Conkling delivered the master piece of classical scurrility in which the re mark occurred which Prof. Matthews under- R takes to" quote: 'When Dr. Johnson defined v patriotism as the last refuge of a scoundrel fc lie -was unconscious of the then undeveloped capaoiuties and uses of the word "reform." ' " Maybe Mr. Conkling got his idea from a state- lent made by Charles L, who said "public re formers had need first practice on their own iearts that which they propose to try on others." it is not always an easy task to locate the origin of a "popular phrase and many amusine knd easily explained errors are made by well liormed men in bestowing credit for some of rate phrases. I, Some time ago Harper's Weekly undertook i-'lnnnto V10 rvnlo'ln nf flirt nVii'ion "n nuliltn nfllin a public trust." Harper's identified it with le name of the late Daniel S. Lamont, but, taken to task by one of its readers, Harper's said it lid not claim that Colonel Lamont was the author the phrase, but that he adapted it to fitting e in a Cleveland campaign. Harper's then pro jeded to give the credit to the late Governor tugh S. Thompson of South Carolina who, ac- rding to Harper's, "first employed the expres- m in his inaugural address in 1882." Another tder of Harper's took issue with this state- it and said that the credit belonged to Daniel ebster who, seventy years ago, in a speech de- rered at Boston, declared: 'It is time to declare it offices created for the people are public ists, not private spoils." The Commoner pointed out at the time that irper's critical reader as well as Harper's itself in error. Grover Cleveland or Daniel La- nt, as you please, used the phrase in 1884; )ram S. Hewitt used it in 1883 and Governor lompson used it in 1882; but Dorman B. Eaton, few York lawyer, said in 1881: "Public offices public trusts; and as early as May. 1872, iarles Sumner declared: "The phrase 'the pub- office Is a public trust' has of late become jmmon property." Daniel Webster, as this read er of Harper's Weekly reminded us, said: "It time to declare that offices created for the ieople are public trusts, not private spoils." But r. Webster said that October 12, 1835, and eight months prior thereto, February 13, 1835, John tC. Calhoun said: "The very essence of a free I government consists in considering offices as public trusts, bestowed for the good or tne coun try, and not for the benefit of the individual or a f party." Years before that Edmund Burke, in his address on the French Revolution, referred to a public office as "a great trust," and in 1807 Thomas Jefferson said: "When a man assumes a public trust, he should -consider himself as public property." But away back in seventeen hundred and something. Matthew Henry, a British h divine, published a commentary on the old and U -nnw testaments. In the third chanter or tne First Enistle to Timothy, referring to the qualifications K of deacons .as" well as bishops, it is said: "And : let .these also lirst De proven, uommeuuug on thts Matthew Henry said: "It is not fit the public trusts should bo lodged in the hands of any till The Commoner. OF THE POPULAR 5 they are first proved and found fit for the busi ness they are to be entrusted with." It is not difficult for one who studies the origin of some of these popular phrases, to con elude that there is "nothing new under the sun." Tnh2SaT?,U Brle' one of th0 directors of the LnHn, f"ey RaIlroad company, might have when ,Hn Tf3 gotflnB 0ff billing original tSni' ? , ? U,e COaI strlkG In December, 1902, nSSS.idifby a ewsn-aPer reporter that the public might want to know something concern ing the proceedings of the special board meeting, he retorted : "yell let them go to h-- it Is no body s business what was done." But the elder Vandcrbilt put this doctrine much more sue clnctly long bofore, when ho said: "The public be d d." Grovdr Cleveland Is commonly credited with several phrases which did not originate with mm. No one has yet claimed credit for his Innocuous desuetude" phrase, but when he said it is a condition which confronts us not a theory," it sounded very much like something Disraeli had said in 1843. When Mr. Cleveland referred to "the cohesive liower of public plun der," he reminded one of something John C. Cal houn said in 1836, towit: "A power has risen up in the government greater than the peoplo themselves, consisting of many and various and powerful Interests, combined into one mass, and held together by the cohesive power of the vast surplus in the banks." To Lincoln is generally attributed the phrase, "government of the people, by the people, for the people." He used that phrase In his Gettysburg speech in 1863, but at Boaton in 1850, Theodore Parker described "the American idea" as de manding "a democracy that is a government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people." In 1830 Daniel Webster used this phrase: -"The people's government, made-for the people, made by the people, and answerable to the people." In 1865, Lincoln said: "With malice toward none, with charity for all," but in 1838 John Quincy Adams said: "In charity to all mankind, bearing no malice or ill will to any human being." Of course Lincoln put it much better than John Quincy did. Henry Ward Beecher is credited with saying: "A man in the right with God on his side is in the majority though Jbe be alone." But Wendell Phillips put it much better when, long before Beecher spoke, he said: "One on God's side Is a majority." For years Abraham Lincoln has been credit ed with the saying: "You can fool all of the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can not fool all of the peoplo all of the time." The Washington Post is au thority for the statement that Representative Snooks, of Ohio, called upon the congressional librarian to say where this Lincoln quotation could be found, and that Assistant Librarian Spofford replied that the sentence, does not occur in any of Mr. Lincoln's writings. Mr. Spofford said that Mr. Nlcolay, Lincoln's secretary, told him (Spofford) that Mr. Lincoln did not use this phrase, but that P. T. Barnum, the great circus man, was the author. William Pitt Kel logg, however, declares that he remembers dis tinctly hearing Mr. Lincoln deliver this phrase at a meeting at Bloomington, 111, in May, 1856. Mr. Kellogg says that Mr. Lincoln used this phrase 'frequently in his speeches, but that he remembers particularly that at Bloomington Mr. Lincoln said: "No one can long be deceived by such sophistries; you can fool all of the peoplo some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time." In 1896, the republican leaders sought to poke fun at Mr. Bryan because he had used the ex pression, "the dollar before the man." But they forgot, or did not know, that in a letter written to certain Boston republicans In April, 1859, Abraham Lincoln complained of those who, he said, "held the liberty of one man to be abso lutely nothing when in conflict with another's right of property," adding: "Republicans, on the contrary, are for both the man and the dollar, but in .case of conflict the man before the dol lar." Jt was, too, William McKinley who, ar. raigning. the Cleveland administration, com plained, that Mr. Cleveland's purpose was to make men cheaper and money dearer, "money the mas ter, everything else the servant" . Just where the very common phrase "the PHRASES greatost good to the greatost number' originated, would bo difficult (o say. Francis Jlutchoson, a Scotch oducator, wrote In 1720: "That nctlon is best which procures tho greatest happiness to the greatest .numbers." Boccaria, an Italian po itical philosopher, in 1761, used tho expression in tho introduction to his "Treatlso on Crimes nn , ?n,8hn,nfc.M Bontham, an English jurist, II n n u lnl1 ,enrnod from Joon'1 Priestly, SL? 8 iB nh,,oaonnGr. that "tho greatest Imp' Plness of the greatest nurcbor, is tho foundation of morals and legislation." "Eternal vigilance Is the price of liberty." Is commonly attributed to various American ora tors. John Phllpot Curran used It at Dublin In When Andrew Hamilton, tho insurance lob bjlst, appeared boford a New York committee ho sought to justify his manipulation of legisla tures through the use of monoy, upon tho theory that there is "a higher law that requires the pro tection of business interests." That was putting to very bad use a phrase that has somo noble associations. In the house of commons, in 1830, Lord Brougham said he did not recognize any" rights of property in a slave, adding: "In vain you tell mo of laws that sanction such a claim! Thero is a law above all enactments of human codes the same throughout tho world, tho sarno in all times such as it was beforo tho daring genius of Columbus pierced the night of ages, and opened to one world the sources of power wealth and knowledgo; to another all unutterable wqes; such aB it Is at this day. It Is tho law written in the heart of man by the finger of his Maker; and by that law, unchangeable and eternal, while men dospiso fraud, and loatho rapine, and abhor blood, they will reject the wild and guilty phantasy that man can Jiold proporty In map! In vain you appeal to treaties, to covo-r nants between nations; tho covenants of the Al mighty, whether of the old covenant or tho new, denounce such unholy pretensions." In a free soil meeting in Boston, in May, 1849, Wendell Phillips referring to "the higher law" said: "We confess that wo intend to" tramplo under foot the constitution ot this coun try. Daniel Webster says: 'You are a law-abiding people;' that the glory of New England Is 'that it is a law-abiding community.' Shamo on It, if this bo true; if ever the religion of Now England sinks as low as its statute book. But I say we are not a law-abiding community. God be thanked for it!" In a speech delivered In tho United States senate In March, 1850, William H. Seward said: "We reverence the constitution, al'hough wo per ceive this defect, Just as we acknowledge tho splendor and the power of tho sun, although its surface Is tarnished with here and there an onaque spot. The constitution regulates our stewardship; the constitution devotes the domain to union, to justice, to defense, to welfare, and to liberty. But there Is a higher law than the constitution, which" regulates our authority over the domain and devotes it to the same noble purposes." This lobbyist, Hamilton, was not tho first ono to put to bad use a phrase that had served good purposes. In February, 1899, John B. Hend erson, formerly a senator from Missouri, delivered an eloquent speech, protesting against Imper ialism, the keynote of which speech was: "Why not let well enough alone?" In that speech Gen eral Henderson said: "We are now entering upon an untried experiment In our system of govern ment. Why not let well enough alone? Imper ialism contains more armed soldiers than tho fabled wooden horse of Troy. Imperialism re verses the entire theory of self-government. It discards the wisdom of our fathers, repudiates, without shame, the Monroe doctrine, and joins hands with the execrated holy alliance. It re jects the civil equality of men and accepts, with out protest, the oppressions and despotism of the sixteenth century. This war in the Philip pines brings us back into the shadows of the Dark Ages. It is a war for which no justification can be urged. As no reasons could be assigned for its existence, congress was ashamed to make . up any record of its declaration. It has scarcely better excuse than the wars of subjugation watred by imperial Rome, whose object was to plunder, and enslave the weak, and whose result was, bz tho language of its own historian, to make a desert pf other lands and call It peace." And that's where Mark Hanna found his 190C campaign slogan. RICHARD L. METCALFE. i i JttWiBfc9a3gql'rtffi JZ-. A j Vji"- ml. 4 4 urJ-ame. m . mv-j-k4 -a ,-