Antifederalist No. 26 THE USE OF COERCION BY THE NEW GOVERNMENT
(PART 1)
"A FARMER AND PLANTER" had his work printed in The Maryland
Journal, and Baltimore Advertiser, April 1, 1788.
The time is nearly at hand, when you are called upon to render up that
glorious liberty you obtained, by resisting the tyranny and oppression of George
the Third, King of England, and his ministers. The first Monday in April is the
day appointed by our assembly, for you to meet and choose delegates in each
county, to take into consideration the new Federal Government, and either adopt
or refuse it. Let me entreat you, my fellows, to consider well what you are
about. Read the said constitution, and consider it well before you act. I have
done so, and can find that we are to receive but little good, and a great deal
of evil. Aristocracy, or government in the hands of a very few nobles, or RICH
MEN, is therein concealed in the most artful wrote plan that ever was formed to
entrap a free people. The contrivers of it have so completely entrapped you,
and laid their plans so sure and secretly, that they have only left you to do
one of two things-that is either to receive or refuse it. And in order to bring
you into their snare, you may daily read new pieces published in the newspapers,
in favor of this new government; and should a writer dare to publish any piece
against it, he is immediately abused and vilified.
Look round you and observe well the RICH MEN, who are to be your only
rulers, lords and masters in future! Are they not all for it? Yes! Ought not
this to put you on your guard? Does not riches beget power, and power,
oppression and tyranny?
I am told that four of the richest men in Ann-Arundel County [Maryland],
have offered themselves candidates to serve in the convention, who are all in
favor of the new Federal Government. Let me beg of you to reflect a moment on
the danger you run. If you choose these men, or others like them, they certainly
will do everything in their power to adopt the new government. Should they
succeed, your liberty is gone forever; and you will then be nothing better than
a strong ass crouching down between two burdens. The new form of government
gives Congress liberty at any time, by their laws, to alter the state laws, and
the time, places and manner of holding elections for representatives. By this
clause they may command, by their laws, the people of Maryland to go to Georgia,
and the people of Georgia to go to Boston, to choose their representatives.
Congress, or our future lords and masters, are to have power to lay and collect
taxes, duties, imposts, and excises. Excise is a new thing in America, and few
country farmers and planters know the meaning of it. But it is not so in Old
England, where I have seen the effects of it, and felt the smart. It is there a
duty, or tax, laid upon almost every necessary of life and convenience, and a
great number of other articles. The excise on salt in the year 1762, to the
best of my recollection, in England, was 4s. sterling per bushel, for all that
was made use of in families; and the price of salt per bushel about 6s.
sterling, and the excise 4s.6d. on every gallon of rum made use of. If a
private family make their own soap, candles, beer, cider, etc., they pay an
excise duty on them. And if they neglect calling in an excise officer at the
time of making these things, they are liable to grievous fines and forfeitures,
besides a long train of evils and inconveniences attending this detestable
excise-to enumerate particularly would fill a volume. The excise officers have
power to enter your houses at all times, by night or day, and if you refuse them
entrance, they can, under pretense of searching for exciseable goods, that the
duty has not been paid on, break open your doors, chests, trunks, desks, boxes,
and rummage your houses from bottom to top. Nay, they often search the clothes,
petticoats and pockets of ladies or gentlemen (particularly when they are coming
from on board an East-India ship), and if they find any the least article that
you cannot prove the duty to be paid on, seize it and carry it away with them;
who are the very scum and refuse of mankind, who value not their oaths, and will
break them for a shilling. This is their true character in England, and I speak
from experience, for I have had the opportunity of putting their virtue to the
test, and saw two of them break their oath for one guinea, and a third for one
shilling's worth of punch. What do you think of a law to let loose such a set
of vile officers among you! Do you expect the Congress excise-officers will be
any better-if God, in his anger, should think it proper to punish us for our
ignorance, and sins of ingratitude to him, after carrying us through the late
war, and giving us liberty, and now so tamely to give it up by adopting this
aristocratical government?
Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several
states which may be included within this union according to their respective
numbers. This seems to imply, that we shall be taxed by the poll again, which
is contrary to our Bill of Rights. But it is possible that the rich men, who
are the great land holders, will tax us in this manner, which will exempt them
from paying assessments on their great bodies of land in the old and new parts
of the United States; many of them having but few taxable by the poll. Our
great Lords and Masters are to lay taxes, raise and support armies, provide a
navy, and may appropriate money for two years, call forth the militia to execute
their laws, suppress insurrections, and the President is to have the command of
the militia. Now, my countrymen, I would ask you, why are all these things
directed and put into their power? Why, I conceive, they are to keep you in a
good humor; and if you should, at any time, think you are imposed upon by
Congress and your great Lords and Masters, and refuse or delay to pay your
taxes, or do anything that they shall think proper to order you to do, they can,
and I have not a doubt but they will, send the militia of Pennsylvania, Boston,
or any other state or place, to cut your throats, ravage and destroy your
plantations, drive away your cattle and horses, abuse your wives, kill your
infants, and ravish your daughters, and live in free quarters, until you get
into a good humor, and pay all that they may think proper to ask of you, and you
become good and faithful servants and slaves.(1) Such things have been done, and
I have no doubt will be done again, if you consent to the adoption of this new
Federal Government. You labored under many hardships while the British
tyrannized over you! You fought, conquered and gained your liberty-then keep
it, I pray you, as a precious jewel. Trust it not out of your own hands; be
assured, if you do, you will never more regain it. The train is laid, the match
is on fire, and they only wait for yourselves to put it to the train, to blow up
all your liberty and commonwealth governments, and introduce aristocracy and
monarchy, and despotism will follow of course in a few years. Four-years
President will be in time a King for life; and after him, his son, or he that
has the greatest power among them, will be King also. View your danger, and
find out good men to represent you in convention-men of your own profession and
station in life; men who will not adopt this destructive and diabolical form of
a federal government. There are many among you that will not be led by the nose
by rich men, and would scorn a bribe. Rich men can live easy under any
government, be it ever so tyrannical. They come in for a great share of the
tyranny, because they are the ministers of tyrants, and always engross the
places of honor and profit, while the greater part of the common people are led
by the nose, and played about by these very men, for the destruction of
themselves and their class. Be wise, be virtuous, and catch the precious moment
as it passes, to refuse this newfangled federal government, and extricate
yourselves and posterity from tyranny, oppression, aristocratical or monarchical
government. . . .
A FARMER AND PLANTER
(1) See the history of the confederate Grecian states-also the history of
England, for the massacre of the people in the valley of Glenco, in the time of
William the Third. [Note by "A Farmer and Planter".]
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