[David Crockett: His Life and Adventures by John S. C. Abbott]@TWC D-Link bookDavid Crockett: His Life and Adventures CHAPTER X 28/31
We see the whole country in commotion: and for what? Because, gentlemen, the true friends of liberty see the laws and Constitution blotted out from the heads and hearts of the people's leaders: and their requests for relief are treated with scorn and contempt.
They meet the same fate that they did before King George and his parliament.
It has been decided by a majority of Congress, that Andrew Jackson shall be the Government, and that his will shall be the law of the land.
He takes the responsibility, and vetoes any bill that does not meet his approbation. He takes the responsibility, and seizes the treasury, and removes it from where the laws had placed it; and now, holding purse and sword, has bid defiance to Congress and to the nation. "Gentlemen, if it is for opposing those high-handed measures that you compliment me, I say I have done so, and will do so, now and forever.
I will be no man's man, and no party's man, other than to be the people's faithful representative: and I am delighted to see the noble spirit of liberty retained so boldly here, where the first spark was kindled; and I hope to see it shine and spread over our whole country. "Gentlemen, I have detained you much longer than I intended: allow me to conclude by thanking you for your attention and kindness to the stranger from the far West." The following extract also shows the candor of his mind, his anxiety to learn, and the progress his mind was making in the science of political economy: "I come to your country to get a knowledge of things, which I could get in no other way but by seeing with my own eyes, and hearing with my awful ears--information I can't get, and nobody else, from book knowledge.
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