My dear Sir,
I have not yet laid aside your Letter of the 17th of Septr
which is the last I have been favord with from you. It ill becomes you, my
Friend, to think of retiring into private Life, who can lay your hand on your
heart, and say that in your publick Conduct your have in no Instance deviated
from virtuous Principles.
If ever the Time should come, when vain & aspiring Men
shall possess the highest Seats in Government, our Country will stand in Need
of its experiencd Patriots to prevent its Ruin. There may be more Danger of
this, than some, even of our well disposd Citizens may imagine. If the People
should grant their Suffrages to Men, only because they conceive them to have
been Friends to the Country, without Regard to the necessary Qualifications for
the Places they are to fill, the Administration of Government will become a
mere Farce, and our publick Affairs will never be put on the Footing of solid
Security.
We should inquire into the Tempers of Men, in order to form
a Judgment in what Manner the publick Trusts to be reposed in them will be
executed. You remember the Character of Pisistratus. He was a Citizen of
Athens, supposd to have many excellent Qualities, but he had an insatiable Lust
of Pre-eminence.
Solon could discover his Vanity, but the People were blinded
by a false Glare of Virtues and he was their Idol. Under Pretence of his having
escaped imminent Danger from a violent Faction, and the further Insecurity of
his Person he artfully obtaind a Guard of Soldiers, by which Means he possessd
himself of the Citadel & usurpd the Government.
But though he made himself Sovereign, & thus far
overthrew the popular Election, the Historian tells us, “that he made no Change
in the Magistracy or the Laws.—He was content that others should hold their
Places according to the establishd Rules of the Constitution, so that he might
continue Archon, independent of the Suffrages of the People.
Samuel Adams, letter to James Warren, October 24, 1780
Samuel Adams, letter to James Warren, October 24, 1780
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