Simplicity of this motion: but was quite ready knew very well
what to do with it. I rose from my Seat with great coolness and deliberation:
So far from expressing or feeling any resentment, I really felt gay, though as
it happened I preserved an unusual Gravity in my countenance and
manAir, and said Mr. President I will second the Gentlemans Motion,
and I recommend it to the Honourable Gentleman to
second another, which I should make, vizt. that No Gentleman who holds any
Office under the Old or present Government, should be admitted to vote on any
such question, as they were interested Persons. The moment when this was
pronounced, it flew like an Electric Stroke through every Countenance in the
Room: for the Gentleman who made the Motion, held as high an Office under the
old Government, as I did under the new, and many other Members present held
Offices under the Royal Government. My Friends accordingly were delighted with
my retaliation, and The Friends of my Antagonist were mortified at his
Indiscretion in exposing himself to such a retort. Finding the house in a good
disposition to hear me, I added I would go farther and chearfully consent to a Self denying Ordinance, that
every Member of Congress before We proceeded to any question respecting
Independence should take a solemn Oath never to accept or hold any Office
of any kind in
America, after the Revolution. Mr. Wythe of
Virginia rose here and said Congress had no Right to exclude any
of their Members from voting on these questions. Their constituents only had a
right to restrain them. And that no Member had a right to take, nor Congress to
prescribe any Engagement not to hold Offices after the Revolution or before.
Again I replied that whether the Gentlemans Opinion was well or ill founded, I
had only said that I was willing to consent to such an Arrangement. That I knew
very well what these Things meant. They were personal Attacks upon me, and I
was glad that at length they had been made publickly where I could defend myself. That I knew very
well, that they had been made secretly, and circulated in Whispers not only in
the
City of Philadelphia and
State of Pensilvania, but in the
Neighbouring States
particularly Maryland, and very probably in private Letters
throughout
the Union. I now took the Opportunity to declare in Public, that it was very true, the unmerited and unsolicited, though unanimous good Will of the Council of Massachusetts had appointed me to an important Office, that of Chief Justice. That as this Office was a very conspicuous station and consequently a dangerous one, I had not dared to refuse it, because it was a Post of Danger, though by the Acceptance of it, I was obliged to relinquish another Office, meaning my Barristers Office which was more than four times so profitable. Thatit was a Sense of Duty, and a full conviction of an honest cause, and not any motives of Ambition or hopes of honor or profit which had drawn me into my present course. That I had seen enough already in the course of my own Experience, that to know that the American Cause was not the most promising road, to Profits, honours, Power or Pleasure. That on the Contrary a man must renounce all these and devote himself to labour, danger and death, and very possibly to disgrace and Infamy, before he was fit, in my judgment in the present State and future prospect of the Country, for a Seat in that Congress. This whole Scne was a Comedy to Charles Thompson whose countenance was in raptures all the time. When all was over he told me he had been highly delighted with it, because he had been witness to many of their Conversations in which they had endeavoured to excite and propagate Prejudices against me, on Account of my Office of Chief Justice. But he said I had cleared and explained the thing in such a manner that he would be bound I should never hear any more Reflections on that head. No more indeed were made in my presence, but the Party did not cease to abuse me in their secret Circles, on this Account as I was well informed.
the Union. I now took the Opportunity to declare in Public, that it was very true, the unmerited and unsolicited, though unanimous good Will of the Council of Massachusetts had appointed me to an important Office, that of Chief Justice. That as this Office was a very conspicuous station and consequently a dangerous one, I had not dared to refuse it, because it was a Post of Danger, though by the Acceptance of it, I was obliged to relinquish another Office, meaning my Barristers Office which was more than four times so profitable. Thatit was a Sense of Duty, and a full conviction of an honest cause, and not any motives of Ambition or hopes of honor or profit which had drawn me into my present course. That I had seen enough already in the course of my own Experience, that to know that the American Cause was not the most promising road, to Profits, honours, Power or Pleasure. That on the Contrary a man must renounce all these and devote himself to labour, danger and death, and very possibly to disgrace and Infamy, before he was fit, in my judgment in the present State and future prospect of the Country, for a Seat in that Congress. This whole Scne was a Comedy to Charles Thompson whose countenance was in raptures all the time. When all was over he told me he had been highly delighted with it, because he had been witness to many of their Conversations in which they had endeavoured to excite and propagate Prejudices against me, on Account of my Office of Chief Justice. But he said I had cleared and explained the thing in such a manner that he would be bound I should never hear any more Reflections on that head. No more indeed were made in my presence, but the Party did not cease to abuse me in their secret Circles, on this Account as I was well informed.
Not long afterwards, hearing that the Supream Court in
Massachusetts was organized and proceeding very well on the
Business of their Circuits, I wrote my Resignation of the Office of Chief
justice toCongre. the Council, very happy to get fairly rid of an
Office that I knew to be burthensome, and whose Emoluments with my small
fortune would not support my family.
