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July 4, 1776
was the historic day on which the
representatives of three millions
of people vocalized Concord, and
Lexington, and Bunker Hill, which
gave notice to the world that they
proposed to establish an independent
nation on the theory that all men
are created equal, that they are
endowed by their creator with certain
inalienable rights, that among these
are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness. The wonder and glory
of the American people is not the
ringing Declaration of that day,
but the action then already begun,
and in the process of being carried
out, in spite of every obstacle
that war could interpose, making
the theory of freedom and equality
a reality.
We revere
that day because it marks the beginnings
of independence, the beginnings
of a constitution that was finally
to give universal freedom and equality
to all American citizens -- the
beginnings of a government that
was to recognize beyond all others
the power and worth and dignity
of man. There began the first of
governments to acknowledge that
it was founded on the sovereignty
of the people. There the world first
beheld the revelation of modern
democracy.
Democracy
is not a tearing down; it is a building
up. It is not denial of the divine
right of kings; it supplements that
same with the assertion of the divine
right of all men. It does not destroy;
it fulfills. It is the consummation
of all theories of government, the
spirit of which all the nations
of the earth must yield. It is the
great constructive course of the
ages. It is the alpha and omega
of man's relation to man, the beginning
and the end. There is, and can be,
no more doubt of the triumphs of
democracy in human affairs than
there is of the triumph of gravitation
in the physical world. The only
question is how and when. Its foundation
lays hold upon eternity. It is unconcerned
with the idolatry, or despotism,
or treason, or rebellion, or betrayal,
but bows in reverence before Moses,
or Hamden, or Washington, or Lincoln,
or the lights that shone on Calvary.
The doctrine
of the Declaration of Independence
predicated upon the glory of man
and the corresponding duty to society
that the rights of citizens ought
to be protected with every power
and resource of the state, and a
government that does any less is
false to the teachings of that great
document -- false to the name American.
The assertion of human rights is
not but a call of human sacrifice.
This is yet the spirit of the American
people. Only so long as this
flame burns shall we endure, and
the light of liberty be shed over
the nations of the earth. May the
increase of the years increase for
America only the devotion to this
spirit, only the intensity of this
flame, and the eternal truth of
[Lowell's] lines: "What were
our lives without thee -- what all
our lives to save thee? We wrecked
not but we gave thee. We will not
dare to doubt thee. But ask whatever
else and we will dare."
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