<?xml version="1.0"?><!-- RSS generated by Radio UserLand v8.0.9b2 on Fri, 21 May 2004 08:02:58 GMT --><rss version="2.0">	<channel>		<title>Adam Curry: The Book Blog</title>		<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/</link>		<description>Uploading classic books in text and mp3 bit by bit.</description>		<language>en-us</language>		<copyright>Copyright 2004 Adam Curry</copyright>		<lastBuildDate>Fri, 21 May 2004 08:02:58 GMT</lastBuildDate>		<docs>http://backend.userland.com/rss</docs>		<generator>Radio UserLand v8.0.9b2</generator>		<managingEditor>adam@curry.com</managingEditor>		<webMaster>adam@curry.com</webMaster>		<category domain="http://www.weblogs.com/rssUpdates/changes.xml">rssUpdates</category> 		<skipHours>			<hour>1</hour>			<hour>2</hour>			<hour>5</hour>			<hour>3</hour>			<hour>4</hour>			<hour>0</hour>			<hour>6</hour>			<hour>19</hour>			</skipHours>		<cloud domain="radio.xmlstoragesystem.com" port="80" path="/RPC2" registerProcedure="xmlStorageSystem.rssPleaseNotify" protocol="xml-rpc"/>		<ttl>60</ttl>		<item>			<title>low lands history</title>			<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2004/05/16.html#a5687</link>			<description>For those interested in the history of the Netherlands, &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/&quot;&gt;Project Gutenberg&lt;/a&gt; has just released Johann Schiller&apos;s &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/etext/6780&quot;&gt;account&lt;/a&gt; of the dutch revolutionary years. Picked up via the PG rss &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/browse/recent/today.rdf&quot;&gt;feed&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</description>			<guid>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2004/05/16.html#a5687</guid>			<pubDate>Sun, 16 May 2004 10:24:20 GMT</pubDate>			</item>		<item>			<title>collaborative audio books</title>			<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2004/04/03.html#a5477</link>			<description>About a week and a half ago I stumbled onto AKMA&apos;s brilliant &lt;a href=&quot;http://akma.disseminary.org/archives/001253.html&quot;&gt;idea&lt;/a&gt; to create an audio-book version of Lawrence Lessig&apos;s new book &quot;&lt;a href=&quot;http://free-culture.org/index.html&quot;&gt;Free Culture&lt;/a&gt;&quot;. Bloggers quickly signed up to the collaborative by claiming chapters to read in the posting&apos;s comments.I arrived a bit late to the party, so I didn&apos;t get to read a chapter, although there is plenty of room for alternative voices and reads, but that&apos;s for later.I&apos;m a big believer in audio books and &apos;read&apos; this way frequently. I just finished Dan Brown&apos;s &apos;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.audible.com/adbl/store/product.jsp?BV_SessionID=@@@@1955256185.1081010988@@@@&amp;BV_EngineID=cccjadcldmjggkecefecegedfhfdgfi.0&amp;uniqueKey=1081011004352&amp;productID=BK_RAND_000266&quot;&gt;The DaVinci Code&lt;/a&gt;&apos; in about 2 week&apos;s time of travelling to my morning radio show whilst listeing in the car. I use my iPod and the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.thinkdifferentstore.com/product_info.php?products_id=250&quot;&gt;iTrip&lt;/a&gt;, a snap-on fm-transmitter, so I can enjoy the reading on my car&apos;s stereo. It&apos;s also much safer.I listen to lots of stuff on my iPod besides music and audio books. There are &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/lydon/specialRssFeed&quot;&gt;interviews&lt;/a&gt; and archives of old radio shows. There&apos;s even an &lt;a href=&quot;http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/dailyAudioBible/rss.xml&quot;&gt;audio bible&lt;/a&gt;.Downloading these files and getting them onto my iPod was a tedious task. Clicking and waiting for hundreds of megabytes to be transferred just doesn&apos;t cut the mustard. Not at least, from a broadcaster&apos;s perspective. I believe there is a market for subscription based audio and video. As long as it requires no intervention from the user other than clicking the play button for instantaneous playback.That&apos;s where &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.thetwowayweb.com/payloadsforrss&quot;&gt;rss enclosures&lt;/a&gt; come in. The concept results in a subscribable service that delivers new content to your news aggregator. Additional &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.blognewsnetwork.com/members/0000001/2003/08/31.html#a4390&quot;&gt;&apos;glue&apos;&lt;/a&gt; gets it onto the desired playback system automatically.This is how I receive a new verse from the bible every day on my iPod. It&apos;s always there for me in the morning when I take my iPod from it&apos;s dock. No intervention required on my part. The same process can be created with video files that are sent to a TiVo.Today I created an &lt;a href=&quot;http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/freeCulture/rss.xml&quot;&gt;rss feed&lt;/a&gt; for the Free Culture audio-book project. Subscribing to it with an &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/directory/5/aggregators/enclosureawareAggregators&quot;&gt;enclosure aware aggregator&lt;/a&gt; will download all the files you need to assemble the audio book.A logical followup to this project would be more &lt;i&gt;multiple reader&lt;/i&gt; audio books. These could be delivered in &lt;i&gt;one go&lt;/i&gt; as with the Free Culture feed, or they could be by subscription, where a new chapter is delivered daily. Regardless of your reading pace, the content will always be there when you are ready for it, not the other way around.Ofcourse non of this would have been possible without Lessig&apos;s gracious Creative Commons &lt;a href=&quot;http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/1.0/&quot;&gt;license&lt;/a&gt;.This brings me to the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/find.php&quot;&gt;Project Gutenberg&lt;/a&gt;. A collaborative project that catalogues the texts of books that are old enough to qualify as a part of the &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/faq/C-8.shtml&quot;&gt;public domain&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/faq/C-10.shtml&quot;&gt;Most&lt;/a&gt; are 100 years old, but there are many extremely recognizable &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/cgi-bin/search/t9.cgi?subject=Children&apos;s%20literature&quot;&gt;titles&lt;/a&gt; and &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/cgi-bin/search/t9.cgi?author=mark+twain&amp;title=&amp;whole=yes&amp;browse=25&quot;&gt;authors&lt;/a&gt;. Many are classics that can still be enjoyed by new audiences today, as they have for decades. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the Tom Swift &lt;a href=&quot;http://www.gutenberg.net/cgi-bin/search/t9.cgi&quot;&gt;series&lt;/a&gt;, which i read a a kid, are now in the public domain.The Free Culture audio-book experiment showed me how quickly and efficiently this type of content can be produced, I am certain the model can be replicated with content from Project Gutenberg and hope to discuss this concept with others at &lt;a href=&quot;http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/bloggerCon/&quot;&gt;BloggerCon II&lt;/a&gt;.</description>			<guid>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2004/04/03.html#a5477</guid>			<pubDate>Sat, 03 Apr 2004 17:34:19 GMT</pubDate>			</item>		<item>			<title>Democracy in America: Chapter I</title>			<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/10.html#a4746</link>			<description>Chapter I: Exterior Form Of North AmericaChapter SummaryNorth America divided into two vast regions, one incliningtowards the Pole, the other towards the Equator - Valley of theMississippi - Traces of the Revolutions of the Globe - Shore ofthe Atlantic Ocean where the English Colonies were founded -Difference in the appearance of North and of South America at thetime of their Discovery - Forests of North America - Prairies-Wandering Tribes of Natives - Their outward appearance, manners,and language - Traces of an unknown people.Exterior Form Of North AmericaNorth America presents in its external form certain generalfeatures which it is easy to discriminate at the first glance.  Asort of methodical order seems to have regulated the separationof land and water, mountains and valleys.  A simple, but grand,arrangement is discoverable amidst the confusion of objects andthe prodigious variety of scenes.  This continent is divided,almost equally, into two vast regions, one of which is bounded onthe north by the Arctic Pole, and by the two great oceans on theeast and west. It stretches towards the south, forming a trianglewhose irregular sides meet at length below the great lakes ofCanada.  The second region begins where the other terminates, andincludes all the remainder of the continent.  The one slopesgently towards the Pole, the other towards the Equator.The territory comprehended in the first region descendstowards the north with so imperceptible a slope that it mayalmost be said to form a level plain.  Within the bounds of thisimmense tract of country there are neither high mountains nordeep valleys.  Streams meander through it irregularly: greatrivers mix their currents, separate and meet again, disperse andform vast marshes, losing all trace of their channels in thelabyrinth of waters they have themselves created; and thus, atlength, after innumerable windings, fall into the Polar Seas. The great lakes which bound this first region are not walled in,like most of those in the Old World, between hills and rocks.Their banks are flat, and rise but a few feet above the level oftheir waters; each of them thus forming a vast bowl filled to thebrim.  The slightest change in the structure of the globe wouldcause their waters to rush either towards the Pole or to thetropical sea.The second region is more varied on its surface, and bettersuited for the habitation of man.  Two long chains of mountainsdivide it from one extreme to the other; the Alleghany ridgetakes the form of the shores of the Atlantic Ocean; the other isparallel with the Pacific.  The space which lies between thesetwo chains of mountains contains 1,341,649 square miles. *a Itssurface is therefore about six times as great as that of France. This vast territory, however, forms a single valley, one side ofwhich descends gradually from the rounded summits of theAlleghanies, while the other rises in an uninterrupted coursetowards the tops of the Rocky Mountains.  At the bottom of thevalley flows an immense river, into which the various streamsissuing from the mountains fall from all parts.  In memory oftheir native land, the French formerly called this river the St.Louis.  The Indians, in their pompous language, have named it theFather of Waters, or the Mississippi.[Footnote a: Darby&apos;s &quot;View of the United States.&quot;]The Mississippi takes its source above the limit of the twogreat regions of which I have spoken, not far from the highestpoint of the table-land where they unite.  Near the same spotrises another river, *b which empties itself into the Polar seas. The course of the Mississippi is at first dubious: it windsseveral times towards the north, from whence it rose; and atlength, after having been delayed in lakes and marshes, it flowsslowly onwards to the south.  Sometimes quietly gliding along theargillaceous bed which nature has assigned to it, sometimesswollen by storms, the Mississippi waters 2,500 miles in itscourse. *c At the distance of 1,364 miles from its mouth thisriver attains an average depth of fifteen feet; and it isnavigated by vessels of 300 tons burden for a course of nearly500 miles.  Fifty-seven large navigable rivers contribute toswell the waters of the Mississippi; amongst others, theMissouri, which traverses a space of 2,500 miles; the Arkansas of1,300 miles, the Red River 1,000 miles, four whose course is from800 to 1,000 miles in length, viz., the Illinois, the St.Peter&apos;s, the St. Francis, and the Moingona; besides a countlessmultitude of rivulets which unite from all parts their tributarystreams.[Footnote b: The Red River.][Footnote c: Warden&apos;s &quot;Description of the United States.&quot;] The valley which is watered by the Mississippi seems formedto be the bed of this mighty river, which, like a god ofantiquity, dispenses both good and evil in its course.  On theshores of the stream nature displays an inexhaustible fertility;in proportion as you recede from its banks, the powers ofvegetation languish, the soil becomes poor, and the plants thatsurvive have a sickly growth.  Nowhere have the great convulsionsof the globe left more evident traces than in the valley of theMississippi; the whole aspect of the country shows the powerfuleffects of water, both by its fertility and by its barrenness. The waters of the primeval ocean accumulated enormous beds ofvegetable mould in the valley, which they levelled as theyretired.  Upon the right shore of the river are seen immenseplains, as smooth as if the husbandman had passed over them withhis roller. As you approach the mountains the soil becomes moreand more unequal and sterile; the ground is, as it were, piercedin a thousand places by primitive rocks, which appear like thebones of a skeleton whose flesh is partly consumed.  The surfaceof the earth is covered with a granite sand and huge irregularmasses of stone, among which a few plants force their growth, andgive the appearance of a green field covered with the ruins of avast edifice.  These stones and this sand discover, onexamination, a perfect analogy with those which compose the aridand broken summits of the Rocky Mountains.  The flood of waterswhich washed the soil to the bottom of the valley afterwardscarried away portions of the rocks themselves; and these, dashedand bruised against the neighboring cliffs, were left scatteredlike wrecks at their feet. *d The valley of the Mississippi is,upon the whole, the most magnificent dwelling-place prepared byGod for man&apos;s abode; and yet it may be said that at present it isbut a mighty desert.[Footnote d: See Appendix, A.]On the eastern side of the Alleghanies, between the base ofthese mountains and the Atlantic Ocean, there lies a long ridgeof rocks and sand, which the sea appears to have left behind asit retired.  The mean breadth of this territory does not exceedone hundred miles; but it is about nine hundred miles in length. This part of the American continent has a soil which offers everyobstacle to the husbandman, and its vegetation is scanty andunvaried.Upon this inhospitable coast the first united efforts ofhuman industry were made.  The tongue of arid land was the cradleof those English colonies which were destined one day to becomethe United States of America.  The centre of power still remainshere; whilst in the backwoods the true elements of the greatpeople to whom the future control of the continent belongs aregathering almost in secrecy together.When the Europeans first landed on the shores of the WestIndies, and afterwards on the coast of South America, theythought themselves transported into those fabulous regions ofwhich poets had sung.  The sea sparkled with phosphoric light,and the extraordinary transparency of its waters discovered tothe view of the navigator all that had hitherto been hidden inthe deep abyss. *e Here and there appeared little islandsperfumed with odoriferous plants, and resembling baskets offlowers floating on the tranquil surface of the ocean.  Everyobject which met the sight, in this enchanting region, seemedprepared to satisfy the wants or contribute to the pleasures ofman. Almost all the trees were loaded with nourishing fruits, andthose which were useless as food delighted the eye by thebrilliancy and variety of their colors.  In groves of fragrantlemon-trees, wild figs, flowering myrtles, acacias, andoleanders, which were hung with festoons of various climbingplants, covered with flowers, a multitude of birds unknown inEurope displayed their bright plumage, glittering with purple andazure, and mingled their warbling with the harmony of a worldteeming with life and motion. *f Underneath this brilliantexterior death was concealed.  But the air of these climates hadso enervating an influence that man, absorbed by presentenjoyment, was rendered regardless of the future.[Footnote e: Malte Brun tells us (vol. v. p. 726) that the waterof the Caribbean Sea is so transparent that corals and fish arediscernible at a depth of sixty fathoms.  The ship seemed tofloat in air, the navigator became giddy as his eye penetratedthrough the crystal flood, and beheld submarine gardens, or bedsof shells, or gilded fishes gliding among tufts and thickets ofseaweed.] [Footnote f: See Appendix, B.]North America appeared under a very different aspect; thereeverything was grave, serious, and solemn: it seemed created tobe the domain of intelligence, as the South was that of sensualdelight.  A turbulent and foggy ocean washed its shores.  It wasgirt round by a belt of granite rocks, or by wide tracts of sand. The foliage of its woods was dark and gloomy, for they werecomposed of firs, larches, evergreen oaks, wild olive-trees, andlaurels. Beyond this outer belt lay the thick shades of thecentral forest, where the largest trees which are produced in thetwo hemispheres grow side by side. The plane, the catalpa, thesugar- maple, and the Virginian poplar mingled their brancheswith those of the oak, the beech, and the lime.  In these, as inthe forests of the Old World, destruction was perpetually goingon.  The ruins of vegetation were heaped upon each other; butthere was no laboring hand to remove them, and their decay wasnot rapid enough to make room for the continual work ofreproduction.  Climbing plants, grasses, and other herbs forcedtheir way through the mass of dying trees; they crept along theirbending trunks, found nourishment in their dusty cavities, and apassage beneath the lifeless bark.  Thus decay gave itsassistance to life, and their respective productions were mingledtogether.  The depths of these forests were gloomy and obscure,undirected in their course by human industry, preserved in them aconstant moisture.  It was rare to meet with flowers, wildfruits, or birds beneath their shades.  The fall of a treeoverthrown by age, the rushing torrent of a cataract, the lowingof the buffalo, and the howling of the wind were the only soundswhich broke the silence of nature.To the east of the great river, the woods almostdisappeared; in their stead were seen prairies of immense extent. Whether Nature in her infinite variety had denied the germs oftrees to these fertile plains, or whether they had once beencovered with forests, subsequently destroyed by the hand of man,is a question which neither tradition nor scientific research hasbeen able to resolve.These immense deserts were not, however, devoid of humaninhabitants. Some wandering tribes had been for ages scatteredamong the forest shades or the green pastures of the prairie. From the mouth of the St. Lawrence to the delta of theMississippi, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, thesesavages possessed certain points of resemblance which borewitness of their common origin; but at the same time theydiffered from all other known races of men: *g they were neitherwhite like the Europeans, nor yellow like most of the Asiatics,nor black like the negroes.  Their skin was reddish brown, theirhair long and shining, their lips thin, and their cheekbones veryprominent. The languages spoken by the North American tribes arevarious as far as regarded their words, but they were subject tothe same grammatical rules. These rules differed in severalpoints from such as had been observed to govern the origin oflanguage.  The idiom of the Americans seemed to be the product ofnew combinations, and bespoke an effort of the understanding ofwhich the Indians of our days would be incapable. *h[Footnote g: With the progress of discovery some resemblance hasbeen found to exist between the physical conformation, thelanguage, and the habits of the Indians of North America, andthose of the Tongous, Mantchous, Mongols, Tartars, and otherwandering tribes of Asia.  The land occupied by these tribes isnot very distant from Behring&apos;s Strait, which allows of thesupposition, that at a remote period they gave inhabitants to thedesert continent of America.  But this is a point which has notyet been clearly elucidated by science.  See Malte Brun, vol. v.;the works of Humboldt; Fischer, &quot;Conjecture sur l&apos;Origine desAmericains&quot;; Adair, &quot;History of the American Indians.&quot;][Footnote h: See Appendix, C.]The social state of these tribes differed also in manyrespects from all that was seen in the Old World.  They seemed tohave multiplied freely in the midst of their deserts withoutcoming in contact with other races more civilized than their own. Accordingly, they exhibited none of those indistinct, incoherentnotions of right and wrong, none of that deep corruption ofmanners, which is usually joined with ignorance and rudenessamong nations which, after advancing to civilization, haverelapsed into a state of barbarism.  The Indian was indebted tono one but himself; his virtues, his vices, and his prejudiceswere his own work; he had grown up in the wild independence ofhis nature. If, in polished countries, the lowest of the people are rudeand uncivil, it is not merely because they are poor and ignorant,but that, being so, they are in daily contact with rich andenlightened men.  The sight of their own hard lot and of theirweakness, which is daily contrasted with the happiness and powerof some of their fellow-creatures, excites in their hearts at thesame time the sentiments of anger and of fear: the consciousnessof their inferiority and of their dependence irritates while ithumiliates them.  This state of mind displays itself in theirmanners and language; they are at once insolent and servile.  Thetruth of this is easily proved by observation; the people aremore rude in aristocratic countries than elsewhere, in opulentcities than in rural districts.  In those places where the richand powerful are assembled together the weak and the indigentfeel themselves oppressed by their inferior condition.  Unable toperceive a single chance of regaining their equality, they giveup to despair, and allow themselves to fall below the dignity ofhuman nature.This unfortunate effect of the disparity of conditions isnot observable in savage life: the Indians, although they areignorant and poor, are equal and free.  At the period whenEuropeans first came among them the natives of North America wereignorant of the value of riches, and indifferent to theenjoyments which civilized man procures to himself by theirmeans. Nevertheless there was nothing coarse in their demeanor;they practised an habitual reserve and a kind of aristocraticpoliteness.  Mild and hospitable when at peace, though mercilessin war beyond any known degree of human ferocity, the Indianwould expose himself to die of hunger in order to succor thestranger who asked admittance by night at the door of his hut;yet he could tear in pieces with his hands the still quiveringlimbs of his prisoner. The famous republics of antiquity nevergave examples of more unshaken courage, more haughty spirits, ormore intractable love of independence than were hidden in formertimes among the wild forests of the New World. *i The Europeansproduced no great impression when they landed upon the shores ofNorth America; their presence engendered neither envy nor fear.What influence could they possess over such men as we havedescribed?  The Indian could live without wants, suffer withoutcomplaint, and pour out his death-song at the stake. *j Like allthe other members of the great human family, these savagesbelieved in the existence of a better world, and adored underdifferent names, God, the creator of the universe.  Their notionson the great intellectual truths were in general simple andphilosophical. *k[Footnote i: We learn from President Jefferson&apos;s &quot;Notes uponVirginia,&quot; p. 148, that among the Iroquois, when attacked by asuperior force, aged men refused to fly or to survive thedestruction of their country; and they braved death like theancient Romans when their capital was sacked by the Gauls.Further on, p. 150, he tells us that there is no example of anIndian who, having fallen into the hands of his enemies, beggedfor his life; on the contrary, the captive sought to obtain deathat the hands of his conquerors by the use of insult andprovocation.][Footnote j: See &quot;Histoire de la Louisiane,&quot; by Lepage Dupratz;Charlevoix, &quot;Histoire de la Nouvelle France&quot;; &quot;Lettres du Rev. G.Hecwelder;&quot; &quot;Transactions of the American Philosophical Society,&quot;v. I; Jefferson&apos;s &quot;Notes on Virginia,&quot; pp. 135-190.  What is saidby Jefferson is of especial weight, on account of the personalmerit of the writer, of his peculiar position, and of the matter-of-fact age in which he lived.][Footnote k: See Appendix, D.]Although we have here traced the character of a primitivepeople, yet it cannot be doubted that another people, morecivilized and more advanced in all respects, had preceded it inthe same regions.An obscure tradition which prevailed among the Indians tothe north of the Atlantic informs us that these very tribesformerly dwelt on the west side of the Mississippi.  Along thebanks of the Ohio, and throughout the central valley, there arefrequently found, at this day, tumuli raised by the hands of men. On exploring these heaps of earth to their centre, it is usual tomeet with human bones, strange instruments, arms and utensils ofall kinds, made of metal, or destined for purposes unknown to thepresent race. The Indians of our time are unable to give anyinformation relative to the history of this unknown people. Neither did those who lived three hundred years ago, when Americawas first discovered, leave any accounts from which even anhypothesis could be formed.  Tradition - that perishable, yetever renewed monument of the pristine world - throws no lightupon the subject. It is an undoubted fact, however, that in thispart of the globe thousands of our fellow-beings had lived.  Whenthey came hither, what was their origin, their destiny, theirhistory, and how they perished, no one can tell. How strange doesit appear that nations have existed, and afterwards so completelydisappeared from the earth that the remembrance of their verynames is effaced; their languages are lost; their glory isvanished like a sound without an echo; though perhaps there isnot one which has not left behind it some tomb in memory of itspassage!  The most durable monument of human labor is that whichrecalls the wretchedness and nothingness of man.Although the vast country which we have been describing wasinhabited by many indigenous tribes, it may justly be said at thetime of its discovery by Europeans to have formed one greatdesert.  The Indians occupied without possessing it.  It is byagricultural labor that man appropriates the soil, and the earlyinhabitants of North America lived by the produce of the chase.Their implacable prejudices, their uncontrolled passions, theirvices, and still more perhaps their savage virtues, consignedthem to inevitable destruction.  The ruin of these nations beganfrom the day when Europeans landed on their shores; it hasproceeded ever since, and we are now witnessing the completion ofit.  They seem to have been placed by Providence amidst theriches of the New World to enjoy them for a season, and thensurrender them. Those coasts, so admirably adapted for commerceand industry; those wide and deep rivers; that inexhaustiblevalley of the Mississippi; the whole continent, in short, seemedprepared to be the abode of a great nation, yet unborn.In that land the great experiment was to be made, bycivilized man, of the attempt to construct society upon a newbasis; and it was there, for the first time, that theorieshitherto unknown, or deemed impracticable, were to exhibit aspectacle for which the world had not been prepared by thehistory of the past.Chapter I: Exterior Form Of North AmericaChapter SummaryNorth America divided into two vast regions, one incliningtowards the Pole, the other towards the Equator - Valley of theMississippi - Traces of the Revolutions of the Globe - Shore ofthe Atlantic Ocean where the English Colonies were founded -Difference in the appearance of North and of South America at thetime of their Discovery - Forests of North America - Prairies-Wandering Tribes of Natives - Their outward appearance, manners,and language - Traces of an unknown people.Exterior Form Of North AmericaNorth America presents in its external form certain generalfeatures which it is easy to discriminate at the first glance.  Asort of methodical order seems to have regulated the separationof land and water, mountains and valleys.  A simple, but grand,arrangement is discoverable amidst the confusion of objects andthe prodigious variety of scenes.  This continent is divided,almost equally, into two vast regions, one of which is bounded onthe north by the Arctic Pole, and by the two great oceans on theeast and west. It stretches towards the south, forming a trianglewhose irregular sides meet at length below the great lakes ofCanada.  The second region begins where the other terminates, andincludes all the remainder of the continent.  The one slopesgently towards the Pole, the other towards the Equator.The territory comprehended in the first region descendstowards the north with so imperceptible a slope that it mayalmost be said to form a level plain.  Within the bounds of thisimmense tract of country there are neither high mountains nordeep valleys.  Streams meander through it irregularly: greatrivers mix their currents, separate and meet again, disperse andform vast marshes, losing all trace of their channels in thelabyrinth of waters they have themselves created; and thus, atlength, after innumerable windings, fall into the Polar Seas. The great lakes which bound this first region are not walled in,like most of those in the Old World, between hills and rocks.Their banks are flat, and rise but a few feet above the level oftheir waters; each of them thus forming a vast bowl filled to thebrim.  The slightest change in the structure of the globe wouldcause their waters to rush either towards the Pole or to thetropical sea.The second region is more varied on its surface, and bettersuited for the habitation of man.  Two long chains of mountainsdivide it from one extreme to the other; the Alleghany ridgetakes the form of the shores of the Atlantic Ocean; the other isparallel with the Pacific.  The space which lies between thesetwo chains of mountains contains 1,341,649 square miles. *a Itssurface is therefore about six times as great as that of France. This vast territory, however, forms a single valley, one side ofwhich descends gradually from the rounded summits of theAlleghanies, while the other rises in an uninterrupted coursetowards the tops of the Rocky Mountains.  At the bottom of thevalley flows an immense river, into which the various streamsissuing from the mountains fall from all parts.  In memory oftheir native land, the French formerly called this river the St.Louis.  The Indians, in their pompous language, have named it theFather of Waters, or the Mississippi.[Footnote a: Darby&apos;s &quot;View of the United States.&quot;]The Mississippi takes its source above the limit of the twogreat regions of which I have spoken, not far from the highestpoint of the table-land where they unite.  Near the same spotrises another river, *b which empties itself into the Polar seas. The course of the Mississippi is at first dubious: it windsseveral times towards the north, from whence it rose; and atlength, after having been delayed in lakes and marshes, it flowsslowly onwards to the south.  Sometimes quietly gliding along theargillaceous bed which nature has assigned to it, sometimesswollen by storms, the Mississippi waters 2,500 miles in itscourse. *c At the distance of 1,364 miles from its mouth thisriver attains an average depth of fifteen feet; and it isnavigated by vessels of 300 tons burden for a course of nearly500 miles.  Fifty-seven large navigable rivers contribute toswell the waters of the Mississippi; amongst others, theMissouri, which traverses a space of 2,500 miles; the Arkansas of1,300 miles, the Red River 1,000 miles, four whose course is from800 to 1,000 miles in length, viz., the Illinois, the St.Peter&apos;s, the St. Francis, and the Moingona; besides a countlessmultitude of rivulets which unite from all parts their tributarystreams.[Footnote b: The Red River.][Footnote c: Warden&apos;s &quot;Description of the United States.&quot;] The valley which is watered by the Mississippi seems formedto be the bed of this mighty river, which, like a god ofantiquity, dispenses both good and evil in its course.  On theshores of the stream nature displays an inexhaustible fertility;in proportion as you recede from its banks, the powers ofvegetation languish, the soil becomes poor, and the plants thatsurvive have a sickly growth.  Nowhere have the great convulsionsof the globe left more evident traces than in the valley of theMississippi; the whole aspect of the country shows the powerfuleffects of water, both by its fertility and by its barrenness. The waters of the primeval ocean accumulated enormous beds ofvegetable mould in the valley, which they levelled as theyretired.  Upon the right shore of the river are seen immenseplains, as smooth as if the husbandman had passed over them withhis roller. As you approach the mountains the soil becomes moreand more unequal and sterile; the ground is, as it were, piercedin a thousand places by primitive rocks, which appear like thebones of a skeleton whose flesh is partly consumed.  The surfaceof the earth is covered with a granite sand and huge irregularmasses of stone, among which a few plants force their growth, andgive the appearance of a green field covered with the ruins of avast edifice.  These stones and this sand discover, onexamination, a perfect analogy with those which compose the aridand broken summits of the Rocky Mountains.  The flood of waterswhich washed the soil to the bottom of the valley afterwardscarried away portions of the rocks themselves; and these, dashedand bruised against the neighboring cliffs, were left scatteredlike wrecks at their feet. *d The valley of the Mississippi is,upon the whole, the most magnificent dwelling-place prepared byGod for man&apos;s abode; and yet it may be said that at present it isbut a mighty desert.[Footnote d: See Appendix, A.]On the eastern side of the Alleghanies, between the base ofthese mountains and the Atlantic Ocean, there lies a long ridgeof rocks and sand, which the sea appears to have left behind asit retired.  The mean breadth of this territory does not exceedone hundred miles; but it is about nine hundred miles in length. This part of the American continent has a soil which offers everyobstacle to the husbandman, and its vegetation is scanty andunvaried.Upon this inhospitable coast the first united efforts ofhuman industry were made.  The tongue of arid land was the cradleof those English colonies which were destined one day to becomethe United States of America.  The centre of power still remainshere; whilst in the backwoods the true elements of the greatpeople to whom the future control of the continent belongs aregathering almost in secrecy together.When the Europeans first landed on the shores of the WestIndies, and afterwards on the coast of South America, theythought themselves transported into those fabulous regions ofwhich poets had sung.  The sea sparkled with phosphoric light,and the extraordinary transparency of its waters discovered tothe view of the navigator all that had hitherto been hidden inthe deep abyss. *e Here and there appeared little islandsperfumed with odoriferous plants, and resembling baskets offlowers floating on the tranquil surface of the ocean.  Everyobject which met the sight, in this enchanting region, seemedprepared to satisfy the wants or contribute to the pleasures ofman. Almost all the trees were loaded with nourishing fruits, andthose which were useless as food delighted the eye by thebrilliancy and variety of their colors.  In groves of fragrantlemon-trees, wild figs, flowering myrtles, acacias, andoleanders, which were hung with festoons of various climbingplants, covered with flowers, a multitude of birds unknown inEurope displayed their bright plumage, glittering with purple andazure, and mingled their warbling with the harmony of a worldteeming with life and motion. *f Underneath this brilliantexterior death was concealed.  But the air of these climates hadso enervating an influence that man, absorbed by presentenjoyment, was rendered regardless of the future.[Footnote e: Malte Brun tells us (vol. v. p. 726) that the waterof the Caribbean Sea is so transparent that corals and fish arediscernible at a depth of sixty fathoms.  The ship seemed tofloat in air, the navigator became giddy as his eye penetratedthrough the crystal flood, and beheld submarine gardens, or bedsof shells, or gilded fishes gliding among tufts and thickets ofseaweed.] [Footnote f: See Appendix, B.]North America appeared under a very different aspect; thereeverything was grave, serious, and solemn: it seemed created tobe the domain of intelligence, as the South was that of sensualdelight.  A turbulent and foggy ocean washed its shores.  It wasgirt round by a belt of granite rocks, or by wide tracts of sand. The foliage of its woods was dark and gloomy, for they werecomposed of firs, larches, evergreen oaks, wild olive-trees, andlaurels. Beyond this outer belt lay the thick shades of thecentral forest, where the largest trees which are produced in thetwo hemispheres grow side by side. The plane, the catalpa, thesugar- maple, and the Virginian poplar mingled their brancheswith those of the oak, the beech, and the lime.  In these, as inthe forests of the Old World, destruction was perpetually goingon.  The ruins of vegetation were heaped upon each other; butthere was no laboring hand to remove them, and their decay wasnot rapid enough to make room for the continual work ofreproduction.  Climbing plants, grasses, and other herbs forcedtheir way through the mass of dying trees; they crept along theirbending trunks, found nourishment in their dusty cavities, and apassage beneath the lifeless bark.  Thus decay gave itsassistance to life, and their respective productions were mingledtogether.  The depths of these forests were gloomy and obscure,and a thousand rivulets, undirected in their course by humanindustry, preserved in them a constant moisture.  It was rare tomeet with flowers, wild fruits, or birds beneath their shades. The fall of a tree overthrown by age, the rushing torrent of acataract, the lowing of the buffalo, and the howling of the windwere the only sounds which broke the silence of nature.To the east of the great river, the woods almostdisappeared; in their stead were seen prairies of immense extent. Whether Nature in her infinite variety had denied the germs oftrees to these fertile plains, or whether they had once beencovered with forests, subsequently destroyed by the hand of man,is a question which neither tradition nor scientific research hasbeen able to resolve.These immense deserts were not, however, devoid of humaninhabitants. Some wandering tribes had been for ages scatteredamong the forest shades or the green pastures of the prairie. From the mouth of the St. Lawrence to the delta of theMississippi, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean, thesesavages possessed certain points of resemblance which borewitness of their common origin; but at the same time theydiffered from all other known races of men: *g they were neitherwhite like the Europeans, nor yellow like most of the Asiatics,nor black like the negroes.  Their skin was reddish brown, theirhair long and shining, their lips thin, and their cheekbones veryprominent. The languages spoken by the North American tribes arevarious as far as regarded their words, but they were subject tothe same grammatical rules. These rules differed in severalpoints from such as had been observed to govern the origin oflanguage.  The idiom of the Americans seemed to be the product ofnew combinations, and bespoke an effort of the understanding ofwhich the Indians of our days would be incapable. *h[Footnote g: With the progress of discovery some resemblance hasbeen found to exist between the physical conformation, thelanguage, and the habits of the Indians of North America, andthose of the Tongous, Mantchous, Mongols, Tartars, and otherwandering tribes of Asia.  The land occupied by these tribes isnot very distant from Behring&apos;s Strait, which allows of thesupposition, that at a remote period they gave inhabitants to thedesert continent of America.  But this is a point which has notyet been clearly elucidated by science.  See Malte Brun, vol. v.;the works of Humboldt; Fischer, &quot;Conjecture sur l&apos;Origine desAmericains&quot;; Adair, &quot;History of the American Indians.&quot;][Footnote h: See Appendix, C.]The social state of these tribes differed also in manyrespects from all that was seen in the Old World.  They seemed tohave multiplied freely in the midst of their deserts withoutcoming in contact with other races more civilized than their own. Accordingly, they exhibited none of those indistinct, incoherentnotions of right and wrong, none of that deep corruption ofmanners, which is usually joined with ignorance and rudenessamong nations which, after advancing to civilization, haverelapsed into a state of barbarism.  The Indian was indebted tono one but himself; his virtues, his vices, and his prejudiceswere his own work; he had grown up in the wild independence ofhis nature. If, in polished countries, the lowest of the people are rudeand uncivil, it is not merely because they are poor and ignorant,but that, being so, they are in daily contact with rich andenlightened men.  The sight of their own hard lot and of theirweakness, which is daily contrasted with the happiness and powerof some of their fellow-creatures, excites in their hearts at thesame time the sentiments of anger and of fear: the consciousnessof their inferiority and of their dependence irritates while ithumiliates them.  This state of mind displays itself in theirmanners and language; they are at once insolent and servile.  Thetruth of this is easily proved by observation; the people aremore rude in aristocratic countries than elsewhere, in opulentcities than in rural districts.  In those places where the richand powerful are assembled together the weak and the indigentfeel themselves oppressed by their inferior condition.  Unable toperceive a single chance of regaining their equality, they giveup to despair, and allow themselves to fall below the dignity ofhuman nature.This unfortunate effect of the disparity of conditions isnot observable in savage life: the Indians, although they areignorant and poor, are equal and free.  At the period whenEuropeans first came among them the natives of North America wereignorant of the value of riches, and indifferent to theenjoyments which civilized man procures to himself by theirmeans. Nevertheless there was nothing coarse in their demeanor;they practised an habitual reserve and a kind of aristocraticpoliteness.  Mild and hospitable when at peace, though mercilessin war beyond any known degree of human ferocity, the Indianwould expose himself to die of hunger in order to succor thestranger who asked admittance by night at the door of his hut;yet he could tear in pieces with his hands the still quiveringlimbs of his prisoner. The famous republics of antiquity nevergave examples of more unshaken courage, more haughty spirits, ormore intractable love of independence than were hidden in formertimes among the wild forests of the New World. *i The Europeansproduced no great impression when they landed upon the shores ofNorth America; their presence engendered neither envy nor fear.What influence could they possess over such men as we havedescribed?  The Indian could live without wants, suffer withoutcomplaint, and pour out his death-song at the stake. *j Like allthe other members of the great human family, these savagesbelieved in the existence of a better world, and adored underdifferent names, God, the creator of the universe.  Their notionson the great intellectual truths were in general simple andphilosophical. *k[Footnote i: We learn from President Jefferson&apos;s &quot;Notes uponVirginia,&quot; p. 148, that among the Iroquois, when attacked by asuperior force, aged men refused to fly or to survive thedestruction of their country; and they braved death like theancient Romans when their capital was sacked by the Gauls.Further on, p. 150, he tells us that there is no example of anIndian who, having fallen into the hands of his enemies, beggedfor his life; on the contrary, the captive sought to obtain deathat the hands of his conquerors by the use of insult andprovocation.][Footnote j: See &quot;Histoire de la Louisiane,&quot; by Lepage Dupratz;Charlevoix, &quot;Histoire de la Nouvelle France&quot;; &quot;Lettres du Rev. G.Hecwelder;&quot; &quot;Transactions of the American Philosophical Society,&quot;v. I; Jefferson&apos;s &quot;Notes on Virginia,&quot; pp. 135-190.  What is saidby Jefferson is of especial weight, on account of the personalmerit of the writer, of his peculiar position, and of the matter-of-fact age in which he lived.][Footnote k: See Appendix, D.]Although we have here traced the character of a primitivepeople, yet it cannot be doubted that another people, morecivilized and more advanced in all respects, had preceded it inthe same regions.An obscure tradition which prevailed among the Indians tothe north of the Atlantic informs us that these very tribesformerly dwelt on the west side of the Mississippi.  Along thebanks of the Ohio, and throughout the central valley, there arefrequently found, at this day, tumuli raised by the hands of men. On exploring these heaps of earth to their centre, it is usual tomeet with human bones, strange instruments, arms and utensils ofall kinds, made of metal, or destined for purposes unknown to thepresent race. The Indians of our time are unable to give anyinformation relative to the history of this unknown people. Neither did those who lived three hundred years ago, when Americawas first discovered, leave any accounts from which even anhypothesis could be formed.  Tradition - that perishable, yetever renewed monument of the pristine world - throws no lightupon the subject. It is an undoubted fact, however, that in thispart of the globe thousands of our fellow-beings had lived.  Whenthey came hither, what was their origin, their destiny, theirhistory, and how they perished, no one can tell. How strange doesit appear that nations have existed, and afterwards so completelydisappeared from the earth that the remembrance of their verynames is effaced; their languages are lost; their glory isvanished like a sound without an echo; though perhaps there isnot one which has not left behind it some tomb in memory of itspassage!  The most durable monument of human labor is that whichrecalls the wretchedness and nothingness of man.Although the vast country which we have been describing wasinhabited by many indigenous tribes, it may justly be said at thetime of its discovery by Europeans to have formed one greatdesert.  The Indians occupied without possessing it.  It is byagricultural labor that man appropriates the soil, and the earlyinhabitants of North America lived by the produce of the chase.Their implacable prejudices, their uncontrolled passions, theirvices, and still more perhaps their savage virtues, consignedthem to inevitable destruction.  The ruin of these nations beganfrom the day when Europeans landed on their shores; it hasproceeded ever since, and we are now witnessing the completion ofit.  They seem to have been placed by Providence amidst theriches of the New World to enjoy them for a season, and thensurrender them. Those coasts, so admirably adapted for commerceand industry; those wide and deep rivers; that inexhaustiblevalley of the Mississippi; the whole continent, in short, seemedprepared to be the abode of a great nation, yet unborn.In that land the great experiment was to be made, bycivilized man, of the attempt to construct society upon a newbasis; and it was there, for the first time, that theorieshitherto unknown, or deemed impracticable, were to exhibit aspectacle for which the world had not been prepared by thehistory of the past.</description>			<guid>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/10.html#a4746</guid>			<pubDate>Mon, 10 Nov 2003 10:11:22 GMT</pubDate>			<enclosure url="http://live.curry.com/mpg/syncPod/bookBlogAudioFiles/democracyInAmerica/Chapter-I.mp3" length="20878494" type="audio/mpeg"/>			</item>		<item>			<title>Democracy in America - Introduction</title>			<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/08.html#a4740</link>			<description>Democracy In AmericaAlexis De TocquevilleTranslator - Henry ReeveBook OneIntroductionSpecial Introduction By Honorable John T. MorganIn the eleven years that separated the Declaration of theIndependence of the United States from the completion of that actin the ordination of our written Constitution, the great minds ofAmerica were bent upon the study of the principles of governmentthat were essential to the preservation of the liberties whichhad been won at great cost and with heroic labors and sacrifices. Their studies were conducted in view of the imperfections thatexperience had developed in the government of the Confederation,and they were, therefore, practical and thorough.When the Constitution was thus perfected and established, anew form of government was created, but it was neitherspeculative nor experimental as to the principles on which it wasbased.  If they were true principles, as they were, thegovernment founded upon them was destined to a life and aninfluence that would continue while the liberties it was intendedto preserve should be valued by the human family.  Thoseliberties had been wrung from reluctant monarchs in manycontests, in many countries, and were grouped into creeds andestablished in ordinances sealed with blood, in many greatstruggles of the people.  They were not new to the people.  Theywere consecrated theories, but no government had been previouslyestablished for the great purpose of their preservation andenforcement.  That which was experimental in our plan ofgovernment was the question whether democratic rule could be soorganized and conducted that it would not degenerate into licenseand result in the tyranny of absolutism, without saving to thepeople the power so often found necessary of repressing ordestroying their enemy, when he was found in the person of asingle despot.When, in 1831, Alexis de Tocqueville came to study Democracyin America, the trial of nearly a half-century of the working ofour system had been made, and it had been proved, by many crucialtests, to be a government of &quot;liberty regulated by law,&quot; withsuch results in the development of strength, in population,wealth, and military and commercial power, as no age had everwitnessed. [See Alexis De Tocqueville]De Tocqueville had a special inquiry to prosecute, in hisvisit to America, in which his generous and faithful soul and thepowers of his great intellect were engaged in the patrioticeffort to secure to the people of France the blessings thatDemocracy in America had ordained and established throughoutnearly the entire Western Hemisphere.  He had read the story ofthe FrenchRevolution, much of which had been recently written inthe blood of men and women of great distinction who were hisprogenitors; and had witnessed the agitations and terrors of theRestoration and of the Second Republic, fruitful in crime andsacrifice, and barren of any good to mankind.He had just witnessed the spread of republican governmentthrough all the vast continental possessions of Spain in America,and the loss of her great colonies.  He had seen that theserevolutions were accomplished almost without the shedding ofblood, and he was filled with anxiety to learn the causes thathad placed republican government, in France, in such contrastwith Democracy in America.De Tocqueville was scarcely thirty years old when he beganhis studies of Democracy in America.  It was a bold effort forone who had no special training in government, or in the study ofpolitical economy, but he had the example of Lafayette inestablishing the military foundation of these liberties, and ofWashington, Jefferson, Madison, and Hamilton, all of whom wereyoung men, in building upon the Independence of the United Statesthat wisest and best plan of general government that was everdevised for a free people.He found that the American people, through their chosenrepresentatives who were instructed by their wisdom andexperience and were supported by their virtues - cultivated,purified and ennobled by self-reliance and the love of God - hadmatured, in the excellent wisdom of their counsels, a new plan ofgovernment, which embraced every security for their liberties andequal rights and privileges to all in the pursuit of happiness. He came as an honest and impartial student and his greatcommentary, like those of Paul, was written for the benefit ofall nations and people and in vindication of truths that willstand for their deliverance from monarchical rule, while timeshall last.A French aristocrat of the purest strain of blood and of themost honorable lineage, whose family influence was coveted bycrowned heads; who had no quarrel with the rulers of the nation,and was secure against want by his inherited estates; was movedby the agitations that compelled France to attempt to graspsuddenly the liberties and happiness we had gained in ourrevolution and, by his devout love of France, to search out andsubject to the test of reason the basic principles of freegovernment that had been embodied in our Constitution.  This wasthe mission of De Tocqueville, and no mission was ever morehonorably or justly conducted, or concluded with greater eclat,or better results for the welfare of mankind.His researches were logical and exhaustive.  They includedevery phase of every question that then seemed to be apposite tothe great inquiry he was making.The judgment of all who have studied his commentaries seemsto have been unanimous, that his talents and learning were fullyequal to his task.  He began with the physical geography of thiscountry, and examined the characteristics of the people, of allraces and conditions, their social and religious sentiments,their education and tastes; their industries, their commerce,their local governments, their passions and prejudices, and theirethics and literature; leaving nothing unnoticed that mightafford an argument to prove that our plan and form of governmentwas or was not adapted especially to a peculiar people, or thatit would be impracticable in any different country, or among anydifferent people.The pride and comfort that the American people enjoy in thegreat commentaries of De Tocqueville are far removed from theselfish adulation that comes from a great and singular success. It is the consciousness of victory over a false theory ofgovernment which has afflicted mankind for many ages, that givesjoy to the true American, as it did to De Tocqueville in hisgreat triumph.  When De Tocqueville wrote, we had lived less than fiftyyears under our Constitution.  In that time no great nationalcommotion had occurred that tested its strength, or its power ofresistance to internal strife, such as had converted his belovedFrance into fields of slaughter torn by tempests of wrath.He had a strong conviction that no government could beordained that could resist these internal forces, when, they aredirected to its destruction by bad men, or unreasoning mobs, andmany then believed, as some yet believe, that our government isunequal to such pressure, when the assault is thoroughlydesperate. Had De Tocqueville lived to examine the history of theUnited States from 1860 to 1870, his misgivings as to this powerof self- preservation would, probably, have been cleared off.  Hewould have seen that, at the end of the most destructive civilwar that ever occurred, when animosities of the bitterest sorthad banished all good feeling from the hearts of our people, theStates of the American Union, still in complete organization andequipped with all their official entourage, aligned themselves intheir places and took up the powers and duties of localgovernment in perfect order and without embarrassment.  Thiswould have dispelled his apprehensions, if he had any, about thepower of the United States to withstand the severest shocks ofcivil war.  Could he have traced the further course of eventsuntil they open the portals of the twentieth century, he wouldhave cast away his fears of our ability to restore peace, order,and prosperity, in the face of any difficulties, and would haverejoiced to find in the Constitution of the United States theremedy that is provided for the healing of the nation.De Tocqueville examined, with the care that is worthy theimportance of the subject, the nature and value of the system of&quot;local self-government,&quot; as we style this most important featureof our plan, and (as has often happened) when this or any subjecthas become a matter of anxious concern, his treatment of thequestions is found to have been masterly and his preconceptionsalmost prophetic.We are frequently indebted to him for able expositions andtrue doctrines relating to subjects that have slumbered in theminds of the people until they were suddenly forced on ourattention by unexpected events.In his introductory chapter, M. De Tocqueville says:&quot;Amongst the novel objects that attracted my attention during mystay in the United States, nothing struck me more forcibly thanthe general equality of conditions.&quot; He referred, doubtless, tosocial and political conditions among the people of the whiterace, who are described as &quot;We, the people,&quot; in the openingsentence of the Constitution.  The last three amendments of theConstitution have so changed this, that those who were then negroslaves are clothed with the rights of citizenship, including theright of suffrage.  This was a political party movement, intendedto be radical and revolutionary, but it will, ultimately, reactbecause it has not the sanction of public opinion.If M. De Tocqueville could now search for a law that wouldnegative this provision in its effect upon social equality, hewould fail to find it.  But he would find it in the unwritten lawof the natural aversion of the races. He would find it in publicopinion, which is the vital force in every law in a freegovernment.  This is a subject that our Constitution failed toregulate, because it was not contemplated by its authors.  It isa question that will settle itself, without serious difficulty. The equality in the suffrage, thus guaranteed to the negro race,alone - for it was not intended to include other colored races -creates a new phase of political conditions that M. DeTocqueville could not foresee.  Yet, in his commendation of thelocal town and county governments, he applauds and sustains thatelementary feature of our political organization which, in theend, will render harmless this wide departure from the originalplan and purpose of American Democracy. &quot;Local Self-Government,&quot;independent of general control, except for general purposes, isthe root and origin of all free republican government, and is theantagonist of all great political combinations that threaten therights of minorities.  It is the public opinion formed in theindependent expressions of towns and other small civil districtsthat is the real conservatism of free government.  It is equallythe enemy of that dangerous evil, the corruption of theballot-box, from which it is now apprehended that one of ourgreatest troubles is to arise.The voter is selected, under our laws, because he hascertain physical qualifications - age and sex.  Hisdisqualifications, when any are imposed, relate to his educationor property, and to the fact that he has not been convicted ofcrime.  Of all men he should be most directly amenable to publicopinion.The test of moral character and devotion to the duties ofgood citizenship are ignored in the laws, because the courts canseldom deal with such questions in a uniform and satisfactoryway, under rules that apply alike to all.  Thus the voter,selected by law to represent himself and four other non-votingcitizens, is often a person who is unfit for any public duty ortrust.  In a town government, having a small area ofjurisdiction, where the voice of the majority of qualified votersis conclusive, the fitness of the person who is to exercise thathigh representative privilege can be determined by his neighborsand acquaintances, and, in the great majority of cases, it willbe decided honestly and for the good of the country.  In suchmeetings, there is always a spirit of loyalty to the State,because that is loyalty to the people, and a reverence for Godthat gives weight to the duties and responsibilities ofcitizenship.M. De Tocqueville found in these minor local jurisdictionsthe theoretical conservatism which, in the aggregate, is thesafest reliance of the State.  So we have found them, inpractice, the true protectors of the purity of the ballot,without which all free government will degenerate intoabsolutism.In the future of the Republic, we must encounter manydifficult and dangerous situations, but the principlesestablished in the Constitution and the check upon hasty orinconsiderate legislation, and upon executive action, and thesupreme arbitrament of the courts, will be found sufficient forthe safety of personal rights, and for the safety of thegovernment, and the prophetic outlook of M. De Tocqueville willbe fully realized through the influence of Democracy in America. Each succeeding generation of Americans will find in the pure andimpartial reflections of De Tocqueville a new source of pride inour institutions of government, and sound reasons for patrioticeffort to preserve them and to inculcate their teachings.  Theyhave mastered the power of monarchical rule in the AmericanHemisphere, freeing religion from all shackles, and will spread,by a quiet but resistless influence, through the islands of theseas to other lands, where the appeals of De Tocqueville forhuman rights and liberties have already inspired the souls of thepeople.Hon. John T. MorganSpecial Introduction By Hon. John J. IngallsNearly two-thirds of a century has elapsed since theappearance of &quot;Democracy in America,&quot; by Alexis Charles HenriClerel de Tocqueville, a French nobleman, born at Paris, July 29,1805.Bred to the law, he exhibited an early predilection forphilosophy and political economy, and at twenty-two was appointedjudge-auditor at the tribunal of Versailles.In 1831, commissioned ostensibly to investigate thepenitentiary system of the United States, he visited thiscountry, with his friend, Gustave de Beaumont, travellingextensively through those parts of the Republic then subdued tosettlement, studying the methods of local, State, and nationaladministration, and observing the manners and habits, the dailylife, the business, the industries and occupations of the people.&quot;Democracy in America,&quot; the first of four volumes upon&quot;American Institutions and their Influence,&quot; was published in1835.  It was received at once by the scholars and thinkers ofEurope as a profound, impartial, and entertaining exposition ofthe principles of popular, representative self-government.Napoleon, &quot;The mighty somnambulist of a vanished dream,&quot; hadabolished feudalism and absolutism, made monarchs and dynastiesobsolete, and substituted for the divine right of kings thesovereignty of the people.Although by birth and sympathies an aristocrat, M. deTocqueville saw that the reign of tradition and privilege at lastwas ended.  He perceived that civilization, after many bloodycenturies, had entered a new epoch.  He beheld, and deplored, theexcesses that had attended the genesis of the democratic spiritin France, and while he loved liberty, he detested the crimesthat had been committed in its name.  Belonging neither to theclass which regarded the social revolution as an innovation to beresisted, nor to that which considered political equality theuniversal panacea for the evils of humanity, he resolved bypersonal observation of the results of democracy in the New Worldto ascertain its natural consequences, and to learn what thenations of Europe had to hope or fear from its final supremacy.That a youth of twenty-six should entertain a design sobroad and bold implies singular intellectual intrepidity.  He hadneither model nor precedent.  The vastness and novelty of theundertaking increase admiration for the remarkable ability withwhich the task was performed.Were literary excellence the sole claim of &quot;Democracy inAmerica&quot; to distinction, the splendor of its composition alonewould entitle it to high place among the masterpieces of thecentury.  The first chapter, upon the exterior form of NorthAmerica, as the theatre upon which the great drama is to beenacted, for graphic and picturesque description of the physicalcharacteristics of the continent is not surpassed in literature:nor is there any subdivision of the work in which the severestphilosophy is not invested with the grace of poetry, and thedriest statistics with the charm of romance. Western emigrationseemed commonplace and prosaic till M. de Tocqueville said, &quot;Thisgradual and continuous progress of the European race toward theRocky Mountains has the solemnity of a providential event; it islike a deluge of men rising unabatedly, and daily driven onwardby the hand of God!&quot;The mind of M. de Tocqueville had the candor of thephotographic camera. It recorded impressions with theimpartiality of nature.  The image was sometimes distorted, andthe perspective was not always true, but he was neither apanegyrist, nor an advocate, nor a critic.  He observed Americanphenomena as illustrations, not as proof nor arguments; andalthough it is apparent that the tendency of his mind was notwholly favorable to the democratic principle, yet those whodissent from his conclusions must commend the ability and couragewith which they are expressed.Though not originally written for Americans, &quot;Democracy inAmerica&quot; must always remain a work of engrossing and constantlyincreasing interest to citizens of the United States as the firstphilosophic and comprehensive view of our society, institutions,and destiny.  No one can rise even from the most cursory perusalwithout clearer insight and more patriotic appreciation of theblessings of liberty protected by law, nor without encouragementfor the stability and perpetuity of the Republic.  The causeswhich appeared to M. de Tocqueville to menace both, have gone. The despotism of public opinion, the tyranny of majorities, theabsence of intellectual freedom which seemed to him to degradeadministration and bring statesmanship, learning, and literatureto the level of the lowest, are no longer considered.  Theviolence of party spirit has been mitigated, and the judgment ofthe wise is not subordinated to the prejudices of the ignorant.Other dangers have come.  Equality of conditions no longerexists. Prophets of evil predict the downfall of democracy, butthe student of M. de Tocqueville will find consolation andencouragement in the reflection that the same spirit which hasvanquished the perils of the past, which he foresaw, will beequally prepared for the responsibilities of the present and thefuture.The last of the four volumes of M. de Tocqueville&apos;s workupon American institutions appeared in 1840.In 1838 he was chosen member of the Academy of Moral andPolitical Sciences.  In 1839 he was elected to the Chamber ofDeputies.  He became a member of the French Academy in 1841. In 1848 he was in the Assembly, and from June 2nd to October31st he was Minister of Foreign Affairs.  The coup d&apos;etat ofDecember 2, 1851 drove him from the public service.  In 1856 hepublished &quot;The Old Regime and the Revolution.&quot; He died at Cannes,April 15, 1859, at the age of fifty-four.Hon. John J. IngallsIntroductory ChapterAmongst the novel objects that attracted my attention duringmy stay in the United States, nothing struck me more forciblythan the general equality of conditions.  I readily discoveredthe prodigious influence which this primary fact exercises on thewhole course of society, by giving a certain direction to publicopinion, and a certain tenor to the laws; by imparting new maximsto the governing powers, and peculiar habits to the governed.  Ispeedily perceived that the influence of this fact extends farbeyond the political character and the laws of the country, andthat it has no less empire over civil society than over theGovernment; it creates opinions, engenders sentiments, suggeststhe ordinary practices of life, and modifies whatever it does notproduce.  The more I advanced in the study of American society,the more I perceived that the equality of conditions is thefundamental fact from which all others seem to be derived, andthe central point at which all my observations constantlyterminated.I then turned my thoughts to our own hemisphere, where Iimagined that I discerned something analogous to the spectaclewhich the New World presented to me.  I observed that theequality of conditions is daily progressing towards those extremelimits which it seems to have reached in the United States, andthat the democracy which governs the American communities appearsto be rapidly rising into power in Europe.  I hence conceived theidea of the book which is now before the reader.It is evident to all alike that a great democraticrevolution is going on amongst us; but there are two opinions asto its nature and consequences. To some it appears to be a novelaccident, which as such may still be checked; to others it seemsirresistible, because it is the most uniform, the most ancient,and the most permanent tendency which is to be found in history. Let us recollect the situation of France seven hundred years ago,when the territory was divided amongst a small number offamilies, who were the owners of the soil and the rulers of theinhabitants; the right of governing descended with the familyinheritance from generation to generation; force was the onlymeans by which man could act on man, and landed property was thesole source of power.  Soon, however, the political power of theclergy was founded, and began to exert itself: the clergy openedits ranks to all classes, to the poor and the rich, the villeinand the lord; equality penetrated into the Government through theChurch, and the being who as a serf must have vegetated inperpetual bondage took his place as a priest in the midst ofnobles, and not infrequently above the heads of kings.The different relations of men became more complicated andmore numerous as society gradually became more stable and morecivilized.  Thence the want of civil laws was felt; and the orderof legal functionaries soon rose from the obscurity of thetribunals and their dusty chambers, to appear at the court of themonarch, by the side of the feudal barons in their ermine andtheir mail.  Whilst the kings were ruining themselves by theirgreat enterprises, and the nobles exhausting their resources byprivate wars, the lower orders were enriching themselves bycommerce.  The influence of money began to be perceptible inState affairs.  The transactions of business opened a new road topower, and the financier rose to a station of political influencein which he was at once flattered and despised.  Gradually thespread of mental acquirements, and the increasing taste forliterature and art, opened chances of success to talent; sciencebecame a means of government, intelligence led to social power,and the man of letters took a part in the affairs of the State. The value attached to the privileges of birth decreased in theexact proportion in which new paths were struck out toadvancement.  In the eleventh century nobility was beyond allprice; in the thirteenth it might be purchased; it was conferredfor the first time in 1270; and equality was thus introduced intothe Government by the aristocracy itself.In the course of these seven hundred years it sometimeshappened that in order to resist the authority of the Crown, orto diminish the power of their rivals, the nobles granted acertain share of political rights to the people. Or, morefrequently, the king permitted the lower orders to enjoy a degreeof power, with the intention of repressing the aristocracy.  InFrance the kings have always been the most active and the mostconstant of levellers.  When they were strong and ambitious theyspared no pains to raise the people to the level of the nobles;when they were temperate or weak they allowed the people to riseabove themselves.  Some assisted the democracy by their talents,others by their vices.  Louis XI and Louis XIV reduced every rankbeneath the throne to the same subjection; Louis XV descended,himself and all his Court, into the dust.As soon as land was held on any other than a feudal tenure,and personal property began in its turn to confer influence andpower, every improvement which was introduced in commerce ormanufacture was a fresh element of the equality of conditions. Henceforward every new discovery, every new want which itengendered, and every new desire which craved satisfaction, was astep towards the universal level.  The taste for luxury, the loveof war, the sway of fashion, and the most superficial as well asthe deepest passions of the human heart, co-operated to enrichthe poor and to impoverish the rich.From the time when the exercise of the intellect became thesource of strength and of wealth, it is impossible not toconsider every addition to science, every fresh truth, and everynew idea as a germ of power placed within the reach of thepeople.  Poetry, eloquence, and memory, the grace of wit, theglow of imagination, the depth of thought, and all the giftswhich are bestowed by Providence with an equal hand, turned tothe advantage of the democracy; and even when they were in thepossession of its adversaries they still served its cause bythrowing into relief the natural greatness of man; its conquestsspread, therefore, with those of civilization and knowledge, andliterature became an arsenal where the poorest and the weakestcould always find weapons to their hand.In perusing the pages of our history, we shall scarcely meetwith a single great event, in the lapse of seven hundred years,which has not turned to the advantage of equality.  The Crusadesand the wars of the English decimated the nobles and dividedtheir possessions; the erection of communities introduced anelement of democratic liberty into the bosom of feudal monarchy;the invention of fire-arms equalized the villein and the noble onthe field of battle; printing opened the same resources to theminds of all classes; the post was organized so as to bring thesame information to the door of the poor man&apos;s cottage and to thegate of the palace; and Protestantism proclaimed that all men arealike able to find the road to heaven.  The discovery of Americaoffered a thousand new paths to fortune, and placed riches andpower within the reach of the adventurous and the obscure. If weexamine what has happened in France at intervals of fifty years,beginning with the eleventh century, we shall invariably perceivethat a twofold revolution has taken place in the state ofsociety.  The noble has gone down on the social ladder, and theroturier has gone up; the one descends as the other rises.  Everyhalf century brings them nearer to each other, and they will veryshortly meet.Nor is this phenomenon at all peculiar to France. Whithersoever we turn our eyes we shall witness the samecontinual revolution throughout the whole of Christendom.  Thevarious occurrences of national existence have everywhere turnedto the advantage of democracy; all men have aided it by theirexertions: those who have intentionally labored in its cause, andthose who have served it unwittingly; those who have fought forit and those who have declared themselves its opponents, have allbeen driven along in the same track, have all labored to one end,some ignorantly and some unwillingly; all have been blindinstruments in the hands of God.The gradual development of the equality of conditions istherefore a providential fact, and it possesses all thecharacteristics of a divine decree: it is universal, it isdurable, it constantly eludes all human interference, and allevents as well as all men contribute to its progress. Would it,then, be wise to imagine that a social impulse which dates fromso far back can be checked by the efforts of a generation?  Is itcredible that the democracy which has annihilated the feudalsystem and vanquished kings will respect the citizen and thecapitalist?  Will it stop now that it has grown so strong and itsadversaries so weak?  None can say which way we are going, forall terms of comparison are wanting: the equality of conditionsis more complete in the Christian countries of the present daythan it has been at any time or in any part of the world; so thatthe extent of what already exists prevents us from foreseeingwhat may be yet to come. The whole book which is here offered to the public has beenwritten under the impression of a kind of religious dreadproduced in the author&apos;s mind by the contemplation of soirresistible a revolution, which has advanced for centuries inspite of such amazing obstacles, and which is still proceeding inthe midst of the ruins it has made.  It is not necessary that Godhimself should speak in order to disclose to us theunquestionable signs of His will; we can discern them in thehabitual course of nature, and in the invariable tendency ofevents: I know, without a special revelation, that the planetsmove in the orbits traced by the Creator&apos;s finger.  If the men ofour time were led by attentive observation and by sincerereflection to acknowledge that the gradual and progressivedevelopment of social equality is at once the past and future oftheir history, this solitary truth would confer the sacredcharacter of a Divine decree upon the change.  To attempt tocheck democracy would be in that case to resist the will of God;and the nations would then be constrained to make the best of thesocial lot awarded to them by Providence.The Christian nations of our age seem to me to present amost alarming spectacle; the impulse which is bearing them alongis so strong that it cannot be stopped, but it is not yet sorapid that it cannot be guided: their fate is in their hands; yeta little while and it may be so no longer.  The first duty whichis at this time imposed upon those who direct our affairs is toeducate the democracy; to warm its faith, if that be possible; topurify its morals; to direct its energies; to substitute aknowledge of business for its inexperience, and an acquaintancewith its true interests for its blind propensities; to adapt itsgovernment to time and place, and to modify it in compliance withthe occurrences and the actors of the age. A new science ofpolitics is indispensable to a new world.  This, however, is whatwe think of least; launched in the middle of a rapid stream, weobstinately fix our eyes on the ruins which may still bedescribed upon the shore we have left, whilst the current sweepsus along, and drives us backwards towards the gulf.In no country in Europe has the great social revolutionwhich I have been describing made such rapid progress as inFrance; but it has always been borne on by chance.  The heads ofthe State have never had any forethought for its exigencies, andits victories have been obtained without their consent or withouttheir knowledge.  The most powerful, the most intelligent, andthe most moral classes of the nation have never attempted toconnect themselves with it in order to guide it.  The people hasconsequently been abandoned to its wild propensities, and it hasgrown up like those outcasts who receive their education in thepublic streets, and who are unacquainted with aught but the vicesand wretchedness of society.  The existence of a democracy wasseemingly unknown, when on a sudden it took possession of thesupreme power. Everything was then submitted to its caprices; itwas worshipped as the idol of strength; until, when it wasenfeebled by its own excesses, the legislator conceived the rashproject of annihilating its power, instead of instructing it andcorrecting its vices; no attempt was made to fit it to govern,but all were bent on excluding it from the government.The consequence of this has been that the democraticrevolution has been effected only in the material parts ofsociety, without that concomitant change in laws, ideas, customs,and manners which was necessary to render such a revolutionbeneficial.  We have gotten a democracy, but without theconditions which lessen its vices and render its naturaladvantages more prominent; and although we already perceive theevils it brings, we are ignorant of the benefits it may confer.While the power of the Crown, supported by the aristocracy,peaceably governed the nations of Europe, society possessed, inthe midst of its wretchedness, several different advantages whichcan now scarcely be appreciated or conceived.  The power of apart of his subjects was an insurmountable barrier to the tyrannyof the prince; and the monarch, who felt the almost divinecharacter which he enjoyed in the eyes of the multitude, deriveda motive for the just use of his power from the respect which heinspired.  High as they were placed above the people, the noblescould not but take that calm and benevolent interest in its fatewhich the shepherd feels towards his flock; and withoutacknowledging the poor as their equals, they watched over thedestiny of those whose welfare Providence had entrusted to theircare.  The people never having conceived the idea of a socialcondition different from its own, and entertaining no expectationof ever ranking with its chiefs, received benefits from themwithout discussing their rights.  It grew attached to them whenthey were clement and just, and it submitted without resistanceor servility to their exactions, as to the inevitable visitationsof the arm of God.  Custom, and the manners of the time, hadmoreover created a species of law in the midst of violence, andestablished certain limits to oppression.  As the noble neversuspected that anyone would attempt to deprive him of theprivileges which he believed to be legitimate, and as the serflooked upon his own inferiority as a consequence of the immutableorder of nature, it is easy to imagine that a mutual exchange ofgood-will took place between two classes so differently gifted byfate. Inequality and wretchedness were then to be found insociety; but the souls of neither rank of men were degraded.  Menare not corrupted by the exercise of power or debased by thehabit of obedience, but by the exercise of a power which theybelieve to be illegal and by obedience to a rule which theyconsider to be usurped and oppressive.  On one side was wealth,strength, and leisure, accompanied by the refinements of luxury,the elegance of taste, the pleasures of wit, and the religion ofart.  On the other was labor and a rude ignorance; but in themidst of this coarse and ignorant multitude it was not uncommonto meet with energetic passions, generous sentiments, profoundreligious convictions, and independent virtues. The body of aState thus organized might boast of its stability, its power,and, above all, of its glory.But the scene is now changed, and gradually the two ranksmingle; the divisions which once severed mankind are lowered,property is divided, power is held in common, the light ofintelligence spreads, and the capacities of all classes areequally cultivated; the State becomes democratic, and the empireof democracy is slowly and peaceably introduced into theinstitutions and the manners of the nation.  I can conceive asociety in which all men would profess an equal attachment andrespect for the laws of which they are the common authors; inwhich the authority of the State would be respected as necessary,though not as divine; and the loyalty of the subject to its chiefmagistrate would not be a passion, but a quiet and rationalpersuasion. Every individual being in the possession of rightswhich he is sure to retain, a kind of manly reliance andreciprocal courtesy would arise between all classes, alikeremoved from pride and meanness.  The people, well acquaintedwith its true interests, would allow that in order to profit bythe advantages of society it is necessary to satisfy its demands. In this state of things the voluntary association of the citizensmight supply the individual exertions of the nobles, and thecommunity would be alike protected from anarchy and fromoppression.I admit that, in a democratic State thus constituted,society will not be stationary; but the impulses of the socialbody may be regulated and directed forwards; if there be lesssplendor than in the halls of an aristocracy, the contrast ofmisery will be less frequent also; the pleasures of enjoyment maybe less excessive, but those of comfort will be more general; thesciences may be less perfectly cultivated, but ignorance will beless common; the impetuosity of the feelings will be repressed,and the habits of the nation softened; there will be more vicesand fewer crimes. In the absence of enthusiasm and of an ardentfaith, great sacrifices may be obtained from the members of acommonwealth by an appeal to their understandings and theirexperience; each individual will feel the same necessity foruniting with his fellow-citizens to protect his own weakness; andas he knows that if they are to assist he must co-operate, hewill readily perceive that his personal interest is identifiedwith the interest of the community.  The nation, taken as awhole, will be less brilliant, less glorious, and perhaps lessstrong; but the majority of the citizens will enjoy a greaterdegree of prosperity, and the people will remain quiet, notbecause it despairs of amelioration, but because it is consciousof the advantages of its condition.  If all the consequences ofthis state of things were not good or useful, society would atleast have appropriated all such as were useful and good; andhaving once and for ever renounced the social advantages ofaristocracy, mankind would enter into possession of all thebenefits which democracy can afford.But here it may be asked what we have adopted in the placeof those institutions, those ideas, and those customs of ourforefathers which we have abandoned.  The spell of royalty isbroken, but it has not been succeeded by the majesty of the laws;the people has learned to despise all authority, but fear nowextorts a larger tribute of obedience than that which wasformerly paid by reverence and by love.I perceive that we have destroyed those independent beingswhich were able to cope with tyranny single-handed; but it is theGovernment that has inherited the privileges of which families,corporations, and individuals have been deprived; the weakness ofthe whole community has therefore succeeded that influence of asmall body of citizens, which, if it was sometimes oppressive,was often conservative.  The division of property has lessenedthe distance which separated the rich from the poor; but it wouldseem that the nearer they draw to each other, the greater istheir mutual hatred, and the more vehement the envy and the dreadwith which they resist each other&apos;s claims to power; the notionof Right is alike insensible to both classes, and Force affordsto both the only argument for the present, and the only guaranteefor the future.  The poor man retains the prejudices of hisforefathers without their faith, and their ignorance withouttheir virtues; he has adopted the doctrine of self-interest asthe rule of his actions, without understanding the science whichcontrols it, and his egotism is no less blind than hisdevotedness was formerly.  If society is tranquil, it is notbecause it relies upon its strength and its well-being, butbecause it knows its weakness and its infirmities; a singleeffort may cost it its life; everybody feels the evil, but no onehas courage or energy enough to seek the cure; the desires, theregret, the sorrows, and the joys of the time produce nothingthat is visible or permanent, like the passions of old men whichterminate in impotence.We have, then, abandoned whatever advantages the old stateof things afforded, without receiving any compensation from ourpresent condition; we have destroyed an aristocracy, and we seeminclined to survey its ruins with complacency, and to fix ourabode in the midst of them.The phenomena which the intellectual world presents are notless deplorable.  The democracy of France, checked in its courseor abandoned to its lawless passions, has overthrown whatevercrossed its path, and has shaken all that it has not destroyed. Its empire on society has not been gradually introduced orpeaceably established, but it has constantly advanced in themidst of disorder and the agitation of a conflict.  In the heatof the struggle each partisan is hurried beyond the limits of hisopinions by the opinions and the excesses of his opponents, untilhe loses sight of the end of his exertions, and holds a languagewhich disguises his real sentiments or secret instincts.  Hencearises the strange confusion which we are witnessing. I cannotrecall to my mind a passage in history more worthy of sorrow andof pity than the scenes which are happening under our eyes; it isas if the natural bond which unites the opinions of man to histastes and his actions to his principles was now broken; thesympathy which has always been acknowledged between the feelingsand the ideas of mankind appears to be dissolved, and all thelaws of moral analogy to be dissolved, and all the laws of moralanalogy to be abolished. Zealous Christians may be found amongst us whose minds arenurtured in the love and knowledge of a future life, and whoreadily espouse the cause of human liberty as the source of allmoral greatness.  Christianity, which has declared that all menare equal in the sight of God, will not refuse to acknowledgethat all citizens are equal in the eye of the law.  But, by asingular concourse of events, religion is entangled in thoseinstitutions which democracy assails, and it is not unfrequentlybrought to reject the equality it loves, and to curse that causeof liberty as a foe which it might hallow by its alliance.By the side of these religious men I discern others whoselooks are turned to the earth more than to Heaven; they are thepartisans of liberty, not only as the source of the noblestvirtues, but more especially as the root of all solid advantages;and they sincerely desire to extend its sway, and to impart itsblessings to mankind.  It is natural that they should hasten toinvoke the assistance of religion, for they must know thatliberty cannot be established without morality, nor moralitywithout faith; but they have seen religion in the ranks of theiradversaries, and they inquire no further; some of them attack itopenly, and the remainder are afraid to defend it.In former ages slavery has been advocated by the venal andslavish-minded, whilst the independent and the warm-hearted werestruggling without hope to save the liberties of mankind.  Butmen of high and generous characters are now to be met with, whoseopinions are at variance with their inclinations, and who praisethat servility which they have themselves never known.  Others,on the contrary, speak in the name of liberty, as if they wereable to feel its sanctity and its majesty, and loudly claim forhumanity those rights which they have always disowned.  There arevirtuous and peaceful individuals whose pure morality, quiethabits, affluence, and talents fit them to be the leaders of thesurrounding population; their love of their country is sincere,and they are prepared to make the greatest sacrifices to itswelfare, but they confound the abuses of civilization with itsbenefits, and the idea of evil is inseparable in their minds fromthat of novelty.Not far from this class is another party, whose object is tomaterialize mankind, to hit upon what is expedient withoutheeding what is just, to acquire knowledge without faith, andprosperity apart from virtue; assuming the title of the championsof modern civilization, and placing themselves in a station whichthey usurp with insolence, and from which they are driven bytheir own unworthiness.  Where are we then?  The religionists arethe enemies of liberty, and the friends of liberty attackreligion; the high- minded and the noble advocate subjection, andthe meanest and most servile minds preach independence; honestand enlightened citizens are opposed to all progress, whilst menwithout patriotism and without principles are the apostles ofcivilization and of intelligence.  Has such been the fate of thecenturies which have preceded our own?  and has man alwaysinhabited a world like the present, where nothing is linkedtogether, where virtue is without genius, and genius withouthonor; where the love of order is confounded with a taste foroppression, and the holy rites of freedom with a contempt of law;where the light thrown by conscience on human actions is dim, andwhere nothing seems to be any longer forbidden or allowed,honorable or shameful, false or true?  I cannot, however, believethat the Creator made man to leave him in an endless strugglewith the intellectual miseries which surround us: God destines acalmer and a more certain future to the communities of Europe; Iam unacquainted with His designs, but I shall not cease tobelieve in them because I cannot fathom them, and I had rathermistrust my own capacity than His justice. There is a country in the world where the great revolutionwhich I am speaking of seems nearly to have reached its naturallimits; it has been effected with ease and simplicity, say ratherthat this country has attained the consequences of the democraticrevolution which we are undergoing without having experienced therevolution itself.  The emigrants who fixed themselves on theshores of America in the beginning of the seventeenth centurysevered the democratic principle from all the principles whichrepressed it in the old communities of Europe, and transplantedit unalloyed to the New World. It has there been allowed tospread in perfect freedom, and to put forth its consequences inthe laws by influencing the manners of the country.It appears to me beyond a doubt that sooner or later weshall arrive, like the Americans, at an almost complete equalityof conditions.  But I do not conclude from this that we shallever be necessarily led to draw the same political consequenceswhich the Americans have derived from a similar socialorganization.  I am far from supposing that they have chosen theonly form of government which a democracy may adopt; but theidentity of the efficient cause of laws and manners in the twocountries is sufficient to account for the immense interest wehave in becoming acquainted with its effects in each of them.It is not, then, merely to satisfy a legitimate curiositythat I have examined America; my wish has been to findinstruction by which we may ourselves profit.  Whoever shouldimagine that I have intended to write a panegyric will perceivethat such was not my design; nor has it been my object toadvocate any form of government in particular, for I am ofopinion that absolute excellence is rarely to be found in anylegislation; I have not even affected to discuss whether thesocial revolution, which I believe to be irresistible, isadvantageous or prejudicial to mankind; I have acknowledged thisrevolution as a fact already accomplished or on the eve of itsaccomplishment; and I have selected the nation, from amongstthose which have undergone it, in which its development has beenthe most peaceful and the most complete, in order to discern itsnatural consequences, and, if it be possible, to distinguish themeans by which it may be rendered profitable. I confess that inAmerica I saw more than America; I sought the image of democracyitself, with its inclinations, its character, its prejudices, andits passions, in order to learn what we have to fear or to hopefrom its progress.In the first part of this work I have attempted to show thetendency given to the laws by the democracy of America, which isabandoned almost without restraint to its instinctivepropensities, and to exhibit the course it prescribes to theGovernment and the influence it exercises on affairs. I havesought to discover the evils and the advantages which itproduces. I have examined the precautions used by the Americansto direct it, as well as those which they have not adopted, and Ihave undertaken to point out the causes which enable it to governsociety.  I do not know whether I have succeeded in making knownwhat I saw in America, but I am certain that such has been mysincere desire, and that I have never, knowingly, moulded factsto ideas, instead of ideas to facts.Whenever a point could be established by the aid of writtendocuments, I have had recourse to the original text, and to themost authentic and approved works.  I have cited my authoritiesin the notes, and anyone may refer to them.  Whenever an opinion,a political custom, or a remark on the manners of the country wasconcerned, I endeavored to consult the most enlightened men I metwith.  If the point in question was important or doubtful, I wasnot satisfied with one testimony, but I formed my opinion on theevidence of several witnesses.  Here the reader must necessarilybelieveme upon my word. I could frequently have quoted nameswhich are either known to him, or which deserve to be so, inproof of what I advance; but I have carefully abstained from thispractice.  A stranger frequently hears important truths at thefire-side of his host, which the latter would perhaps concealfrom the ear of friendship; he consoles himself with his guestfor the silence to which he is restricted, and the shortness ofthe traveller&apos;s stay takes away all fear of his indiscretion.  Icarefully noted every conversation of this nature as soon as itoccurred, but these notes will never leave my writing-case; I hadrather injure the success of my statements than add my name tothe list of those strangers who repay the generous hospitalitythey have received by subsequent chagrin and annoyance.I am aware that, notwithstanding my care, nothing will beeasier than to criticise this book, if anyone ever chooses tocriticise it.  Those readers who may examine it closely willdiscover the fundamental idea which connects the several partstogether.  But the diversity of the subjects I have had to treatis exceedingly great, and it will not be difficult to oppose anisolated fact to the body of facts which I quote, or an isolatedidea to the body of ideas I put forth.  I hope to be read in thespirit which has guided my labors, and that my book may be judgedby the general impression it leaves, as I have formed my ownjudgment not on any single reason, but upon the mass of evidence. It must not be forgotten that the author who wishes to beunderstood is obliged to push all his ideas to their utmosttheoretical consequences, and often to the verge of what is falseor impracticable; for if it be necessary sometimes to quit therules of logic in active life, such is not the case in discourse,and a man finds that almost as many difficulties spring frominconsistency of language as usually arise from inconsistency ofconduct.I conclude by pointing out myself what many readers willconsider the principal defect of the work.  This book is writtento favor no particular views, and in composing it I haveentertained no designs of serving or attacking any party; I haveundertaken not to see differently, but to look further thanparties, and whilst they are busied for the morrow I have turnedmy thoughts to the Future.</description>			<guid>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/08.html#a4740</guid>			<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2003 13:34:30 GMT</pubDate>			<enclosure url="http://live.curry.com/mpg/syncPod/bookBlogAudioFiles/democracyInAmerica/Introduction.mp3" length="24296697" type="audio/mpeg"/>			</item>		<item>			<title>Welcome to the Book Blog</title>			<link>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/08.html#a4739</link>			<description>Starting a new project today, the Book Blog. I&apos;ve been interested in the &lt;a href=&quot;http://promo.net/pg/&quot;&gt;Gutenberg Project &lt;/a&gt;for some time now, and find it fascinating that so many really well known titles are available online and copyright free. As an experiment I&apos;m going to upload selected works to this weblog, in all available formats (html, rss) as well as a speech-synthesized version in mp3 format. These files are attached to each posted chapter as an &quot;rss&quot; enclosure and can be automatically downloaded to your harddisk or mobile mp3 player.Updates will be posted daily, so you can keep up with your reading both on the web or as an audio book.I&apos;m using the speech synthesizer that comes built-in to Mac OS X. While still far from perfect, it actually is quite usable and I&apos;d love to receive any feedback about improving the quality, pitch and speed of the voice.</description>			<guid>http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/theBookBlog/2003/11/08.html#a4739</guid>			<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2003 13:00:27 GMT</pubDate>			</item>		</channel>	</rss>