Jefferson Davis
Second Inaugural Address of Jefferson Davis as President of the Permanent Government of
the Confederate States of America on February 22, 1862
Fellow-Citizens: On this the birthday of the man most identified with the establishment of
American independence, and beneath the monument erected to commemorate his heroic virtues
and those of his compatriots, we have assembled to usher into existence the Permanent
Government of the Confederate States. Through this instrumentality, under the favor of
Divine Providence, we hope to perpetuate the principles of our revolutionary fathers. The
day, the memory, and the purpose fitly associated.
It is with mingled feelings of humility and pride that I appear to take, in the presence
of the people and before high Heaven, the oath prescribed as a qualification for the
exalted station to which the unanimous voice of the people has called me. Deeply sensible
of all that is implied by this manifestation of the people's confidence, I am yet more
profoundly impressed by the vast responsibility of the office, and humbly feel my own
unworthiness.
In return for their kindness I can offer assurances of the gratitude with which it is
received; and can but pledge a zealous devotion of every faculty to the service of those
who have chosen me as their Chief Magistrate.
When a long course of class legislation, directed not to the general welfare, but to the
aggrandizement of the Northern section of the Union, culminated in a warfare on the
domestic institutions of the Southern States - when the dogmas of a sectional party,
substituted for the provisions of the constitutional compact, threatened to destroy the
sovereign rights of the States, six of those States, withdrawing from the Union,
confederated together to exercise the right and perform the duty of instituting a
Government which would better secure the liberties for the preservation of which that
Union was established.
Whatever of hope some may have entertained that a returning sense of justice would remove
the danger with which our rights were threatened, and render it possible to preserve the
Union of the Constitution, must have been dispelled by the malignity and barbarity of the
Northern States in the prosecution of the existing war. The confidence of the most hopeful
among us must have been destroyed by the disregard they have recently exhibited for the
all time-honored bulwarks of civil and religious liberty. Bastiles filled with prisoners,
arrested without civil process or indictment duly found; the writ of habeas corpus
suspended by Executive mandate; a State Legislature controlled by the imprisonment of
members whose avowed principles suggested to the Federal Executive that there might be
another added to the list of seceded States; elections held under threats of a military
power; civil officers, peaceful citizens, and gentlewomen incarcerated for opinion's sake
- proclaimed the incapacity of our late associates to administer a Government as free,
liberal, and human as that established for our common use.
For proof of the sincerity of our purpose to maintain our ancient institutions, we may
point to the Constitution of the Confederacy and the laws enacted under it, as well as to
the fact that through all the necessities of an unequal struggle there has been no act on
our part to impair personal liberty or the freedom of speech, of thought, or of the press.
The courts have been open, the judicial functions fully executed, and every right of the
peaceful citizen maintained as securely as if a war of invasion had not disturbed the
land.
The people of the States now confederated became convinced that the Government of the
United States had fallen into the hands of a sectional majority, who would pervert that
most sacred of all trusts to the destruction of the rights which it was pledged to
protect. They believed that to remain longer in the Union would subject them to a
continuance of a disparaging discrimination, submission to which would be inconsistent
with their welfare, and intolerable to a proud people. They therefore determined to sever
its bonds and establish a new Confederacy for themselves.
The experiment instituted by our revolutionary fathers, of a voluntary Union of sovereign
States for the purposes specified in a solemn compact, and been perverted by those who,
feeling power and forgetting right, were determined to respect no law but their own will.
The Government had ceased to answer the ends for which it was ordained and established. To
save ourselves from a revolution which, in its silent but rapid progress, was about to
place us under the despotism of numbers, and to preserve in spirit, as well as in form, a
system of government we believed to be peculiarly fitted to our condition, and full of
promise for mankind, we determined to make a new association, composed of States
homogenous in interest, in policy, and in feeling.
True to our traditions of peace and our love of justice, we sent commissioners to the
United States to propose a fair and amicable settlement of all questions of public debt or
property which might be in dispute. But the Government at Washington, denying our right to
self-government, refused even to listen to any proposals for a peaceful separation.
Nothing was then left to do but to prepare for war.
The first year in our history has been the most eventful in the annals of this continent.
A new Government has been established, and its machinery put in operation over an area
exceeding seven hundred thousand square miles. The great principles upon which we have
been willing to hazard everything that is dear to man have made conquests for us which
could never have been achieved by the sword. Our Confederacy has grown from six to
thirteen States; and Maryland, already united to us by hallowed memories and material
interests, will, I believe, when able to speak with unstifled voice, connect her destiny
with the South. Our people have rallied with unexampled unanimity to the support of the
great principles of constitutional government, with firm resolve to perpetuate by arms the
right which they could not peacefully secure. A million of men, it is estimated, are now
standing in hostile array, and waging war along a frontier of thousands of miles. Battles
have been fought, sieges have been conducted, and, although the contest is not ended, and
the tide for the moment is against us, the final result in our favor is not doubtful.
The period is near at hand when our foes must sink under the immense load of debt which
they have incurred, a debt which in their effort to subjugate us has already attained such
fearful dimensions as will subject them to burdens which must continue to oppress them for
generations to come.
We too have had our trials and difficulties. That we are to escape them in the future is
not to be hoped. It was to be expected when we entered upon this war that it would expose
our people to sacrifices and cost them much, both of money and blood. But we knew the
value of the object for which we struggle, and understood the nature of the war in which
we were engaged. Nothing could be so bad as failure, and any sacrifice would be cheap as
the price of success in such a contest.
But the picture has its lights as well as its shadows. This great strife has awakened in
the people the highest emotions and qualities of the human soul. It is cultivating
feelings of patriotism, virtue, and courage. Instances of self-sacrifice and of generous
devotion to the noble cause for which we are contending are rife throughout the land.
Never has a people evinced a more determined spirit than that now animating men, women,
and children in every part of our country. Upon the first call the men flew to arms, and
wives and mothers sent their husbands and sons to battle without a murmur of regret.
It was, perhaps, in the ordination of Providence that we were to be taught the value of
our liberties by the price which we pay for them.
The recollections of this great contest, with all its common traditions of glory, of
sacrifice and blood, will be the bond of harmony and enduring affection amongst the
people, producing unity in policy, fraternity in sentiment, and just effort in war.
Nor have the material sacrifices of the past year been made without some corresponding
benefits. If the acquiescence of foreign nations in a pretended blockade has deprived us
of our commerce with them, it is fast making us a self-supporting and an independent
people. The blockade, if effectual and permanent, could only serve to divert our industry
from the production of articles for export and employ it in supplying commodities for
domestic use.
It is a satisfaction that we have maintained the war by our unaided exertions. We have
neither asked nor received assistance from any quarter. Yet the interest involved is not
wholly our own. The world at large is concerned in opening our markets to its commerce.
When the independence of the Confederate States is recognized by the nations of the earth,
and we are free to follow our interests and inclinations by cultivating foreign trade, the
Southern States will offer to manufacturing nations the most favorable markets which ever
invited their commerce. Cotton, sugar, rice, tobacco, provisions, timber, and naval stores
will furnish attractive exchanges. Nor would the constancy of these supplies be likely to
be distributed by war. Our confederate strength will be too great to tempt aggression; and
never was there a people whose interests and principles committed them so fully to a
peaceful policy as those of the Confederate States. By the character of their productions
they are too deeply interested in foreign commerce wantonly to disturb it. War of conquest
they cannot wage, because the Constitution of their Confederacy admits of no coerced
association. Civil war there cannot be between States held together by their volition
only. The rule of voluntary association, which cannot fail to be conservative, by securing
just and impartial government at home, does not diminish the security of the obligations
by which the Confederate States may be bound to foreign nations. In proof of this, it is
to be remembered that, at the first moment of asserting their right to secession, these
States proposed a settlement on the basis of the common liability for the obligations of
the General Government.
Fellow-citizens, after the struggle of ages had consecrated the right of the Englishman to
constitutional representative government, our colonial ancestors were forced to vindicate
that birthright by an appeal to arms. Success crowned their efforts, and they provided for
their posterity a peaceful remedy against future aggression.
The tyranny of an unbridled majority, the most odious and least responsible form of
despotism, has denied us both the right and the remedy. Therefore we are in arms to renew
such sacrifices as our fathers made to the holy cause of constitutional liberty. At the
darkest hour of our struggle the Provisional gives place to the Permanent Government.
After a series of successes and victories, which covered our arms with glory, we have
recently met with serious disasters. But in the heart of a people resolved to be free
these disasters tend but to stimulate to increased resistance.
To show ourselves worthy of the inheritance bequeathed to us by the patriots of the
Revolution, we must emulate that heroic devotion which made reverse to them but the
crucible in which their patriotism was refined.
With confidence in the wisdom and virtue of those who will share with me the
responsibility and aid me in the conduct of public affairs; securely relying on the
patriotism and courage of the people, of which the present war has furnished so many
examples, I deeply feel the weight of the responsibilities I now, with unaffected
diffidence, am about to assume; and, fully realizing the inequality of human power to
guide and to sustain, my hope is reverently fixed on Him whose favor is ever vouchsafed to
the cause which is just. With humble gratitude and adoration, acknowledging the Providence
which has so visibly protected the Confederacy during its brief but eventful career, to
thee, O God, I trustingly commit myself, and prayerfully invoke thy blessing on my country
and its cause.
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