Civil Government in the United States Considered with - Some Reference to Its Origins by John Fiske
page 72 of 467 (15%)
page 72 of 467 (15%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
for public purposes which it did not first take from its own
people,--unless when it may have plundered it from some other people in victorious warfare. The inhabitant of a New England town is perpetually reminded that "the Government" is "the People." Although he may think loosely about the government of his state or the still more remote government at Washington, he is kept pretty close to the facts where local affairs are concerned, and in this there is a political training of no small value. [Sidenote: Educational value of the town-meeting.] In the kind of discussion which it provokes, in the necessity of facing argument with argument and of keeping one's temper under control, the town-meeting is the best political training school in existence. Its educational value is far higher than that of the newspaper, which, in spite of its many merits as a diffuser of information, is very apt to do its best to bemuddle and sophisticate plain facts. The period when town-meetings ware most important from the wide scope of their transactions was the period of earnest and sometimes stormy discussion that ushered in our Revolutionary war. Country towns were then of more importance relatively than now; one country town--Boston--was at the same time a great political centre; and its meetings were presided over and addressed by men of commanding ability, among whom Samuel Adams, "the man of the town-meeting," was foremost[3]. In those days great principles of government were discussed with a wealth of knowledge and stated with masterly skill in town-meeting. [Footnote 3: The phrase is Professor Hosmer's: see his _Samuel Adams, the Man of the Town Meeting_, in "Johns Hopkins Univ. Studies," vol. II. no. |
|