Page:Harvard Law Review Volume 2.djvu/359

 

N the mind of every intelligent man the question must sometimes arise, whether the political institutions of his country, and especially its constitution, are superior to those of other nations, and, if so, in what the superiority consists. The American who directs his attention to the constitution of the Federal Union is not likely to regard this question as one upon which there can well be a difference of opinion. The establishment of the federal constitution, whether we regard it in the light of its undoubted benefits to the people immediately concerned, or consider its more remote influence upon the institutions of other countries, was an act of organization and of government with which, for value and importance, no other in the history of mankind is comparable. It did not create the American States or the American Union, for these were in existence before; but it saved the States from anarchy, and it settled a tottering Union upon the only basis that was at once a foundation of solidity and of growth, of permanence and of evolution. It converted a loose confederacy into a nation; and that nation, though feeble in its beginnings, has in the compass of a century overflowed and mastered the major part of the continent; and now, in the number and intelligence of its people, in national resources and power, it takes unchallenged place with the leading nations on the globe. HIistory tells no other story of expansion so rapid, of progress so steady, of growth that in its promise appears so assuring. Many causes have contributed to the marvellous