Volume: I Pages: 51-54
April 30, 1789
Fellow Citizens of the Senate
and of the House of
Representatives:
Among the vicissitudes incident
to life no event could have
filled me with greater anxieties
than that of which the
notification was transmitted by
your order, and received on the
fourteenth day of the present
month. On the one hand, I was
summoned by my country, whose
voice I can never hear but with
veneration and love, from a
retreat which I had chosen with
the fondest predilection, and,
in my flattering hopes, with an
immutable decision, as the
asylum of my declining years—a
retreat which was rendered every
day more necessary as well as
more dear to me by the addition
of habit to inclination, and of
frequent interruptions in my
health to the gradual waste
committed on it by time. On the
other hand, the magnitude and
difficulty of the trust to which
the voice of my country called
me, being sufficient to awaken
in the wisest and most
experienced of her citizens a
distrustful scrutiny into his
qualifications, could not but
overwhelm with despondence, one,
who inheriting inferior
endowments from nature and
unpracticed in the duties of
civil administration, ought to
be peculiarly conscious of his
own deficiencies. In this
conflict of emotions all I dare
aver, is, that it has been my
faithful study to collect my
duty from a just appreciation of
every circumstance by which it
might be affected. All I dare
hope, is, that if, in executing
this task, I have been too much
swayed by a grateful remembrance
of former instances, or by an
affectionate sensibility to this
transcendent proof of the
confidence of my
fellow-citizens, and have thence
too little consulted my
incapacity as well as
disinclination for the weighty
and untried cares before me, my
error will be palliated by the
motives which misled me, and its
consequences be judged by my
country with some share of the
partiality in which they
originated.
Such being the impressions under
which I have, in obedience to
the public summons, repaired to
the present station, it would be
peculiarly improper to omit in
this first official act my
fervent supplications to that
Almighty Being who rules over
the universe; who presides in
the councils of nations; and
whose providential aid can
supply every human defect; that
his benediction may consecrate
to the liberties and happiness
of the People of the United
States, a Government instituted
by themselves for these
essential purposes, and may
enable every instrument employed
in its administration to execute
with success the functions
allotted to his charge. In
tendering this homage to the
Great Author of every public and
private good, I assure myself
that it expresses your
sentiments not less than my own,
nor those of my fellow-citizens
at large less than either. No
people can be bound to
acknowledge and adore the
invisible hand which conducts
the affairs of men more than
those of the United States.
Every step by which they have
advanced to the character of an
independent nation seems to have
been distinguished by some token
of providential agency. And in
the important revolution just
accomplished in the system of
their united government the
tranquil deliberations and
voluntary consent of so many
distinct communities from which
the event has resulted can not
be compared with the means by
which most governments have been
established, without some return
of pious gratitude, along with
an humble anticipation of the
future blessings which the past
seem to presage. These
reflections, arising out of the
present crisis, have forced
themselves too strongly on my
mind to be suppressed. You will
join with me, I trust, in
thinking that there are none
under the influence of which the
proceedings of a new and free
government can more auspiciously
commence.
By the article establishing the
Executive Department it is made
the duty of the President “to
recommend to your consideration
such measures as he shall judge
necessary and expedient.” The
circumstances under which I now
meet you will acquit me from
entering into that subject,
further than to refer to the
great constitutional charter
under which you are assembled,
and which, in defining your
powers, designates the objects
to which your attention is to be
given. It will be more
consistent with those
circumstances, and far more
congenial with the feelings
which actuate me, to substitute,
in place of a recommendation of
particular measures, the tribute
that is due to the talents, the
rectitude, and the patriotism,
which adorn the characters
selected to devise and adopt
them. In these honorable
qualifications I behold the
surest pledges that as on one
side no local prejudices or
attachments—no separate views,
nor party animosities, will
misdirect the comprehensive and
equal eye which ought to watch
over this great assemblage of
communities and interests; so,
on another, that the foundation
of our national policy will be
laid in the pure and immutable
principles of private morality,
and the pre-eminence of free
government be exemplified by all
the attributes which can win the
affections of its citizens and
command the respect of the
world. I dwell on this prospect
with every satisfaction which an
ardent love for my country can
inspire: since there is no truth
more thoroughly established than
that there exists in the economy
and course of nature an
indissoluble union between
virtue and happiness; between
duty and advantage; between the
genuine maxims of an honest and
magnanimous policy and the solid
rewards of public prosperity and
felicity; since we ought to be
no less persuaded that the
propitious smiles of Heaven can
never be expected on a nation
that disregards the eternal
rules of order and right which
Heaven itself has ordained: and
since the preservation of the
sacred fire of liberty and the
destiny of the republican model
of government are justly
considered, perhaps, as
deeply, perhaps as
finally, staked on the
experiment entrusted to the
hands of the American people.
Besides the ordinary objects
submitted to your care, it will
remain with your judgment to
decide how far an exercise of
the occasional power delegated
by the fifth article of the
Constitution is rendered
expedient at the present
juncture, by the nature of
objections which have been urged
against the system, or by the
degree of inquietude which has
given birth to them. Instead of
undertaking particular
recommendations on this subject,
in which I could be guided by no
lights derived from official
opportunities, I shall again
give way to my entire confidence
in your discernment and pursuit
of the public good: for I assure
myself, that, whilst you
carefully avoid every alteration
which might endanger the
benefits of an united and
effective government, or which
ought to await the future
lessons of experience, a
reverence for the characteristic
rights of freemen, and a regard
for the public harmony, will
sufficiently influence your
deliberations on the question,
how far the former can be
impregnably fortified or the
latter be safely and
advantageously promoted.
To the foregoing observations I
have one to add, which will be
most properly addressed to the
House of Representatives. It
concerns myself, and will
therefore be as brief as
possible. When I was first
honored with a call into the
service of my country, then on
the eve of an arduous struggle
for its liberties, the light in
which I contemplated my duty
required that I should renounce
every pecuniary compensation.
From this resolution I have in
no instance departed. And being
still under the impressions
which produced it, I must
decline, as inapplicable to
myself, any share in the
personal emoluments which may be
indispensably included in a
permanent provision for the
Executive Department; and must
accordingly pray that the
pecuniary estimates for the
station in which I am placed,
may, during my continuance in
it, be limited to such actual
expenditures as the public good
may be thought to require.
Having thus imparted to you my
sentiments as they have been
awakened by the occasion which
brings us together, I shall take
my present leave; but not
without resorting once more to
the benign Parent of the human
race in humble supplication
that, since he has been pleased
to favor the American People
with opportunities for
deliberating in perfect
tranquility, and dispositions
for deciding with unparalleled
unanimity on a form of
government for the security of
their union, and the advancement
of their happiness, so his
divine blessing may be equally
conspicuous in the
enlarged views, the temperate
consultations, and the wise
measures on which the success of
this Government must depend.