Harry V.
Jaffa.
A New Birth of Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War.
Lanham, Md: Rowman and Littlefield, 2000. xiv + 549 pp. Notes, Index, About
the Author. $35.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-8476-9952-8 .
Reviewed
by:
Matthew J. Franck, Radford University.
Published by:
H-Law
(January, 2001)
Father Abraham and the Cause of the Union
Forty-two years ago, Harry V. Jaffa first published his treatment of the
Lincoln-Douglas debates, Crisis of the House Divided.[1] I still
remember the heady experience of reading that book as a graduate student in
the early 1980s: here was an author steeped in political philosophy who
explicated the issues between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas with
infinite care, and with painstaking attention to historical events, and who
brought to light in the most serious way the enduring importance of the
principles of the Declaration of Independence in American politics.
Crisis was a tough act to follow, and for many years those of us who
admire it have read Jaffa's subsequent books (mostly collections of essays)
with twinges of disappointment while wondering when his long-promised sequel
on Lincoln
would appear. In his most recent books in particular, Jaffa
seemed to have become a mere controversialist taking on subjects such as
constitutional law where he seemed simply out of his element.[2]
Still,
as I turned now and then to my dog-eared copy of Crisis, I could
remind myself (and tell students) that as a vindication of Lincoln the book
simply had no peer. Until now. A New Birth of Freedom is an even
better book than the earlier one. Taking up the tale of Lincoln's
statesmanship in the secession crisis of 1860-61, Jaffa offers what he calls
"a commentary on the Gettysburg Address," but one that is therefore
necessarily "a commentary on the speeches and deeds that constituted the
historical process during the fourscore and seven years preceding, no less
than on the conflict of the war itself" (p. xi). That description signals a
very ambitious book indeed, but Jaffa more than fulfills that ambition. It
is no exaggeration to say that this is the best book one can read to
understand 1) the political thought, rhetoric, and action of Lincoln; 2) the
meaning and truth of the Declaration of Independence; 3) the political
science of John C. Calhoun; 4) the final implosion of Stephen Douglas's
"popular sovereignty" doctrine; and 5) the deepest character of the conflict
between North and South in the Civil War.
Along
the way, he sheds important light on the thought of Thomas Jefferson and of
James Madison; on the thought of Rousseau, Hegel, Kant, Marx, and Darwin and
their connections to or influences on antebellum American thought; on the
failure of twentieth-century historians (Carl Becker being the great
exemplar) to understand the American founding; on the origins of positivism
in political science, legal thought, and historical scholarship; and on the
parallel sources of American political principles in both reason and
revelation. Elegantly and forcefully written, A New Birth of Freedom
may be considered by some readers to suffer from a certain degree of
repetition, as arguments reappear and are restated in multiple contexts.
These repeated restatements, however, are not merely forgivable but
necessary, as Jaffa stands firmly on the ground of a central idea that has
been subjected to attacks from multiple quarters, against which he defends
it.
That
central idea, as expressed by Lincoln,
is this: "As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master.
This expresses my idea of democracy. Whatever differs from this, to the
extent of the difference, is not democracy" (quoted, p. 155). This statement
encapsulates the essentials of Jaffa's argument throughout A New Birth of
Freedom. He who would be neither slave nor master refuses either status
because of a principle that flows from a fact: that all human beings are one
another's equals in the decisive moral and political respects -- none is
either a beast to be mastered by men, or a god to master them. It follows
that republican government, respectful of natural rights and founded on
consent, is the only alternative to anarchy or tyranny. This was the view
from the American founding, the view that came under assault only as the
nation's initially necessary toleration of slavery warped and twisted in one
half of the country, under the pressure of self-interest, into an
affirmation of slavery's positive good, and in the other half of the country
came near to becoming a matter of indifference. It was the task of Lincoln's
statesmanship to save and restore that "ancient faith" before its
degradation and denial became an irretrievable loss. That he undertook the
task knowing full well that his own words and deeds could help to
precipitate a civil war whose outcome would mean the life or death of that
faith should only increase our awe when contemplating the terrible burden he
carried.
Part
of that burden was in making good the promise of The Federalist No. 1,
that under a just republicanism ballots ("reflection and choice") should
succeed bullets ("accident and force") as the means of deciding the nation's
future direction. Jaffa regards the 1800 election (discussed in chapter 1)
as the pivotal precursor to the 1860 election, for it was in 1800 that a
free election between bitterly rivalrous parties first resulted in a
peaceful transfer of power from one to the other. Jefferson, who appears
here in an ambiguous light, seemed in his Kentucky Resolutions to appeal not
to election but to revolution for the vindication of the Declaration's
republican principles. (Whether those principles were truly in jeopardy in
1798 is a matter about which Jaffa
and I might differ, but that is of no consequence here.) But what began as
revolutionary rhetoric evolved into electoral canvassing, and the
establishment of a democratic precedent that Lincoln was determined not to
see reversed: that when the electorate decides the future course of public
policy on matters of the greatest moment (such as the future of slavery in
the territories), there is no gainsaying that result at the ballot box but
by a subsequent regular election or by the making of a just revolution
against tyranny. And there can be no justice in a rebellion, dressed up
however it might be in the false political science of "state rights" or
"secession," whose aim is itself tyrannical.
In the
three most masterly historical chapters here, Jaffa explores Lincoln's
posture on the brink of war in the First Inaugural Address (chapters 4 and
5), and just after the war began in the message of July 4, 1861 to a special
session of Congress (chapter 6). In more than a hundred densely argued
pages, the chapters on the first inaugural address weave together all the
strands of the mounting antebellum crisis, the struggle over the meaning and
relation of the Declaration and the Constitution, the disaster of the Dred
Scott ruling, the two electoral struggles between Douglas and Lincoln in
1858 and 1860, and the post-electoral secession of half the South, into a
focused meditation on the magnanimous but uncompromising speech of a new
president in a precarious military situation who had to speak of peace but
gird for war. The more condensed and tragic poetry of the Second Inaugural
Address has tended to overshadow the great achievement of the First, and Jaffa
deserves thanks for restoring the First Inaugural to the front rank of Lincoln's
great public utterances.
The
same may be said of
Jaffa's treatment of
the great July 4 message to Congress. Now, with the war under way, "Lincoln,
as president and commander in chief, must save the Union from physical
destruction. But first he must save it from ingenious sophistry" (p. 368).
The July 4 message offers Lincoln's best defense -- and it is quite good
enough -- of his understanding of executive power under the Constitution. It
rebuts yet again the pretensions of secessionist theorizing. It reiterates
Lincoln's belief -- rightly held -- that "[t]he Union is older than any of
the States, and, in fact, it created them as States" (quoted, p. 377). But
it reaches its peak in Lincoln's
claim that the war was "essentially a people's contest," a struggle for the
fulfillment of the American promise "to lift artificial weights from all
shoulders ... to afford all an unfettered start, and a fair chance in the
race of life" (quoted, p. 395). Even in the midst of war, as Jaffa
shows, Lincoln
appealed to the ordinary people of the South as well as the North to repair
to the standard maxims of free government from which all might benefit. But
the common white folk of the South had imbibed from Calhoun "the social
function of the distinction of race in the slave states: It reduced to
insignificance the social distance between whites, because of the great gulf
that divided all whites from blacks" (p. 396). Hence it was that members of
all classes of whites in the South "were nonetheless often attached to
slavery with fierce devotion" (ibid.). And so the principal audience of the
July 4 message, under the circumstances, remained the Congress of the Union
and its constituents, who were called upon to prosecute the "people's
contest" against their southern brethren for the latter's own sake -- a
cause identical with that of Union itself, with self-government, and with
the ultimate goal of ridding the nation of slavery.
Bracketing these central chapters on Lincoln
in the crucible of secession and war are chapters of surpassing insight into
the malign modes of thought that nearly brought the nation to ruin and whose
legacy still haunts certain quarters in contemporary thought. Commenting in
his second chapter on "the historians" who have ill-served the students of
our own century, Jaffa writes: "So far as I know ... no historian who has
written about the Civil War has seriously asked whether Lincoln's belief in
the truth of the Declaration can be accepted, not merely as emotionally
evocative and persuasive, but as philosophically sound.... But if the
question as to whether the philosophy of the Declaration is true or false is
essentially meaningless, then questions as to whether slavery is right or
wrong or whether freedom is better than despotism are equally meaningless"
(p. 75).[3] Such historians, at their best, are the intellectual
stepchildren of Roger Taney, who held with an exacting pseudo-Kantianism
that the founders could not have seriously meant what they appeared to say
about equality in the Declaration and continued to tolerate slavery anywhere
in their midst for another instant (see pp. 292-93). I meet the stepchildren
of these stepchildren of Taney every semester in my introductory class
discussions of the Declaration. It takes considerable effort to show these
young worshipers of the false idol of progress, not always with success on
my part, what Jaffa
shows so brilliantly here: that the racial views of a substantial portion of
Americans became worse rather than better in the decades following the
founding.
That
decline is illuminated in Jaffa's third chapter (on James Buchanan,
Jefferson Davis, and Alexander Stephens), his seventh chapter (on Calhoun),
and his appendix (on Douglas) as arising from intellectual developments
inimical to America's founding principles: the identification of nature with
history, the ascription of rights to communities and not to individuals, the
emerging "scientism" of racial theory (often quasi-Darwinian), and the
displacement of reason by a version of Rousseau's "general will" (in
Calhoun's over-praised theory of concurrent majorities). Here are some of
Jaffa's most penetrating observations, grounding his account of the struggle
for a just American republicanism in the perennial arguments of political
philosophy, from Plato and Aristotle to Hegel and Nietzsche.
There
is a certain abruptness to the way A New Birth of Freedom is brought
to a close, with its treatments of Calhoun and Douglas followed by no
further return to Lincoln. Perhaps this is because Jaffa has promised yet a
third volume "on the triumph and tragedy of the war years" (p. xiv). As he
has now passed his eightieth year, we can only hope that Jaffa has this
final work well in hand. When the trilogy is completed, it will no doubt
long outlive its author as a standing rebuke to the academic practitioners
of "a shallow and permissive historicism and relativism [who] have subjected
the 'laws of nature and of nature's God' to scorn and contempt" (p. 471).
With thorough historical scholarship, acute philosophical reasoning, and a
humane and civilized sensibility, Harry Jaffa has already brought us, not
merely a "Lincoln for our times," but Lincoln
as he was, is, and ever shall be.
Notes
[1].
Harry V. Jaffa, Crisis of the House Divided: An Interpretation of the
Issues in the Lincoln-Douglas Debates (Garden City, NY: Doubleday,
1959). The book was subsequently republished with a new introduction by the University
of Washington Press
in 1973, and with a new preface by the University of Chicago Press in 1982.
The Chicago edition remains in print.
[2].
See, e.g., Harry V. Jaffa, Original Intent and the Framers of the
Constitution: A Disputed Question (Washington, D.C.: Regnery Gateway,
1994), reviewed by the present author in The Review of Politics 58
(1996): 390-96.
[3].
By no means does Jaffa attempt a comprehensive review of the historical
scholarship on the founding, on Lincoln, or on the antebellum period, which
some may see as a fault but which would in fact have been a major
distraction from the tightly focused discussion Jaffa provides. Carl Becker,
as noted above, is the principal target of this chapter, for in Jaffa's view
his "perspective on the natural rights philosophy has remained unchanged and
unchallenged in the mainstream of the academic world" (p. 75), even while
the "earlier revisionism" represented by Becker was replaced by a later
revisionism, differing somewhat but in Jaffa's opinion not decisively, in
the second half of the twentieth century. Among those historians subjected
to criticism (in varying degrees) in Jaffa's
notes to this chapter are J.G. Randall, Avery Craven, George Fort Milton,
Allan Nevins, Robert Johannsen, Shelby Foote, Garry Wills, David Brion
Davis, and William W. Freehling.
Library
of Congress
Call Number: E459.J34 2000
Subjects:
*
United States -- Politics and government -- 1861-1865
*
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865
*
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865. Gettysburg address
*
Presidents -- United States -- Election -- 1860
*
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865 -- Inauguration, 1861
Citation: Matthew J. Franck. "Review of Harry V. Jaffa, A New Birth of
Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War," H-Law, H-Net
Reviews, January, 2001. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=23272980364205.
“The main topic of [Jaffa’s] book is really a
philosophical proposition that Lincoln, in his Gettysburg Address, claimed
the nation was dedicated to: the proposition that ‘all men are created
equal’… This book, though, reads more like an Old Testament jeremiad than it
does either a Platonic dialogue or Lincoln memorabilia. In reading it, I
was alternately attracted by Jaffa’s gravitas and erudition and
repelled by his Manichaean world view and stentorian language.”
David F. Ericson, review of A New Birth of Freedom:
Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War, by Harry V. Jaffa,
The Journal of American History 89 (June 2002): 225-226.