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Contributors
Gary M. Galles - Contributor
Mr.
Galles is a professor of econmics at Pepperdine University. [go
to Galles index]
More
than his Free Verse
Remembering
Walt Whitman
[Gary M. Galles] 6/4/04
On May 31, 1819 Walt
Whitman was born in West Hills, New York. Many believe he was
America’s greatest poet and his Leaves
of Grass the most influential poetry volume in American literature.
According to the Columbia
Encyclopedia, his poetry “celebrated
the freedom and dignity of the individual.” But that celebration
was not limited to his poetry. It was also reflected in his all
but overlooked prose during an extensive career as a journalist
and editor.
Anyone who writes
of individual freedom must consider the role of government.
Whitman was no exception. His views were well
expressed in two editorials he wrote for the Brooklyn Daily
Eagle, Duties
of Government, on April 4, 1846, and Government, on
July 26, 1847.
From Duties
of Government
It is only the novice in political economy who thinks it the
duty of government to make its citizens happy. Government has
no such office. To protect the weak and the minority from the
impositions of the strong and the majority--to prevent anyone
from positively working to render the people unhappy, to do the
labor not of an officious inter-meddler in the affairs of men,
but of a prudent watchman who prevents outrage--these are rather
the proper duties of a government.
Under the specious
pretext of effecting “the happiness
of the whole community,” nearly all the wrongs and intrusions
of government have been carried through...Indeed, sensible men
have long seen that “the best government is that which
governs least.” And we are surprised that the spirit of
this maxim is not oftener and closer to the hearts of our domestic
leaders.
From Government
The recognized doctrine that the people are to
be governed by
some abstract power, apart from themselves, has not, even at
this day in this country, lost its hold--nor that to anything
more than the government must the said people look for their
well-doing and the prosperity of the state...this dogma is particularly
inconvenient; because it makes a perpetual and fierce strife
between those of opposing views, to get their notions and doctrines
realized in the laws.
In plain truth, “the people expect too much of the government.” Under
a proper organization, the wealth and happiness of the citizens
could hardly be touched by the government--could neither be retarded
nor advanced. Men must be “masters of themselves,” and
not look to Presidents and legislative bodies for aid. In this
wide and naturally rich country, the best government indeed is “that
which governs least.”
One point, however,
must not be forgotten--ought to be put before the eyes of the
people every day; and that is, although government
can do little positive good to the people, it may do an
immense deal of harm...the Democratic principle...would prevent all this
harm. It would have no man’s benefit achieved at the expense
of his neighbors. It would have no one’s rights infringed
upon and that, after all, is pretty much the sum and substance
of the prerogatives of government. How beautiful and harmonious
a system! How it transcends all other codes, as the golden rule,
in its brevity, transcends the ponderous tomes of the philosophic
lore! While mere politicians, in their narrow minds, are sweating
and fuming with their complicated statutes, this one single rule,
rationally construed and applied, is enough to form the starting
point of all that is necessary in government: to make no more
laws than those useful for preventing a man or body of men from
infringing on the rights of other men.
70 years after the
Declaration of Independence, Walt Whitman echoed Thomas Jefferson
on government’s essential role:
defending citizens’ liberty to govern themselves. As we
mark his birthday, celebrate not only his unique American poetry,
but also the freedom that both inspired it and made it possible.
As he said in the Preface to Leaves of Grass, “the Genius
of the United States is...in the common people...their deathless
attachment to freedom. CRO
copyright
2004 Gary M. Galles
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