Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 1.djvu/443

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430
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.
Ch. 17.

he hoped that the situation would force him into taking a side.[1]

"From the language of his ministers, and from the insinuations of some members of the Federal party, it will not be, I doubt, such a measure of vigor as would place the country on a commanding ground in the negotiation with Spain, or eventually with France; and the latter persons have some of them designated it to me as likely to be a very foolish thing."

Five days passed before Jefferson answered the call of the House; and when he did so, he sent papers which might have been prepared in five minutes, for most of them had been long printed in the newspapers.[2] In communicating these documents, the President added that he had not lost a moment in causing every step to be taken which the occasion claimed from him; but he did not say what these steps were. A week later he sent another document, which he requested the House to return without publication;[3] it was a letter which Governor Claiborne had received from Governor Salcedo, denying responsibility for the Intendant's act, and asserting that it was not authorized by the Spanish government. The House shut its doors and debated a week. Then it reopened its doors, and announced to the world that by a party

  1. Thornton to Lord Hawkesbury, Jan. 3, 1803; MSS. British Archives.
  2. Message of Dec. 22, 1802; State Papers, ii. 469.
  3. Message of Dec. 30, 1802; State Papers, ii. 471.