would, when they had power, endeavour to destroy a
work whose adoption they opposed and whose execution they have constantly counteracted. But I do
not imagine they will stop here; they will proceed in
their mad and wicked career and the People's eyes will
be opened." James Hillhouse wrote that
now the
constitutional independence of the Judges is a mere
cobweb."[1] Fisher Ames wrote to Rufus King: "To repeal the Judicial Law to save a small sum shocks many
who could swallow the claim of a Constitutional right
to repeal it. . . . Gouv. Morris' speeches are justly
admired and have had effect on thinking men —i.e. on 600 of 6 millions"; and to Theodore Dwight, he
wrote, "the angels of destruction. . . are making haste." Theodore Sedgwick wrote to King: "All
men who have been misled by an attachment to refined theory, and who really wish a security of property
and person, will be shocked by the establishment of
a precedent which renders the Judiciary, the only instrument of this security, dependent on, and subservient to, the prevailing faction in the Legislature; and
the more so when they reflect that this measure is in
direct violation of the Constitution, and not only so,
but establishes a principle of complete consolidation
of all National and State authority. For if the Legislature may do this, there can be no established defence
against legislative usurpation." Gouverneur Morris
wrote that "the repeal of the Judiciary Bill battered
down the great outwork of the Constitution. The
Judiciary has been overthrown," and again, writing
- ↑ Life and Letters of Simeon Baldwin (1919), by Simeon E. Baldwin; letter of Hillhouse to Baldwin, Feb. 4, 1802; King, IV, letter of Sedgwick, Feb. 20, 1802. See National Aegis, June 2, 1802, to the effect that it was rumored that Rufus King was to be called home from Great Britain, that John Marshall was to succeed him as Ambassador there and that Thomas McKean, the Republican Governor of Pennsylvania, was to be made Chief Justice in Marshall's place. Works of Fisher Ames (1864), I, 297, letter of Ames to Dwight, April 16, 1802.