,^^^,. % o '.^ :vi» A J""^^ ^ ^ r . . • ' • *.^'' ^0 ►"^ •^l^J* .' °o V^'*'/ 0' ♦.l:^'* v • • • , *^% 4 > 4 o '^-.1* ,0^ V ♦TXT* v'V <^ 'o,.* .cr %. *^t;'.' < o ^' ^^' -^^ .0* • • " <• *^ ^^^ "^. V6v5j^e) they could rally. Like a thunderbolt he hurled his ringing reso- lutions into the convention. He was, indeed, infused with the bold spirit of the patriotic representatives of the upper countrv The time for supplication and remonstrance had passed. A militia must be established, said the resolutions, for the proiec- tion and defence of the country, and to secure our inestimable rights and liberties from the further violations with which they have been threatened. The Colony must be immediately put into a state of defense and a committee appointed to prepare a plan for embodying, arming, and discipling such a number of men, as would be suf^cient for the purpose. The men who had been all powerful and had hitherto shaped the course of the colony were dumbfounded, the wealthy land- owners on Ihe seaboard were filled with alarm and consterna- tion, and even men of such well-known patriotism as Riciiard Bland, Benjamin Harrison, and Robert C. Nicholas violently opposed the resolutions. They insisted that filial respect de- manded the exercise of patience. Urged the conciliatory temj>er that had lately been jirofessed by the King and his Ministers, the endearing character of the ties that had hitherto connei ted \'irginia with the Alother Country, the strength and lustre we derived from our connection with her, the uttei hopelessness of a contest, and lliat it would be time enough to resort to measures of despair when hope had entirely vanished. JNIr. Wirt says of Patrick Henry: "His was a spirit fitted to raise the whirlwind, as well as to ride in and direct it." If his resolutions had startled the convention by their daring and defiant tone, the wonderful speech with which he supported them was able to lift his hearers to the heights from which he viewed the situation and fire their souls for action. He rose with a majesty unusual to him in an exordium, and with all that self- possession by which he was so invariably distinguished. But with him it was no time for ceremony. The question before the House was one of awful moment to the country. It was nothing less than a question of freedom or slavery. He wished the people to know the whole truth — to know the worst and to provide for it. He pointed to the warlike preparations of Great Britain, which could be intended only to bind and rivet upon the colonies those chains which the British Ministry had been so long forging. Entreaty and humble supplication had been exhausted. It was vain CO indulge in the fond hope of peace and reconciliation. Unless they meant basely to abandon the noble struggle in which they had been so long engaged, "We must fight!" he exclaimed with all the power of his impassioned eloquence. "I repeat it, sir, we nuist fight! An appeal to arms and to the God of hosts is all that is left us !" But I need not repeat here how he met the 9 arguments of the peace party, nor attempt to recite his tlaming words, that rang Hke a trumpet-call to arms— swept the conven- tion like a whirlwind, gaining in strength and power as its tones vibrated beyond the borders of Virginia, until they thrilled every heart in the remotest part of the ColonjlU^'Ms life so dear, or peace so sweet," he ended, "as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery ? Forbid it, Almighty God ! I know not what course others may take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death !" He took his seat, said Wirt. No murmur of applause was heard. The effect was too deep. After the trance of a moment, several members started from their seats. The cry, "To arn.s !" seemed to quiver on every lip, and gleam from every eye ! His supernatural voice still sounded in their ears, and shivered along their arteries. They heard in every pause the cry of liberty or death. Thev became impatient of speech — their souls were on fire for action. Henry was not the man to content himself with urging a resort to arms and then leave it to others to carry on the conflict, or to shrink from dangers to wdiich he deemed it necessary to expose his fellow-countrymen. He at once threw himself, heart and soul, into the movement he had set on foot by his eloquence. "We find him assuming the character of a military leader," says Everett, "and discharging its duties with a spirit and efficiency which seemed to show that, if circtimstances of a wholly acci- dental nature had not checked his progress, his energies would probably have taken this direction, and given him as high a rank among the warriors of his country as he has in fact ob- tained among her orators and statesmen." The first overt act of war in Virginia, as Jefferson testifies, was committed by Patrick Henry. The first armed resistance to a Royal Governor was made in \ irginia vmder his direction and inspiration almost as early as that made by the "embattled farmers" at Lexington and Concord. In the first organization of the Revolutionary army in Virginia the chief command was 10 given to him. Why he did not retain this command involves a discussion we cannot go into here. It is sufficient to say that no blame or discredit ever attached to him. Instead, however, of showing discontent and resentment at the treatment he received, he used all his influence with his troops to repress their contem- plated demonstrations in his favor and to make them, as he said to them himself, the glorious instruments of saving their coun- try. He showed then, as at all times in his career, his exalted character and his unselfish devotion to his country. For any passing mortification he may have been occasioned, he soon received ample satisfaction from his grateful fellow- countrymen. As a signal-mark of public favor he was designated as the first Chief Executive of Virginia, an office which he three times filled. In fact, there was no office or post of honor that could be conferred by his people that was not at his disposal. As Governor, as a member of the Conventions, as a member of Con- gress, in every position in which he was placed, and at all times and under all circumstances, he was. as he, indeed, said he con- sidered himself to be, in his speech before the Convention of 1/88, "the servant of the people of this Commonwealth; as a sentinel over their rights, liberty, and happiness." What he might have achieved as a soldier, had he continued in the service, we can never know ; but as ~Mv. Grigsby said : "That he would not have made a better fighter than Jay, or Living- ston, or the Adamses ; that he might not have made as dashing a partisan as Tarleton or Simcoe. his friends might readily afford to concede ; but that he evinced what neither Jay, nor Living- ston, nor the Adamses did evince — a determined resolution to stake his reputation and his life on the issue of arms — and ihat he resigned his commission when the post of imminent danger was refused him, exhibited a lucid proof that, whatever may have been his ultimate fortune, he was not deficient in two grand elements of military success — personal enterprise and unques- tioned courage." When George Rogers Clark, "the Hannibal of the West." laid his plans before Mr. Henry, then Governor, his sagacious mind 11 at once grasped the vast benefit it would be to the future of the country, if the campaign should prove successful, and the assis- tance he rendered Clark must always be remembered in connec- tion with the conquest of the Northwestern Territory by the gal- lant young Mrginian. x ■% x. -yi It was Patrick Henry, indeed, who lit the fires of the Revolu- tion, and called armies up from the valleys and down from the mountains' heights to battle for the birthrights of man. Such was the spirit of the times, and such the very atmosphere itself, that no true man could live without being infused with an ardent love of liberty and a high conception of duty and responsibility. But with Henry the love of liberty was a passion. It was to him Avhat "alone gives the flower of fleeting life its lustre and per- fume." His high spirit "cou ld ej idurejihains nowdiere patiently; and chains at home where he was free by birthright, not at all." It is well with any land when her great men are sincere in their faith, devoted and unselfish in their love of country, and pure in their lives. It is said of Patrick Henry: "His morals were strict. As a husband, a father, a master, he had no superior. He was kind and hospitable to the stranger and most friendly and accommodating to his neighbors. In his dealings with the world, he was faithful to his promises, and punctual in his con- tracts to the utmost of his power." "Keep justice, keep truth,'' was his injunction to John Randolph. "Righteousness alone can exalt them as a nation," was his declared belief. "A^irtue, morality, and religion alone renders us invincible," he wrote to a friend. WeW might A^irginia point with pride to such a son and say, "Imitate my Henry." His last act was in response to a call from his great chief, and, as he believed, from his country. The one great passionate love of Richelieu v\'as France. In a dramatic part of the play that bears his name, the old Cardinal is on the stage — dying. In a few moments death will bring rest and quiet to the tired, wearied, old man, whose life has been one long scene of strife and warfare, and peace at last is settling 12 upon him. Alarming news suddenly arrives ; the helpless Prince rushes to the death-bed of the great man and begs him to live for the sake of France ! At that name he arouses himself and struggles with death, as did Hercules over the body of Alcestis, and comes out the victor. In Mr. Henry's old age, long after he had retired from the active pursuits of life, and but one week after he had written Mr. Blair that he was too old and infirm ever again to undertake public concerns, he received an earnest appeal begging him to come forward as a candidate for the next General Assembly, where he would have to face a stupendous task. The appeal was from General Washington, who believed the country was in great danger. He at once declared himself a candidate for the Legislature, old and infirm a^he was. He was elected, but death claimed him before he - tooK nTs seat. "Thus lived, and thus died, the celebrated Patrick Henry, of Virginia — a man who justly deserves to be ranked among the highest ornaments and noblest benefactors of his country. Had his lot been cast in the republics of Greece or Rome, his name would have been enrolled by some immortal pen among the ex- pellers of tyrants and the champions of liberty; the proudest monuments of national gratitude would have arisen in his honor, and handed down his memorv to future generations." o ,./yi.;^A. c°^.^Ji;I^>o V »'* r. ^vc. A^ ' »>V/k«- 'V j^ *'f?^^'. t.. A^ ' .: ^ov^- V ^OV^ ''^£im^^\ ^^U.rS oV'^^lD^"'. 'Jt.v-i^' "'Jm^^^^ '•^. ^^-'^^ >» . * • - *^ v-0^ 'oK / ^h' ^^0^ .. V*^\^^^ %*^-^%o^ V"^'\^^^ V^^ b-- »°-^». -- -^K* '^^ "^^^ Grantvjiie, PA '^ , ^^IK* '^'^ '^ ". Cttv ^* ^J .I'V' .♦!