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tations, and its enlightened policy. Much of its excellence, it must be admitted, is the growth of modern times. Its history may be easily traced back to the classical shores of the Mediterranean, where maritime enterprise upon the revival of letters spread itself with wonderful rapidity and success. It succeeded the age of chivalry; and by blending the common interests of nations, it softened the manners, and subdued the barbarous spirit of rivals and adversaries. The customs of trade and navigation soon acquired the authority of law; and assisted by the persuasive equity of the Roman law of contract, (then much studied and admired, and still entitled to profound admiration,) it silently pervaded all Europe, from the farther Calabria to the frozen Baltic. The Consolato del Mare, which still instructs us by the wisdom of his precepts, is but a collection of the rules and maxims of this voluntary international code. The celebrated Ordinance of Louis the Fourteenth (which will be gratefully remembered, when his ambitious projects shall be lost in the dimness of tradition,) is little more than a text gathered from the civilians, and the customs of commerce, by the genius of a minister, whose life seemed devoted to the interests of posterity. England was almost the last to receive into her bosom this beautiful effort of human reason. Little more than a century has elapsed, since she could scarcely be said to possess any commercial jurisprudence. The old common lawyers repelled it with a sullen inhospitality and indifference. And though it cannot be doubted, that the spirit of commerce would, first or last, have forced it into the courts of England, and compelled them to protect

the interests, which the enterprise of her subjects had created; it may be reasonably questioned, whether, but for the extraordinary genius of Lord Mansfield, she would not have been, at this very moment, a century behind continental Europe in adopting its doctrines. He was in a great measure the author of the law of insurance; and he gave to the other branches of commercial law, a clearness and certainty, which surprise us more and more, as we examine and study his decisions. That he borrowed much from foreign jurisprudence is admitted; but he more than repaid every obligation to these sources. He naturalized the principles of commercial law, when he transplanted them into the soil of England, and they have flourished with new vigour in her genial climate. It is her just boast, that having been once a tributary, she has now in turn laid the whole Continent under contribution. Her commercial law has attained a perfection, order, and glory, which command the reverence of the whole world. It is almost universally followed and obeyed; not, indeed, as of positive institution; but as wisdom, practical wisdom, acting upon the results of a large experience, in a government, where opinion is free, and justice is administered without favour and without reproach.

A treatise upon this branch of law must necessarily comprehend a wide range of subjects. It must discuss, among other things, the law of principals and agents, brokers, factors, and consignees; of partnerships, and other joint ownerships; of negotiable instruments, such as bills of exchange, promissory notes, checks, and bills of lading; of contracts of

bailment, shipments, and affreightment; and, as incidents, of charter-parties, freight, demurrage, and stoppage in transitu; of navigation and shipping, and, as incidents, the rights and duties of owners, masters, and mariners; and of insurance, bottomry, respondentia, salvage, and general average. My object will be to deal as fully with these topics, as may consist with the limits, by which every system of lectures must be circumscribed.

In the last place, the Constitutional Law of the United States. In the correct exposition of this subject, there is not a single American citizen, who has not deep stake and permanent interest. "In questions merely political," says Junius, "an honest man may stand neuter. But the laws and constitution are the general property of the subject. Not to defend is to relinquish; and who is so senseless as to renounce his share in a common benefit, unless he hopes to profit by a new division of the spoil?" * The existence of the union of these States, does, (as I think,) mainly depend upon a just administration of the powers and duties of the national government; upon the preservation of that nice, but ever changing influence, which balances the State and General Governments, and tends, or should always tend to bring them into a due equilibrium. There is no safety to our civil, religious, or political rights, except in this union. And it is scarcely too much to affirm, that the cause of liberty throughout the world is in no small measure suspended upon this great experiment of self-government by the people. I shall endeavour, in my commentaries upon

* Letter 41, to Lord Mansfield.

this important branch of political law, to discuss it with all the delicacy and reserve becoming my official station, and with all the sobriety appertaining to the fundamental law of organization of a free government. My object will be to unfold its divisions, and explain its principles, as far as practicable, by the lights of those great minds, which fostered into being, and nourished its infancy. I shall deal little with speculative discussions, and still less with my own personal opinions. But I shall rely with undoubting confidence upon the early commentaries of its framers, upon the legislative recognitions of authority and duty, and the judicial decisions of the highest courts, as safe guides for interpretation. Above all, I shall freely use the doctrines of the admirable production* of Hamilton, Madison, and Jay, (patriots as pure, and statesmen as wise, as any, which have graced our country,) which has already acquired the weight of an authority throughout America. If by such means I shall contribute to fix in the minds of American youth a more devout enthusiasm for the constitution of their country, a more sincere love of its principles, and a more firm determination to adhere to its actual provisions against the clamours of faction, and the restlessness of innovation, my humble labours will not be without some reward in the consciousness of having contributed something to the common weal.

I have thus sketched a general outline of the course of lectures, which the Founder of the Dane Professorship has in the first instance assigned to this

*The Federalist.

chair, for the encouragement of juridical learning. Imperfect as this outline is, it must strike the most superficial observer, how rich and various are the topics, which it proposes to examine; how extensive is the learning, and how exhausting the diligence, to accomplish the design. While it does honour to the public spirit, and the sagacity and enlightened zeal of the Founder; while it testifies his enthusiasm for the science, in which he has so deservedly attained eminence; it at the same time admonishes us, that he, who matured the plan, seems alone to possess the courage and ability to execute it with complete success. In truth, the venerable Founder has measured the strength of others by his own; and scarcely seems to have suspected the difficulties of the task, from the consciousness of his own power to subdue them. The skilful guide in the Alps walks with fearless confidence in the midst of dangers, which appal the traveller, who has never made trial of his strength. Lord Coke, himself a prodigy of professional learning, has somewhere laid down, for the benefit of students, the various employments for every day, and has assigned six hours for the pursuit of the law.* Lord Hale has limited his exactions to the same period; and Sir William Jones, whose early ambition thought, that all the departments of law might be mastered by a single mind in satisfactory Commentaries, has not ventured upon a different assign

*Co. Litt. 64 b.

"Sex horas somno, totidem des legibus æquis,
Quatuor orabis, des epulis duas.

Quod superest ultro sacris largire camœnis."

Boswell's Life of Johnson, iii. 398.

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