Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell eBook

Hugh Blair Grigsby
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 182 pages of information about Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell.

Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell eBook

Hugh Blair Grigsby
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 182 pages of information about Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell.

Under the date of December, 1822, he writes:  “If I know myself, there is no situation within the power of government to bestow which I covet or desire, nor is there one which I would not accept, if the discharge of its duties by me was deemed necessary or useful to my country.  I have no ambition to gratify, although I have duties to fulfil.”

Under the date of December 9, 1824, he says:  “The public interest shall never be postponed to my individual concerns, although ruin to myself may result from it.”

When once asked for something like a defence of some parts of his political career, which he declined to give, he said:  “There is no act of my whole life, public or private, which I regret; none that I am solicitous should not be scrutinized; none the motives or objects of which I cannot instantly explain, in a way which candor will approve.”

On the 1st of December, 1824, he writes:  “If I know myself, there is no office, place, or appointment within the gift of man which I wish, and none I would accept save from my native State.  To her I have never felt myself at liberty to refuse myself under any circumstances, when she thought proper to call me to her side.  But even from her I want nothing but that protection which she affords in common to all her citizens.  My gratitude would constrain me to sacrifice everything to obey her wishes.”  On another occasion, when his creed was called for, he wrote:  “As a Virginian, I would willingly suffer this inconvenience and make this sacrifice, and much more, for Virginia; but I should feel myself unworthy of her name, if I did not scorn to stoop to the meanness of blazoning to her view my own merits, which, if they exist at all, none ought to know so well as my countrymen, or to vindicate myself against suspicions which, if without foundation, they ought not to entertain.  I cannot, therefore, humiliate myself, or degrade my friends, so far as, at this time of day, and under the circumstances in which I am placed, to furnish you or any other with a confession of my political faith, to be read either in the Richmond church or elsewhere, to the end that I may propitiate its tutelary deity or his ministering priesthood; and as this seems to be the sine qua non of my success, I must, therefore, beg leave to decline the nomination.”

On the 6th of December, 1826, he writes:  “I want no office, place, or appointment under the sun, nor will I ever have any except from the gift of my own State.”

It thus appears that, though he was not desirous of holding office, he was always willing and ready to perform at every sacrifice any duty which Virginia might require at his hands.

I wish it had been in my power to present even a brief glance at the labors of Mr. Tazewell, as one of the Commissioners under the Florida treaty of 1819, when, in conjunction with the late Judge Hugh L. White and Mr. King, some important questions were decided; but I had no materials within reach while engaged in preparing the discourse; and my recollections were too vague to be used on such an occasion.

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Discourse of the Life and Character of the Hon. Littleton Waller Tazewell from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.