Source: The Polynesian. Honolulu, Saturday, July 6,
1861.
The celebration, by the American citizens in Honolulu, of
this time-honored day came off according to the programme, nearly, as published
in our issue of last week. The Committee of Arrangements had obtained from
H.R.H. Prince Kamehameha the kindly loan of some field pieces and a file of
artillerymen, and at sunrise the echoes of the valley awakened its inhabitants
by a salute of 13 guns from the premises of A.B. Bates, Esq. At 10, A.M., a
goodly crowd assembled at the Forth Street Church, where the Rev. Mr. C. V.
Anthony delivered an eloquent address, preceded and followed by singing “Hail
Columbia” and “The Star-spangled Banner.”
From 11, A.M., to 12 M., the Diplomatic and Consular Agents
of Foreign Powers, Officers of this Government and a numerous host of American
citizens paid the customary complimentary visits to His Excellency Col. Dryer,
the United States Commissioner at the Court of Honolulu. At 12, M., every body
had repaired to the spacious grounds of A.B. Bates, Esp., Nuuanu Valley, which
had been placed at the disposal of the Committee, where the Star-spangled
Banner of the United States was hoisted under a salute of 84 guns and during
the ringing of the bell of the Forth Street Church.
The American Declaration of Independence was read by Jos.
Fuller, Esq., and the company sat down to a sumptuous collation in a large and
splendidly arranged marquee, Chief Justice Allen presiding at the table. Toasts
were drank and responded to, and the day celebrated with a heartiness and
satisfaction heightened no doubt by the presence of the wives and families of
the American citizens and of other invited guests.
The following were the thirteen regular toasts and the
gentlemen who responded to them:
1st. The Day we celebrate.
We hope that its celebration is general throughout our
country, and by arousing memories of past glories will prompt a return to duty
of those now following misguided counsels. –Responded to by the Hon. E.H.
Allen.
2nd. The President of the United States.
We believe him to be a true Patriot and an honest man. His
administration commences in discord and gloom: We hope that it will end in
peace and brightness. –Hon. Thomas J. Dryer, U.S. Commissioner.
3d. The King and Royal Family.
May length of days and prosperity in their Kingdom and
Family be the blessings granted to them. –Robert G. Davis, Esq.
4th. The Memory of Washington.
“Where
may the wearied eye repose,
When
gazing on the great-
Where
neither guilty glory glows,
Nor
despicable state?
Yes
one –the first-the last-the best-
The
Cincinnatus of the West-
Whom
Envy dared not hate.”
-Col. Parker, U.S. Consul.
5th. The Union.
The Union of the States is the Life of Freedom. –J.W. Austin,
Esq.
6th. The Heroes of ’76, both Civil and Military.
“Wake
the trumpet’s sound again,
And
rouse the ranks of Warrior Men!
Oh,
War! When Truth thy arm employs,
And
Freedom’s spirit guides the laboring storm-
‘Tis
then thy vengeance takes a hallowed form-
And,
like Heaven’s lightning, sacredly destroys.
Nor
Music. Through thy breathing sphere,
Lives
there a sound more grateful to the ear
Of
him, who made all harmony-
Than
the blessed sound of fetters breaking,
And
the first Hymn that man, awaking
From
slavery’s slumber, breathes to Liberty.”
-S.N. Castle, Esq.
7th. The Army and Navy of the United States.
Small bodies-but when needed, have not been and will not be
found wanting. –Lieut. Wm. Reynolds, U.S.N.
8th. The Constitution.
Under it the country has attained to greatness –by adhering
to it we shall continue in prosperity. –Ashier B. Bates, Esq.
9th. The Volunteer Militia.
May we never see the day when the citizen shall cease to be
a soldier, ready for duty –or the soldier shall cease to be a citizen. –L.
McCully, Esq.
10th. Gen. Winfield Scott.
The brave and loyal soldier. A life of glory shall close in
a blaze of light. –J.C. Spaulding, Esq.
11th. Col. Robert Anderson and the other
defenders of Fort Sumter.
By their staunchness and fidelity they have set an example
to the army, and given earnest of a life honorable to themselves and useful to
their country. –R.H. Stanley.
12th. Our Flag.
The American Banner will not allow any of her Stars to play
comet, or submit to Indignant Stripes. –H.A.P. Carter, Esq.
13th. The Ladies.
God bless them. –B.F. Durham, Esq.
Nor was this party the only one in honor of the day. Rural
picnics seemed the order of the day, and the weather gave all its charm to the
enjoyment. A large party of gentlemen met at the residence of Capt. H.S.
Howland, in Waimalu, eight miles from town, and spent a most pleasant day
together. Another party, of which Mr. Duncan was the soul, met at Moanalua.
Another at Waikiki, and the veteran American Capt. J. Meek, had the honor of
entertaining His Majesty at the Big Tree, in Ewa. The day closed, as it had
opened, with a salute of 13 guns, and in the evening the U.S. Commissioner,
Col. Dryer, entertained his countrymen and friends.
Every flag-staff in town, and vessel in the port flew the
colors to which its owner was entitled, and we would not omit to make honorable
mention of the gorgeous profusion of flags and devices which decorated the
carriages and horses that plied during the day between the town and the various
festal rendevouzes.
So ended in Honolulu the celebration of the 85th
Anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence; a day memorable to all
future ages for the bold and unequivocal enunciation of the political principle
that “government exists by the will, and for the interest of the governed.,”
and its inevitable corollary that, when that will is slighted, those interests
contravened, the people have a natural, inalienable right to set up another
government. On that basis did the framers of the Declaration renounce their
allegiance to the British Empire and erect a political fabric, that has been
the wonder of the age and the polar star of every oppressed people.
On that basis the several independent communities on the
North American Continent threw in their fortunes together, and it is the
sincere and faithful recognition of that principle and the spirit of mutual
concession under the pressure of mutual wants, the spirit of conciliating
instead of suppressing differences, which spring from it, that has made those
communities individually free and collectively great. And the lesson has not
been lost upon the world, for the declaration of that principle has gone far to
soften the exercise of that oppression which is so often associated with
arbitrary government, whether of one, a few, or many; and for more than eighty
years the oppressed of Europe have looked well to the West and taken courage.
It has been said by a great writer that “revolutions never
go backward;” and a principle or a truth once established never dies. The
Anniversary of the Declaration of American Independence would then have been an
invaluable day on its own account, even had every individual state succumbed as
a martyr to the truth it fought for. We honor the day for the principle it bore
into the world; we honor the flag of the Stars and the Stripes as its emblem –E
Pluribus Unum.
We do not feel competent to critically analyze the address
of Mr. Anthony; it was eloquent in a high degree, and abounded in forcible
appeals and nervous language. It undoubtedly received much of its coloring from
the unhappy circumstances which have lately troubled the tranquil path of the
United States. The address was received throughout with loud and energetic
applause.
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