First Inaugural Address
Woodrow Wilson
Capitol Building, Washington, DC
March 4, 1913
There has been a change of government. It began two
years ago, when the House of Representatives became Democratic by a
decisive majority. It has now been completed. The Senate about to
assemble will also be Democratic. The offices of President and
Vice-President have been put into the hands of Democrats. What does
the change mean? That is the question that is uppermost in our minds
today. That is the question I am going to try to answer, in order,
if I may, to interpret the occasion.
It means much more than the mere success of a party. The success of
a party means little except when the Nation is using that party for
a large and definite purpose. No one can mistake the purpose for
which the Nation now seeks to use the Democratic Party. It seeks to
use it to interpret a change in its own plans and point of view.
Some old things with which we had grown familiar, and which had
begun to creep into the very habit of our thought and of our lives,
have altered their aspect as we have latterly looked critically upon
them, with fresh, awakened eyes; have dropped their disguises and
shown themselves alien and sinister. Some new things, as we look
frankly upon them, willing to comprehend their real character, have
come to assume the aspect of things long believed in and familiar,
stuff of our own convictions. We have been refreshed by a new
insight into our own life.
We see that in many things that life is very great. It is
incomparably great in its material aspects, in its body of wealth,
in the diversity and sweep of its energy, in the industries which
have been conceived and built up by the genius of individual men and
the limitless enterprise of groups of men. It is great, also, very
great, in its moral force. Nowhere else in the world have noble men
and women exhibited in more striking forms the beauty and the energy
of sympathy and helpfulness and counsel in their efforts to rectify
wrong, alleviate suffering, and set the weak in the way of strength
and hope. We have built up, moreover, a great system of government,
which has stood through a long age as in many respects a model for
those who seek to set liberty upon foundations that will endure
against fortuitous change, against storm and accident. Our life
contains every great thing, and contains it in rich abundance.
But the evil has come with the good, and much fine gold has been
corroded. With riches has come inexcusable waste. We have squandered
a great part of what we might have used, and have not stopped to
conserve the exceeding bounty of nature, without which our genius
for enterprise would have been worthless and impotent, scorning to
be careful, shamefully prodigal as well as admirably efficient. We
have been proud of our industrial achievements, but we have not
hitherto stopped thoughtfully enough to count the human cost, the
cost of lives snuffed out, of energies overtaxed and broken, the
fearful physical and spiritual cost to the men and women and
children upon whom the dead weight and burden of it all has fallen
pitilessly the years through. The groans and agony of it all had not
yet reached our ears, the solemn, moving undertone of our life,
coming up out of the mines and factories, and out of every home
where the struggle had its intimate and familiar seat. With the
great Government went many deep secret things which we too long
delayed to look into and scrutinize with candid, fearless eyes. The
great Government we loved has too often been made use of for private
and selfish purposes, and those who used it had forgotten the
people.
At last a vision has been vouchsafed us of our life as a whole. We
see the bad with the good, the debased and decadent with the sound
and vital. With this vision we approach new affairs. Our duty is to
cleanse, to reconsider, to restore, to correct the evil without
impairing the good, to purify and humanize every process of our
common life without weakening or sentimentalizing it. There has been
something crude and heartless and unfeeling in our haste to succeed
and be great. Our thought has been "Let every man look out for
himself, let every generation look out for itself," while we reared
giant machinery which made it impossible that any but those who
stood at the levers of control should have a chance to look out for
themselves. We had not forgotten our morals. We remembered well
enough that we had set up a policy which was meant to serve the
humblest as well as the most powerful, with an eye single to the
standards of justice and fair play, and remembered it with pride.
But we were very heedless and in a hurry to be great.
We have come now to the sober second thought. The scales of
heedlessness have fallen from our eyes. We have made up our minds to
square every process of our national life again with the standards
we so proudly set up at the beginning and have always carried at our
hearts. Our work is a work of restoration.
We have itemized with some degree of particularity the things that
ought to be altered and here are some of the chief items: A tariff
which cuts us off from our proper part in the commerce of the world,
violates the just principles of taxation, and makes the Government a
facile instrument in the hand of private interests; a banking and
currency system based upon the necessity of the Government to sell
its bonds fifty years ago and perfectly adapted to concentrating
cash and restricting credits; an industrial system which, take it on
all its sides, financial as well as administrative, holds capital in
leading strings, restricts the liberties and limits the
opportunities of labor, and exploits without renewing or conserving
the natural resources of the country; a body of agricultural
activities never yet given the efficiency of great business
undertakings or served as it should be through the instrumentality
of science taken directly to the farm, or afforded the facilities of
credit best suited to its practical needs; watercourses undeveloped,
waste places unreclaimed, forests untended, fast disappearing
without plan or prospect of renewal, unregarded waste heaps at every
mine. We have studied as perhaps no other nation has the most
effective means of production, but we have not studied cost or
economy as we should either as organizers of industry, as statesmen,
or as individuals.
Nor have we studied and perfected the means by which government may
be put at the service of humanity, in safeguarding the health of the
Nation, the health of its men and its women and its children, as
well as their rights in the struggle for existence. This is no
sentimental duty. The firm basis of government is justice, not pity.
These are matters of justice. There can be no equality or
opportunity, the first essential of justice in the body politic, if
men and women and children be not shielded in their lives, their
very vitality, from the consequences of great industrial and social
processes which they can not alter, control, or singly cope with.
Society must see to it that it does not itself crush or weaken or
damage its own constituent parts. The first duty of law is to keep
sound the society it serves. Sanitary laws, pure food laws, and laws
determining conditions of labor which individuals are powerless to
determine for themselves are intimate parts of the very business of
justice and legal efficiency.
These are some of the things we ought to do, and not leave the
others undone, the old-fashioned, never-to-be-neglected, fundamental
safeguarding of property and of individual right. This is the high
enterprise of the new day: To lift everything that concerns our life
as a Nation to the light that shines from the hearthfire of every
man's conscience and vision of the right. It is inconceivable that
we should do this as partisans; it is inconceivable we should do it
in ignorance of the facts as they are or in blind haste. We shall
restore, not destroy. We shall deal with our economic system as it
is and as it may be modified, not as it might be if we had a clean
sheet of paper to write upon; and step by step we shall make it what
it should be, in the spirit of those who question their own wisdom
and seek counsel and knowledge, not shallow self-satisfaction or the
excitement of excursions whither they can not tell. Justice, and
only justice, shall always be our motto.
And yet it will be no cool process of mere science. The Nation has
been deeply stirred, stirred by a solemn passion, stirred by the
knowledge of wrong, of ideals lost, of government too often
debauched and made an instrument of evil. The feelings with which we
face this new age of right and opportunity sweep across our
heartstrings like some air out of God's own presence, where justice
and mercy are reconciled and the judge and the brother are one. We
know our task to be no mere task of politics but a task which shall
search us through and through, whether we be able to understand our
time and the need of our people, whether we be indeed their
spokesmen and interpreters, whether we have the pure heart to
comprehend and the rectified will to choose our high course of
action.
This is not a day of triumph; it is a day of dedication. Here
muster, not the forces of party, but the forces of humanity. Men's
hearts wait upon us; men's lives hang in the balance; men's hopes
call upon us to say what we will do. Who shall live up to the great
trust? Who dares fail to try? I summon all honest men, all
patriotic, all forward-looking men, to my side. God helping me, I
will not fail them, if they will but counsel and sustain me!
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