Second Inaugural Address
Woodrow Wilson
Capitol Building, Washington, DC
March 5, 1917
My Fellow citizens: The four years which have
elapsed since last I stood in this place have been crowded with
counsel and action of the most vital interest and consequence.
Perhaps no equal period in our history has been so fruitful of
important reforms in our economic and industrial life or so full of
significant changes in the spirit and purpose of our political
action. We have sought very thoughtfully to set our house in order,
correct the grosser errors and abuses of our industrial life,
liberate and quicken the processes of our national genius and
energy, and lift our politics to a broader view of the people's
essential interests.
It is a record of singular variety and singular distinction. But I
shall not attempt to review it. It speaks for itself and will be of
increasing influence as the years go by. This is not the time for
retrospect. It is time rather to speak our thoughts and purposes
concerning the present and the immediate future.
Although we have centered counsel and action with such unusual
concentration and success upon the great problems of domestic
legislation to which we addressed ourselves four years ago, other
matters have more and more forced themselves upon our attention --
matters lying outside our own life as a nation and over which we had
no control, but which, despite our wish to keep free of them, have
drawn us more and more irresistibly into their own current and
influence.
It has been impossible to avoid them. They have affected the life of
the whole world. They have shaken men everywhere with a passion and
an apprehension they never knew before. It has been hard to preserve
calm counsel while the thought of our own people swayed this way and
that under their influence. We are a composite and cosmopolitan
people. We are of the blood of all the nations that are at war. The
currents of our thoughts as well as the currents of our trade run
quick at all seasons back and forth between us and them. The war
inevitably set its mark from the first alike upon our minds, our
industries, our commerce, our politics and our social action. To be
indifferent to it, or independent of it, was out of the question.
And yet all the while we have been conscious that we were not part
of it. In that consciousness, despite many divisions, we have drawn
closer together. We have been deeply wronged upon the seas, but we
have not wished to wrong or injure in return; have retained
throughout the consciousness of standing in some sort apart, intent
upon an interest that transcended the immediate issues of the war
itself.
As some of the injuries done us have become intolerable we have
still been clear that we wished nothing for ourselves that we were
not ready to demand for all mankind -- fair dealing, justice, the
freedom to live and to be at ease against organized wrong.
It is in this spirit and with this thought that we have grown more
and more aware, more and more certain that the part we wished to
play was the part of those who mean to vindicate and fortify peace.
We have been obliged to arm ourselves to make good our claim to a
certain minimum of right and of freedom of action. We stand firm in
armed neutrality since it seems that in no other way we can
demonstrate what it is we insist upon and cannot forget. We may even
be drawn on, by circumstances, not by our own purpose or desire, to
a more active assertion of our rights as we see them and a more
immediate association with the great struggle itself. But nothing
will alter our thought or our purpose. They are too clear to be
obscured. They are too deeply rooted in the principles of our
national life to be altered. We desire neither conquest nor
advantage. We wish nothing that can be had only at the cost of
another people. We always professed unselfish purpose and we covet
the opportunity to prove our professions are sincere.
There are many things still to be done at home, to clarify our own
politics and add new vitality to the industrial processes of our own
life, and we shall do them as time and opportunity serve, but we
realize that the greatest things that remain to be done must be done
with the whole world for stage and in cooperation with the wide and
universal forces of mankind, and we are making our spirits ready for
those things.
We are provincials no longer. The tragic events of the thirty months
of vital turmoil through which we have just passed have made us
citizens of the world. There can be no turning back. Our own
fortunes as a nation are involved whether we would have it so or
not.
And yet we are not the less Americans on that account. We shall be
the more American if we but remain true to the principles in which
we have been bred. They are not the principles of a province or of a
single continent. We have known and boasted all along that they were
the principles of a liberated mankind. These, therefore, are the
things we shall stand for, whether in war or in peace:
That all nations are equally interested in the peace of the world
and in the political stability of free peoples, and equally
responsible for their maintenance; that the essential principle of
peace is the actual equality of nations in all matters of right or
privilege; that peace cannot securely or justly rest upon an armed
balance of power; that governments derive all their just powers from
the consent of the governed and that no other powers should be
supported by the common thought, purpose or power of the family of
nations; that the seas should be equally free and safe for the use
of all peoples, under rules set up by common agreement and consent,
and that, so far as practicable, they should be accessible to all
upon equal terms; that national armaments shall be limited to the
necessities of national order and domestic safety; that the
community of interest and of power upon which peace must henceforth
depend imposes upon each nation the duty of seeing to it that all
influences proceeding from its own citizens meant to encourage or
assist revolution in other states should be sternly and effectually
suppressed and prevented.
I need not argue these principles to you, my fellow countrymen; they
are your own part and parcel of your own thinking and your own
motives in affairs. They spring up native amongst us. Upon this as a
platform of purpose and of action we can stand together. And it is
imperative that we should stand together. We are being forged into a
new unity amidst the fires that now blaze throughout the world. In
their ardent heat we shall, in God's Providence, let us hope, be
purged of faction and division, purified of the errant humors of
party and of private interest, and shall stand forth in the days to
come with a new dignity of national pride and spirit. Let each man
see to it that the dedication is in his own heart, the high purpose
of the nation in his own mind, ruler of his own will and desire.
I stand here and have taken the high and solemn oath to which you
have been audience because the people of the United States have
chosen me for this august delegation of power and have by their
gracious judgment named me their leader in affairs.
I know now what the task means. I realize to the full the
responsibility which it involves. I pray God I may be given the
wisdom and the prudence to do my duty in the true spirit of this
great people. I am their servant and can succeed only as they
sustain and guide me by their confidence and their counsel. The
thing I shall count upon, the thing without which neither counsel
nor action will avail, is the unity of America -- an America united
in feeling, in purpose and in its vision of duty, of opportunity and
of service.
We are to beware of all men who would turn the tasks and the
necessities of the nation to their own private profit or use them
for the building up of private power.
United alike in the conception of our duty and in the high resolve
to perform it in the face of all men, let us dedicate ourselves to
the great task to which we must now set our hand. For myself I beg
your tolerance, your countenance and your united aid.
The shadows that now lie dark upon our path will soon be dispelled,
and we shall walk with the light all about us if we be but true to
ourselves -- to ourselves as we have wished to be known in the
counsels of the world and in the thought of all those who love
liberty and justice and the right exalted.
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