The Austin Papers, Vol. 2

THE AUSTIN PAPERS 289 the constitution and are bound to do so. That the constitution of the state expressly recognises the right of property in slav~s, liy allowing six months after its publication for their introduction into the State-That they will defend it, and with it, their property. There ought to be no vocifirous and visionary excitement or noise about this matter- Our course is a very plain one-calmn, deliber- ate dispationate, inflexible, firmness; an_d not windy and ridiculous blowing and wild threats, and much less any thing like opposition to the Mexican constitution, nothing of this kind will do any good, it will in fact be unjustifiable, and will never be approved of by me but on the contrary opposed most decidedly. I will not violate my duty as a mexican citizen. • • • The constitution must be both our shield, and our arms, under it, and with it we must constitutionally defend ourselves and . our property. . The chief of department Dn Ramon Musquiz, has taken a firm a.nd noble stand, he has suspended the publication of said decree, and has represented in n, very able manner against it. If he should finnUy be compelled to publish and circulate it, the Ayuntamientos must then, take an unanimous, firm, and constitutional stand. The people will unanimously support them. I know nothing of the men who compose the Ayuntamiento of Nacogdoches, if they are true patriots, and true friends to themselves and to Texas, they will not suffer that decree to be published or cir- culated in that municipality and they will take the stand I have indicated or some other that will preserve the constitution and our constitutional rights from open a.nd direct violation These are my ideas on the matter. I have said the same to my friends in Bexar, and when the decree arrives officially (which it has not yet) I shall say the same to the Goyt-Wbat I do in this matter will be done openly-:Mexico has not within ·its whole dominions n man who would defend its independence, the union of its terri- tory, and all its constitutional rights sooner than I would, or be more ready and willing to discharge his duties as a J\1exican citizen; one of the first and most sacred of those duties is to protect my con- stitutional rights and I will do it, so ,far as I am able. I am the owner of one slave only, an old decreped woman·not worth much, but in this matter I should feel that my constitutional rights ns n Mexican were just as much infringed as they would be if I had a thousand, it is the principle and not the amount, the latter makes the violation more agravated, but not more illegal or unconstitu- tional S. F. Aus·nN [Rubric] P. S. Let me know what your Ayt 0 • will do- S. F. A [Rubric]

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