Mr. Blount to
Mr. Gresham.
No. 3.]
Legation of the United States,
Honolulu, Hawaiian
Islands, May 29,
1893.
Sir: Just before the leaving of the Australia, on the 24th instant, there came to
me, too late for mailing to you, a communication from President
Dole, a copy of which I inclose (No. 1).
At this date (May 29) nothing further has been heard.
I suggested to President Dole and the attorney-general, in
conversations with them, that if Mr. Nordhoff was so obnoxious they
might possibly require him to leave the country. This did not seem
to impress them favorably. Indeed, the whole proceeding in relation
to him seems to have been animated by the spirit of crushing out all
opposing opinions by forceful methods.
I do not expect the Government to recur to this matter again until a
mail from the United States brings some letter to the Herald from
Mr. Nordhoff, criticising the action of the annexationists. Then I
expect it to be very much stirred again with anger toward him.
The action I have already taken will restrain it from excesses.
The Hawaiian Star, which is the annexation organ, commenting on the
stay of proceedings against Mr. Nordhoff, published an editorial
entitled “The Cutting Precedent,” a copy of which I inclose
herewith. (No. 2.)
I also inclose another comment from the same paper, entitled “The
Farce of Protection.” (No. 3.)
The editor-in-chief of this paper, prior to my taking any notice of
the temper of the community towards Mr. Nordhoff, went to Admiral
Skerrett late in the afternoon and informed him that he had been all
day endeavoring to prevent the people from tarring and feathering
Mr. Nordhoff; that up to that time he had been able to prevent it,
and called on Admiral Skerrett to do what he could with the same
view.
Admiral Skerrett communicating the facts to me I communicated them to
President Dole. On his motion he sent the police to Mr. Nordhoff’s
house.
The situation, therefore, will, appear somewhat graver than in my
former dispatch, in which the statement of Admiral Skerrett was not
as full as herein contained.
I hope you will not underrate the excitement which prompted all my
actions in regard to Mr. Nordhoff.
I am, sir, your obedient servant,
James H. Blount,
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
Plenipotentiary of the United States.
[Inclosure 1 in No. 3, Diplomatic
Series.]
Department of Foreign Affairs,
Honolulu, May 24, 1893.
Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge
receipt of your letter of the 22d instant elating to Mr.
Nordhoff, and to state in reply that upon full consideration of
the questions involved this Government has decided to take no
criminal proceedings against Mr. Nordhoff for what was suggested
as contempt against the advisory council of this Government.
In respect of the matters referred to in the attorney-general’s
letter to Mr. Nordhoff, this Government does not propose to take
any proceedings in contravention of the view of international
law expressed by the United States Government in the Cutting
case; hut there is apparently this distinction to be noted in
the two matters, viz, That Mr. Cutting was in the United States
when he made the publication
[Page 428]
objected to by the Mexican Government,
whereas Mr. Nordhoff, while in the Hawaiian Islands and under
the jurisdiction of its courts, has written articles defamatory
of this Government, which were published in the United States in
a newspaper which is freely circulated in the Hawaiian Islands,
and which articles have been republished here.
I beg to inform you that this Government will rigidly adhere to
the rules of international law in respect of this matter as in
all other matters, and in that view has referred to its law
advisers the question of Mr. Nordhoff’s civil liability in the
premises.
I have the honor to be Your Excellency’s obedient servant,
Sanford B. Dole,
Minister of Foreign
Affairs.
To His Excellency J. H.
Blount,
Envoy Extraordinary
and Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States at
Honolulu.
[Inclosure 2 in No.
3.]
[From the Hawaiian Star, May 24,
1893.]
the cutting precedent.
The Cutting case, which was cited by United States Minister
Blount in behalf of Charles Nordhoff, is a well-remembered
episode in the criminal practice of international law. Mr.
Cutting was a citizen of the United States, who lived at Juarez,
formerly Paso del Norte, on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande
border. At outs with an official of the Mexican Government, he
assaulted him bitterly in a paper published on the Texas side of
the line at El Paso, for which offense he was arrested by the
Mexican authorities and thrust into jail. The American Secretary
of State thereupon demanded and enforced his release on the
ground that a citizen of the United States could not be
criminally punished by the Government of a foreign country for a
libelous publication made on American soil holding that the
injured party must seek redress in the courts within the
jurisdiction of which the offense of publication had been
committed.
Such a rule as this would, for example, apply to George Kennan,
author of the Century papers on Siberia, in case he should, upon
another visit to Russia, be criminally prosecuted by the Czar
for the libels which the Russian Government claim he committed
in his accounts of official cruelties practiced upon Siberian
convicts. The Imperial Government would doubtless be informed by
the American Foreign Office that its only remedy—except the
deportation of Mr. Kennan as an undesirable visitor—lay in his
prosecution in the courts of the United States and before a jury
of his peers. No doubt in Mr. Kennan’s case the validity of this
argument would be as promptly admitted by Russia as it was when
applied a year ago to Poultney Bigelow and Frederick Remington,
who went into the Empire on a mission similar to that of Kennan,
but were arrested for it and expelled from the country. That
they would have been otherwise punished but for the force of the
international rule laid down in the Cutting case can hardly be
doubted by any one who is familiar with the tendencies of the
Czar towards those who write, speak, or act against his mode of
government.
Mr. Nordhoff is of course fortunate that by appeal to American
precedent he has escaped another humiliation; but that fact does
not alter the circumstances that, morally speaking, and in a way
amenable to civil damages, he libeled Minister Stevens and
President Dole and deserved the punishment which Hawaiian
criminal law would have been likely to inflict upon him. His
guilt is patent, though the consequences of it may have been
avoided. The only gratification he can feel is that of an
apprehended miscreant who escapes his deserts through a merely
technical plea against the jurisdiction of the judge.
[Inclosure 3 in No. 3, Diplomatic
Series.]
[From the Hawaiian Star, May 23,
1893.
the farce of protection.
A broad smile of amusement went across the face of the town last
evening, when it was learned that Mr. Nordhoff had applied for
protection to the United States minister, and that, at the
request of the latter, the Provisional Government had detailed
[Page 429]
two native
policemen to guard the Herald correspondent’s lodgings. In view
of the fact that Mr. Nordhoff is as safe in Honolulu as he could
he at his sequestered home on Coronado Beach, the whole episode
becomes a tax upon the risibles.
Careful inquiry shows that the only basis for the Herald man’s
fears—apart from that conscience which, as the poet says, “Doth
make cowards of us all”—was a stray remark here and there that
he ought to be tarred and feathered. As Mr. Nordhoff is well
aware, such talk is often heard in times of political debate,
and is but the smallest of small change in the circulation of
public opinion. It is the coinage of idle chat merely; in this
case particularly so, as the annexation party is standing on its
dignity as a representative Hawaiian body, asking admission to
the American brotherhood on the ground, among other grounds,
that in civilization, Christianity, and moral purpose it is
worthy of the fellowship. It could not be induced to do or
permit a ruffianly act, a fact which we believe Mr. Nordhoff
himself appreciates as well as anyone else.
Why, then, did he ask protection? Wait and see! If he doesn’t use
the fact that he got it to fill the columns of the Herald with a
lurid tale of how he escaped death at the hands of an infuriated
annexation mob, only to be saved by the intervention of Minister
Blount and the reluctant display of provisional force, then the
Star misses a reasonable guess. The two shirt-sleeved native
policemen who dawdle about his palace dozing and yawning will
doubtless be magnified into a garrison of men in buckram
surrounded and besieged by bloodthirsty planters or missionaries
all eager to flesh their daggers in the heart of the one bold
correspondent who had exposed their foul conspiracies and haled
their cause to the bar of public judgment. Life will hardly be
worth Mr. Nordhoff’s living until he can get some such
phantasmagoria before the Herald’s readers, as evidence that all
he had previously said against the nature and personnel of the
annexation movement is true.
In the meantime it is to be hoped that the two native guardians
of Mr. Nordhoff’s person and peace will manage to keep awake
during the drowsy days and soporific nights which envelop the
pastoral region of Nuuanu street.