» ,0 I r \ V f .« ^ R^\ a ^y^^ \ f:- o dhf ^ ■^ ^. . ^^„ CO^ .^^.>/°o ,^^ yJ^/\ "Q ^... J^ /^m^\ \. .^ r j^ yjf£^^ ,vV-^ * i % ,v^ ; .0* .'■•.% •^bv^ 'v \..** :'MK' \/ '''SJBs'. ^* .^ .V .V^^ -^.-^^^ ■J?^. :?:^> .5^ IV- ■aa 1 FUNERAL SERMON, //• DKLIVEKEU IN THE PRESBYTERIAN (.'HVRCH. FN WASUINTiTOK, ON THE SABBATH AFTER THE DECEASE up WILLJAM HENRY HARRISON, rhe 2Late ||resftrent of the {.tnitrD States, iiv PXBSO'CK or PRESIDF.NT rVLER AND MKMKKRS OF THK CABINET. BY THE REV. CORTLANDT VAN RENSSELAER, or-fl'HLlNDTiJN, tiii->v in nit i WASHINGTON, D. C. M nCCC XLf, ScA^ 'dt^it^ FUNERAL SERMON, DELIVERED IN THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, rN WASHISGTO:*, ON THE SABBATH AFTER THE DECEASE or WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, rfte aate Drcsttrent oC the Jixuftctr states, IN PRESENCE OP PRESIDENT TYLER AND MEMBERS OF THE CABINET, BY THE REV. CORTLANDT VAN RENSSELAER, OF BURLINGTON, NEW JERSEV. WASHINGTON, D. C. M DCCC XLI. .V? Having been providentially engaged in preaching the Gospel in Washington for a time, it became my duty to attempt to improve the afflictive dispensation, which occurred during the course of my minis- trations. Being on the spot, and in the enjoyment of pastoral inter- course with several members of the family, I was enabled to obtain a number of facts, illustrating the religious character of our late be- loved Chief Magistrate. These have been embodied in the Dis- course. An Appendix is added, containing a full account of the proceed- ings attending his death and funeral. C. V. R. Burlington, IS. J., April 13, 1841. SERMON. For all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away: but the word of the Lord endureth for ever. — 1 Peter i. 24, 25. The instructions of Heaven are best realized amidst the solemnities of the grave. The ministrations of sorrovr reveal, with portentous gleams of eternity, how all below is fleeting — how all above endures. Jesus, by his Spirit and Providence, has often tra- versed the Judea, Samaria and Galilee of our coun- try. Often has He taught in our sanctuaries, cried aloud in our streets, stood upon our mountains, ut- tered His voice upon our waters, admonished in our councils, and knocked at the door of our humble dwellings. But lo! He has now entered the habita- tion of our power. For the first time, He has com- missioned His Providence to open the mansion of the nation with the keys of death, and to maintain the rights of God and the grave. Our beloved President is dead ! The hero of bat- tles is at rest; and the ruler of councils is silent. The changes of a single moon have reflected the light of Heaven upon the vanity of earthly glory. Had our Capitol disappeared in the visions of the night, it would not have had more the appearance of mira- culous interposition. As men, struck down in amaze- ment, we know not whither to turn, nor what judg- ment to dread as the next omnipotent visitation. There is mourning throughout the land, for the first- born of our honor has fallen ! The lamentations of a smitten people cry out to God in a united agony, which breaks the peace of the Sabbath, and yet corresponds with its highest purposes of repentance and faith, and of prostration before "the Lord God omnipotent," that " reigneth !" Emblems of woe are upon us ; and within us is affliction itself. Shrouded in black is the nation, the men in powder, the sanc- tuaries of Zion, and the high places of our glory. Yonder deserted mansion, with its proud pillars, and halls of festivity and silent chambers, is darkened, as with the shadow of death; and out of its w^alls issues a voice, audible in tones of power and mercy, "All flesh is grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass : the grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away : but the word of the Lord endureth for- ever," Mourning people ! Let God be magnified ! His purposes, though mystery on earth, are wisdom in heaven ! Be it ours to attend to the lessons of His Providence ; by pondering upon the vanity of our estate, and obeying the precepts of His enduring Word! I. "All flesh is grass" — 'Hhe grass withereth^ Thus does God describe our earthly condition and doom. Faithful to the race, whom His power brought into being, He admonishes us that we are born to die. " Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shalt re- turn," is the sentence of universal condemnation, fearfully executed through all generations. The miUions who have gone before us — in number unut- terable ! — is tiie testimony of death to the sin of Eden, and to our inheritance of woe. The dead of even one generation would encircle the earth with a pathway of coflins ! Ye living men, the hollow sound of sepulchres beneath your feet is the assu- rance of your doom ! We must all depart. How many die in infancij! Tender blades on creation's soil, they perish in aii hour. — How many die in earlij youth! They have passed the terrific perils of infancy, and hope seems to have bound firmly around their brows the garland of life. But whilst we fondly gaze, they disappear. "They flee as a shadow, and continue not."' "They are as the green herb ; as the grass on the house-top ; as corn blasted before it is grown up." " In the morning, they flourish ; before noon, they are cut down and withered." — In manhood mid mature life, how many others are brought low ! Though strong in human strength, they are but as the grass before the scythe. They abide not when the king of ter- rors sends forth his mandate. He touches them with the sceptre of the grave, and they fall, submissive subjects at his feet. " There is no man that hath power over the spirit to retain the spirit; neither hath he power in the day of death." Strength of constitution, vigor of motion, health of limb, power of effort, energy of endurance, are held in derision, even by the very worms which turn us into corrup- tion. — Comparatively few are the victims, white with 8 aye, and bowed down with care. Even the old must die. Age, like infancy, of which it is at last the an- titype, sinks, without the power of a hopeful strug- gle. The marks of three score years and ten, iden- tify it as ready prey; and if labor and sorrow hold it up to the confines of four score, yet at last it meets the general doom. We need, indeed, no evidences to convince us of our mortality; but we need continual warnings to keep us mindful of it. Such is our forgetfulness of the lessons of His Providence, that God sends death among us in every variety of form, of method, of pe- riod, of circumstance. In almost every death, there is something new and peculiar ; something to preserve the sense of our insecurity, and to make us realize, with Job, " I know that thou wilt bring me to death." What an exhibition of our mortality is the dispen- sation which has filled a nation w^ith dismay ! The venerable form, which so recently was the object of our reverence and patriotic affection, has been car- ried away into sepulchral darkness. But yesterday, he stood among us in the green vigor of years; alas he is now decaying in the desolate and kindred earth. His eye will no more open upon us with its benignity, singleness of purpose, and intelligence. His lips will never more speak words of aflfection and patriotism to his endeared people. His face will -never again be brightened with a smile ; nor w^ill his frail and oft-pressed hand ever shrink again from the hearty welcome of the old soldier, and the equal enthusiasm of ten thousands of admiring freemen. No ! His form, lifeless, motionless, cold, corrupting, we have carried to the place appointed for all living. " Thou changest his countenance, and sendest him away" "As° for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone : and the place thereof shall know it no more." The people will soon lie, side by side, with their President. The whole living nation will, in a few short years, be beneath the clods of the valley. Mor- tality is the degradation which sin has marked upon our bodies. All must die. Whatever be our rank, or station, or learning, or endowments, or character, or destiny, we must all lie down as in a sleep, and be gathered, as our fathers were, to the all-devouring crrave. The dust of Kings, of Presidents, of rulers, soon mingles with the dust of subjects, citizens, and slaves; yea, with the dust of the withered grass— the emblem of man's condition and decay. "All flesh is grass — the grass withereth." II. " And all the glory of man is as the flow- er OF grass"— "TAe/ower thereof falleth away " Not only is the body withering grass, but all the glory of man's earthly existence is as the falling flower. Neither body nor spirit have an abiding honor, in the world of vanity and degradation.. 1. All the glory of man's intellectual endowmeTits— of what avaifare they, when God requireth the soul! Though we understood all mystery and all know- ledo-e,° yet in these alone we are " nothing." In the hour of death, the mightiest mind parts forever from all its pride of attainments. Though we may pass. 10 in the visions of intellppf -^..^ -ar. and g,o.., a^.d;/ dL:f wXl'X 7 " r efern 'r nitr ■" ''' ~--S: i« the wise 2„ I "/ ' °"'y '^^''am ! Where the teJr of he 'rj't'""^^^"'^''^ ^^--* learning of a race, :r.,pf,::L:ro„'''^°'""*^ evening !" The ac.ui.i.j;' t^t^ TJT^^ '? aspirings of jurisprudence, the kno dedt 5 T^'''* antniuity, the aims and measures Ifn rr'°"''' cty-all the profounde.t studyon.Y " '" r°" man, hke the folly of fools '■ nil ! I " '^^'"^ 'ency, which is i^he:';.,^;*rytr- without wisdom." "Though th« u- ' ^''^^ dom be as a flowin. b ool > 7"-^.P"»& of-is- of the swelling JordL *' " " '°^' » «- -^^rs pear JtlSri: -r"' "''J-'^""""' "^^-- -^-p- gave it bebl O.V 1' ^''''^'"^ ""' *e power which of Its dural^ "o 1 '°'"';-:'"'^ " '""^ -^""e™ *e..hador;fdrfr.?h'efrtf:fr^^^^ "vexation of snin> " ^\ °^ ^'"^^^^ is to our bodirisS idTr :trr:f ^t^^ -tat. ..Man in his best estate ^^S^LZi^ "^:^:^t-^^' -f "-- to .ng the resource; of pow'r^ IZTe t """'"P'^- brow are without peace to the ha tT' '" "" ments are the temptations J ^Zinl^^^ ^^ 11 was great and increased more than all they that were before me in Jerusalem," and "I withheld not my heart from any joy." "And behold all was vanity and vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the sun." All the glory of Solomon has fal- len, like the cedars of Lebanon. His palaces, and temples, and all the insignia of his reign, have no abiding place on the earth, yea, are unknown even in the memory of man. If such glory thus passeth away, like the flowers of the field, (which it equalled not) what glory of man, can hope to survive, in the visions of most presumptuous ambition ! How brief and uncertain too, is the period of present enjoyment! We have been taught by impressive Providence, the end of all human distinction. Our President has been suddenly taken from the honors of a grateful people, to be placed beneath the soil on which they tread. The distant echoes of his inauguration tri- umphs, are reverberated beyond tlie mountains to mingle with the mournings of his funeral solemnities. Yonder mansion, which he lately entered in glory, has seen him carried out of it in dust ! Though "the glory of his house be increased " yet " when he dieth, he shall carry nothing away ; his glory shall not de- scend after him." " All the glory of man, is as the flower of grass — the flower thereof falleth away." 3. The glory of riches is of the same fleeting character. Strange that man should set his heart so firmly upon that which perishes, and then cleave to it, as though it were to endure! Yet there is hardly any possession, which more engages the aim and pursuit of our race, than wealth. It is 13 sought for with an avidity that scorns oceans, and mountains, and deserts and climates. Stoop down for the flower which your feet have trodden from its stem of grass, and learn, from its decay, the vanity of your anxious toil. "They spend their days in wealth, and in a moment go down to the grave." The wealth of the Esterhazys, treasured up as a glorious inheritance, is of no use to those who as- sisted in its accumulation, nor will long serve the vanity of its present possessors. " For, we brought nothing into this world; and it is certain that we can carry nothing out." Yet, our race is bent on evil, on the evil of the glory of wealth. If Canova were awaiting directions for a man, who would fitly re- present the race, we would say to him (especially for this generation,) " Chisel him in the attitude of graspingr And when he had completed the statue, we would add, '' Make another m the attitude of deathr' The two together,— the one representing the spirit, and the other the end of riches— would fitly describe the nature of its glory. 4. The glory of arms is similar in its shadowy end. Many mighty warriors have been conspicuous in their generation, receiving, when living, the ap- plause of armies and nations, and when dead, the highest honors. But their glory went not with them beyond the darkness of the grave. Unsatisfied Alex- ander could weep in want of an unconquered world ; and Napoleon, trembling at Moscow amidst the flames, and at St. Helena amidst the waves, was at last insensible to the honors of his faithful France. Our own country, separated from contending nations, 13 has yet had its share in the peril of conflicts, and in the strife of battles. How few survive, to enjoy the rewards of onr war of Revolution! "How are the mighty fallen, and the weapons of war perished!" That generation of heroes has already almost van- ished from the scenes of its glory. And of the leaders of our second war, how many arc gone! Beyond the promotions of army or navy, they will never more serve that country, whose honor was dearer than life! — The last of the dead was the hero of many conflicts. He often heard the war cry of the Indian, and the roar of cannon, and guided to victory the armies of his country. Methinks I see him, near the sources of the Wabash, preparing for the exigencies of an eventful morning. Before the twilifrht, his sleep is broken bv sentinel-ofuns. Battle rages. He is in the midst of the conflict. The voice we lately heard so clear and loud at the Capitol, is soundingr above the noise of battle in its tones of hio-h command. Yes, I see him, with his country's sword in his hand, and the fire of battle in his eye, charg- ing upon the savage foe with the enthusiasm of vic- tory. But hark ! The din of war is hushed ! — And see ! The conquerer sleeps in the grave with the prophet! Such is the glory of man, of whatever kind; fleet- ing as the shadows of his body, or the dust of his grave. "Man giveth up the ghost, and where is he?" " All flesh is as grass: and all the glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass withereth, the flower thereof falleth away. But the word of the Lord endureth forever." 14 III. It is profitable to turn from the vanities of earth to the enduring " word of the Lord ;" from vain glory to truth, and heaven, and immortality ! Great is the transition ! which may the Spirit assist us to understand and to realize ! 1. "The word of the Lord endures forever" in the majesti/ of Him it rej)resents. God's revelation, the image of His own glory, is unchanging as His own existence. Like Jehovah Himself, it is beyond the reach of the vanities and changes of man's estate, the revolutions of empires, and the final convulsions of nature. "The heavens and the earth shall pass away, but His word shall not pass away." " For- ever, O Lord, Thy word is settled in heaven!" The stability of the throne is its truth ; the praises of uni- versal dominion are its testimonies; and the holiness, justice and goodness of God, its everlasting and sure foundations. "In the beginning was the Word ; and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." 2. This word also endures forever m the principles of salvation, which it establishes. "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, full of grace and truth." Coming " to seek and to save that which was lost," Jesus lived a life of holiness, benevolence and atonement. He procured salvation for our race, by reconciling Justice and Mercy through the cross. He cried " it is finished !" Oh cry, unknown in creation ! Rocks quaking, sun darkened, vail rent, dead rising, sinners trembling, witnessed the tri- umphs of everlasting truth in the sacrifice of eternal love. "The word of the Lord endureth forever; and this is the word which by the Gospel is preached 15 unto you''' "Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sins." " All have sinned and come short of the glory of God;" but ''by grace are ye saved through faith." " In v\hom we have redemp- tion through his blood, even the forgiveness of sin." " Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." These principles of our salva- tion, which, in a word, embrace the acknowledg- ment of sin, faith in the atonement of Jesus Christ, regeneration by the Holy Spirit, and obedience of life, are everlasting principles. They endure whilst the world endures ; yea, beyond all earthly destinies, in results for which eternity has no bounds of degree or measure of duration. 3. This word of the Lord endures forever in the rule of life, which is our glorious guide. Love to God and love to man are the fulfilling of the com- mandments. They are the sum of our duty, the source of our happiness, the measure of our sanctifi- cation, and the abiding standard of our preparation for heaven. The precepts of the Gospel, which are of equally permanent obligation, enjoin self-denial, the regulation of the heart, the crucifixion of the lusts of the flesh, victory over the world, and, in short, the exhibition of the graces of the Spirit, and the imitation of the life of Christ. How different a life, regulated by the enduring rule, from one of worldliness, pleasure, and unchastened ambition! It is a life which possesses the spirit and the princi- ples of immortality. Jesus, who was both "life and immortality," overcame the world in every form of temptation ; He rejected the kingdoms of the world 16 with all their glory, and lived above its honors to the glory of God the Father. His disciples, regulating their lives by the same precepts and motives, subject themselves to the authority of the same government, which is ''from everlasting to everlasting." 4. And this suggests the eternal sanctions by which "the Lord's word endureth for ever." Brethren ! does the destiny of man perish, like the withered grass of his body, and the fallen flower of his glory? No! Children of immortality! No! Ye are of the life and the resurrection ! " They that are in the graves shall hear the voice "of the Son of God," "and shall come forth; they that have done good unto the resurrection of life, and they that have done evil unto the resurrec- tion of damnation." Wonders, passing the awe of a sino^le Providence shall fill the firmament with might- iest miracles. The trump of the archangel, the glo- rious appearing of Christ, the shining of the angelic host, the resurrection of the dead, the fire-consuming scroll of these heavens and this earth, the solemnities of the general judgment, will reveal in the light of glorious Omnipotence, Justice and Mercy, the eter- nal destiny of all the race of Adam. Woe will be the doom of those who sought the acquisitions of knowledge, the exaltation of station, the accumula- tion of wealth, and the honor of arms, to the neglect of the spirit, "created in the image of God," and endued with his immortality! Yes, the worldliness and vanity of a life spent in despising the cross of Christ, shall suffer all the threatenings of Divine Justice. " The word of the Lord endureth forever." 17 But who can describe the triumphs of those, who, by a life of faith on earth, were preparing for the glory, honor and immortality of the skies ! Know- ledge indeed will be theirs; the knowledge of God in Christ Jesus, the knowledge of perfections, of Re- demption, of Providence, of expanding creations, of angels' state, and Heaven's service. Exaltation will be theirs : the exaltation of kings and priests, of dia- dems and thrones, of glorious society, of the new nature and the new song. Wealth will be theirs ; the wealth of spiritual blessedness, of God's love, of unstained righteousness, of promises fulfilled, of real- ities possessed. Victory \\'\\\ be theirs; the victory over the world, over principalities of the air, over the depravity within — victory, in the possession of Ca- naan, in the prospects of peace, in the enjoyments of God's abiding glory ! Sweet will it be to exchange the cares an4 sorrows and degradation of this life, for the high praises and possessions of that which is to come ! Sweet to lie down in the dust, and " awake in Thy likeness!" Sweet to wash the last pollution of our feet in the Jordan, and to enter w^ith hallelu- jahs the gate of Heaven ! "All flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away. But the word of the Lord endure th forever." Even so, our Father ! The grass and its flower are our witliered inheritance here, but may the pro- mises of thy Word be our eternal reward ! These meditations afford an appropriate introduc- tion to a brief notice of the life and character of one, 18 "vvho was lately numbered amons^ the grreat of the earth. William Henry Harrison, the late President of the United States, was born in Charles City county, Vir- ginia, in 1773. Having received a liberal education at Hampden Sydney College,^ he commenced the study of medicine; but his thoughts were soon turned to the preservation of his countrymen, through the profession of arms. With the blood of the Revo- lution in his veins, he determined to assist in repell- ing the Indian atrocities on our frontier. In 1792, at the age of 19, be received the commission of En- sign from General Washington ; and thus be entered the public service b}^ holding in his hands the flag of his country — a banner never tarnished by any act of his long and eventful life. He was soon promoted, and was the aid of General Wayne in the great bat- tle fought in 1794, which procured for the West a temporary emancipation from Indian cruelties. At the age of 26, he was chosen delegate in Congress from the Northwestern Territory. The next year he was appointed, by President Adams, Governor of Indiana, which at that time embraced all the West, except Ohio; and a short time afterward a Commis- sioner to form treaties with the Indians. He con- tinued to act as Governor under Jefferson and !Madi- son for many years, and led our troops to victory at the battle of Tippecanoe, in 1511, and as General in the regular army, at the victory of the Thames in 1S13. ' A College which had been recently founded by Presbyterians. 19 Tne foar promiiieiit even'-*, which -"xHl erer asso- ciate the name of HaiTi«r,i, ^th the Wtst. are — Ist. His fideiitT and success m making "^^^r^.^. -ir-L^b ■*:he Indian tribes, bv which he was the ig the title to immense tract? of coxLntrv to Teat m the United S""- ?--- -•-'-- -- ,,--,-.- the Unitr - - _ richest conntry in the West, uid the most Talnable mineral region in the Union." 2d- His agencT, when Delegate in Congress, aiid when onlv twenty-six years old. in larinj the foun- dation of the land system, under which the West has increased until Ohio ontnombers eren Virginia. He was chairman of the Committee which proposed the reform by which the size of Government tracts was reduced from 4j',K) Pall Bearers. ^ n ^^11 Bearers. M > The family and relations of the late President. The Vice President and the Heads of Departments. F'.x-Presidents, and former Heads of Departments. Foreign Ministers and Suits. The Chief Justice, and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court and District Judges of the United States. The President of the Senate protempore. Senators and ofllcers of the Senate. United States and Mexican Commissioners for the adjustment of claims under the convention with Mexico. Members of the House of Representatives and Officers. Governors of States and Territories and Members of State Legislatures. Judges of the Circuit Court of the District of Columbia with the Members of the Bar and Officers of the Court. The Judges of the several States. The Comptrollers of the Treasury, Auditors, Treasurer, Register and Solicitor. Commissioners and other Civil Officers of the Government. Officers and Soldiers of the late war who served under the command of the late President. Corporate authorities of Washington, Georgetown and Alexandria. Such Societies and Fraternities as may wish to join in the Procession, to report to the Marshal of the District, who will assign to them their respective positions. Citizens and Strangers. 40 The troops designated to Ibrm the escort will assemble in the Avenue, north of the President's House, and form line precisely at 11 o'clock, A. M., on Wednesday the 7th instant, with its right (Captain Ringgold's company of Light Artillery) resting opposite the western gate. The procession will move precisely at 12 o'clock, M,, when minute guns will be fired by detachments of artillery stationed near St. John's Church and the Capitol. At the same hour, the bells of the several churches in Washington, Georgetown and Alexandria, will be tolled. At sun-rise to-morrow, (the 7th inst.) a Federal salute will be fired from the military stations in the vicinity of Washington, minute guns between the hours of 12 and 3, and a national salute at the setting of the sun. The usual badge of mourning will be worn on the left arm, and on the hilt of the sword. The Adjutant General of the Army is charged with the military arrangements of the day, aided by the Assistants Adjutant General on duty at the Head Quarters of the Army. The United States Marshal of the District has the direction of the Civic Procession, assisted by the Mayors of the cities of the District and the Clerk of the Supreme Court of the United States. By order, R. Jones, Adjutant General of U. S. Army. The various DEPARTMENTS issued orders, corresponding to the occasion, to their various public officers, enjoining the wearing of crape on the arm, the badges of mourning on the public build- ings, &c., &c. VII. VIEW OF THE DEAD. On Monday, the body of the deceased President was placed in a large court or ante-room of the house, between the front or entrance door aud the reception rooms. It reposed in a leaden coffin, which was enclosed in another of mahogany; and that day was designated to give all the people, who wished to take a last look at the beloved Harrison, an opportunity of so doing. Accordingly, they came in 41 great numfers, and in the silence of undissembled grief gazed on the cold remains of one, who so lately and so freely mingled among them as one of them. No military sentinels were necessary to pre- serve order, great as were the numbers pressing to the melancholy spot. The workman in his apron, as well as the gentleman in his more costly dress, reverently came and went, as did all classes, trades and professions. The features of the illustrious dead bore the marks of his native benevolence and kind disposition. Death had not yet taken away his smile; nor.had the majesty of a noble spirit left his brow. He looked " like a warrior taking his rest ;" and when the night came, he was again removed to the silent chamber, to be left " alone in his glory." The awe-struck and mourning population of the metropolis spent a three-days interval of intense feeling. VI II. ARRIVAL OF THE VICE PRESIDENT. At 12 o'clock, all the Heads of Departments, except the Secretary of the Navy, (who has not yet returned to the city, from his visit to his family,) waited upon the Vice President to pay him their official and personal respects. They were received with all the polite- ness and kindness which dharacterize the new President. He sig- nified his deep feeling of the public calamity sustained by the death of President Hakrison, and expressed his profound sensibility to the heavy responsibilities so suddenly devolved upon himself. He spoke of the present stale of things with great concern and seriousness, and made known his wishes that the several Heads of Departments would continue to fill the places which they now respectively occupy, and his confidence that they would afibrd all the aid in their power to enable him to carry on the administration of the Government suc- cessfully. The President then took and subscribed the following oath of office: I do solemnly swear that I wili faithfully execute the office of President of the United States, and will, to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. April 6, 1841. John Tyler. 4-2 District of Columbia, } City and County of Washington, ^ I, William Cranch, Chief Justice of the Circuit Court of the Dis- trict of Columbia, certify that the above named John Tyler per- sonally appeared before me this day, and, although he deems him- self qualified to perform the duties and exercise the powers and office of the President on the death of William Henry Harrison, late President of the United States, without any other oath than that which he has taken as Vice President, yet, as doubts may arise, and for greater caution, took and subscribed the foregoing oalb before me. W. Cranch. April G, 1841. IX. PRAYER MEETING AT THE PRESIDENT'S MANSION. The author of the foregoing discourse felt it to be a duly and a privilege to visit frequently at the Mansion, during the sickness of the President. With Col. Todd in particular I had many seasons of Christian intercourse, which will long be remembered. After the President's death, it was my duty to propose a pastoral visit to the ladies in their atlliction, with the hope of administering consolation through divine truth and prayer. Accordingly, I went by appoint- ment on Tuesday evening; when 1 found that Col. Todd, with true Christian forethought, had so arranged it as to have all the family assembled, in number from fifteen to twenty. There was evidently deep affliction in every heart ; and in the midst of the general sor- row, there was a very cordial welcome to him, who aimed at bring- ing the peace and comforts of the Gospel. After a few remarks, in- tended to direct the thoughts of all heavenward, I read portions of the 21st and 22d chapters of Revelation. Almost all present were members of different churches, (chiefly Presbyterian) and seemed to appreciate the description of the heavenly state, in hope of its eternal enjoyment. We then all united in prayer at the throne of grace, that God's solemn providence might be sanctified to all the family — that the beloved and smitten "mother in Israel" might have the special comforts of divine suppoft — and that all might be impressed with the vanities of earth in contrast with the glories of life eternal. After prayer, I made an exhortation, presenting God as the Ruler of providence, who governed according to the dictates of infinite wis- 43 dom and mercy. I also pointed to Christ as our Mediator, our Com- fort and our Hope, and to Heaven, as our eternal home. The Apos- tolic benediction was then pronounced ; and 1 left the afflicted family with deep sympathy for their bereavement, and thanking God that I was a minister of the Gospel. As I passed from the weeping circle, and trod softly by the cham- ber of the dead, I could not help thinking how religion is adapted to all the wants of our race, in all circumstances of our condition ; and how important it was to have its hopes in our trials, but especially in our death. X. FUNERAL CEREMONIES. It was not till Wednesday that the full force of the bereavement was felt by the public mind, when to all who about five weeks be- fore had witnessed the spectacle of the inauguration, there was now presented the very different spectacle of a funeral — and the funeral of that very inaugurated Chief Magistrate. The day itself — the clouds covering the heavens — resembled the fourth of March. The numerous flags at half-mast, and hung with crape, met the eye wherever it was turned; while the ear was saluted with the deep thunder of heavy cannon, as at short intervals the melancholy sound came through the air. The stream of human beings continued to pour into the city from all quarters until 12 o'clock, and although it was supposed all the States of the Union sent the materials that constituted the host at the Inauguration, there seemed really to be as many to-day in the city as on the Fourth of March. At sunrise the sound of cannon from the several military stations in the vicinity of the city heralded the melancholy occasion which was to assemble the citizens of the District and its neighborhood, and minute guns were fired during the morning. In entire conso- nance with those mournful sounds was the aspect of the whole city, as well its dwellings as its population. The buildings on each side of the entire length of the Pennsylvania Avenue, with scarcely an exception, and many houses on the contiguous streets, were hung with festoons and streamers of black, not only about the signs and entrances, but in many cases from all the upper stories. Almost every private dwelling had crape upon the knocker and bell-handle 44 of its door, and many of the very humblest abodes l)ung out some spontaneous signal of the general sorrow. The stores and places of business, even such as are too frequently seen open on the Sabbath, were all closed. Every thing like business seemed to have been forgotten, and all minds to be occupied with the purpose of the day. The great point of attraction was the President's Mansion. Toward that, all steps, all thoughts were tending. The northern portico of the Mansion was hung with long banners of black, extending from column to column. The iron gates of the enclosure in front were closed, save when the Foreign Ministers, Members of the Cabinet, the attending Physicians, the Clergy, the Judiciary and ladies were admitted, preparatory to their taking the places assigned them in the Funeral Procession. At the entrance of the Mansion, the dressings of black presented themselves on every side, descending from the lofty ceiling to the floor. The great chandelier, with the immense mirrors of the east room, and other articles of furniture, were enveloped in the sable symbols; while in the centre of the room reposed the illustrious dead — the body being contained in a cofHn covered with rich silk velvet, over which was thrown the pall of similar material. Under the lid of the coffin was a glass, through which could be seen the face of the late President. The expression was calm and natural : his white hair lying close to his head, and his features regular and peaceful, as if they had been quietly composed to their last long sleep. It was impossible to escape contrasting this moveless repose of death with the incessant activity of the living individual, when re- ceiving the visits of the people, or transacting business with those who called. What little of form or ceremony remained about the Government, was extinguished by the late President. The first semi-circle around the coffin was composed of about forty Clergymen of different denominations in and near the District. Opposite to these, encircling the head of the coffin, sat the Vice Pre- sident and the Cabinet, except Mr. Badger, who has gone to North Carolina. On the left of the Cabinet were Messrs. Forsyth, Poin- sett and Paulding, also Mr. Adams. In their rear sat the Foreign Ministers, in their gorgeous dresses of gold and silver lace, stars, epaulettes and other insignia peculiar to monarchical governments, 45 and strongly contrasting with the severe simplicity of all around, especially the s'nnplicily of death. Immediately behind the Clergy were the mourners, about fifteen or twenty in number, including the "faithful women," who "did what they could " to minister to the last wants of their departed relative and friend. The next semi-cir- cle was composed of the attending and consulting physicians, and the twenty. four pall-bearers, all with white sashes. Officers of the government of various grades, ladies and others, who had the privi- lege of admission, filled the room, which was not crowded, the thou- sands of the people being outside even the gales of the great front lawn, and maintaining the most profound stillness and exemplary order. In fact, the population had, as if by common consent, ex- tended itself in very equal masses along the whole distance of a mile and a half from the Mansion to the Capitol. The passage way within the spacious front lawn was filled with mourning-coaches, in waiting for the Family .Mourners, the Cabinet, the Clergy, Mem- bers of Congress, Foreign Ministers, &c. At half-past 11 o'clock, the Rev, Mr. Ilawley, Rector of St. John's Church, arose, and observed tnat he would mention an incident con- nected with the Bible which lay on the table before him (covered with black silk velvet). "This Hiblc," said he, " was purchased by the President, on the fifih of March. lie has since been in the habit of daily reading it. He was accustomed not only to altend Church, but to join audibly in the Church service, and to kneel before his Maker." Mr. H. stated that had the President lived, and been in health, he intended on the next Sabbath to become a communicant at the Lord's table. A part of the 15lh of 1st Corinthians was then read, some selections from the Psalms, and a short prayer. No address or particular appeal was made to the assembly or to any portion of it. It was after eleven o'clock, when the procession in front of the Presidential mansion presented a complete line, and a few minutes before twelve, a funeral car entered the square, and drew up within the portico. It was of large dimensions, in form an oblong platform, on which was a raised dais, the whole covered with black velvet. From the cornice of the platform fell a black velvet curtain outside of the wheels to within a few inches of the orround. From the cor- 46 ners of the car a black crape festoon was formed on all sides, looped in the centre by a funeral wreath. Precisely at twelve o'clock, a detachment of musicians, which had been marched up in front of the portico, played the Portuguese hymn, during which the body was moved, and placed on the car. The coffin was covered with a rich velvet, on which were placed two swords, laid across (the Sword of Justice and the sword of State) sur- mounted by the scroll of the Constitution, bound together by a funeral wreath formed of the yew and cypress. The Car was drawn by six white horses, having at the head of each a coloured groom, dressed in white, with white turban and sash, and supported by pall bearers in black. The effect was very fine. The contrast of this slowly moving body of white and black, so opposite to the strong colours of the military around it, struck the eye even from the greatest distance, and gave a chilling warning beforehand that the corpse was drawing nigh. The Pall bearers marched two abreast on each side of the car, and consisted of the following gentlemen, representing each Slate and Territory in the union : Maine, R. Cutts, Esq. — New Hampshire, Hon. Jacob B. Moore. — Massachusetts, Hon. C. Cushing. — Rhode Island, M. St. C. Clarke, Esq. — Connecticut, W. B. Loyd, Esq. — Vermont, Hon. Hiland Hall. — New York, Gen. John Granger. — New Jersey, Hon. Geo. C. Washington. — Pennsylvania, M. Willing, Esq. — Delaware, Hon. A. Naudain. — Maryland, D. Hoffman, Esq. — Virgiriia, Major Camp. — North Carolina, Hon. E. D. White. — South Carolina, John Carter, Esq. — Georgia, Gen. D. L. Clinch. — Kentucky, Thos. Crittenden, Esq. — Tennessee, Col. Rogers. — Louisiana, M. Durald, Esq. — Mississippi, Major Anderson Miller — Alabama, Dr. Perrine. — Arkansas, A. W. Lyon, Esq. — Ohio, Mr. Graham. — Indiana, Gen. R. Hanna. — Illinois, D. G. Gurnsey, Esq. — Missouri, Major Russell. — Michigan, Gen. Howard. — Wisconsin, Hon. J. D. Doty. — Iowa, Hon. W. B. Carter. — Florida, Hon. C. Downing. — Dis- trict of Columbia, R. Smith, Esq. Before the hearse, marched the Military Escort, in the order mentioned above. The most impressive portion of the military part of the procession 47 consisted of the dismounted and mounted officers of the Army, Navy, Militia, and Volunteers. Seldom has their been exhibited within a space so limited so many distinguished military rnen; the sight of whose well-known figures led back our thoughts to many a bloody field and many an ensanguined sea, on which the national honor has been well and nobly maintained. Next to the military, were the clergy of the District and elsewhere, (dressed with scarfs, and with crape on the hat and left arm,) about forty in number, in carriages. Then followed the attending physicians, in their private vehicles. Immediately behind the hearse, were the male relatives of the deceased, including his old and faithful friends Colonels Todd and Chambers. Immediately after them President Tyler, in a carriage with the Secretary of State ; then the several other Heads of Departments, and Mr. J. Q. Adams. Several members of the Judiciary Depart- ment followed, and then all the Ministers of Foreign Governments, now present, or their Secretaries. Next followed Officers and soldiers who had served under General Harrison in the late war. Another division of the Procession con- sisted of public societies and associations preceded by their banners, and wearing their respective badges. On the firing of the signal gun at the appointed hour, the Proces- sion moved along Pennsylvania Avenue, under the fire of minute guns near the President's House, repeated at the City Hall, on the head of the column arriving opposite to it, and at the Capitol on its reaching the western gate of the enclosure. The music was excel- lent ; several fine bands playing mournful airs, giving place from time to time, to the muffled drums of the military, beating slow marches. The solemnity of the scene was beyond description. Among the most touching incidents which occurred during the procession, was its meeting the Maryland Legislature about half way down the Avenue. Having just arrived in the cars, the members preceded by their officers, marched on to meet the funeral train of the President ; and were immediately assigned their proper and honorable rank in the multitude of public mourners. Having reached the Capitol Square, passing on the south side of 48 it, the Procession advanced over the plains eastward till it reached the space in front of the Congressional Burying Ground. Here the Car halted, while the line was formed by the Military; and then passed slowly on, being saluted as it passed with a dirge, with colours lowered, the troops presenting arms, and the officers saluting it in military form. Having reached the principal entrance, Ihe Car was again halted ; the coffin was taken down and placed on the shoulders of the bearers; the Clergy advanced, and the Rev. Mr. Havvley, reciting the solemn funeral service of the Episcopal Liturgy, the Procession advanced down the principal avenue of the cemetery until it reached the receiving vault, where a space had been kept open by sentries under arms, and where a hollow square being formed, the coffin was lowered into the public vault, which was hung with festoons of black crape and muslin. It is a spacious arched apartment at the extremity of the ground, perfectly dry There were about eight coffins in it before that of General Harrison was received into it. In the centre of this vault, a mahogany shell had been placed, and into this shell the coffin was fitted, and the lid was then placed upon it, when, in an interval of "expressive silence," the coffin was conveyed down into the tomb, and all that remained on earth of the President of this great Union was laid in its narrow bed, near other coffins almost unnoticed, and altogether unknown to us, how did all earthly grandeur dwindle to its real insignificance, and how impressively did the tomb teach it in that hour ! The im- mortality of Fame ! How did the bubble burst in the atmosphere of that house of death ! And when I saw Tylek, Webster, Ewing, Bell, Crittenden and Granger enter that house, to take their last view of the coffin, and to emerge again with the weight of a na- tion's cares, added to present affliction, upon them, who could help exclaiming: "What shadows we are, what shadows we pursue!" Among the last things which I observed were the tears of his old comrades in arms on many a hard-fought field, as they ascended out of the vault, and left their brave and beloved General in the em- brace of the Universal Conqueror, adding another trophy to the tri- umphs of Death, and another portion to the spoils of the Grave. A signal being given to the troops outside, the battalion of Light Artillery, who were placed on an adjoining eminence, fired a salute, which was immediately followed by the several military bodies in 49 line, who commenced tiring (Vom the left to the right, and had con- tinued the salute till it had thrice gone up the whole line. The Vice President appeared to be much aflected. Mr. Ewing, the Secretary of the Treasury, was, at limes, almost unmanned by the excess of his', grief. Mr. Webster, Mr. Bell, Mr. Granger, and Mr. Crittenden evinced, by their deportment, that they felt their loss. The entire Procession occupied two full miles in length, and was marshalled on its way by officers on horseback carrying white batons with black tassels. The utmost order prevailed throughout; and, considering the very great concourse of people collected, the silence preserved during the whole course of the march was very impressive. The Procession returned by the same route to the city, where the troops were dismissed, and the citizens retired to their several abodes. By five o'clock, nothing remained but empty streets and the em- blems of mourning upon the houses, and the still deeper gloom, which oppressed the general mind with renewed power after all was over, and the sense of the public bereavement alone was left to fill the thoughts. It was the universal impression, that the procession was larger, and the whole effect more imposing, than that of the pageant of the Inauguration. In regard to solemnity, the two occasions of course admit of no comparison. The one was a nation in joy; the other a nation in tears. XI. REFLECTIONS IN THE EAST ROOM— April 7. 1841. The great East Room of the President's House — that room in which I have seen a thousand gay and joyful faces glowing in the light of ponderous chandeliers, radiating the light of a hundred burners, was now the scene of death ! Those brilliant fountains of light were hid in the dark robes of mourning. The splendid mirrors, which rose almost to the lofty ceiling, reflecting on every side the brilliant crowds which often thronged this room, now refused to look upon the scene befoiethem, and buried their polished bosoms in the habiliments of sadness. In short, this magnificent room, in every part of it, spoke in the appropriate language of silent grief, an- nouncing to all — Death is here ! The coffin rested in the centre of the room, and was richly and 7 beautifully dressed. Closely attached to it was a covering of black velvet. The edges where the top rested were delicately traced wiih fine gold lace, and on either side and at each end of the coffin the same material was formed into beautiful squares. A gorgeous vel- vet pall hung gracefully over the whole, with a deep rich fringe appended to a border of gold lace. On the lop of all rested two elegantly wrought swords in mourning, buried in a profusion of lovely and fragrant flowers, which Flora had consecrated to this sad and melancholy service, as if to express the idea that sweetness and beauty could conquer the sword and survive death itself! Around the coffin, and at an appropriate distance, was formed a circle composed of the new President of the United States, the heads of departments, the clergy of every denomination, judges of courts, and members of the bar. The next circle contained the foreign ministers in their rich and varied court dresses, wilh a number of members of both Houses of Congress, and the relatives of the deceased President. Beyond this circle a vast assemblage of ladies and gentlemen filled up the room. Silence, deep and undisturbed, even by a whisper, pervaded the entire assembly. The solemn event which they were now gazing upon fixed every eye and hushed every tongue. When at the appointed hour, the officiating minister rose from his seat, and as he rose in solemn tones announced these words, " / awt the resurrection, and the life!'"'' one simultaneous move placed this vast assembly upon their feet on the first sound of the minister's voice, and a feeling of deeper awe rested upon every countenance, as he uttered the above sentence. Never before did I realize the grandeur and sublimity of these words — never before did I feel the thrilling effect which the enunciation of this glorious Christian truth is capable of inspiring. At the close of these religious ceremonies, the coffin was con- ducted to the funeral car specially constructed for the occasion, where it was met and saluted by the solemn dirge of appropriate music; and the procession moved off" under the discharge of funeral artillery, which uttered loud and long the nation's grief. XII. THE MOURNFUL INTELLIGENCE. As the news of the decease of the venerable President of this re- public spread t>om city to city, there was every demonstration of the 51 "^ ;* ^0 . I ' ' ^ :7'/^^. •^,. "iJo <3> y * o .\^- ■^^^\ ^V^' /°- '."^ 'o. ♦.":^*' A V . ♦ . t<. ^ ^'^%i/)i^. >. .fi^ ^oV' l<^^ / ^^ 'S :. -^^o^ », r#. ^^^ '^-^ ^^ *>V/^''- '^<'. cV" »y ^^'\ '^0^ V