Iiiii!li«^^^^ EXPLANATORY OF THE ABOVE. The names on the I'rn are in order of d ite of the death of the three peat Statesmen. On the left, the Muse of History, with fallen scroll, sits weeping. The Angelic figur?, on the right, is pointing to the three great liglitsi in Heaven. / V C. SHIELDS, ['nnt. (omrr til Plul ux) Ooll S(tceu, N. Y. EULOGIES DELIVERKD IN THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES, ON THE LIFE AND CHARACTER OF HON. JOHN C. CALHOUN, OF SOUTH .' JiOLINA, HON. HENRY CLAY, OF KENTUCKY, AND HON. DANIEL WEBSTER, OP MASSACHUSETTS. (Konipileti from ®ffic(i7i. JDocumcnts. ENTERED IN THE DISTRICT COdRT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR THE DISTRTCT OF COLnjIBIA, BY THOMAS FOSTER AND GEORGE COCHtfAN^ ., "TT" A _ "^^^^^ -i«*^- ^0 WASHINGTON: ^^^sil^A^ VV;' Sll 1] PUBLrSHED BY FOSTER AND COCHRAN 18 5 3. :^ e. /" TO THE READER. The great venei-ation felt by the whole American people for the character and services of the three great sages and patriots who, within a brief period, have passed from the stage of action, has induced the undersigned to compile and present, in one volume, the Eulogies and just tributes of contemporary statesmen. The names of Calhoun, Clay, and Webster, are household words. Every child is taught to lisp them — and the history of the country would be incomplete without them. "Who is not anxious to treasure up the incidents and actions which have ren- dered the trio illustrious ? Who would consider his library com- plete without an epitome of the lives of such men ? True, the speeches which follow are the emanations of warm hearts in the hours of grief — but the encomiums are not the less just, nor the facts imbodied the less striking. They were uttered in the moments of sadness and sorrow — in the hours when every generous man is willing to lay in the grave with its eminent victims every unkind and uncharitable thought; yet the public are ever ready to admit that each and all of these great men were capable of " the high, the exalted, the sublime emotions of a patriotism, which, soaring toward Heaven, rises far above all mean, low, or selfish things, and is absorbed by one soul-transporting thought of the good and the glory of the country." It is believed the style of the work, and the embellishments, will be found to correspond with the interest of the theme. THOMAS FOSTER, GEORGE COCHRAN. Washington, D, C, May, 1853. OBITUARY HONORS XO THE MEMORY OF JOHN CALDWELL CALHOUN IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, Monday, April 1st, 1850. On the motion of IMr. King, the reading of the Journal of Thursday was dispensed with. Mr. BUTLER rose and said : — Mr. President : I rise to discharge a mournful duty, and one which involves in it considerations well calculated to arrest the attention of this body. It is to announce the death of my late colleague, the Hon. John Caldwell Calhoun. He died at his lodgings in this city, yesterday morning, at half-past seven o'clock. He was conscious of his approaching end, and met death with for- titude and uncommon serenity. He had many admonitions of its approach, and, without doubt, he had not been indifferent to them. With his usual aversion to professions, he said nothing for mere effect on the world, and his last hours were an exemplification of his life and character, truth and simplicity. Mr. Calhoun, for some years past, had been suffering under a pulmonary complaint, and under its effects could have reckoned but on a short existence. Such was his own conviction. The immediate cause of his death was an affection of the heart. A few hours before he expired, he became sensible of his situation ; and when he was unable to speak, his eye and look evinced recognition and intelligence of what was passing. One of the last directions he gave was to a dutiful son, who had been attending him, to put away some manuscripts which had been wi'itten a short time before, under his dictation. Mr. CALnotTN was the least despondent man I oyer knew ; and he had, in an eminent degree, the self-sustaining power of intellect. His last days, and his last remarks, are exemplifications of what I have just said. Mental determination sustained him, when all others were in despair. We saw him a few days ago, in the seat near me, which he had so long and so honorably occupied ; we saw the struggle of a great mind exerting itself to sustain and overcome the weakness and infirmities of a sinking body. It was the exhibi- tion of a wounded eagle, with his eyes turned to the heavens in which he had soared, but into which his wings could never carry him again. Mr. President, Mr. Calhoun has lived in an eventful period of our Kepublic, and has acted a distinguished part. I surely do not venture too much, when I say that his reputation forms a striking part of a glorious history. Since 1811 until this time, he has been responsibly connected with the Federal Grovernment. As Repre- sentative, Senator, Cabinet Minister, and Vice President, he has been identified with the greatest events in the political history of our country. And I hope I may be permitted to say, that he has been equal to all the duties which were devolved upon him in the many critical junctures in which he was placed. Having to act a responsible part, he always acted a decided part. It would not become me to venture upon the judgment which awaits his memory. That will be formed by posterity before the impartial tribunal of history. It may be that he will have had the fate, and will have given to him the judgment that has been awarded to Chatham. I should do the memory of my friend injustice were I not to speak of his life in the spirit of history. The dignity of his whole character would rebuke any tone of remark which truth and judg- ment would not sanction. Mr. Calhoun was a native of South Carolina, and was born in Abbeville district, on the 18th March, 1782. He was of an Irish family. His father, Patrick Calhoun, was born in Ireland, and at an early age came to Pennsylvania, thence moved to the western part of "Virginia, and, after Braddock's defeat, moved to South Carolina in 1756. He and his family gave a name to what is known as the Calhoun settlement in Abbeville district. The motlioi- of iny colleague was a Miss Caldwell, born in Charlotte county, Virginia. The character of his parents had no doubt a sensible influence on the destiny of their distinguished son. His father had energy and enterprise, combined with perseverance and great mental determination. His mother belonged to a family of revolutionary heroes. Two of her brothers were distinguished in the Revolution. Their names and achievements are not left to tradition, but constitute a part of the history of the times. Mr. Calhoun was born in the Revolution, and in his childhood felt the influence of its exciting traditions. He derived from the paternal stock, intellect and self-reliance, and from the Caldwell's, enthusiasm and impulse. The traditions of the Revolution had a sensible influence on his temper and character. Mr. Calhoun, in his childhood, had but limited advantages of what is termed a literary tuition. His parents lived in a newly settled country, and among a sparse population. This population had but a slight connection with the lower country of South Caro- lina, and were sustained by emigrants from Virginia and Pennsyl- vania. There was, of course, but limited means of instruction to children. They imbibed most of their lessons from the conversa- tion of their parents. Mr. Calhoun has always expressed himself deeply sensible of that influence. At the age of thirteen he was put under the charge of his brother-in-law, Dr. Waddel, in Colum- bia county, Ceorgia. Scarcely had he commenced his literary course before his father and sister died. His brother-in-law, Dr. Waddel, devoted himself about this time to his clerical duties, and was a great deal absent from home. On his second marriage, he resumed the duties of his academy ; and, in his nineteenth year, Mr. Calhoun put himself under the charge of this distinguished teacher. It must not be supposed that his mind, before this, had been unemployed. He had availed him- self of the advantages of a small library, and had been deeply inspired by his reading of history. It was under such influences that he entered the academy of his preceptor. His progress was rapid. He looked forward to a higher arena with eagerness and purpose. He became a student in Yale College in 1802, and graduated two years afterwards with distinction, as a young man of great ability, and with the respect and confidence of his preceptors and 8 fellows. What tlicy have said and thought of him would have given any man a high reputation. It is the pure fountain of a clear reputation. If the stream has met with obstructions, they were such as have only shown its beauty and majesty. After he had graduated, Mr. Calhoun studied law, and for a few years practised in the courts of South Carolina, with a reputa- tion that has descended to the profession. He was then remarkable for some traits that have since characterized him. He was clear in his propositions, and candid in his intercourse with his brethren. The truth and justice of the law inculcated themselves on his mind, and when armed with these, he was a great advocate. His forensic career was, however, too limited to make a promi- nent part in the history of his life. He served for some years in the Legislature of his native State ; and his great mind made an impression on her statutes, some of which have had a great prac- tical operation on the concerns of society. From the Legislature of his own State he was transferred to Congress ; and from that time his career has been a part of the history of the Federal Government. Mr. Calhoun came into Congress at a time of deep and exciting interest — at a crisis of great magnitude. It was a crisis of peril to those who had to act in it, but of subseq^uent glory to the actors and the common history of the country. The invincibility of Great Britain had become a proverbial expression, and a war with her was fidl of terrific issues. Mr. Calhoun found himself at once in a situation of high responsibility — one that required more than speaking qualities and eloquence to fulfil it. The spirit of the people required direction ; the energy and ardor of youth were to be employed in affairs requiring the maturer qualities of a states- man. The part which Mr. Calhoun acted at this time has been approved and applauded by cotemporaries, and now forms a part of the glorious history of those times. The names of Clay, Calhoun, Cheves, and Lowndes, Grundy, Porter, and others, carried associations with them that reached the lieaH of the nation. Their clarion notes penetrated the army,* •* Governor Dodge, (now a Senator on this floor,) who was at that time a gallant officer of the army, informs me tliat the speeches of Calhouij and Clay were publicly read to the army, and exerted a most decided influence on the spirits of tlie men. tliey animated tlie people, and sustained the Administration of the Government. With such aotors, and in such scenes — the most eventful of oui- history — to say that Mr. Caluoun did not perform a second part^ is no common praise. In debate he was equal with Randolph, and in council he commanded the respect and confidence of Madison. At this period of his life he had the quality of Themistocles — to inspire confidence — which, after all, is the highest of earthly qualities in a public man ; it is a mystical some- thing, which is felt, but cannot be described. The events of the war were brilliant and honorable to both statesmen and soldiers, and their history may be read with enthu- siasm and delight. The war terminated with honor; but the measures which had to be taken, in a transition to a peace estab- lishment, were full of difficulty and embarrassment. This distin- guished statesman, with his usual intrepidity, did not hesitate to take a responsible and leading part. Under the influence of a broad patriotism, he acted with an unealculating liberality to all the interests that were involved, and which were brought under review of Congress. His personal adversary at this time, in his admiration for his genius, paid Mr. Calhoun a beautiful compli- ment for his noble and national sentiments, and views of policy. The gentleman to whom I refer is Mr. Grrosvenor, of New York, who used the following language in debate : — "He had heard with peculiar satisfaction the able, manly, and constitutional speech of the gentleman from South Carolina. (Here Mr. Grosvenor, recurring in his own mind to a personal difi"erence with Mr. Calhoun, which arose out of the warm party discussions dming the war, paused for a moment, and then pro- ceeded.) " Mr. Speakek, I will not be restrained. No barrier shall exist, which I will not leap over for the purpose of offering to that gen- tleman my thanks for the judicious, independent, and national course which he has pursued in this House for the last two years, and particularly on the subject now before us. Let the honorable gentleman continue with the same manly independence, aloof from party views and local prejudices, to pursue the great interests of his country, and to fulfil the high destiny for which it is manifest he was born. The buzz of popular applause may not cheer hiiu 10 on bis ■way, but he will inevitably arrive at a high and happy elevation in the Anew of his country and the world." At the termination of Mr. Madison's administration, Mr. Cal- houn had acquired a commanding reputation ; he was regarded as one of the sages of the Ilepublic. In 1817, Mr. Monroe invited him to a place in his Cabinet. Mr. Calhoun's friends doubted the propriety of his accepting it, and some of them thought he would put a high reputation at hazard in this new sphere of action. Per- haps these suggestions fired his high and gifted intellect; he accepted the j^lace, and went into the War Department under cir- cumstances that might have appalled other men. His success has been acknowledged. What was complex and confused, he reduced to simplicity and order. His organization of the War Department, and his administration of its undefined duties, have made the im- pression of an author^ having the interest of originality, and the sanction of trial. To applicants for office, IMr. Calhoun made few promises, and hence he was not accused of delusion and deception. When a public trust was involved, he would not compromise with duplicity or temporary expediency. At the expiration of Mr. Monroe's administration, Mr. Calhoun's name became connected with the Presidency; and from that time to his death he had to share the fate of all others who occupy prominent positions. The remarkable canvass for the President to succeed Mr. Mon- roe, terminated in returning three distinguished men to the House of Representatives, from whom one was to be elected. Mr. Calhoun was elected Vice President by a large majority. He took his seat in the Senate, as Vice President, on the 4th of March, 1825, hav- ing remained in the War Department over seven years. While he was Vice President, he was placed in some of the most trying scenes in any man's life. I do not now choose to refer to any thing that can have the elements of controversy ; but I hope I may be permitted to speak of my friend and colleague in a character in which all will join in paying him sincere respect. As a presiding officer of this body, he had the undivided respect of its members. He was punctual, methodical, and impartial, and had a high regard for the dignity of the Senate, which, as a presiding officer, he 11 endeavored to preserve and maintain. He looked upon debate as an honorable contest of intellect for truth. Such a strife has its incidents and its trials; but Mr. Calhoun had, in an eminent de- gree, a regard for parliamentary dignity and propriety. Upon General Hayne's leaving the Senate to become Governor of South Carolina, Mr. Calhoun resigned the Vice Presidency, and was elected in his place. All will now agree that such a position was environed with difficulties and dangers. His own State was under the ban, and he was in the national Senate to do her justice under his constitutional obligations. That part of his life posterity will review, and, I am confident, will do it full and impartial justice. After his senatorial term had expired, he went into retirement by his own consent. The death of JMr. Upshur — so full of me- lancholy associations — made a vacancy in the State Department; and it was by the common consent of all parties that Mr. Calhoun was called to fill it. This was a tribute of which any public man might well be proud. It was a tribute to truth, ability, and ex- perience. Under Mr. Calhoun's counsels, Texas was brought into the Union. His name is associated with one of the most remark- able events of history — that of one Republic being annexed to another by the voluntary consent of both. He was the happy agent to bring about this fraternal association. It is a conjunction under the sanction of his name, and by an influence exerted through his great and intrepid mind. Mr. Calhoun's connexion with the Executive department of the Government terminated with Mr. Tyler's administration. As a Secretary of State he won the confidence and respect of foreign ambassadors, and his despatches were characterized by clearness, sagacity, and boldness. He was not allowed to remain in retirement long. For the last five years he has been a member of this body, and has been en- gaged in discussions that have deeply excited and agitated the country. He has died amidst them. I had never had any par- ticular association with Mr. Calhoun until I became his colleague in this body. I had looked on his fame as others had done, and had admii-ed his character. There are those here who know more of him than I do. I shall not pronounce any such judgment as may be subject to a controversial criticism. But I will say, as a 12 matter of justice, from my own personal knowledge, that I never knew a fairer man in argument, or a juster man in purpose. His intensity allowed of little compromise. "While he did not qualify his own positions to suit the temper of the times, he appreciated the unmasked propositions of others. As a Senator, he commanded the respect of the ablest men of the body of which he was a mem- ber ; and I believe I may say that, where there was no political bias V« influence the judgment, he had the confidence of his breth- ren. As a statesman, Mr. Calhoun's reputation belongs to the history of the country, and I commit it to his countrymen and posterity. In my opinion, Mr. Calhoun deserves to occupy the first rank as a parliamentary speaker. He had always before him the dignity of purpose, and he spoke to an end. From a fuU mind, fired by genius, he expressed his ideas with clearness, simplicity, and force ; and in language that seemed to be the vehicle of his thoughts and emotions. His thoughts leaped from his mind like arrows from a well-drawn bow. They had both the aim and force of a skilful archer. He seemed to have had little regard for ornament; and when he used figures of speech, they were only for illustration. His manner and countenance were his best language ; and in these there was an exemplification of what is meant by Action, in that term of the great Athenian orator and statesman, whom, in so many respects, he so closely resembled. They served to exhibit the moral elevation of the man. In speaking of Mr. Calhoun as a man and a neighbor, I am sure I may speak of him in a sphere in which all will love to con- template him. Whilst he was a gentleman of striking deportment, he was a man of primitive taste and simple manners. He had the hardy virtues and simple tastes of a rej)ublican citizen. No one disliked ostentation and exhibition more than he did. When I say he was a good neiglibor, I imply more than I have expressed. It is summed up under the word justice. I will venture to say, tliat no one in his private relations could ever say that Mr. Calhoun treated him with injustice, or that he deceived him by professions or concealments. His private character was illustrated by a beau- tiful propriety, and was the exemplification of truth, justice, tem- perance, and fidelity to all his engagements. 13 I will yenture anotlier remark. Mr. Calhoun was fierce in his contests with political adversaries. He did not stop in the fight to count losses or bestow favors. But he forgot resentments, and forgave injuries inflicted by rivals, with signal magnanimity. Whilst he spoke freely of their faults, he could with justice appre- ciate the merits of all the public men of whom I have heard him speak. He was sincerely attached to the institutions of this coun- try, and desired to presei've them pure, and make them perpetual. By the death of Mr. Calhoun, one of the brightest luminaries has been extinguished in the political firmament. It is an event which will produce a deep sensation throughout this broad land, and the civilized world. I have forborne to speak of his domestic relations. They make a sacred circle, and I will not invade it. Mr. Butler then ofiered the following resolutions : — Resolved unanimously, That a committee be appointed by the Vice President to take order for superintending the funeral of the Hon: John Caldwell Calhoun, wliich will take place to-morrow, at 19 o'clock meridian, and that the Senate mil attend the same: Resolved unanimowly, That the members of tlie Senate, from a sincere desire of show- ing every mark of respect due to the memory of the Hon: John Caldwell Calhoun, deceased, late a member thereof, will go into mourning for him for one month, by the usual mode of wearing crape on the left arm: Resolved unanimously, That, as an additional mark of respect to the memory of the de- ceased, the Senate do now adjourn: Mr, CLAY said : — Mr. President, prompted by my own feelings of profound regret, and by the intimations of some highly esteemed friends, I wish, in rising to second the resolutions which have been offered, and which have just been read, to add a few words to what has been so well and so justly said by the surviving colleague of the illustrious deceased. My personal acquaintance with him, Mr. President, commenced upwards of thu-ty-eight years ago. We entered at the same time, together^ the House of Kepresentatives, at the other end of this building. The Congress, of which we thus became members, was that amongst whose deliberations and acts was the declaration of war against the most powerful nation, as it respects us, in the world. During the preliminary discussions which arose in the preparation for that great event, as well as during those which 14 took place when the resolution was finally adopted, no member displayed a more lively and patriotic sensibility to the wrongs which led to that momentous event than the deceased, whose death we all now so much deplore. Ever active, ardent, able, no one was in advance of him in advocating the cause of his country, and denouncing the foreign injustice which compelled us to appeal to arms. Of all the Congresses with which I have had any acquaint- ance since my entry into the service of the Federal Government, in none, in my humble opinion, has been assembled such a galaxy of eminent and able men as were in the House of Representatives of that Congress which declared the war, and in that immediately following the peace ; and, amongst that splendid constellation, none shone more bright and brilliant than the star which is now set. It was my happiness, sir, during a large part of the life of the departed, to concur with him on all great questions of national policy. And, at a later period, when it was my fortune to differ from him as to measures of domestic policy, I had the happiness to agree with him generally as to those which concerned our foreign relations, and especially as to the preservation of the peace of the country. During the long session at which the war was declared, we were messmates, as were other distinguished members of Con- gress from his own patriotic State. I was afforded, by the inter- course which resulted from that fact, as well as the subsequent in- timacy and intercourse which arose between us, an opportunity to form an estimate, not merely of his public, but of his private life ; and no man with whom I have ever been acquainted, exceeded him in habits of temperance and regularity, and in aU the freedom, frankness, and affability of social intercourse, and in all the tender- ness, and respect, and affection, which he manifested towards that lady who now mourns more than any other the sad event which has just occurred. Such, Mr. President, was the high estimate I formed of his transcendent talents, that, if at the end of his service in the exe- cutive department, under Mr. Monroe's administration, the duties of which he performed with such signal ability, he had been called to the highest office in the Government, I should have felt perfectly assured that under his auspices, the honor, the prosperity, and the glory of our country would have been safely placed. 15 Sii', he lias gone ! No more shall we witness from yonder seat the flashes of that keen and penetrating eye of his, darting through this chamber. No more shall we be thrilled by that torrent of clear, concise, compact logic, poured out from his lips, which, if it did not always carry conviction to our judgment, always com- manded our great admiration. Those eyes and those lips are closed forever ! And when, Mr. President, will that great vacancy which has been created by the event to which we are now alluding, when will it be filled by an equal amount of ability, patriotism, and devotion, to what he conceived to be the best interests of his country ? Sir, this is not the appropriate occasion, nor would I be the ap- propriate person, to attempt a delineation of his character, or the powers of his enlightened mind. I will only say, in a few words, that he possessed an elevated genius of the highest order ; that in felicity of generalization of the subjects of which his mind treated, I have seen him surpassed by no one ; and the charm and captiva- ting influence of his colloquial powers have been felt by all who have conversed with him. I was his senior, Mr. President, in years — in nothing else. According to the course of nature, I ought to have preceded him. It has been decreed otherwise ; but I know that I shall linger here only a short time, and shall soon follow him. And how brief, how short is the period of human existence allotted even to the youngest amongst us ! Sir, ought we not to profit by the contemplation of this melancholy occasion ? Ought we not to draw from it the conclusion, how unwise it is to indulge in the acerbity of unbridled debate ? How imwise to yield our- selves to the sway of the animosities of party feeling ? How wrong it is to indulge in those unhappy and hot strifes which too often exasperate our feelings and mislead our judgments in the dis- charge of the high and responsible duties which we are called to perform ? How unbecoming, if not presumptuous, it is in us, who are the tenants of an hour in this earthly abode, to wrestle and struggle together with a violence which would not be justifiable if it were our perpetual home ! In conclusion, sir, while I beg leave to express my cordial sym- pathies and sentiments of the deepest condolence towards all who 16 stand in near relation to liim, I trust we sliall all be instructed by the eminent virtues and merits of his exalted character, and be taught by his bright example to fulfil our great public duties by the lights of our own judgment, and the dictates of our OAvn con- sciences, as he did, according to his honest and best comprehension of those duties, faithfully, and to the last. Mr. WEBSTER said: — I hope the Senate will indulge me in adding a very few words to what has been said. My apology for this presumption is the very long acquaintance which has subsisted between Mr. Calhoun and myself. We are of the same age. I made my first entrance into the House of Representatives in May, 1813, and there found Mr. Calhoun. He had already been in that body for two or three years. I found him then an active and efl&cient member of the assembly to which he belonged, taking a decided part, and exer- cising a decided influence, in all its deliberations. From that day to the day of his death, amidst all the strifes of party and politics, there has subsisted between us, always, and without interruption, a great degree of personal kindness. Differing widely on many great questions respecting the institu- tions and government of the country, those difierences never inter- rupted our personal and social intercourse. I have been present at most of the distinguished instances of the exhibition of his talents in debate. I have always heard him with pleasure, often with much instruction, not unfrequently with the highest degree of ad- miration. Mr. Calhoun was calculated to be a leader in whatsoever asso- ciation of political friends he was thrown. He was a man of un- doubted genius, and of commanding talent. All the country and all the world admit that. His mind was both perceptive and vigorous. It was clear, quick, and strong. Su\ the eloquence of Mr. Calhoun, or the manner of his exhibi- tion of his sentiments in public bodies, was part of his intellectual character. It grew out of the qualities of his mind. It was plain, strong, terse, condensed, concise; sometimes impassioned — still always severe. Ecjecting ornament, not often seeking far for illustration, his power consisted in the plainness of his propositions, 17 in the closeness of his logic, and in the earnestness and energy of his rdanner. These are the qualities, as I think, which have enabled him through such a long course of years to speak often, and yet always command attention. His demeanor as a Senator is known to us all — is appreciated, venerated by us all. No man was more respectful to others ; no man carried himself with greater decorum, no man with superior dignity. I think there is not one of us but felt when he last addressed us from his seat in the Senate, his form still erect, with a voice by no means indicating such a degree of physical weakness as did, in fact, possess him, with clear tones, and an impressive, and, I may say, an imposing manner, who did not feel that he might imagine that we saw before us a Senator of Rome, when Rome survived. Sir, I have not in public nor in private life known a more as- siduous person in the discharge of his appropriate duties. I have known no man who wasted less of life in what is called recreation, or employed less of it in any pursuits not connected with the im- mediate discharge of his duty. He seemed to have no recreation but the pleasure of conversation with his friends. Out of the chambers of Congress, ho was either devoting himself to the acqui- sition of knowledge, pertaining to the immediate subject of the duty before him, or else he was indulging in those social interviews in which he so much delighted. My honorable friend from Kentucky has spoken in just terms of his colloquial talents. They certainly were singular and emi- nent. There was a charm in his conversation not often found. He delighted, especially, in conversation and intercoxirse with young men. I suppose that there has been no man among us who had more winning manners, in such an intercourse and conversa- tion, with men comparatively young, than Mr. Calhoun. I believe one great power of his character, in general, was his conversational talent. I believe it is that, as well a^ a consciousness of his high integrity, and the greatest reverence for his intellect and ability, that has made him so endeared an object to the people of the State to which he belonged. Mr. President, he had the basis, the indispensable basis, of aU high character; and that was, unspotted integrity — unimpeached honor and character. If he had aspirations, they were high, and 18 honorable, and noble. There was nothing groveling, or low, or meanly selfish, that came near the head or the heart of Mr. Cal- houn. Firm in his jjurpose, perfectly patriotic and honest, as I am sure he was, in the principles that he espoused, and in the measures that he defended, aside from that large regard for that species of distinction that conducted him to eminent stations for the benefit of the Republic, I do not believe he had a selfish motive, or selfish feeling. However, sir, he may have differed from others of us in his po litieal opinions, or his political principles, those principles and those opinions will now descend to posterity, under the sanction of a great name. He has lived long enough, he has done enough, and he has done it so well, so successfully, so honorably, as to connect himself for all time with the records of his country. He is now a historical character. Those of us who have known him here, will find that he has left upon om* minds and our hearts a strong and lasting impression of his person, his character, and his public performances, which, while we live, will never be obliterated. We shall hereafter, I am sure, indulge in it as a grateful recollection that we have lived in his age, that we have been his cotemporaries, that we have seen him, and heard him, and known him. We shall delight to speak of him to those who are rising up to fill our places. And, when the time shall come when we ourselves shall go, one after another, in succession, to our graves, we shall carry with us a deep sense of his genius and character, his honor and integrity, his amiable deportment in private life, and the purity of his exalted patriotism. Mr. RUSK said: — Mr. President : I hope it will not be considered inappropriate for me to say a word upon, this solemn occasion. Being a native of the same State with the distinguished Senator, whose death has cast such a gloom upon this Senate and the audience here assem- bled, I had the good fortune, at an early period of my life, to make his acquaintance. At that time he was just entering on that bright career which has now terminated. I was then a boy, with prospects any thing but flattering. To him, at that period, I was indebted for words of kindness and encouragement; and often 19 since, in the most critical positions in which I have been placed, a recurrence to those words of encouragement has inspired me with resolution to meet difficulties that beset my path. Four years ago, I had the pleasure of renewing that acquaintance, after an absence of some fifteen years; and this took place after he had taken an active pai't in the question of annexing Texas to the United States, adding a new sense of obligation to my feeling of gratitude. In the stirring questions that have agitated the country, it was my misfortune sometimes to differ from him, but it is a matter of heartfelt gratification for me to know that our personal relations remained unaltered. And, sir, it will be a source of pleasant, though sad, reflection to me throughout life to remember, that on the last day on which he occupied his seat in this chamber, his body worn down by disease, but his mind as vigorous as ever, we held a somewhat extended conversation on the exciting topics of the day, in which the same kind feelings, which had so strongly impressed me in youth, were still manifested toward me by the veteran statesman. But, sir, he is gone from among us ; his voice will never again be heard in this chamber ; his active and vigorous mind will participate no more in our councils ; his spirit has left a world of trouble, care, and anxiety, to join the spirits of those patriots and statesmen who have preceded him to a brighter and better world. If, as many believe, the spirits of the departed hover around the places they have left, I earnestly pray that his may soon be permitted to look back upon our country, which he has left in excitement, confusion, and apprehension, restored to calm- ness, security, and fraternal feeling, as broad as the bounds of our Union, and as fixed as the eternal principles of justice, in which our Grovernment has its foundation. Mr. CLEMENS said..- - I do not expect, Mr. President, to add any thing to what has already been said of the illustrious man, whose death we .alb so deeply deplore ; but silence upon an occasion like this, would by no means meet the expectations of those whose representative I am. To borrow a figure from the Senator from Kentucky, the brightest star in the brilliant galaxy of the Union has gone out, and Ala- 20 bama claims a place among the chief mourners over the event. Differing often from the great Southern statesman on questions of public policy, she has yet always accorded due homage to his ge- nius, and stiU more to that blameless purity of life which entitles him to the highest and the noblest epitaph which can be graven upon a mortal tomb. For more than forty years an active partici- pant in all the fierce struggles of party, and sm-rounded by those corrupting influences to which the politician is so often subjected, his personal character remained not only untarnished, but unsus- pected. He walked through the flames, and even the hem of his garment was unscorched. It is no part of my purpose to enter into a recital of the public acts of JouN C. Calhoun. It has already been partly done by his colleague; but even that, in my judgment, was unnecessary. Years after the celebrated battle of Thermopylae, a traveller, on ^dsiting the spot, found a monument with the simple inscription, " Stranger, go tell at Lacedsemon that we died in obedience to her laws." " Why is it," he asked, " that the names of those who feU here are not inscribed on the stone ?" " Because," was the proud reply, " it is impossible that any Grreek should ever forget them." Even so it is with him of whom I speak. His acts are graven on the hearts of his countrymen, and time has no power to obliterate the characters. Throughout this broad land — " The meanest rill, the mightiest river. Rolls mingling with his fame forever." Living, sir, in an age distinguished above all others for its intel- ligence, surrounded throughout his whole career by men, any one of whom would have marked an era in the world's history, and stamped the time in which he lived with immortality, Mr. Caluoun yet won an intellectual eminence, and commanded an admiration not only unsurpassed but unequalled, in all its parts, by any of his giant compeers. That great light is now extinguished ; a place in this Senate is made vacant which cannot be filled. The sad tidings have been borne upon the lightning's wing to the remotest corners of the Republic, and millions of freemen are now mourning with us over all that is left of one who was scai'cely "lower than the angels." 21 I may be permitted, ?.Ir. President, to express my gratification at what we have heard and witnessed this day. Kentucky has been heard through the lips of one, who is not only her greatest statesman, but the world's greatest living orator. The great ex- pounder of the Constitution, whose massive intellect seems to com- prehend and give clearness to all things beneath the sun, has spoken for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. From every quarter, the voice of mourning is mingled with notes of the high- est admiration. These crowded galleries, the distinguished gen- tlemen who fill this floor, all indicate that here have " Bards, artists, sages, reverently met, To waive each separating plea Of sect, clime, party, and degree. Ail honoring liim on whom nature all honor ahed." The resolutions were then unanimously adopted. f IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES; ■^♦^ Tuesday, AjjtU 2, 1850. The remains of the deceased were brought into the Senate at 12 o'clock, attended by the Committee of Arrangements and the Pall- bearers. COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS. Mr. mason, Mr. DAVIS, of Miss. Mr. ATCHISON, Mr. dodge, of Wisconsin, Me. DICKINSON, Mr. GREENE. PALL-BEARERS. Mr. MANGUM, Mr. clay, Mr. WEBSTER, Mr.. CASS, Mr. king, Mr. BERRIEN. The funeral cortege left the Senate chamber for the Congres- sional Burial Ground, (where the body was temporarily deposited,) attended by the President of the United States, both Houses of Congress, the Justices of the Supreme Coui-t, Heads of Depart- ments, the Diplomatic Corps, officers of the Army and Navy, the corporate authorities of the city of Washington, citizens, strangers, &c., &c. A SERMOjV PREACHED IN THE SENATE CHAMBER APRIL 2, 1850, AT THE FUNERAL OF THE HON. JOHN C. CALHOUN, SENATOR OF THE U. S. FROM SOUTH CAROLINA, BY THE REV. C. M. BUTLER, D. D., CHAPLAIN OF THE SENATE. I have said ye are gods, and all of yon are children of the Most High ; but ye shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes. — Psalm Ixxxii, 6, 7. One of the princes is fallen ! A prince in intellect ; a prince in his sway over human hearts and minds ; a prince in the wealth of his own generous affections, and in the rich revenues of ad- miring love poured into his heart ; a prince in the dignity of his demeanor — this prince has fallen — fallen! And ye all, his friends and peers, illustrious statesmen, orators, and warriors — "I have said ye are gods, and all of you are children of the Most High ; hut ye shall die like men, and fall like this one of the princes !" The praises of the honored dead have been, here and elsewhere, fitly spoken. The beautifully blended benignity, dignity, simpli- city, and purity of the husband, the father, and the friend; the integrity, sagacity, and energy of the statesman; the compressed intenseness, the direct and rapid logic of the orator; all these have been vividly portrayed by those who themselves illustrate what they describe. There seem still to linger around this hall echoes of the voices, which have so faithfully sketched the life, so happily discriminated the powers, and so affectionately eulogized the virtues of the departed, that the muse of history will note down the words, as the outline of her future lofty narrative, her nice analysis, and her glowing praise. 23 24 But the echo of those eulogies dies away. All that was mortal of their honored object lies here unconscious, in the theatre of his glory. "Lord of the lion heart and eagle eye" — there he lies! that strong heart still, that bright eye dim ! Another voice claims youi" eai*. The minister of God, standing over the dead, is sent to say — "Ye are gods, and all of you are children of the Most High ; hut ye shall die like men, and fall like one of the princes." He is sent to remind you that there are those here, not visible to the eye of sense, who are greater than the greatest of ye all — even Death, and Death's Lord and Master. Death is here. I see him stand over his prostrate victim, and grimly smile, and shake at us his unsated spear, and bid us all attend this day on him. He is King to-day, and leads us all cap- tive in his train, to swell his triumph and proclaim his power. And there is no visitant that can stand before the soul of man, with such claims on his awed, intent, and teachable attention. "When, as on a day, and in a scene like this, he holds us in his presence and bids us hear him — who can dare to disregard his mandate ? Oh, there is no thought or fact, having reference to this brief scene of things, however it may come with a port and tone of dignity and power, which does not dwindle into meanness in the presence of that great thought, that great fact, which has entered and dark- ened the Capitol to-day — Death ! To make us see that, by a law perfectly inevitable and irresistible, soul and body are soon to sepa- rate ; that this busy scene of earth is to be suddenly and forever left ; that this human heart is to break through the cux-le of warm, congenial, familiar, and fostering sympathies and associations, and to put off, all alone, into the silent dark — this is the object of the dread message to us of death. And as that message is spoken to a soul which is conscious of sin ; which knows that it has not within itself resources for self-purification, and self-sustaining peace and joy ; which realizes, in the very core of its conscience, retribution as a moral law ; it comes fraught with the unrest, which causes it to be at once dismissed, or which lodges it in the soul, a visitant whose first coming is gloom, but whose continued presence shall be glory. Then the anxious spirit, peering out with intense eai'- nestness into the dark unknown, may, in vain, question earth of 25 the destiny of the soul, and lift to heaven the passionate invoca- tion — " Answer me, burning stars of night Where hath the spirit gone ; Which, past the reacli of mortal sight, E'en as a breeze hath flown?" And tlie stars answer him, " We roll In pomp and power on high ; But of the never dying soul, Ask things that cannot die !" " Things that cannot die !" God only can tell us of the spirit- world. He assures us, by his Son, that death is the child of sin. He tells us what is the power of this king of terrors. He shows us that in sinning " Adam all die." He declares to us that, sinful by nature and by practice, we are condemned to death ; that we are consigned to wo ; that we are unfit for Heaven ; that the con- dition of the soul which remains thus condemned and unchanged, is far drearier and more dreadful beyond, than this side, the grave. No wonder that men shrink from converse with death ; for all his messages are woful and appalling. But, thanks be to God ! though death be here, so also is death's Lord and Master. " As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." That Saviour, Christ, assures us that all who repent, and forsake their sins, and believe in him, and live to him, shall rise to a life glorious and eternal, with Him and His, in Heaven. He tells us that if we are his, those sharp shafts which death rattles in our ears to-day, shall but transfix, and only for a season, the garment of our mortality ; and that the emancipated spirits of the righteous shall be borne, on angel wings, to that peaceful paradise where they shall enjoy perpetual rest and felicity. Then it need not be a gloomy message which we deliver to you to- day, that " ye shall die as men, and fall like one of the princes ;" for it tells us that the humblest of men may be made equal to the angels ; and that earth's princes may become " kings and priests unto God !" In the presence of these simplest yet grandest truths ; with these thoughts of death and the conqueror of death ; with this splendid trophy of his power proudly held up to our view by death, I need utter to you no common-place on the vanity of our mortal life, the 26 inevitableness of its termination, and the solemnities of our after- being. Here and now, on this theme, the silent dead is preaching to you more impressively than could the most eloquent of the living. You feel now, in your inmost heart, that that great upper range of things with which you are connected as immortals ; that moral administration of God, who stretches over the infinite of existence ; that magnificent system of ordered governments, to whose lower circle we now belong, which consists of thrones, dominions, princi- palities, and powers, which rise — " Orb o'er orb, and height o'er height," to the enthroned Supreme ; you feel that this, your high relation to the Infinite and Eternal, makes poor and low the most august and imposing scenes and dignities of earth, which flit, like shadows, through your three-score years and ten. Oh, happy will it be, if the vivid sentiment of the horn- become the actuating conviction of the life ! Happy will it be, if it take its place in the centre of the soul, and inform all its thoughts, feelings, principles, and aims! Then shall this lower system of human things be con- sciously linked to, and become part of, and take glory from that spiritual sphere, which, all unseen, encloses us, whose actors and heroes are "angels and archangels, and all the company of heaven." Then would that be permanently and habitually felt by all, which was here, and in the other chamber yesterday so elo- quently expressed, that "vain are the personal strifes and party contests in which you daily engage, in view of the great account which you may all so soon be called upon to render;"* and that " it is unbecoming and presumptuous in those who are the tenants of an hour in this earthly abode, to wrestle and struggle together with a violence which would not be justifiable if it were your per- petual home."t Then, as we see to-day, the sister States, by their Representatives, linked hand in hand, in mournful attitude, around the bier of one in whose fame they all claim a share, we should look upon you as engaged in a sacrament of religious patriotism, whose spontaneous, unpremeditated vow, springing consentient * .Mr. VVimhrop's speech in the House of Representatives. fMr. Clay's speech in the Senate. 27 from all your hearts, and going up unitedly to Leaven, would be • " Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable !" But I must no longer detain you. May we all — " So live, tliat when our summons comes to join The innumerable caravan, that moves To that mysterious realm, where each shall take His chamber in the silent halls of death, We go not like the quarry-slave at night Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed By an unfaltering trust, approach our grave Like one who wraps tlie drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to pleasant dreamo. 28 In the Senate of the United States, Ap'il Sd, 1850. Resolved, As a mark of the respect entertained by the Senate, for the memory of the hxte John Caldwell Calhoun, a Senator from South Carolina, and for his long and distinguished service in the jmblic councils, that his remains be removed at the pleasure of his surviving family, in charge of the Sergeant-at-Arms, and attended by a committee of the Senate, to the place designated for their interment in the bosom of his native State ; and that such committee, to consist of sis Senators, be appointed by the President of the Senate, who shall have full power to carry the foregoing resolution into effect. Attest: ASBURY DICKINS, Secretary. In the Senate of the United States, April m, 1850. In pursuance of the foregoing resolution — Mr. Mason, Mr. Davis, of Miss., Mr. Berrien, Mr. Webster, Mr. Dickinson, and Mr. Dodge, of Iowa, were appointed the committee. Attest: ASBUHY DICKINS, Secretary. In the Senate of the United States, April 9th, 1850. Mr. Webster having been, on his motion, excused from serving on the committee to attend the remains of the late John C. Calhoun to the State of South Carolina, On motion, by Mr. Mason, Ordered, That a member be appointed by the Vice President to supply the vacancy, and Mr. Clarke was appointed. Attest: ASBURY DIGKINS, Secretary. 29 In the Senate or the United States, April Zd, 1850. Resolved, That the Vice President be requested to communicate to the Executive of the State of South Carolina, information of the death of the Hon. John C. Calhoun, late a Senator from the said State. Attest: ASBURY DICKINS, Secretary. Senate Chamber, April Zd, 1850. Sir: In pursuance of a resolution of the Senate, a copy of which is enclosed, it becomes my duty to communicate to you the painful intelligence of the decease of the Hon. John Caldwell Calhoun, late a Senator of the United States from the State of South Carolina, who died in this city the 31st ultimo. I have the honor to be, sir, your obedient servant, MILLARD FILLMORE, Vice President of the U. S., and President of the Senate. His excellency, Governor Of the State of South Carolina, Columbia. Senate of the United States, Washington city, April 4:th, 1850. To his excellency, W. B. Seabrook, Governor of South Carolina. Sir : I have the honor to make known to you, that a committee of the Senate has been appointed to attend the remains of their late honored associate, Mr. Calhoun, to the place that may be designated for his interment in his native State, when the surviving family shall express a wish for their removal. It is desirable to the committee to know whether this removal is contemplated by them ; and, should it be, that they be informed as soon as may be, (but entirely at the convenience of the family,) when they may desire it. /^ 30 Knowing the deep interest that will be taken by the State of South Carolina in the matter spoken of, I take the liberty, by this note, of asking that you will, at the proper time, learn what may be necessary to answer the foregoing inquiry, and apprise me, as chairman of the committee, a few days in advance. With great respect, I have the honor to be, &c., &c., &c., J. M. MASON. Washington, Ai^ril \^th, 1850. His excellency, W. B. Seabrook, Governor of South Carolina. Sir : I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 11th instant, handed to me by Mr. Ravenel; and, on behalf of my associates on the committee of the Senate, and of myself, to accept the hospitalities you have kindly proffered to us on behalf of the State, on our arrival in South Carolina. We are directed, by the order of the Senate, to attend the remains of Mr. Calhoun " to the place designated for their inter- ment in his native State" — a duty we expect strictly to discharge, and are gratified to find by your communication that it will be in accordance with the wishes of your fellow-citizens of Carolina. Mr. Ravenel, of the committee of South Carolina, will have apprised you of the time of our probable arrival in Charleston, which we learn will be on Thursday, the 25th of this month. With great respect, I have the honor to be, &c., &c., &c., J. M. MASON, Chairman Committee of Senate PROCEEDINGS HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ■^♦^ IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Wasuington, Ajjril 1st, 1850. Mr. Vinton, rising, said tlaat the House might soon expect to receive the usual message from the Senate, announcing the melan- choly event occurring yesterday, (the death of the Hon. Senator Calhoun.) Instead of proceeding with the ordinary business of legislation, he would therefore move the suspension of the rules, that the House might take a recess until the Senate were ready to make that communication. The question on this motion being put, it was unanimously agreed to. So the House then took a recess until one o'clock and ten minutes, p. m., at which hour the Secretary of the Senate, Mr. Dickins, appearing at the bar — The Speaker called the House to order. The Secretary of the Senate then announced that he had been directed to communicate to the House information of the death of John C. Calhoun, of South Carolina, late a Senator from the State of South Carolina, and delivered the resolutions adopted by the Senate on the occasion. Mr. HOLMES, of South Carolina, rose and addressed the House as follows : — It becomes, Mr. Speaker, my solemn duty to announce to this House the decease of the honorable John C. Calhoun, a Senator of the State of South Carolina. He expired at his lodgings in this city yesterday morning, at seven o'clock. He lives no longer among the living; he sleeps the sleep of a long night, which 31 32 knows no dawning. The sun which rose so brightly on this morning, brought to him no healing in its beams. We, the Representatives of our State, come to sorrow over the dead ; but the virtue, and the life, and the services of the deceased, were not confined by metes and bounds ; but, standing on the broad expanse of this Confederacy, he gave his genius to the States, and his heart to his entire country. Carolina will not, therefore, be suifered to mourn her honored son in secret cells and solitary shades ; but her sister States will gather around her in this palace of the nation, and, bending over that bier, weep as she weeps, and mourn with the deep, afflictive mourning of her heart. Yes, sir, her honored son — honored in the associations of his birth, which occurred when the echoes and the shouts of freedom had not yet died along his native hills, born of parents who had partaken of the toils, been affected by the struggles, and fought in the battles for liberty — seemed as if he were baptized in the very fount of freedom. Reared amid the hardy scenery of nature, and amid the stern, pious, and reserved population, unseduced yet by the temp- tations, and unnerved by the luxuries of life, he gathered from surrounding objects, and from the people of his association, that peculiar hue and coloring which so transcendently marked his life. Unfettered by the restraints of the school-house, he wandered in those regions which surrounded his dwelling unmolested, and indulged those solitary thoughts, in rambling through her mighty forests, which gave that peculiar cast of thinking and reflection to his mighty soul. He was among a people who knew but few books, and over whose minds learning had not yet thrown its effulgence. But they had the Bible ; and, with his pious parents, he gathered rich lore, which surpasses that of Glreek or Roman story. At an age when youths are generally prepared to scan the classics, he was yet uninitiated in their rudiments. Under the tuition of the venerable Dr. Waddel^ his relative and friend, he quickly acquired what that gentleman was able to impart, and even then began to develop those mighty powers of clear perception, rapid analysis, quick comprehension, vast generalization, for which he was subsequently so eminently distinguished. He remained but a very short time at his school, and returned again to his rustic employments. But the spirit had been awakened — the inspiration 33 had come like to a spirit from on high ; and he felt that within him were found treasures that learning was essential to unfold. Ho gathered up his patrimony, he hastened to the College of Yale, and there, under the tuition of that accomplished scholar and profound theologian. Rev. Dr. Dwight, he became in a short period the first among the foremost, indulging not in the enjoyments, in the lusuries, and the dissipations of a college life, but with toil severe, with energy unbending, with devotion to his studies, he became (to use the language of a contemporary) " a man among boys." In a conflict intellectual with his great master, the keen eye of Dr. Dwight discerned the great qualifications which marked the man, and prophesied the honors that have fallen in his pathway. He was solitary, and associated not much with his class. He indulged his propensity to solitude ; he walked among the elms that surround that ancient college ; and in the cells, in the secret shades of that institution, he felt that dawning on his mind which was to precede the brighter and the greater day ; and raising himself from the materiality around him, he soared on the wings of contemplation to heights sublime, and wending his flight along the zodiac raised his head among the stars. The honors of the college became his meed, and departing thence with the blessings and the benedictions of his venerable instructor, he repaired for a short period to the school of Litchfield, and there imbibed those principles of the common law, based upon the rights of man, and throwing a cordon around the British and the American citizen. He left, and upon his return home was greeted by the glowing presence of his friends, who had heard from a distance the glad tidings of his studies and his success. He took at once his position among his neighbors. He was sent by them to the councils of the State ; and there, amid the glittering array of lofty intellects and ennobled characters, he became first among the first. But that sphere was too limited for the expansibility of a mind which seemed to know no limit but the good of all mankind. At the age of twenty-eight he was transferred to this Hall. He came not sii', to a bower of ease ; he came not in the moment of a sunshine of tranquillity ; he came when the country was disturbed by dissension from within, and pressed out by the great powers of Europe, then contending for the mastery of the world, and uniting 3 34 and Iiarmonizing in this, and this alone — the destruction of American institutions, the annihilation of American trade. The whole country (boy as I then was, I well remember) seemed as if covered with an eternal gloom. The spirits of the best men seemed crushed amid that pressure, and the eye of hope scarce found con- solation in any prospect of the future. But he had not been long in these Halls, before he took the gauge and measurement of the depth of these calamities, and the compass of its breadth. He applied himself most vigorously to the application of the remedies to so vital a disease. He found that mistaken policy had added to the calamities on the ocean, that still further calamity of fettering, with a restrictive system, the very motions and energies of the people. He looked down and saw that there was a mighty pres- sure, a great weight upon the resources of this country, which time had gradually increased, and he resolved at once, with that resolu- tion which characterized him — with that energy which impelled him direct to his purpose — to advise what was considered a remedy too great almost for the advice of any other — once, weak as we were in numbers, unprepared as we were in arms, diminished as were our resources, to bid defiance to Britain, and assume the attitude of a conflicting nation for its rights. Fortunately for the country that advice was taken, and then the great spu-it of America, released from her shackles, burst up, and made her leave her incumbent, prostrate condition, and stand erect laefore the people of the world, and shake her spear in bold defiance. In tliat war, his counsels contributed as much, I am informed, as those of any man, to its final success. At a period when our troops on the frontier, under the command of the Governor of New York, were about to retire from the line, and that Governor had written to Mr. Madison that he had exhausted his own credit, and the credit of all those whose resources he could command, and his means were exhausted, and, unless in a short period money was sent on to invigorate the troops, the war must end, and our country bow down to a victorious foe ; sir, upon that occasion, Mr. Madison became so disheartened that he assembled his counsellors, and asked for advice and aid, but advice and aid they had not to give. At length Mr. Dallas, the Secretary of the Treasury, said to Mr. Madison — you arc sick; retire to your 35 chamber ; leave the rest to us. I will send to the Capitol for the youthful Hercules, who hitherto has borne the war upon his shoulders, and he will counsel us a remedy. Mr. Calhoun came. He ad^^sed an appeal to the States for the loan of their credit. It seemed as if a new light had burst upon the Cabinet. His advice was taken. The States generously responded to the appeal. These were times of fearful import. We were engaged in war with a nation whose resources were ample, while ours were crippled. Our ships of war, few in number, were compelled to go forth on the broad bosom of the deep, to encounter those fleets which had sig- nalized themselves at the battles of Aboukir and Trafalgar, and annihilated the combined navies of France and Spain. But there was an inward strength — there was an undying confidence — in the hearts of a free people ; and they went forth to battle and to conquest Sii', the clang of arms, and the shouts of victory, had scarcely died along the dark waters of the Niagara — the war upon the plains of Orleans had just gone out with a blaze of glory — when all eyes were instinctively turned to this youthful patriot, who had rescued his country in the dark hour of her peril. Mr. Monroe transferred him to his Cabinet ; and upon that occasion, so confused was the Department of War, so complicated and disordered, that Mr. William Lowndes, a friend to Mr. Calhoun, advised him against risking the high honors he had achieved upon this floor, for the uncertain victories of an Executive position. But no man had pondered more thoroughly the depths of his own mind, and the purposes of his own heart — none knew so well the undaunted resolution and energy that always characterized him ; and he resolved to accept, and did. He related to me what was extremely characteristic ; he went into the Department, but became not of it for a while. He gave no directions — he let the machinery move on by its own impetus. In the mean time he gathered, with that minuteness which characterized him, all the facts connected with the working of the machinery — with that power of generaliza- tion which was so remarkable, combined together in one sj^stem all the detached parts, instituted the bureaus, imparting individual responsibility to each, and reqixiring from them that responsibility in turn, but uniting them all in beautiful harmony, and creating 36 in tlie workings a perfect unity. And so complete did that work come from his hands, that at this time there has been no change material in this Department. It has passed through the ordeal of another war, and it still remains fresh, and without symptoms of decay. He knew that if we were to have wars, we should have the science to conduct them ; and be therefore directed his atten- tion to West Point, which, fostered by his care, became the great school of tactics and of military discipline, the benefits of which have so lately been experienced in the Mexican campaign. But, sir, having finished this work, his mind instinctively looked for some other gi-eat object on which to exercise its powers. He beheld the Indian tribes, broken down by the pressure and the advances of civilization, wasting away before the vices, and ac- quiring none of the virtues, of the white man. His heart expanded with a philanthropy as extensive as the human race. He imme- diately conceived the project of collecting them into one nation, of transferring them to the other side of the great river, and freeing them at once from the temptations and the cupidity of the Christian man. Sir, he did not remain in office to accomplish this great object. But he had laid its foundation so deep, he had spread out his plans so broad, that he has reared to himself, in the establishment of that people, a brighter monument, more glorious trophies, than can be plucked upon the plains of war. The triumphs of war are marked by desolated towns and conflagrated fields ; his triumphs will be seen in the collection of the Indian tribes, constituting a confederation among themselves, in the school-houses in the valleys, in the churches that rise with their spires from the hill top, in the clear sunshine of Heaven. The music of that triumph is not heard in the clangor of the trumpet, and the rolling of the drum, but swells from the clang of the anvil, and the tones of the water- wheel, and the cadence of the mill-stream, that rolls down for the benefit of the poor red man. Sir, he paused not in his career of usefulness; he was trans- ferred, by the votes of a gi-ateful peoiDle, to the chair of the second ofiice of the Government. There he presided with a firmness, an impartiality, with a gentleness, with a dignity, that all admired. And yet it is not given unto man to pass unscathed the fiery fur- 37 nace of tMs world. While presiding over that body of ambassadors from sovereign States, while regulating their councils, the tongue of calumny assailed him, and accused him of ofl&cial corruption in the Rip Rap contract. Indignantly he left the Chair, demanded of the Senators an immediate investigation by a committee, and came out of the fire like gold refined in the furnace. From that time to the day that terminated his life, no man dared to breathe aught against the spotless purity of his character. But, while in that chair, Mr. Calhoun perceived that there was arising a great and mighty influence to over-shadow a portion of this land. From a patriotic devotion to his country he consented, on this floor, in 1816, upon the reduction of the war duties, to a gradual diminution of the burdens, and thus saved the manufac- turers from annihilation. But that interest, then a mere stripling, weak, and requiring nurture, fostered by this aliment, soon increased in strength, and became potent, growing with a giant's growth, and attained a giant's might, and was inclined tyrannously to use it as a giant. He at once resigned his seat, gave up his dignified position, mingled in the strifes of the arena, sounded the tocsin of alarm, waked up the attention of the South, himself no less active than those whom he thus aroused, and at length advised his own State, heedless of danger, to throw herself into the breach for the protection of that sacred Constitution, whose every precept he had imbibed, whose every condition he had admired. Sir, although hostile fleets floated in our waters, and armies threatened our cities, he quailed not ; and at length the pleasing realization came to him, and to the country, like balm to the wounded feelings, and by a generous compromise on all parts, the people of the South were freed from onerous taxation, and the North yet left to enjoy the fruits of her industry, and to progress in her glorious advancement in all that is virtuous in industry, and elevated in sentiment. But he limited not his scope to our domestic horizon. He looked abroad at our relations with the nations. He saw our increase of strength. He measured our resources, and was willing at once to settle all our difficulties with foreign powers on a permanent basis. With Britain we had causes of contention, of deep and long standing. He resolved, if the powers of his intellect could avail aught before he departed hence, that these questions should be settled, for a nation's honor and a nation's safety. He faltered not. I know (for I was present) that when the Ashburton treaty was about to be made — when there were apprehensions in the Cabinet that it would not be sanctioned by the Senate — a member of that Cabinet called to consult Mr. Calhoun, and to ask if he would give it liis generous support. The reply of Mr. Calhoun at that moment was eminently satisfactory, and its annunciation to the Cabinet gave assurance to the distinguished Secretary of State, who so eminently had conducted this important negotiation. He at once considered the work as finished; for it is the union of action in the intellectual, as in the physical, world, that moves the spheres into harmony. When the treaty was before the Senate, it was considered in secret session ; and I never shall forget, that sitting upon yonder side of the House, the colleague of Mr. Calhoun — who at that time was not on social terms with him — my friend, the honorable Mr. Preston, whose heart throbbed with an enthusiastic love of all that is elevated — left his seat in the Senate, and came to my seat in the House, saying, "I must give vent to my feelings; Mr. Calhoun has made a speech which has settled the question of the Northeastern boundary. All his friends — nay, all the Senators — have collected around to congratulate him, and I have come out to express my emotions, and declare that he has covered himself with a mantle of glory." Sh*, after a while he retired from Congress ; but the unfortunate accident on board the Princeton, which deprived Virginia of two of her most gifted sons, members of the Cabinet, immediately sug- gested the recall of Mr. Calhoun from his retirement in private life, and the shades of his own domicil, to aid the country in a great exigency. His nomination as Secretary of State was sent to the Senate, and, without reference to a committee, was unanimously confu-med. Sir, when he arrived here, he perceived that the Southern country was in imminent peril, and that the arts and intrigues of Great Britain were about to wrest from us that imperial territory which is now the State of Texas. By his wisdom, and the exercise of his great administrative talents, the intrigues of Great Britain were defeated, and that portion of the sunny South was soon annexed to this Kepublic. 39 "With the commencement of Mr. Polk's administration he retired once more from jiublic life, but he retired voluntarily. IMr. Buchanan (for I might as well relate the fact) called upon me, took mc to the embrasure of one of those windows, and said : " I am to be Secretary of State ; the President appreciates the high talents of Mr. Caluoun, and considers the country now encircled by danger upon the Oregon question. Go to Mr. Calhoun, and tender to him the mission to the Court of St. James — special or general, as he may determine — with a transfer of the Oregon question entirely to his charge." Never can I forget how the muscles of his face became tense, how his great eye rolled, as he received the terms of the proposal. " No, sir — no, (he replied.) If the embassies of all Europe were clustered into one, I would not take it at this time ; my country is in danger; here ought to be the negotiation, and here will I stand." Sir, he retired to his farm ; but the President, in his inaugural, had indicated so strongly his assertion of the entirety of the Oregon treaty ; had inspirited the people of the West almost to madness, and in like manner had dispirited the merchants of the East, and of the North and South, that a presentiment of great dangers stole over the hearts of the people, and a war seemed inevitable, with the greatest naval jDOwer of the earth. Impelled by their apprehensions, the merchants sent a message to Mr. Cal- houn, and begged him again to return to the councils of the nation. His predecessor generously resigned. He came, and when he came, though late, he beheld dismay on the countenances of all. There was a triumphant majority in both parts of this Capitol of the Democratic party, who, with a few exceptions, were for carry- ing out the measures of Mr. Polk. The Whigs, finding that they were too few to stem the current, refused to breast themselves to the shock. But when Mr. Calhoun announced on the floor of the Senate, the day after his arrival, his firm determination to resist and save from the madness of the hour this great country, they immediately rallied, and soon his friends in this House, and in the Senate, gathered around him, and the country was safe. Reason triumphed, and the Republic was relieved of the calamities of a war. This was the last great work he ever consummated. 40 But he saw other evils ; he beheld this Republic about to lose its poise from a derangement of its weights and levers ; he was anxious to adjust the balance, and to restore the equilibrium ; he exercised his mind for that purpose; he loved this Union, for I have often heard him breathe out that love ; he loved the equality of the States, because he knew that upon that equality rested the stability of the Government; he admired that compact — the Con- stitution of our fathers — and esteemed it as a great covenant between sovereign States, which, if properly observed, would make us the chosen people of the world. At length the acting of the spirit chafed the frail tenement of mortality, and, to the eye of his friends, the tide of life began to ebb; but, sir, with an undying confidence in his powers — with a consciousness of the dangers which encircled his physical nature, but without regard to his own sufferings, in the solitudes of dis- ease, unable in the midst of disease even to hold a pen, he dictated his last great speech. That speech has gone forth to the world, and the judgment of that world will now impartially be stamped upon it. Sir, when his health began gradually to recover, his spirit impelled him, against the advice of his friends, into the Senate chamber ; and there, with a manliness of purpose, with a decision of tone, with a clearness of argument, with a rapidity of thought, he met and overthrew his antagonists, one by one, as they came up to the attack. But weakened by the strife, although he retired victorious and encircled with a laurel wreath, he fell exhausted by his own efforts, and soon expired on the plains. And now where is he ? Dead, dead, sir ; lost to his country and his friends. " For him no more tlie blazing heartli shall burn, Xor wife nor ciiildrcn more shall he behold," nor sacred home. But he shall shortly rest amid his own native hills, witli no dirge but the rude music of the winds, and, after a while, no tears to moisten his grave but the dews of Heaven. But though dead, he still liveth ; he liveth in the hearts of his friends, in the memory of his services, in the respect of the States, in tlie affections, the devoted affections, of that household he cherished. He will live in the tomes of time, as they shall unfold their pages, rich with virtues, to the eyes of the yet unborn. 41 He lives, and will continue to live, for countless ages, in the advance of that science to which, by his intellect, he so much con- tributed, in the disenthralment of man from the restrictions of government, in the freedom of intercourse of nations, and kindreds, and tongues, which makes our common mother earth throw from her lap her bounteous plenty unto all her children. And it may be, that with the example set to other nations, there shall arise a union of thought and sentiment, and that the strong ties of interest, and the silken cords of love, may unite the hearts of all, until, from the continents and the isles of the sea, there will come up the gratulations of voices that shall mingle with the choral song of the angelic host — "Peace on earth; good will to all mankind.',' I move, sir, the adoption of the following resolutions : — Resolved, That this House has heard, with deep sensibility, the announcement of the death of the Hon. John C. Calhoun, a Senator from the State of South Carohna. Resolved, That, as a testimony of respect for tlie memory of the deceased, the members and officers of this House will wear the usu:il badge of mourning for thirty days. Resolved, That the proceedings of this House, in relation to tlie deatli of tlie Hon. John C. Calhodn, be communicated to tlie family of the deceased by the Clerk. Resolved, That tliis House will attend the funeral of the deceased in a body; and as a furtlier mark of respect for liis memory, that it do now adjourn. Mr. WINTHPv.OP rose to second the resolutions offered by Mr. Holmes , and proceeded as follows : — I am not unaware, Mr. Speaker, that the voice of New England has already been heard to-day, in its most authentic and most impressive tones, in the other wing of this Capitol. But it has been suggested to me, and the suggestion has met with the promptest assent from my own heart, that here, also, that voice should not be altogether mute on this occasion. The distinguished person, whose death has been announced to us in the resolutions of the Senate, belonged, not indeed, to us. It is not ours to pronounce his eulogy. It is not ours, certainly, to appropriate his fame. But it is ours to bear witness to his character, to do justice to his virtues, to unite in paying honor to his memory, and to offer our heart-felt sympathies, as I now do, to those who have been called to sustain so great a bereavement. We have been told, sir, by more than one adventurous navigator, that it was worth all the privations and perils of a protracted voyage beyond the line, to obtain even a passing view of the 42 Southern Cross — that great constellation of tlie Southern hemis- phere. We can imagine, then, what would be the emotions of those who have always enjoyed the light of that magnificent luminary, and who have taken their daily and their nightly direc- tion from its refulgent rays, if it were suddenly blotted out from the sky. Such, sir, and so deep, I can conceive to be the emotions at this hour, of not a few of the honored friends and associates whom I see around me. Indeed, no one who has been ever so distant an observer of the course of public affairs, for a quarter of a century past, can fail to realize that a star of the first magnitude has been struck from our political firmament. Let us hope, sir, that it has only been trans- ferred to a higher and purer sphere, where it may shine on with undimmed brilliancy forever ! Ml*. Speaker, it is for others to enter into the details of Mr. Calhoun's life and services. It is for others to illustrate and to vindicate his peculiar opinions and principles. It is for me to speak of him only as he was known to the country at large, and to all, without distinction of party, who have represented the country of late years in either branch of the national councUs. And speaking of him thus, sir, I cannot hesitate to say, that, among what may be caUed the second generation of American statesmen, since the adoption of the Federal Constitution, there has been no man of a more marked character, of more pronounced qualities, or of a wider and more deserved distinction. The mere length and variety of his public service, in almost every branch of the National Government, running through a con- tinuous period of almost forty years — as a member of this House, as Secretary of War, as Vice President of the United States, as Secretary of State, and as Senator from his own adored and adoring South Carolina — would alone have secured him a conspicuous and permanent place upon our public records. But he has left better titles to remembrance than any which mere office can bestow. There was an unsullied purity in his private life ; there was an inflexible integrity in his public conduct ; there was an indescriba- ble fascination in his familiar conversation ; there was a condensed 43 energy in his formal discourse ; there was a quickness of percep- tion, a yigor of deduction, a directness, and a devotedness of purpose, in all that he said, or wrote, or did ; there was a Eomau dignity in his whole Senatorial deportment; which, together, made up a character which cannot fail to be contemplated and admired to the latest posterity. I have said, sir, that New England can appropriate no part f>f his fame. But we may he permitted to remember, that it was in our schools of learning and of law that he was trained up for the e-reat contests which awaited him in the forum of the Senate chamber. Nor can we forget how long, and how intimately, he was associated in the executive or deliberative branches of the Government, with more than one of our own most cherished statesmen. The loss of such a man, sir, creates a sensible gap in the public councils. To the State which he represented, and the section of country with which he was so peculiarly identified, no stranger tongue may venture to attempt words of adequate consolation. But let us hope that the event may not be without a wholesome and healing influence upon the troubles of the times. Let us heed the voice, which comes to us all, both as individuals and as public officers, in so solemn and signal a providence of God. Let us remember that, whatever happens to the Eepublic, we must die ! Let us reflect how vain are the personal strifes and partisan con- tests in which we daily engage, in view of the great account which we may so soon be called on to render ! As Cicero exclaimed, in considering the death of Crassus : " fallacem liominum spem, frarjilem que fortunam, et inanes nostras contentiones." Finally, sir, let us find fresh bonds of brotherhood and of union in the cherished memories of those who have gone before us ; and let VIS resolve that, so far as in us lies, the day shall never come when New England men may not speak of the great names of the South, whether among the dead or among the living, as of Ameri- cans and fellow countrymen ! Mr. VENABLE rose and said : — Mr. Speaker : In responding to the announcement just made by the gentleman from South Carolina, (Mr. Holmes,) I perform a sad 44 and melancholy office. Did I consult my feelings alone, I would be silent. In the other end of this building we have just heard the touching eloquence of two venerable and distinguished Sena- tors, his cotemporaries and compatriots. Their names belong to their country as well as his ; and I thought, while each was speak- ing, of the valiant warrior, clothed in armor, Avho, when passing the grave of one with whom he had broken lances and crossed weapons, dropped a tear upon his dust, and gave testimony to his skill, his valor, and his honor. He whose spii'it has fled needs no effort of mine to place his name on the bright page of history, nor would any eulogy which I might pronounce swell the vast tide of praises which will flow jjerennially from a nation's gratitude. The great American statesman who has fallen by the stroke of death, has left the impress of his mind upon the generations among whom he lived — has given to posterity the mines of his recorded thoughts to reward their labor with intellectual wealth — has left an example of purity and patriotism on which the wearied eye may rest — " And gaze upon the great, Where neitJier guilty glory glows, Nor despicable state." For more than forty years his name is conspicuous in our history. Born at the close of the Revolutionary war, he was in full maturity to guide the councils of his country in our second contest with England. Never unmindful of her claims upon him, he has de- voted a long life to her service, and has closed it, like a gallant warrior, with his armor buckled on him. " Death made no con- quest of this conqueror ; for now he lives in fame, though not in life." The only fame, sir, which he ever coveted — an impulse to great and honorable deeds — a fame which none can despise who have not renounced the virtues which deserve it. It is at least some relief to our hearts, now hea^^ug with sighs at this dispensa- tion of Heaven, that he now belongs to bright, to enduring history ; for his was one of " the few, the immortal names that were not born to die." Of his early history the gentleman who preceded me has spoken ; of his illustrious life I need not speak ; it is known to millions now living, and will be familiar to the world in after times. 45 But, sir, I propose to say something of hiin in his last days. Early in tho winter of 1848-9, his failing health gave uneasiness to his friends. A severe attack of bronchitis, complicated with an affection of the heart, disqualified him for the performance of his Senatorial duties, with the punctuality which always distinguished him. It was then that I became intimately acquainted with his mind, and, above all, with his heart. Watching by his bedside, and during his recovery, I ceased to be astonished at the power which his master-mind and elevated moral feelings had always exerted upon those who were included within the circle of his social intercourse. It was a tribute paid spontaneously to wisdom, genius, truth. Patriotism, honesty of purpose, and purity of motive, rendered active by the energies of such an intellect as hardly ever falls to any man, gathered around him sincere admirers and devoted friends. That many have failed to appreciate the value of the great truths which he uttered, or to listen to the warn- ings which he gave, is nothing new in the history of great minds. Bacon wrote for posterity, and men of profound sagacity always think in advance of their generation. His body was sinking under the invasion of disease before I formed his acquaintance, and he was passing from among us before I was honored with his friend- ship. I witnessed with astonishment the influence of his mighty mind over his weak physical structure. Like a powerful steam- engine on a frail bark, every revolution of the wheel tried its capacity for endurance to the utmost. But yet his mind moved on, and, as if insensible to the decay of bodily strength, put forth, without stint, his unequalled powers of thought and analysis, until nature well-nigh sunk under the imposition. His intellect pre- served its vigor while his body was sinking to decay. The men- struum retained its powers of solution, while the frail crucible which contained it was crumbling to atoms. During his late illness, which, with a short intermission, has continued since the com- mencement of this session of Congress, there was no abatement of his intellectual labors. They were directed, as Avell to the momen- tous questions now agitating the public mind, as to the completion of a work which imbodies his thoughts on the subject of govern- ment in general, and our own Constitution in particular; thus 46 distinguishing his last days by the greatest effort of his mind, and bequeathing it as his richest legacy to posterity. Cheerful in a sick chamber, none of the gloom which usually attends the progress of disease annoyed him ; severe in ascertaining the truth of conclusions, because unwilling to be deceived himself, he scorned to deceive others; skilful in appreciating the past, and impartial in his judgment of the present, he looked to the future as dependant on existing causes, and fearlessly gave utterance to his opinions of its nature and character ; the philosopher and the statesman, he discarded expedients by which men " construe the times to their necessities." He loved the truth for the truth's sake, and believed that to temporize is but to increase the evil which we seek to remove. The approach of death brought no indication of impatience — no cloud upon his intellect. To a friend who spoke of the time and manner in which it was best to meet death, he remarked : " I have but little concern about either ; I desire to die in the discharge of my duty; I have an unshaken reliance upon the providence of Gt)d." I saw him four days after his last appearance in the Senate chamber, gradually sinking under the power of his malady, with- out one murmur at his affliction, always anxious for the interest of his country, deeply absorbed in the great question which agitates the public mind, and earnestly desiring its honorable adjustment, unchanged in the opinions which he had held and uttered for many years, the ardent friend of the Union and the Constitution, and seeking the perpetuity of our institutions, by inculcating the prac- tice of justice and the duties of patriotism. Aggravated symptoms, on the day before his death, gave notice of his approaching end. I left him late at night, with but faint hopes of amendment; and, on being summoned early the next morning, I found him sinking in the cold embrace of death ; calm, collected, and conscious of his situation, but without any symptom of alarm, his face beaming with intelligence, without one indication of suffering or of pain. I watched his countenance, and the lustre of that bright eye remained unchanged, until the silver cord was broken, and then it went out in instantaneous eclipse. When I removed my hand from closing his eyes, he seemed as one who had fallen into a sweet and refreshing slumber. 47 Thus, sir, closed the days of John Caldwell Calhoun, the illustrious American statesman. His life and services shall sjieak of the greatness of by-gone days with undying testimony. Another jewel has fallen from our crown ; an inscrutable Providence has removed from among us one of the great lights of the age. But it is not extinguished. From a height, to which the shafts of malice or the darts of detraction never reach, to which envy cannot crawl, or jealousy approach, it will shine brighter and more glo- riously, sending its rays over a more extended horizon, and blessing mankind by its illumination. The friend of constitutional liberty will go to his writings for truth, and to his life for a model. We, too, should be instructed by his experience, whUe his presages for the future should infuse caution into om* counsels, and prudence into our actions. His voice, now no more heard in the Senate, wUl speak most potentially from the grave. Personal opposition has died with his death. The aspiring cannot fear him, nor the ambitious dread his elevation. His life has become history, and his thoughts the property of his countrymen. Sir, while we weep over his grave, let us be consoled by the assurance " that honor decks the turf that wraps his clay." He was our own, and his fame is also ours. Let us imitate his great example, in preferring truth and duty to the approbation of men, or the triumphs of party. Be wdling to stand alone for the right, nor surrender independence for any inducement. He was brought up in the society of the men of the Revolution, saw the work of our Constitution since its formation, was profoundly skilled in con- struing its meaning, and sought, by his wisdom and integrity, to give permanency to the Government which it created. If such high purposes be ours, then our sun, like his, will go down serenely, and we shall have secured " a peace above all other dig- nities — a calm and quiet conscience." The question was then taken on the resolutions offered by Mr. Holmes, and they were unanimously agreed to. And thereupon the House adjourned. APPENDIX. -*♦•- PROGRAMME OF PROCEEDINGS IN WASHINGTON ON THE REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS OF MR. CALHOUN. The remains of Mr. Calhoun will be brought to the Capitol in a hearse, by eight o'clock, a. m., in the morning of Monday, the 22d instant, in charge of the Sergeant-at-Arms, and will so remain in his charge, and with those assistants present who are to accom- pany it to the South. They will be at the Eastern front. Carriages will be sent for the committee of the Senate, and Mr. Venable and Mr. Holmes, of South Carolina, their guests, and for the committee from South Carolina, to their respective lodgings, to be there jyunctually at half -past seven. They will rendezvous at the Eastern front of the Capitol; and at eight o'clock punc- tually, a baggage-wagon, in charge of a messenger, will convey the baggage of the South Carolina committee, and have it on board before the procession arrives. The body, in charge of the Sergeant-at-Arms, with his assistants, and the committee, will leave the Capitol at eight o'clock, punc- tually, and proceed to the mail boat, passing on the southern side of Capitol Hill, and along Maryland Avenue. The Sergeant-at-Arms will communicate a copy of this to Daniel Ravenel, Esq., chairman of the committee for South Carolina, and to Mr. Venable and Mr. Holmes. (Signed) JAMES M. MASON. [Along the line of route, at Fredericksburg, Richmond, and Petersburg, Virginia, and at Wilmington, North Carolina, the remains of the departed statesman were received with the most profound respect.] 50 HONORS AT CHARLESTON, S. C, ON THE RECEPTION OF THE REMAINS OF MR. CALHOUN. The boom of the signal gun over the waters of Charleston harbor, on the morning of the 25th of April, 1850, announced that the mortal remains of Carolina's great statesman were approaching their native shores, to receive the last honors of a mourning people. At twelve, meridian, the steamer Nina, bearing the body, touched Smith's wharf; on board were the committee of the United States Senate and House of Representatives, the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Senate, the committee of citizens from Wilmington, North Caro- lina, the committee of Twenty-five from South Carolina, and the sub-committee of arrangements. The revenue cutter Gallatin, the steamers IMetamora and Pilot, acting as an escort, with colors at half mast and draped in mourning, lay in her wake. Profound silence reigned around — no idle spectator loitered on the spot — the curiosity incident to the hour was merged into a deep feeling of respect, that evinced itself by being present only where that sentiment could with most propriety be displayed. The solemn minute gun — the wail of the distant bell, the far oif spires shrouded in the drapery of grief — the hearse and its attendant mourners waiting on the spot, alone bore witness that the pulse of life still beat within the city — that a whole people in voiceless woe were about to receive and consign to earth all that was mortal of a great and good citizen. The arrangements for landing having been made, the Committee of Reception advanced, and, through its chairman, tendered a wel- come, and the hospitalities of the city, to the committee of citizens from Wilmington, North Carolina, to which the chairman of that committee feelingly responded. The body, enclosed in an iron case, 2)artially shaped to the form, was then borne by the Guard of Honor (clad in deep mourning, with white silk scarfs across the shoulder) from the boat to the magnificent funeral car drawn up to receive it ; the pall, prepared of black velvet, edged with heavy silk fringe, and enflounced in silver, with the escutcheon of the State of South Carolina in the centre and four corners, was spread over it. The pall-bearers, composed of twelve ex-Governors and Lieutenant Governors of the State, arranged themselves at the 51 sides of the car, the procession advanced, preceded by a military escort of three companies — the German Fusiliers, Washington Light Infantry, and Marion Artillery — under the command of Cap- tain Manigault. The various committees and family of the deceased followed in carriages, the drivers and footmen clad in mouming, with hat-bands and scarfs of white crape. In this order the funeral train slowly moved forward, to the sound of muffled drums, to the Citadel -square, the place assigned in the arrangements made, where the committee from the Senate of the United States would sur- render the remains under their charge to the Executive of South Carolina, and the funeral procession proceed to the City Hall. At the Citadel a most imposing spectacle was presented. The entire front and battlements were draped in mourning, and its wide portal heavily hung with black; the spacious area on the South was densely filled with the whole military force of the city, drawn up in proper array; at different points, respectively assigned them, stood the various orders of Free Masons, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Sons of Temperance, the Order of Rechabites, in their rich regalia, the difi"erent Fire Companies in uniform, the various Societies and Associations ; the pupils of public and private schools, with their tutors, bearing banners in- scribed with the names of the several States of the Confederacy, their arms, and mottoes ; the Seamen, with their pastor, the Rev. Mr. Yates, bearing a banner with this inscription, " The children of Old Ocean mourn for him," and citizens on horse and foot. The most perfect order prevailed; no sound was heard, but the subdued murmur of the collected thousands. At the appointed hour the funeral car slowly entered the grounds from the east, and halted before the gates of the Citadel ; the hush of death brooded over all as the hearse, towering aloft its mourning curtains waving in air, revealed to the assembled multitude the sarcophagus reposing within. In the centre of the square, and directly fronting the gates of the Citadel, stood the Governor of the State, attended by the mem- bers of the Senate and House of Representatives, and the delegates from difierent sections of the State. On the right the Mayor and Aldermen of the city, habited in deep mourning, their wands of office bound with crape ; on the left, the reverend the clergy, of all 52 denominations. In front of the funeral car were arranged the various committees, who had attended the removal of the remains from the seat of Government; at the proper moment they slowly advanced, with heads uncovered, preceded by the Sergeant-at-Arms of the United States Senate, with his golden rod, to the spot occupied by the Governor and suite. Alderman Banks, chair- man of the Committee of Reception, stood forth, and announced to the Governor the presence of the Hon. Mr. Mason, chairman of the Senate's committee, who, with a manner deeply solemn and impressive, thus surrendered his sacred trust : — " Governor Seabrook : " The Senate of the United States, by its order, ha.s deputed a committee of six Senators to bring back the remains of their colleague, your illustrious statesman, John Caldwell Calhoun, to his native State. He fell in the fullness of his fame, without stain or blot, without fear, and without reproach, a martyr to the great and holy cause to which his life had been devoted — the safety and equality of the Southern States in their Federal alliance. " It is no disparagement to your State or her people, to say their loss is irreparable, for Calhoun was a man of a century ; but to the entire South, the absence of his counsels can scarcely be sup- plied. With a judgment stern, with decided and indomitable purpose, there was united a political and moral purity, that threw around him an atmosphere which nothing unholy could breathe and yet live. But, bir, I am not sent here to eulogize your honored dead ; that has been already done in the Senate House, with the memories of his recent triumphs there clustering around us, and by those far abler than I. It is our melancholy duty only, which I have performed on behalf of the committee of the Senate, to surrender all that remains of him on earth to the State of South Carolina ; and, having done this, our mission is ended. We shall return to our duties in the Senate, aud those performed, to our separate and distant homes, bearing with us the treasured memory of his exalted worth, and the gi-eat example of his devoted and patriotic life." 53 Mr. Masox having concluded, Governor Seabrook responded: " I receive, Mr. Chairman, with the deepest emotions, the mortal remains of him for whom South Carolina entertained an unljounded aifection Implicitly relying on the faithful exercise of his great moral and intellectual endowments, on no occasion, for a period of about forty years, which constituted indeed his whole political life, did her confidence in him suffer the slightest abatement. Although the spirit that animated its tenement of clay now inhabits another and a purer mansion, yet the name of John Caldwell Calhoun will live while time shall be permitted to endure. That name is printed in indelible characters on the hearts of those whose feel- ings and opinions he so truly reflected, and will forever be fondly cherished, not only by his own countrymen, but by every human being who is capable of appreciating the influence of a gigantic intellect, unceasingly incited by the dictates of wisdom, virtue, and patriotism. " In the name of the people of the State he so dearly loved, I tender, through you, to the Senate of the United States, their warmest acknowledgments, for the honors conferred by that dis- tinguished body on the memory of our illustrious statesman ; and, by this committee, I ask their acceptance of their heartfelt grati- tude, for the very kind and considerate manner in which, gentle- men, the melancholy yet honorable task assigned you has been executed. " The first of April, 1850, exhibited a scene in the Halls of the Federal Congress, remarkable for its moral sublimity. On that day, the North and the South, the East and the West, together harmoniously met at the altar consecrated to the noblest afiec- tions of our nature, and, moved by a common impulse, portrayed, in strains of fervid eloquence, before the assembled wisdom of the land, the character and services of him around whose bier we are assembled. To every member of the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives, whose voice was heard on that solemn occasion. South Carolina profiers the right hand of fellowship. " I trust it will not be considered a departure from the strictest rules of propriety, to say to an honorable member of Congress before me, that the Palmetto State owes him a debt of gratitude, which, at her bidding, and in obedience to my own feelings, I am 54 imperatively summoned at tliis time to liquidate in part. From the first day of Mr. Calhoun's protraxjted illness, to the moment when death achieved his victory, you, Mr. Venable, were rarely alisent from his bed side. "With the anxious solicitude of a devoted friend, you ministered to his wants, and watched the reflux of that noble stream whose fertilizing powers were about to be buried in the great ocean of eternity. For services so disinterested, spon- taneously bestowed by a stranger, I offer the tribute of thanks, warm, from overflowing hearts." Mr. Venable replied : — "The manner in which your excellency has been pleased to refer to the attention which I was enabled to bestow on our illus- trious friend, has deeply afiected my heart. It is but the repeated expression of the feelings of the people of Charleston, on the same subject, contained in a resolution which has reached me, and for which manifestation of kindness I now return to you, and to them, my most sincere and heartfelt thanks. Nothing has so fully con- vinced me of the extended popularity, I should rather say, feeling of veneration, towards the statesman whose death has called us together to-day, as the high estimate which you and your people have placed upon the services of an humble friend. Sir, the im- pulses of humanity would have demanded nothing less, and that man is more than rewarded, who is permitted to soothe the pain or alleviate the suffering of a philosopher, sage, patriot, and states- man, so exalted above his cotemporaries, that were we not admon- ished by his subjection to the invasion of disease and death, we might well doubt whether he did not belong to a superior race. To be even casually associated with his memory, in the gratitude of a State, is more than a reward for ■ any services which I could render him. " Sir, as his life was a chronicle of instructive events, so his death but furnished a commentary on that life. It is said of Hampden, when in the agonies of death, rendered most painful by the nature of his wound, that he exclaimed — ' God of my fathers, save, save my country I' thus breathing the desire of his soul on earth into the ^-estibule of the court of heaven. So our illustrious friend, but a few hours before his departure, employed the last effort in i 55 whicli lie was enabled to utter more than a single sentence, saying, 'If I had my health and strength to devote one hour to my coixn- try in the Senate, I could do more than in my whole life.' lie is gone ! and when, in my passage here, I saw the manifestations of deep feeling, of heartfelt veneration, in Virginia and my own Carolina, I felt as one making a pilgrimage to the tomb of his father, whose sad heart was cheered by spontaneous testimonials of the merits of the one he loved and honored. But when, with this morning's dawn, I approached your harbor and saw the city in the peaceful rest of the Sabbath, heard not the stroke of a ham- mer, or the hum of voices engaged in the business of life ; when, from the deck of the steamer, in the midst of your harbor^ I could descry the habiliments of mourning which consecrated your houses ; the stillness — the solemn stillness — spoke a language that went to my heart. But when, added to this, I behold this vast multitude of mourners, I exclaim — ' A people's tears water the dust of one who loved and served them.' No military fame was his ; he never set a squadron in the field. The death of the civilian and pati'iot who loved his country, and his whole country, gave rise to this great demonstration of sorrow and regard. Permit me again to assure your excellency, and the people of Charleston, and of South Carolina, that I shall ever cherish, as one of the dearest recollec- tions of my life, the expressions of kindness which have been made to me as the friend and the companion, in the sick chamber of John C. Calhoun. His society and his friendship were more than a compensation for any attentions which any man could bestow. Such were his gifts, that whether in sickness or in health, no man retired from a conversation with him who was not greatly his debtor. By the courtesies of this day, and the association of my name with his, I am both his debtor and yours; the sincere ac- knowledgment of which I tender to your excellency, requesting that it may be received by you, both for yourself and the people whose sovereignty you represent." Gov. Seabrook now turned to the Hon. T. Leger Hutchinson, Mayor of the city, and said : — "3Ir. IMayor: I commit to your care these precious remains. After the solemn ceremonies of the day, I request that you put 56 over them a Guard of Honor, until the hour shall arrive to consign them to their temporary resting place." To which the Mayor replied : — " Governor Seabrook : As the organ of the corporation of the city of Charleston, I receive from you, with profound emotion, the mortal remains of John Caldwell Calhoun — a sacred trust, confided to us, to be retained until the desire of the people of South Carolina, expressed through their constituted authorities, shall be declared respecting their final resting place." The ceremony of the reception of the body from the hands of the Senatorial committee by the Executive of the State being over, the members constituting the civic and military portions of the solemn pageant were, with consummate skill, arranged in their respective positions by the Chief Marshal and his assistants. With order and precision each department fell into its allotted place, and the whole mass moved onward, a vast machine, obeying, with per- fect motion, the impulse given by the directing power. The gates opening from the Citadel square upon Boundary street, (the name since changed to Calhoun street,) through which the procession passed, were supported on each side by Palmetto trees, draped in mourning; from the branches which over-arched the gateway hung the escutcheon of the State ; between the folds of funeral cloth, in which it was enveloped, appeared the inscription — " Carolina mourns." The procession moved from the Citadel square down Boundary to King street, down King street to Hasell, through Hascll to Meeting street, down Meeting to South Bay Batteiy, along the Battery to East Bay, up East Bay to Broad street to the City Hall. Along the streets through which the procession passed, the public and private buildings and temples of worship were draped with mourning, the windows and doors of the houses were closed, and no one was seen to gaze upon the spectacle ; it seemed that those who did not participate directly in the obsequies were mourn- ing within. When the head of the escort reached the City Hall, it halted ; the troops formed into line on the south side of Broad street, facing 57 the City Hall. The funeral car, drawn by six horses, caparisoned in mourning trappings that touched the ground, each horse attended by a groom clad in black, slowly moved along the line until it reached the front steps of the City Hall. The division composing the procession then passed through the space intervening between the body and the military, with heads uncovered; the Marshals having the resjiective divisions in charge dismounted, and, leading their horses, proceeded to the points where the divisions were to be dismissed. When the last division had passed through, the body was then removed from the funeral car by the Guard of Honor, borne up the steps, and received at the threshold of the City Hall by the Mayor and Aldermen ; it was then deposited within the magnificent catafalque prepared for its reception. Here the body remained in state until the next day, under the special charge of the Honorary Guard of two hundred citizens, who kept watch at intervals during the day and night. Thousands of citizens and strangers of all sexes, ages, and conditions in life, repaired to the City Hall to pay their tribute of respect to the illustrious dead ; the most perfect propriety and decorum prevailed ; the incessant stream of visiters entered by the main doors, passed upward to the catafalque, ascended, gazed upon the sarcophagus resting within, and in silence I'etired through the passage in the rear. The iron case that enshrined the body, and the tomb-shaped structure npon which it lay, were covered with flowers, the offer- ings of that gentler sex, who in sorrow had lingered around its precincts. The ceremonies of the day completed, the various deputations and committees of this and other States, who had repaired to the city in performance of the mournful duties assigned them, were invited to the Council Chamber, where the hospitalities of the city were tendered by the municipal authorities ; they were afterwards escorted to the lodgings provided for them by the committees ap- pointed for the purpose. The committee from the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States repaired to the head-quarters of his excellency Governor Seabrook, where they were received and entertained as the guests of South Carolina during their stay. 58 The next clay, the 26th of April, was ai^jDointed for the rcDioval of the remains to the tomb. At early dawn the bells resumed their toll ; business remained suspended, and all the evidences of public mourning were continued. At ten o'clock a civic procession, under the direction of the marshals, having been formed, the body was then removed from the catafalque in the City Hall, and borne on a bier by the Guard of Honor to St. Philip's church; on reaching the church, which was draped in deepest mourning, the cortege proceeded up the centre aisle to a stand covered with black velvet, upon which the bier was deposited. After an anthem sung by a full choir, the Right Rev. Dr. Gadsden, Bishop of the Diocese, with great feeling and solemnity, read the burial service, to which succeeded an elo- quent funeral discourse by the Rev. Mr. Miles. The Holy rites ended, the body was again borne by the Guard of Honor to the western cemetery of the church, to the tomb erected for its tempo- rary abode, a solid structure of masonry raised above the surface, and lined with cedar wood. Near by, pendent from the tall spar that supported it, drooped the flag of the Union, its folds mourn- fully sweeping the verge of the tomb, as swayed by the passing wind. Wrapped in the pall that first covered it on reaching the shores of Carolina, the iron coffin, with its sacred trust, was lowered to its resting place, and the massive marble slab, simply inscribed with the name of "CALnouN," adjusted to its position. The lingering multitude then slowly passed from the burial ground — " And we left him alone with his glory." The last offices of respect and veneration, such as no man ever received from the hearts and hands of Carolinians, had been ren- dered, but it was felt by all that no monument could be raised too high for his excellence, no record too enduring for his virtue. " Tanto noinini nullum par elogium." For many weeks after the interment, the marble that covered the tomb was daily strewn with roses, and other fragrant flowers, and vases containing sucli, and filled with water freshly renewed, were placed around, the spontaneous offerings of the people. An 59 oak, the emblem of his strength of character, was planted at the foot, and a willow, whose branches soon drooped over the grave, became a type of the general sorrow. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. Executive Chamber, Harrisburg, April 23.d, 1850. To his excellency W. B. Seabrook, Governor of the State of South Carolina. Dear Sir : The accompanying resolutions of the Legislature of this State have been presented to me for transmission to your excellency, with a request that the same be communicated to the Legislature of South Carolina. In performing this duty, allow me to express my personal regard for the social and public virtues of the illustrious deceased, and my deep sense of the great loss which this dispensation of Providence has inflicted upon, the American nation. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, yours, &c., WM. F. JOHNSTON. RESOLUTIONS Of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, relative to the death of the Hon. John C. Calhoun. Whereas, it has pleased an all-wise Providence to remove from the scenes of earth one of America's most distinguished sons, whose name has been associated with her history during the last forty years, and whose distinguished talent, private virtues, and purity of character, have shed lustre on her name. And whereas, it is becoming and proper that society, whilst hum- bly bowing to the dispensations of infinite wisdom, should, in such cases, testify its sense of the worth and exalted character of the illustrious deceased, by appropriate tributes of respect to his memory, forgetting all points of difference, and cherishing the recollection only of his virtues. 60 Be it tliercfore resolved, unanimonshj, hy the Senate and House of Rejyresentatives of the Co^nmomoealth of Pennsylvania, in Gen- eral Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted hy the authority of the same. That this General Assembly has heard, with profound sen- sibility and heartfelt sorrow, of the death of the Hon. Joiix C. CALnouN, of South Carolina, for whom, in his long and distin- guished public career, whilst often differing from his views and policy, we have ever entertained the most profound respect ; and in whose private virtues, and personal character, there has been every thing to win admiration, and conciliate affection. Resolved, That, as a further testimony of respect for the memory of the deceased, an extract from the Journal of each House, to be signed by the Speakers, be communicated to the Governor, with a request that he forward the same to the widow and family of the deceased, with a letter of condolence, expi-essing the sincere sym- pathy of this General Assembly with them in this, their afflicting bereavement. Resolved, That the Governor be further requested to forward a copy of the foregoing resolutions to the Governor of South Caro- lina, with a request that he communicate the same to the Legislature of said Commonwealth. J. S. McCALMONT, Speaker of the House of Representatives. V. BEST, Speaker of the Senate. Approved the sixth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and fifty. WILLIAM F. JOHNSTON. 61 NEW YORK LEGISLATURE. SENATE. The Governor transmitted the following communication : — State of New York, Executive Department, Albany, April 2, 1850. To the Legislature : We learn, from the public journals, that the Hon. John C. Cal- houn died at Washington, on the morning of Sunday last. His death is an event of interest, and a source of grief to all sections of the country, in whose service nearly the whole of his active life has been spent. I believe, therefore, that I consult the public sense of propriety, not less than my own feelings, in giving you this official information of his decease. Mr. Calhoun became connected with the Federal Government at an early age, and died in its service. He has been a member of the House of Representatives, Secretary of State, Secretary of War, Senator in Congress, and Vice President of the United States. In each of these stations he has been distinguished for ability, integrity, and independence. He has taken a prominent part in every great cjuestion which has agitated the country during the last forty years, and has exerted a commanding influence upon the whole course of our public policy. In his death the nation has lost a statesman of consummate ability, and of unsullied character. It is fitting that this State should evince sorrow at his death, by such action as her Repre- sentatives may deem appropriate. HAMILTON FISH. Mr. Morgan offered the following resolution : That a select committee of three be appointed on the part of the Senate, to meet with a committee on the part of the Assembly, to report resolutions expressive of the sense of the Legislature relative to the death of the Hon. John C. Calhoun, and that the Senate will meet at four o'clock this afternoon to hear the report of said committee. 62 The resolution was luianimously adopted. The select committee, on the part of the Senate, on the Calhoun resolutions, are jMessrs. jMorgan, Man, and Babcock. ASSEMBLY. The Governor transmitted to the House a message, announcing the death of Mr. Calhoun. The proceedings of the Senate on this subject were read, desig- nating a committee on the part of the Senate, and requesting a like committee on the part of the House. Mr. Ford, after a few appropriate remarks, moved a concurrence in the resolution of the Senate. Mr. Raymond concurred in the motion, and paid a brief tribute to the memory of the deceased, as a citizen and statesman. Mr. Bacon followed, conceding to Mr. Calhoun great intellect and virtue. Messrs. Monroe and Varnu3i also sustained the motion. The resolutions were unanimously adopted, and the Chair named Messrs. Ford, jMonroe, Godard, Raymond, and Church, as the com- mittee on the part of the House. Recess to four o'clock. EVENING SESSION. Mr. JMoRGAN, from the Joint Select Committee appointed on the message of the Governor, announcing the death of the Hon. John C. Calhoun, offered the following resolutions, which were unan- imously adopted. Resolved, That the Legislature of the State of New York have heard, with deep regret, of the death of the Hon. John C. Cal- houn, United States vSenator from South Carolina; that they entertain sentiments of profound respect for the pre-eminent ability, the unsullied character, and the high-minded independence, which, throughout his life, distinguished his devotion to the public service ; and that they unite, with their fellow-citizens throughout the Union, in deploring his death as a public calamity. 63 Resolved, That the Governor of this State be requested to transmit a copy of these resolutions to the President of the Senate of the United States, with a request that the same be entered on their journal ; and a copy to the Governor of the State of Soutli Carolina, with a request that he transmit the same to the family of the deceased. Resolved, That, as a token of respect to the memory of the deceased, the public offices be closed, and the flag at the Capitol be displayed at half-mast for twenty-four hours, and that the Senate do now adjourn. The same resolutions were passed by the Assembly, which also adjourned. / •^ X I ■^ ■^ s ;r:^^<^. / / r I OBITUARY HONORS TO THE MEMORY OF HENRY CLAY. IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, Wednesday, June 30, 1852. After the reading of the Journal, Mr. UNDERWOOD rose, and addressed the Senate as follows : — Mr. President : I rise to announce the death of my colleague, Mr. Clay. He died at his lodgings, in the National Hotel of this city, at seventeen minutes past eleven o'clock yesterday morning, in the seventy-sixth year of his age. He expired with perfect composure, and without a groan or struggle. By his death our country has lost one of its most eminent citizens and statesmen ; and, I think, its greatest genius. I shall not detain the. Senate by narrating the transactions of his long and useful life. His distinguished services as a statesman are insepa- rably connected with the history of his country. As Representative and Speaker in the other House of Congress, as Senator in this body, as Secretary of State, and as envoy abroad, he has, in all these positions, exhibited a wisdom and patriotism which have made a deep and lasting impression upon the grateful hearts of his countrymen. His thoughts and his actions have already been published to the world in written biography; in Congressional debates and reports ; in the journals of the two Houses ; and in the pages of American history. They have been commemorated by monuments erected on the way side. They have been engraven on medals of gold. Their memory will survive the monuments of 5 marble and the medals of gold ; foi* these are effaced and decay by the friction of ages. But the thoughts and actions of my late col- league have become identified with the immortality of the human mind, and will pass down, from generation to generation, as a portion of our national inheritance, incapable of annihilation so long as genius has an admirer, or liberty a friend. Mr. President, the character of Henry Clay was formed and developed by the influence of our free institutions. His physical, mental, and moral faculties, were the gift of God. That they were greatly superior to the faculties allotted to most men cannot be questioned. They were not cultivated, improved, and directed by a liberal or collegiate education. His respectable parents were not wealthy, and had not the means of maintaining their children at college. Moreover, his father died when he was a boy. At an early period Mr. Clay was thrown upon his own resources, without patrimony. He grew up in a clerk's office, in Richmond, Virginia. He there studied law. He emigrated from his native State and settled in Lexington, Kentucky, where he commenced the practice of his profession before he was of full age. The road to wealth, to honor, and fame, was open before him. Under our Constitution and laws he might freely employ his great faculties, unobstructed by legal impediments, and unaided by ex- clusive privileges. Very soon Mr. Clay made a deep and favorable impression upon the people among whom he began his career. The excellence of his natural faculties was soon displayed. Neces- sity stimulated him in their cultivation. His assiduity, skill, and fidelity in professional engagements, secured public confidence. He was elected member of the Legislatm-e of Kentucky, in which body he served several sessions prior to 1806. In that year he was elevated to a seat in the Senate of the United States. At the bar, and in the General Assembly of Kentucky, Mr. Clay first manifested those high qualities as a public speaker, which have secured to him so much popular applause and admiration. His physical and mental organization eminently qualified him to become a great and impressive orator. His person was tall, slender, and commanding. His temperament ardent, fearless, and full of hope. His countenance clear, expressive, and variable — indicating the emotion which predominated at the moment with exact simili- > V n ^'- \ / tude. His voice, cultivated and modulated in harmony with the sentiment he desired to express, fell upon the ear like the melody of enrapturing music His eye beaming with intelligence, and flashing with coruscations of genius. His gestures and attitudes graceful and natural. These personal advantages won the pre- possessions of an audience, even before his intellectual powers began to move his hearers ; and when his strong common sense, his profound reasoning, his clear conceptions of his subject in all its bearings, and his striking and beautiful illustrations, united with such personal qualities, were brought to the discussion of any question, his audience was enraptured, convinced, and led by the orator as if enchanted by the lyre of Orpheus. No man was ever blessed by his Creator with faculties of a higher order of excellence than those given to Mr. Clay. In the quick- ness of his perceptions, and the rapidity with which his conclusions were formed, he had few equals, and no superior. He was emi- nently endowed with a nice discriminating taste for order, sym- metry, and beauty. He detected in a moment every thing out of place or deficient in his room, upon his farm, in his own or the dress of others. He was a skilful judge of the form and qualities of his domestic animals, which he delighted to raise on his farm. I could give you instances of the quickness and minuteness of his keen faculty of observation, which never overlooked any thing. A want of neatness and order was offensive to him. He was par- ticular and neat in his handwriting, and his apparel. A slovenly blot, or negligence of any sort, met his condemnation ; while he was so organized that he attended to, and arranged little things to please and gratify his natural love for neatness, order, and beauty, his great intellectual faculties grasped all the subjects of jurispru- dence and politics with a facility amounting almost to intuition. As a lawyer, he stood at the head of his profession. As a states- man, his stand at the head of the Republican Whig party for nearly half a century, establishes his title to pre-eminence among his illustrious associates, Mr. Clat was deeply versed in all the springs of human action. He had read and studied biography and history. Shortly after I left college, I had occasion to call on him in Frankfort, where he was attending court, and well I remember to have found him with Plutareli's Lives in his hands. No one better than he knew how to avail himself of human motives, and all the circumstances which surrounded a subject, or could present them with more force and skill to accomplish the object of an argument. Mr. Clay, throughout his public career, was influenced by the loftiest patriotism. Confident in the truth of his eonvictions, and the purity of his purposes, he was ardent, sometimes impetuous, in the pursuit of objects which he believed essential to the general welfare. Those who stood in his way were thrown aside without fear or ceremony. He never affected a courtier's deference to men or opinions, which he thought hostile to the best interests of his country ; and hence he may have wounded the vanity of those who thought themselves of consequence. It is certain, whatever the cause, that, at one period of his life, Mr. Clay might have been referred to as proof that there is more truth than fiction in those profound lines of the poet — " He who ascends the mountain top shall find Its loftiest peaks most wrapt in clouds and snow j He who surpasses or subdues mankind. Must look down on the hate of those below : Though far above the sun of glorj' glow, And far beneath the earth and ocean spread. Round him are icy rocks, and loudly blow Contending tempests on his naked head. And thus reward the toils which to those summits led." Calumny and detraction emptied their vials iipon him. But how glorious the change! He outlived malice and envy. He lived long enough to prove to the world that his ambition was no more than a holy aspiration to make his country the greatest, most powerful, and best governed on the earth. If he desired its highest office, it was because the greater power and influence resulting from such elevation would enable him to do more than he otherwise could for the progress and advancement — first of his own countrymen, then of his whole race. His sympathies embraced all. The African slave, the Creole of Spanish America, the children of renovated classic Greece — all families of men, without respect to color or clime, found in his expanded bosom and comprehensive intellect a friend of their elevation and amelioration. Such ambi- tion as that, is God's implantation in the human heart for raising the down-trodden nations of the earth, and fitting them for regen- erated existence in politics, in morals, and religion. Bold and determined as Mr. Clay was in all his actions, he was, nevertheless, conciliating. He did not obstinately adhere to things impracticable. If he could not accomplish the best, he contented himself with the nighest approach to it. He has been the great compromiser of those political agitations and opposing opinions which have, in the belief of thousands, at different times, endan-r gered the perpetuity of our Federal Government and Union. Mr. Clay was no less remarkable for his admirable social qual- ities than for his intellectual abilities. As a companion, he was the delight of his friends, and no man ever had better or truer. They have loved him from the beginning, and loved him to the last. His hospitable mansion at Ashland was always open to their reception. No guest ever thence departed without feeling happier for his visit. But, alas ! that hospitable mansion has already been converted into a house of mourning ; already has intelligence of his death passed with electric velocity to that aged and now widowed lady, who, for more than fifty years, bore to him all the endearing relations of wife, and whose feeble condition prevented her from joining him in this city, and soothing the anguish of life's last scene, by those endearing attentions which no one can give so well as woman and a wife. May Grod infuse into her heart and mind the Christian spirit of submission under her bereavement ! It cannot be long before she may expect a reunion in Heaven. A nation condoles with her and her children on account of their irreparable loss. Mr. Clay, from the nature of his disease, declined very gradu- ally. He bore his protracted sufferings with great equanimity and patience. On one occasion he said to me, that when death was inevitable, and must soon come, and when the sufferer was ready to die, he did not perceive the wisdom of praying to be " delivered from sudden death." He thought, under such circumstances, the sooner suffering was relieved by death the better. He desired the termination of his own sufferings, while he acknowledged the duty of patiently waiting and abiding the pleasui-e of God. Mr. Clay frequently spoke to me of his hope of eternal life, founded upon the merits of Jesus Christ as a Saviour ; who, as he remarked, 6 came into the world to bring " life and immortality to light." He was a member of the Episcopalian Church. In one of our con- versations he told me, that, as his hour of dissolution approached, he found that his affections were concentrating more and more upon his domestic circle — his wife and children. In my daily visits he was in the habit of asking me to detail to him the trans- actions of the Senate. This I did, and he manifested much interest in j)assing occui'rences. His inquiries were less frequent as his end approached. For the week preceding his death he seemed to be altogether abstracted from the concerns of the world. When he became so low that he could not converse without being fatigued, he frequently requested those around him to converse. He would then quietly listen. He retained his mental faculties in great perfection. His memory remained perfect. He frequently mentioned events and conversations of recent occui-- rence, showing that he had a perfect recollection of what was said and done. He said to me that he was grateful to God for con- tinuing to him the blessing of reason, which enabled him to con- template and reflect on his situation. He manifested, during his confinement, the same characteristics which marked his conduct through the vigor of his life. He was exceedingly averse to give his friends "trouble," as he called it. Some time before he knew it, wo commenced waiting through the night in an adjoining room. He said to me, after passing a painful day, " perhaps some one had better remain all night in the parlor." From this time he knew some friend was constantly at hand ready to attend to him. Mr. President, the majestic form of Mr. Clay will no more grace these Halls. No more shall we hear that voice, which has so often thrilled and charmed the assembled Representatives of the American people. No more shall we see that waving hand and eye of light, as when he was engaged unfolding his policy in regard to the varied interests of our growing and mighty Republican empire. His voice is silent on earth for ever. The darkness of death has obscured the lustre of his eye. But the memory of his services — not only to his beloved Kentucky, not only to the United States, but for the cause of human freedom ^nd progress throughout the world — will live through future ages, as a bright example, stimulating and encoui-aging his own coiilitrymen, and the people of all nations, in their patriotic devotions to country and liumanity. With Christians, there is yet a nobler and a higher thought in regard to Mr. Clay. They will think of him in connexion with eternity. They will contemplate his immortal spirit, occupying its true relative magnitude among the moral stars of glory in the presence of God. They will think of him as having fulfilled the duties allotted to him on earth, having been regenerated by Divine grace, and having passed through the valley of the shadow of death, and reached an everlasting and happy home in that " house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens." On Sunday morning last, I was watching alone at Mr. Clay's bedside. For the last hour he had been unusually quiet, and I thought he was sleeping. In that, however, he told me I was mistaken. Opening his eyes, and looking at me, he said, " Mr. Underwood, there may be some question where my remains shall be buried. Some persons may designate Frankfort. I wish to repose at the cemetery in Lexington, where many of my friends and connexions are buried." My reply was, "I will endeavor to have your wish executed." I now ask the Senate to have his corpse transmitted to Lexing- ton, Kentucky, for sepulture. Let him sleep with the dead of that city, in and near which his home has been for more than half a century. For the people of Lexington, the living and the dead, he manifested, by the statement made to me, a pure and holy sympathy, and a desire to cleave unto them as strong as that which bound Ruth to Naomi. It was his anxious wish to return to them before he died, and to realize what the daughter of Moab so strongly felt and beautifully expressed : " Thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God. Where thou diest will I die, and there will I be buried." It is fit that the tomb of Henry Clay should be in the city of Lexington. In our Revolution, liberty's first libation-blood was poured out in a town of that name in Massachusetts. On hearing it, the pioneers of Kentucky consecrated the name, and applied it to the place where Mr. Clay desired to be buried. The associa- tions connected with the name harmonize with his character; and the monument erected to his memory at the spot selected by him, 8 •will be visited by the votaries of genius and liberty with tbat reverence wbicli is inspired at tlie tomb of Washington. Upon that monument let his epitaph be engraved. Mr. President, I have availed myself of Dr. Johnson's para- phrase of the epitaph on Thomas Hanmer, with a few alterations and additions, to express, in borrowed verse, my admiration for the life and character of Mr. Clay, and, with this heart-tribute to the memory of my illustrious colleague, I conclude my remarks : — Born when Freedom her stripes und stars unfinl-d. When Revolution shook the startled world — Heroes and sages taught his brilliant mind To know and love tJie rights of all mankind. " In life's first bloom his public toils began, At once commenced the Senator and man : In business dext'rous, weighty in debate, Near fifty years he labor-d for the State. In every speech persuasive v.'isdom flow'd. In every act refulgent virtue glow'd: Suspended faction ceased from rage and strife. To hear his eloquence and praise his life. Resistless merit fixed tlie Members' choice, Who hail'd him Speaker witli united voice." His talents ripening with advancing years — His wisdom growing with his public cares — A chosen envoy, war's dark horrors cease, And tides of carnage turn to streams of peace. Conflicting principles, internal strife, Tarift' and slavery, disunion rife. Are all compromised by his great hand. And beams of joy illuminate the land. Patriot, Christian, Husband, Father, Friend, Thy work of life achieved a glorious end ! I offer the following resolutions : — Resolved, That a committee of six be appointed by the President of tlie Senate, to take order for superintending the funeral of Henry Clay, late a member of this body, which will take place to-morrow at twelve o'clock, m., and that the Senate will attend the same. Resolved, That the members of tlie Senate, from a sincere desire of showing every mark of resj)ect to the memory of the deceased, will go into mourning for one montli, by the usual mode of wearing crape on the left arm. Resolved, As a further mark of respect entcrtuincd by the Senate fur the memory of Henry Clay, and his long and distinguished services to his country, tliat his remains, in pursuance of the known wishes of his family, be removed to the place of sepulture selected by himself at Lexington, in Kentucky, in charge of tlie Sergeant-at-Arms, and attended by a committee of six Senators, to be appointed by the President of the Senate, who shall liave full power to carry this resolution into effect. Mr. CASS said: — Mr. President : Again lias an impressive warning come to teacL us, that in the midst of life we are in death. The ordinary labors of this Hall are suspended, and its contentions hushed, before the power of Him, who says to the storm of human passion as He said of old to the waves of Galilee — Peace, be still. The lessons of His providence, severe as they may be, often become merciful dis- pensations, like that which is now spreading sorrow through the land, and which is reminding us that we have higher duties to fulfil, and graver responsibilities to encounter, than those that meet us here, when we lay our hands upon His holy word, and invoke His holy name, promising to be faithful to that Constitution which He gave us in His mercy, and will withdraw only in the hour of our blindness and disobedience, and of His own wrath. Another great man has fallen in our land, ripe indeed in years and in honors, but never dearer to the American people than when called from the theatre of his services and renown to that final bar where the lofty and the lowly must all meet at last. I do not rise, upon this mournful occasion, to indulge in the language of panegyi'ic. My regard for the memory of the dead, and for the obligations of the living, would equally rebuke such a course. The severity of truth is, at once, our proper duty and our best consolation. Born during the Revolutionary struggle, our deceased associate was one of the few remaining public men who connect the present generation with the actors in the trying scenes of that eventful period, and whose names and deeds will soon be known only in the history of their country. He was another illustration, and a noble one, too, of the glorious equality of our institutions, which freely offer all their rewards to all who justly seek them; for he was the architect of his own fortune, having made his way in life by self-exertion ; and he was an early adven- turer in the great forest of the West, then a world of primitive vegetation, but now the abode of intelligence and religion, of pros- perity and civilization. But he possessed that intellectual supe- riority which overcomes surrounding obstacles, and which local seclusion cannot long withhold fi-om general knowledge and appre- ciation. 10 It is almost half a century since lie passed through Chillicothe, then the seat of Government of Ohio, where I was a member of the Legislature, on his way to take his place in this very body, which is now listening to this reminiscence, and to a feeble tribute of regard from one who then saw him for the first time, but who can never forget the impression he produced by the charms of his conversation, the frankness of his manner, and the high qualities with which he was endowed. Since then he has belonged to his country, and has taken a part, and a prominent part, both in peace and war, in all the great questions afiiecting her interest and her honor ; and though it has been my fortune often to differ from him, yet I believe he was as pure a patriot as ever participated in the councils of a nation, anxious for the public good, and seeking to promote it, during all the vicissitudes of a long and eventful life. That he exercised a powerful influence, within the sphere of his action, through the whole country, indeed, we all feel and know; and we know, too, the eminent endowments to which he owed this high distinction. Frank and fearless in the expression of his opinion, and in the performance of his duties, with rare powers of eloquence, which never failed to rivet the attention of his auditory, and which always commanded admiration, even when they did not carry conviction — prompt in decision, and firm in action, and with a vigorous intellect, trained in the contests of a stirring life, and strengthened by enlarged experience and observation, joined withal to an ardent love of country, and to great purity of purpose — these were the elements of his power and success; and we dwell upon them with mournful gratification now, when we shall soon follow him to the cold and silent tomb, where we shall commit " earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust," but with the blessed conviction of the truth of that Divine revelation which teaches us that there is life and hope beyond the narrow house, where we shall leave him alone to the mercy of his God and ours. He has passed beyond the reach of human praise or censure ; but the judgment of his contemporaries has preceded and pro- nounced the judgment of history, and his name and fame Avill shed lustre upon his country, and will be proudly cherished in the hearts of his countrymen for long ages to come. Yes, they will be cherished and freshly remembered when these marble columns, 11 that surround us, so often the witnesses of his triumph — but iu a few brief hours, when his mortal frame, despoiled of the immortal spirit, shall rest under this dome for the last tune, to become the witnesses of his defeat in that final contest, where the mightiest fall before the great destroyer — when these marble columns shall themselves have fallen, like all the works of man, leaving their broken fragments to tell the story of former magnificence, amid the very ruins which announce decay and desolation. I was often with him during his last illness, when the world and the things of the world were fast fading away before him. lie knew that the silver cord was almost loosened, and that the golden bowl was breaking at the fountain ; but he was resigned to the will of Providence, feeling that He who gave has the right to take away, in His own good time and manner. After his duty to his Creator, and his anxiety for his family, his first care was for his country, and his first wish for the preservation and perpetuation of the Constitution and the Union — dear to him in the hour of death, as they had ever been in the vigor of life. Of that Consti- tution and Union, whose defence in the last and greatest crisis of their peril had called forth all his energies, and stimulated those memorable and powerful exertions, which he who witnessed can never forget, and which no doubt hastened the final catastrophe a nation now deplores with a sincerity and unanimity not less honor- able to themselves than to the memory of the object of their affec- tions. And when we shall enter that narrow valley, through which he has passed before us, and which leads to the judgment-seat of God, may we be able to say, through faith in his Son, our Saviour, and in the beautiful language of the hymn of the dying Christian — dying, but ever living, and triumphant — "The world recedes, it disappears — Heaven opens on my eyes ! my ears With sounds seraphic ring ; Lend, lend, your wings ! I mount — I fly I Oh, Grave ! where is thy victorj- .' Oh, Death ! where is thy sting."' " Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last hour be like his." 12 Mr. HUNTER said: — Mr. President : "We have heard, with deep sensibility, what has just fallen from the Senators who have preceded me. We have heard, sir, the voice of Kentucky — and, upon this occasion, she had a right to speak — in mingled accents of pride and sorrow; for it has rarely fallen to the lot of any State to lament the loss of such a son. But, Virginia, too, is entitled to her place in this procession ; for she cannot be supposed to be unmindful of the tie which bound her to the dead. When the earth opens to receive the mortal part which she gave to man, it is then that affection is eager to bury in its bosom every recollection but those of love and kindness. And, sir, when the last sensible tie is about to be severed, it is then that we look with anxious interest to the deeds of the life, and to the emanations of the heart and the mind, for those more enduring monuments which are the creations of an immortal nature. In this instance, we can be at no loss for these. This land, sir, is full of the monuments of his genius. His memory is as im- perishable as American history itself, for he was one of those who made it. Sir, he belonged to that marked class who are the men of their century ; for it was his rare good fortune not only to have been endowed with the capacity to do great things, but to have enjoyed the opportunities of achieving them. I know, sir, it has been said and deplored, that he wanted some of the advantages of an early education ; but it, perhaps, has not been remembered that, in many respects, he enjoyed such opportunities for mental training as can rarely fall to the lot of man. He had not a chance to learn as much from books, but he had such opportunities of learning from men as few have ever enjoyed. Sir, it is to be re- membered that he was reared at a time when there was a state of society, in the Commonwealth which gave him birth, such as has never been seen there before nor since. It was his early privilege to see how justice was administered by a Pendleton and a Wythe, with the last of whom he was in the daily habit of familiar inter- course. He had constant opportunities to observe how forensic questions were managed by a Marshall and a Wickham. He was old enough, too, to have heard and to have appreciated the eloquence of a Patrick Heni-y, and of George Keith Taylor. In 13 short, sir, he lived in a society in which the examples of a Jeffer- son, and a Madison, and a Monroe, were living influences, and on which the setting sun of a Washington cast the mild effulgence of its departing rays. He was trained^ too, as has been well said by the Senator from Michigan, [Mr. Cass,] at a period when the recent Revolutionary struggle had given a more elevated tone to patriotism, and im- parted a higher cast to public feeling and to public character. Such lessons were worth, perhaps, more to him than the whole encyclopedia of scholastic learning. Not only were the circum- stances of his early training favorable to the development of his genius, but the theatre upon which he was thrown was eminently propitious for its exercise. The circumstances of the early settle- ment of Kentucky, the generous, daring, and reckless character of the people — all fitted it to be the theatre for the display of those commanding qualities of heart and mind which he so eminently possessed. There can be little doubt but that those people, and their chosen leader, exercised a mutual influence upon each other ; and no one can be surprised that, with his brave spirit and com- manding eloquence, and fascinating address, he should have led not only there but elsewhere. I did not know him, Mr. President, as you did, in the fresh- ness of his prime, or in the full maturity of his manhood. I did not hear him, sir, as you have heard him, when his voice roused the spirit of his countrymen for war — when he cheered the droop- ing, when he rallied the doubting, through all the vicissitudes of a long and doubtful contest. I have never seen him, sir, when, from the height of the Chair, he ruled the House of Representa- tives by the energy of his will, or when upon the level of the floor he exercised a control almost as absolute, by the mastery of his intellect. "When I first knew him, his sun had a little passed its zenith. The effacing hand of time had just begun to touch the lineaments of his manhood. But yet, sir, I saw enough of him to be able to realize what he might have been in the prime of his strength, and in the full vigor of his maturity. I saw him, sir, as you did, when he led the " opposition" during the administration of Mr. Van Buren. I had daily ojiportunities of witnessing the exhibition of his powers during the extra session under Mr. Tyler's 14 administration. And I saw, as wo all saw, in a recent contest, the exhibition of power on his part, which was most marvellous in one of his years. Mr. President, he may not have had as much of analytic skill as some others, in dissecting a subject. It may be, perhaps, that he did not seek to look quite so far ahead as some who have been most distinguished for political forecast. But it may be truly said of Mr. Clay, that he was no exaggerator. He looked at events through neither end of the telescope, but surveyed them with the natural and the naked eye. He had the capacity of seeing things as the people saw them, and of feeling things as the people felt them. He had, sir, beyond any other man whom I have ever seen, the true mesmeric touch of the orator — the rare art of transferring his impulses to others. Thoughts, feelings, emotions, came from the ready mould of his genius, radiant and glowing, and communicated their own warmth to every heart which received them. His, too, was the power of wielding the higher and intenser forms of passion with a majesty and an ease which none but the great masters of the human heart can ever employ. It was his rare good fortune to have been one of those who form, as it were, a sensible link, a living tradition, which connects one age with another, and through which one generation speaks its thoughts and feelings, and appeals to another. And, unfortunate is it for a country, when it ceases to possess such men, for it is to them that we chiefly owe the capacity to maintain the unity of the great Epos of human history, and preserve the consistency of political action. Sir, it may be said that the grave is still new-made which covers the mortal remains of one of those great men who have been taken from our midst, and the earth is soon to open to receive another. I know not whether it can be said to be a matter of lamentation, so far as the dead are concerned, that the thread of this life has been clipped when once it has been fully spim. They escape the infirmities of age, and they leave an imperishable name behind them. The loss, sir, is not theirs, but ours ; and a loss the more to be lamented, that we see none to fill the places thus made vacant on the stage of public afi"airs. But it may be well for us, who have much more cause to mourn and to lament sucli deaths, to 15 pause amidst the business of life for the purpose of contemplating the spectacle before us, and of drawing the moral from the pass- ing event. It is when death seizes for its victims those who are, by " a head and shoulders, taller than all the rest," that we feel most deei^ly the uncertainty of human affairs, and that " the glories of our mortal state are shadows, not substantial things." It is, sir, in such instances as the present that we can best study by the light of example the true objects of life, and the wisest ends of human pursuit. Mr. HALE said: — Mr. President : I hope I shall not be considered obtrusive, if on this occasion for a brief moment, I mingle my humble voice with those that, with an ability that I shall neither attempt nor hope to equal, have sought to do justice to the worth and memory of the deceased, and at the same time appropriately to minister to the sympathies and sorrows of a stricken people. Sir, it is the teaching of inspiration that "no man liveth and no man dieth unto himself" There is a lesson taught no less in the death than in the life of every man — eminently so in the case of one who has filled a large space and occupied a distinguished position in the thoughts and regard of his fellow-men. Particularly instructive at this time is the event which we now deplore, although the circumstances at- tending his decease are such as are calculated to assuage rather than aggravate the grief which it must necessarily cause. His time had fully come. The three score and ten marking the ordi- nary period of human life had for some years been passed, and, full of years and of honors, he has gone to his rest. And now, when the nation is marshalling itself for the contest which is to decide " who shall be greatest," as if to chasten our ambition, to restrain and subdue the violence of passion, to moderate our de- sires and elevate our hopes, we have the spectacle of one who, by the force of his intellect and the energy of his own purpose, had achieved a reputation which the highest official honors of the Re- public might have illustrated, but could not have enhanced, laid low in death — as if, at the very outset of this political contest, on which the nation is now entering, to teach the ambitious and as- 16 piring the vanity of human pursuit and end of earthly honor. But, sir, I do not intend to dwell on that moral which is taught by the silent lips and closed eye of the illustrious dead, with a force such as no man ever spoke with ; but I shall leave the event, with its silent and mute eloquence, to impress its own appropriate teachings on the heart. In the long and eventful life of Mr. Clay, in the various posi- tions which he occupied, in the many posts of public duty which he filled, in the many exhibitions which his history affords of un- tiring energy, of unsurpassed eloquence, and of devoted patriotism, it would be strange indeed if different minds, as they dwell upon the subject, were all to select the same incidents of his life as pre- eminently calculated to challenge admiration and respect. Sir, my admiration — aye, my affection for Mr. Clay — was won and secured many years since, even in my school-boy days — when his voice of counsel, encouragement, and sympathy was heard in the other Hall of this Capitol, in behalf of the struggling colonies of the southern portion of this continent, who, in pursuit of their inalienable rights, in imitation of our own forefathers, had unfm-1- ed the banner of liberty, and, regardless of consequences, had gal- lantly rushed into that contest where "life is lost, or freedom won." And again, sir, when Grreece, rich in the memories of the past, awoke from the slumber of ages of oppression and centuries of shame, and resolved "To call her virtues back, and conquer time and fate"— there, over the plains of that classic land, above the din of battle and the clash of arms, mingling with the shouts of the victors and the groans of the vanquished, were heard the thrilling and stirring notes of that same eloquence, excited by a sympathy which knew no bounds, wide as the world, pleading the cause of Grecian liber- ty before the American Congress, as if to pay back to Greece the debt which every patriot and orator felt was her due. Sir, in the long and honorable career of the deceased, there are many events and circumstances upon which his friends and posterity will dwell with satisfaction and pride, but none which will preserve his mem- ory with more unfading lustre to future ages than the course he pursued in the Spanish-American and Greek revolutions. 17 Mr. CLEMENS said: — Mr. President : I should not have thought it necessary to add any thing to what has already been said, hut for a request prefer- red by some of the friends of the deceased. I should have been content to mourn him in silence, and left it to other tongues to pronounce his eulogy. What I have now to say shall be brief — very brief. Mr. President, it is now less than three short years ago since I first entered this body. At that period it numbered among its members many of the most illustrious statesmen this Republic has ever produced, or the world has ever known. Of the living, it is not my purpose to speak ; but in that brief period, death has been busy here ; and, as if to mark the feebleness of human things, his arrows have been aimed at the highest, the mightiest of us all. First, died Calhoun. And well, sir, do I remember the deep feel- ing evinced on that occasion by him whose death has been an- nounced here to-day, when he said : " I was his senior in years — in nothing else. In the course of natiu-e I ought to have preceded him. It has been decreed otherwise ; but I know that I shall lin- ger here only a short time, and shall soon follow him." It was genius mourning over his younger brothei', and too surely predict- ing his own approaching end. He, too, is now gone from among us, and left none like him be- hind. That voice, v^^hose every tone was music, is hushed and still. That clear, bright eye is dim and lustreless, and that breast, where grew and flourished every quality which could adorn and dignify our nature, is cold as the clod that soon must cover it. A few hours have wrought a mighty change — a change for which a lin- gering illness had, indeed, in some degree, prepared us ; but which, nevertheless, will still fall upon the nation with crushing force. Many a sorrowing heart is now asking, as I did yesterday, when I heard the first sound of the funeral bell — ■ " And is he p^nc ? — the pure of llie purest. The hand Uiat upheld our bright banner tlie surest, la he gone from our struggles away ? But yesterday lending a people new life. Cold, nmte, in the cotiin to-day." 18 Mr. President, this is an occasion when eulogy must fail to per- form its office. The long life which is now ended is a history of glorious deeds too mighty for the tongue of praise. It is in the hearts of his countrymen that his best epitaph must be written. It is in the admiration of a world that his renown must be recorded. In that deep love of country which distinguished every period of his life, he may not have been unrivalled. In loftiness of intel- lect, he was not without his peers. The skill with which he touch- ed every chord of the human heart may have been equalled. The iron will, the unbending firmness, the fearless courage, which marked his character, may have been shared by others. But where shall we go to find all these qualities united, concentrated, blended into one brilliant whole, and shedding a lustre upon one single head, which does not dazzle the beholder only because it attracts his love and demands his worship ? I scarcely know, sir, how far it may be allowable, upon an occa- sion like this, to refer to party struggles which have left wounds not yet entirely healed. I will venture, however, to suggest, that it should be a source of consolation to his friends that he lived long enough to see the full accomplishment of the last great work of his life, and to witness the total disappearance of that sectional tem- pest which threatened to whelm the Republic in ruins. Both the great parties of the country have agreed to stand upon the plat- form which he erected, and both of them have solemnly pledged themselves to maintain unimpaired the work of his hands. I doubt not the knowledge of this cheered him in his dying moments, and helped to steal away the pangs of dissolution. jNIr. President, if I knew any thing more that I could say, I would gladly utter it. To me, he was something more than kind, and I am called upon to mingle a private with the public grie£ I wish that I could do something to add to his fame. But he built for himself a monument of immortality, and left to his friends no task but that of soothing their own sorrow for his loss. We pay to him the tribute of our tears. More we have no power to bestow. Patriotism, honor, genius, courage, have all come to strew their garlands about his tomb ; and well they may, for ho was the peer of them all. Mr. COOPER said: — Mr. President : It is not always by words that the living pay to the dead the sincerest and most eloquent tribute. The tears of a nation, flowing spontaneously over the grave of a public bene- factor, is a more eloquent testimonial of his worth and of the aflFec- tion and veneration of his countrymen, than the most highly- wrought eulogium of the most gifted tongue. The heart is not necessarily tne fountain of words, but it is always the source of tears, whether of joy, gratitude, or grief. But sincere, truthful, and eloquent, as they are, they leave no permanent record of the virtues and greatness of him on whose tomb they are shed. As the dews of heaven falling at night are absorbed by the earth, or dried up by the morning sun, so the tears of a people, shed for their benefactor, disappear without leaving a trace to teU to future generations of the services, sacrifices, and virtues of him to whose memory they were a grateful tribute. But as homage paid to vii'tue is an incentive to it, it is right that the memory of the good, the great, and noble of the earth should be preserved and honored. The ambition, Mr. President, of the truly great, is more the hope of living in the memory and estimation of future ages than of possessing power in their own. It is this hope that stimulates them to perseverance ; that enables them to encounter disappoint- ment, ingratitude, and neglect, and to press on through toils, pri- vations, and perUs to the end. It was not the hope of discovering a world, over which he should himself exercise dominion, that sus- tained Columbus in all his trials. It was not for this he braved danger, disappointment, poverty, and reproach. It was not for this he subdued his native pride, wandered from kingdom to king- dom, kneeling at the feet of princes, a suppliant for means to prose- cute his sublime enterprise. It was not for this, after having at last secured the patronage of Isabella, that he put off in his crazy and ill-appointed fleet into unknown seas, to struggle with storms and tempests, and the rage of a mutinous crew. It was another and nobler kind of ambition that stimulated him to contend with terror, super stitution, and despair, and to press forward on his perilous course, when the needle in his compass, losing its polari- ty, seemed to unite with the fury of the elements and the insub- 20 ordinatiou of IiIs crew in turning him back from Iiis perilons But glorious undertaking. It was tbe hope "wliicli "was realized at last, when his ungrateful country was compelled to inscribe, as an epi- taph on his tomb — " COLUMBUS HAS GIVEN A NEW WORLD TO THE KINGDOMS OF CASTILE AND LEON," that enabled him, at ftrst, to brave so many disappointments, and at last, to conquer the multitude of perils that beset his pathway on the deep. This, sir, is the ambition of the truly great — not to achieve present fame, but future immortality. This being the case, it is befitting here to-day, to add to the life of Henry Clay the record of his death, signalized as it is by a nation's gratitude and grief. It is right that posterity should learn from us, the con- temporaries of the illustrious deceased, that his virtues and ser- vices were appreciated by his country, and acknowledged by the tears of his countrymen poured out upon his grave. The career of Henry Clay was a wonderful one. And what an illustration of the excellence of our institutions would a retrospect of his life afford ! Bom in an humble station, without any of the adventitious aids of fortune by which the obstructions on the road to fame are smoothed, he rose not only to the most exalted emi- nence of position, but likewise to the highest place in the affections of his countrymen. Taking into view the disadvantages of his early position, disadvantages against which he had always to con- tend, hia career is without a parallel in the history of great men. To have seen him a youth, without friends or fortune, and with but a scanty education, who would have ventured to predict for him a course so brilliant and beneficent, and a fame so well deserved and enduring ? Like the pine, which sometimes springs up amidst the rocks on the mountain side, with scarce a crevice in which to fix its roots, or soil to nourish them, but which, nevertheless, overtops all the trees of the surrounding forest, Henry Clay, by his own inherent, self-sustaining energy and genius, rose to an altitude of fame almost unequalled in the age in which he lived. As an orator, legislator, and statesman, he had no superior. All his faculties were remarkable, and in remarkable combination. Pos- sessed of a brilliant genius and fertile imagination, his judgment 21 "was sound, discriminating, and eminently practical. Of an ardent and impetuous temperament, lie was nevertheless perseyenng and firm of pui'pose. Frank, bold, and intrepid, he was cautious in providing against the contingencies and obstacles which might possibly rise up in the road to success. Generous, liberal, and entertaining broad and expanded views of national policy, in his legislative course he never transcended the limits of a wise economy. But, Mr. President, of all hie faculties, that of making friends, and attaching them to him, was the most remarkable and extra- ordinary. In this respect, he seemed to possess a sort of fascina- tion, by which all who came into his presence were attracted towards, and bound to him by ties which neither time nor cir- cumstances had power to dissolve or weaken. In the admiration of his friends was the recognition of the divinity of intellect ; in their attachment to him, a confession of his generous personal qualities and social virtues. Of the public services of Mr. Clay, the present occasion affords no room for a sketch more extended than that which his respected colleague [Mr. Undekwood] has presented. It is, how- ever, sufficient to say, that for more than forty years he has been a prominent actor in the drama of American affairs. During the late war with England, his voice was more potent than any other in awakening the spirit of the country, infusing confidence into the people, and rendering available the resources for carrying on the contest. In our domestic controversies, threatening the peace of the country and the integrity of the Union, he has always been fii'st to note danger, as well as to suggest the means of averting it. When the waters of the great political deep were upheaved by the tempest of discord, and the ark of the Union, freighted with the hopes and destinies of freedom, tossing about on the raging billows, and drifting every moment neai-er to the vortex which threatened to swallow it up, it was his clarion voice, rising above the storm, that admonished the crew of impending peril, and ■counselled the way to safety. But, Mr. President, devotedly as he loved his country, his aspirations were not limited to its welfare alone. Wherever free- dom had a votary, that votary had a friend in Heney Clay ; and 22 in the struggle of the Spanish colonies for independenee he uttered words of encoui'agement, which have become the mottos on the banners of freedom in every land. But neither the services which he has rendered his own country, nor his wishes for the welfare of others, nor his genius, nor the affection of friends, could turn aside the destroyer. No price could piu-chase exemption from the common lot of humanity. Henry Clay, the wise, the great, the gifted, had to die; and his history is summed up in the biography which the Russian poet has prepared for all, kings and serfs — ♦ * * * cc bom, living, dying, Quitting the still shore for the troubled wave. Struggling with storm-clouds, over shipwrecks flying, And casting anchor in the silent grave." Eut though time would not spare him, there is still this of con- solation : he died peacefully and happy, ripe in renown, full of years and of honors, and rich in the affections of his country. He had, too, the unspeakable satisfaction of closing his eyes whilst the country ho had loved so much, and served so well, was still in the enjoyment of peace, happiness, union, and prosperity — still advancing in all the elements of wealth, greatness, and power. I know, Mr. President, how unequal I have been to the appa- rently self-imposed task of presenting, in an appropriate manner, the merits of the illustrious deceased. But if I had remained silent on an occasion like this, when the hearts of my constituents are swelling with grief, I would have been disowned by them. It is for this reason — that of giving utterance to their feelings as well as of my own — that I have trespassed on the time of the Senate. I would that I could have spoken fitter words; but, such as they are, they were uttered by the tongue in response to the promptings of the heart. Mr. SEWARD said : — Mr. President: Fifty years ago, Henry Clay of Virginia, already adopted by Kentucky, then as youthful as himself, entered the service of his country, a representative in the unpretending Legislature of that rising State ; and having thenceforward, with ardor and constancy, pursued the gradual paths of an aspiring change through Halls of Congress, Foreign Courts, and Executive 23 Councils, he lias now, with the cheerfulness of a patriot, and the serenity of a Christian, fitly closed his long and arduous career, here in the Senate, in the full presence of the Republic, looking down upon the scene with anxiety and alarm, not merely a Senator like one of us, who yet remain in the Senate House, but filling that character which, though it had no authority of law, and was assigned without suffrage, Augustus Cfesar, nevertheless, declared was above the title of Emperor — Primus inter lUustres — the Prince of the Senate. Generals are tried, Mr. President, by examining the campaigns they have lost or won, and statesmen by reviewing the transac- tions in which they have been engaged. Hamilton would have been unknown to us, had there been no Constitution to be created ; as Brutus would have died in obscurity, had there been no Ccesar to be slain. Colonization, Revolution, and Organization — three great act;; in the drama of our National Progress — had already passed when the Western Patriot appeared on the public stage. He entered in that next division of the majestic scenes which was marked by an inevitable reaction of political forces, a wild strife of factions, and ruinous embarrassments in our foreign relations. This tran- sition stage is always more perilous than any other in the career of nations, and especially in the career of republics. It proved fetal to the Commonwealth in England. Scarcely any of the Spanish- American States have yet emerged from it; and more than once it has been sadly signalized by the ruin of the Repub- lican cause in France. The continuous administration of Washington and John Adams had closed under a cloud, which had thrown a broad, dark shadow over the future; the nation was deeply indebted at home and abroad, and its credit was prostrate. The Revolutionary factions had given place to two inveterate parties, divided by a gulf which had been worn by the conflict in which the Constitution was adopted, and made broader and deeper by a war of prejudices concerning the merits of the belligerents in the great European struggle that then convulsed the civilized world. Our extraordi- nary political system was little more than an ingenious theory, not yet practically established. The union of the States was as yet M only one of compact; for the political, social, and commercial necessities to wliicli it was so marvellously adapted, and wbicli, clustering thickly upon it, now render it indissoluble, had not then been broadly disclosed, nor had the habits of acquiescence, and the sentiments of loyalty, always slow of growth, fully ripened. The bark that had gone to sea, thus unfurnished and untried, seemed quite certain to founder by reason of its own inherent frailty, even if it should escape unharmed in the great conflict of nations, which acknowledged no claims of justice, and tolerated no pretensions of neutrality. Moreover, the territory possessed by the nation was inadequate to commercial exigencies and indis- pensable social expansion ; and yet no provision had been made for enlargement, nor for extending the political system over distant regions, inhabited or otherwise, which must inevitably be acquired. Nor could any such acquisition be made, without disturbing the carefully-adjusted balance of powers among the members of the Ci^'federacy. These diiBculties, Mr. Pkesident, although they grew less with time and by slow degrees, continued throughout the whole life of the statesman whose obsequies we are celebrating. Be it known, then, and I am sure that history will confirm the instruction, that Conservatism was the interest of the nation, aijd the responsibility of its rulers, during the period in which he flourished. He was ardent, bold, generous, and even ambitious ; and yet with a pro- found conviction of the true exigencies of the country, like Alex- ander Hamilton, he disciplined himself and trained a restless nation, that knew only self-control, to the rigorous practice of that often humiliating conservatism, which its welfare and security in that 2>articular crisis so imperiously demanded. It could not happen, sir, to any citizen to have acted alone, nor even to have acted always the most conspicuous part in a trying period so long protracted. Henry Clay, therefore, shared the responsibilities of Government with not only his proper contem- poraries, but also sm-vivors of the Revolution, as well as also many who will succeed himself. Delicacy forbids the naming of thoso who retain their places here, but we may, without impropriety, recall among his compeers a Senator of vast resources and inflex- ible resolve, who has recently withdrawn from this Chamber, but 26 I trust not altogether from public life, (Mr. Benton ;) and another, who, surpassing all his contemporaries within his country, and even throughout the world, in proper eloquence of the forum, now in autumnal years, for a second time dignifies and adorns the highest seat in the Executive Council, (Mr. Webster.) Passing by these eminent and noble men, the shades of Calhoun, John Quincy Adams, Jackson, Monroe, and Jefferson, rise up before us — statesmen, whose living and local fame has ripened already into historical and world-wide renown. Among geniuses so lofty as these, Heney Clay bore a part in regulating the constitutional freedom of political debate; estab- lishing that long-contested and most important line which divides the sovereignty of the several States from that of the States con- federated ; asserting the right of Neutrality, and vindicating it by a war against G-reat Britain, when that just but extreme measure became necessary ; adjusting the terms on which that perilous yet honorable contest was brought to a peaceful close ; perfecting the Army and the Navy, and the national fortifications ; settling the fiscal and financial policy of the Grovernment in more than one crisis of apparently threatened revolution ; asserting and calling into exercise the powers of the Government for making and im- proving internal communications between the States; arousing and encouraging the Spanish- American Colonies on this continent to thi-ow off the foreign yoke, and to organize Governments on principles congenial to our own, and thus creating external bul- warks for oiir own national defence; establishing equal and impartial peace and amity with all existing maritime Powers; and extending the constitutional organization of G-overnment over all the vast regions secured in his lifetime by purchase or by con- quest, whereby the pillars of the Republic have been removed from the banks of the St. Mary to the borders of the Rio G-rande, and from the margin of the Mississippi to the Pacific coast. We may not yet discuss here the wisdom of the several measures which have thus passed in review before us, nor of the positions which the deceased statesman assumed in regard to them, but we may, without offence, dwell upon the comprehensive results of them all. The Union exists in absolute integrity, and the Republican system is in complete and triumphant development. Without 26 having relinquished any part of their individuality, the States have more than doubled already, and are increasing in numbers and political strength and expansion, more rapidly than ever before. Without having absorbed any State, or having even encroached on any State, the Confederation has opened itself, so as to embrace all the new members who have come, and now, with capacity for further and indefinite enlargements, has become fixed, enduring, and per|)etual. Although it was doubted only half a century ago whether our j)olitical system could be maintained at all, and whether, if maintained, it could guarantee the peace and happiness of society, it stands now confessed by the world the form of Gov- ernment not only most adapted to Empire, but also most congenial with the constitution of Human Nature. When we consider that the nation has been conducted to this haven, not only through stormy seas, but altogether, also, without a course and without a star; and when we consider, moreover, the sum of happiness that has already been enjoyed by the American People, and still more the influence which the great achievement is exerting for the advancement and melioration of the condition of mankind, we see at once that it might have satisfied the highest ambition to have been, no matter how humbly, concerned in so great transaction. Certainly, sir, no one will assert that Henry Clay in that trans- action performed an obscure or even a common part. On the contrary, from the day on which he entered the public service un- til that on which he passed the gates of death, he was never a fol- lower, but always a leader; and he marshalled either the party which sustained or that which resisted every great measure, equal- ly in the Senate and among the people. He led where duty seem- ed to him to indicate, reckless whether he encountered one Presi- dent or twenty Presidents, whether he was opposed by factions or even by the whole peojile. Hence it has happened, that although that people arc not yet agreed among themselves on the wisdom of all, or perhaps of even any of his great measures, yet they are nevertheless unanimous in acknowledging that he was at once the greatest, the most faithful and the most reliable of their statesmen. Here the effort at discriminating praise of Henry Clay, in regard « 27 to his public policy, must stop in this place, even on this sad occa- sion which awakens the ardent liberality of his generous sui-vivors. But his personal qualities may be discussed without apprehen- sion. What were the elements of the success of that extraordina- ry man ? You, sir, knew him longer and better than I, and I would prefer to hear you speak of them. He was indeed elo- quent — all the world knows that. He held the keys to the hearts of his countrymen, and he turned the wards within them with a skill attained by no other master. But eloquence was nevertheless only an instrument, and one of many that he used. His conversation, his gesture, his very look, was persuasive, seductive, irresistible. And his appliance of all these was courteous, patient and indefatigable. Defeat only in- spired him with new resolution. He divided op}X)sition by his as- siduity of addi-ess, while he rallied and strengthened his own bands of supporters by the confidence of success which, feeling himself, he easily inspired among his followers. His affections were high, and pui-e, and generous, and the chiefest among them was that which the great Italian poet designated as the charity of native land. And in bim that charity was an enduring and over-power- ing enthusiasm, and it influenced all his sentiments and conduct, rendering him more impartial between conflicting interests and sections than any other statesman who has lived since the Revolu- tion. Thus with very great versatility of talent and the most catholic equality of favor, he identified every question, whether of domestic administration or foreign policy, with his own great name, and so became a perpetual Tribune of the people. He needed only to pronounce in favor of a measui-e or against it, here, and immediately popular enthusiasm, excited as by a magic wand, was felt, overcoming all opposition in the Senate Chamber. In this way he wrought a change in our political system, that I think was not foreseen by its founders. He converted this branch of the Legislature from a negative position, or one of equilibrium between the Executive and the House of Representatives, into the ac- tive ruling power of the Roimblic. Only time can disclose whether this great innovation shall be beneficent, or even permanent. Certainly, sir, the great lights of the Senate have set. The ob- scuration is not less palpable to the country than to us, who are 28 ieffc to grope our uncertain way here, as in a labyrinth, oppressed with self-distrust. The times, too, present new embarrassments. We are rising to another and a more sublime stage of natural pro- gress, — that of expanding wealth and rapid territorial aggrandize- ment. Our institutions throw a broad shadow across the St. Law- rence, and stretching beyond the valley of Mexico, reaches even to the plains of Central America; whUo the Sandwich Islands and the shores of China recognise its renovating influence. Wherever that influence is felt, a desire for protection under those institu- tions is awakened. Expansion seems to be regulated, not by any diificulties of resistance, but by the moderation which results from our own internal constitution. No one knows how rapidly that restraint may give way. Who can tell how far or how fast it ought to yield? Commerce has brought the ancient conti- nents near to us, and created necessities for new positions — per- haps connections or colonies there — and with the trade and friendship of the elder nations their conflicts and collisions are brought to our doors and to our hearts. Our sympathy kindles, our indifference extinguishes the fire of freedom in foreign lands. Before we shall be fully conscious that a change is going on in Em-ope, we may find ourselves once more divided by that eternal line of separation that leaves on the one side those of om' citizens who obey the impulses of sympathy, while on the other are found those who submit only to the counsels of prudence. Even pru- dence will soon be required to decide whether distant regions. East and West, shall come under our own protection, or be left to ag- grandize a rapidly spreading and hostile domain of despotism. Sir, who among us is equal to these mighty questions ? I fear there is no one. Nevertheless, the example of Henry Clay re- mains for our instruction. His genius has passed to the realms of light, but his virtues still live here for our emulation. With them there will remain also the protection and favor of the Most High, if by the practice of justice and the maintenance of freedom we Shall deserve it. Let, then, the bier pass on. With sorrow, but not without hope, we will follow the revered form that it bears to its final resting place ; and then, when that grave opens at our feet to receive such an inestimable treasure, we will invoke the God of 29 our fathers to send tts new guides, like him that is now withdrawn, and give us wisdom to obey their instructions. Mr. JONES, of Iowa, said : Mr. Peesident : Of the vast number who mourn the departure of the great man whose voice has ,so often been heard in this Hall, I have peculiar cause to regret that dispensation which has remov- ed him from among us. He was the guardian and director of my collegiate days ; four of his sons were my coUegemates and my warm friends. BIy intercom-se with the father was that of a youth and a friendly adviser. I shall never cease to feel grateful to him — ^to his now heart-stricken and bereaved widow and children, for their many kindnesses to me during four or five years of my life. I had the pleasure of renewing my acquaintance with him, first, as a delegate in Congi-ess, while he was a member of this body from 1835 to 1839, and again in 1848, as a member of this branch of Congress ; and dm-ing the whole of which period, some eight years, none but the most kindly feeling existed between us. As an humble and unimportant Senator, it was my fortune to co-operate with him throughout the whole of the exciting session of 1849-^50 — the labor and excitement of which is said to have precipitated his decease. That co-operation did not end with the accordant vote on this floor, but, in consequence of the unyielding opposition to the series of measures known as the "compromise," extended to many private meetings held by its friends, at all of which Mr. Clay was present. And whether in public or private life, he everywhere continued to inspire me with the most exalted estimate of his patriotism and statesmanship. Never shall I for- get the many ardent appeals he made to Senators, in and out of the Senate, in favor of the settlement of our then unhappy sec- tional differences. Immediately after the close of that memorable session of Con- gress, during •n'hich the nation beheld his great and almost super- human efforts upon this floor to sustain the wise counsels of the " Father of his Country," I accompanied him home fo Ashland, at his invitation, to revisit the place whei'e my happiest days had been spent, with the friends who there continued to reside. Dur- ing that, to me, most agreeable and instructive journey^ in many t 30 conversations he evinced the utmost solicitude for the welfare and honor of the Republic, all tending to show that ho believed the happiness of the people and the cause of liberty throughout the world depended upon the continuance of our glorious Union, and the avoidance ef those sectional dissensions which could but alien- ate the affections of one portion of the people from another. With the sincerity and fervor of a true patriot, he warned his compan- ions in that journey to withhold all aid from men who labored, and from every cause which tended, to sow the seeds of disunion in the land ; and to oppose such, he declared himself willing to forego all the ties and associations of mere party. At a subsequent period, sir, this friend of my youth, at my earnest and repeated entreaties, consented to take a sea voyage from New York to Havana. He remained at the latter place a fortnight, and then returned by New Orleans to Ashland. That excursion by sea, he assured me, contributed much to relieve him from the sufferings occasioned by the disease which has just ter- minated his eventful and glorious life. Would to Heaven that he could have been persuaded to abandon his duties as a Senator, and to have remained dui-ing the past winter and spring upon that Is- land of Cuba ! The country would not now, perhaps, have been called to mourn his loss. In some matters of policy connected with the administration of our General Government, I have disagreed with him, yet the pu- rity and sincerity of his motives I never doubted ; and as a true lover of his country, as an honorable and honest man, I trust his example will be reverenced and followed by the men of this, and of succeeding generations. Mr. BROOKE said: — Mr. President : As an ardent, personal admirer and political friend of the distinguished dead, I claim the privilege of adding my humble tribute of respect to his memory, and of joining in the general expression of sorrow that has gone forth from this Cham- ber. Death, at all times, is an instructive monitor, as well as a mournful messenger ; but when his fatal shaft hath stricken down the great in intellect and renown, how doubly impressive the lesson that it brings home to the heart, that the grave is the com- 31 mon lot of all — the great leveller of all earthly distinctions ! But at the same time we are taught, that iu one sense, the good and great can never die ; for the memory of their vii'tues and their bright example will live through all coming time, in an immor- tality that blooms beyond the grave. The consolation of this thought may calm our sorrow ; and, in the language of one of our own poets, it may be asked — " Why weep ye, then, for him, who having run The bound of man's appointed years, at last. Life's blessings all enjoyed, life's labors done, Serenely to his final rest has pass'd ; While the soft memory of liis virtues yet Lingers, like twilight hues when the bright sun has set ?" It will be doing no injustice, sir, to the living or the dead, to say, that no better specimen of the true American character can be found in our history than that of Mr. Clay. With no adven- titious advantages of birth or fortune, he won his way by the efforts of his own genius to the highest distinction and honor. Ardently attached to the principles of civil and religious liberty, patriotism was with him both a passion and a sentiment — a pas- sion that gave energy to his ambition, and a sentiment that per- vaded all his thoughts and actions, concentrating them upon his country as the idol of his heart. The bold and manly frankness in the expression of his opinions which always characterized him, has often been the subject of remark ; and in all his victories it may be truly said, he never " stooped to conquer." In his long and brilliant political career, personal considerations never for a single instant caused him to swerve from the strict line of duty, and none have ever doubted his deep sincerity in that memorable expression to Mr. Preston, " Sir, I had rather be right than be President." This is not the time nor occasion, sir, to enter into a detail of the public services of Mr. Clay, interwoven, as they are, with the history of the country for half a century ; but I cannot refrain from adverting to the last crowning act of his glorious life — his great effort in the Thirty-jBrst Congress, for the preservation of the peace and integrity of this great Republic, as it was this effort that shat- tered his bodily strength, and hastened the consummation of tf^^msaaw^mmm 32 death. The Union of the States, as being essential to oui* pros- perity and hajipiness, was the paramount proposition in his political creed, and the slightest symptom of danger to its perpetuity filled him with alarm, and called forth all the energies of his body and mind. In his earlier life he had met this danger and overcome it. In the conflict of contending factions it again appeared ; and com- ing forth from the repose of private life, to which age and infirmity had carried him, with unabated strength of intellect, he again entered upon the arena of political strife, and again success crowned his efforts, and peace and harmony were restored to a distracted people. But unequal to the mighty struggle, his bodily strength sank beneath it, and he retired from the field of his glory to yield up his life as a holy sacrifice to his beloved country. It has well been said, that peace has its victories as well as war ; and how bright upon the page of history will be the record of this great victory of intellect, of reason, and of moral suasion, over the spirit of discord and sectional animosities ! We this day, Mr. President, commit his memory to the regard and affection of his admiring countrymen. It is a consolation to them, and to us, to know that he died in full possession of his glorious intellect, and, what is better, in the enjoyment of that "peace which the world can neither give nor take away." He sank to rest as the fidl-orbed king of day, unshorn of a single beam, or rather like the planet of morning, his brightness was but eclipsed by the opening to him of a more full and perfect day — " No wrrning of fire, no paling of ray, But rising, still rising, as passing away. Farewell, gallant eagle, tliou'rt buried in light — God speed thee to Heaven, lost star of our night." The resolutions submitted by Mr. Underwood were then unan- imously agreed tOw Ordered, That the Secretary communicate these resolutions to tlie House of Representatives. On motion, by jMr. Underwood, Resolved, That, as an additional mark of respect to the memory of the deceased, the Senate do now adjourn. MMt jf T '* i»»pii> n ^*»^ > I ■» — aiW«^*iW» % PKOCEEDINaS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Washington, June 30, 1852. The Journal of yesterday having been read — A message was received from the Senate, by Asbtjry Dickins, Esq., its Secretary, communicating information of the death of Henry Clay, late Senator from the State of Kentucky, and the proceedings of the Senate thereon. The resolutions of the Senate having been read — Mr. BRECKINRIDGE rose and said : — Mr. Speaker: I rise to perform the melancholy duty of an- nouncing to this body the death of Henry Clay, late a Senator in Congress from the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Mr. Clay expired at his lodgings in this city yesterday morning, at seventeen minutes past eleven o'clock, in the seventy-sixth year of his age. His noble intellect was unclouded to the last After protracted sufferings, he passed away without pain ; and so gently did the spirit leave his frame, that the moment of departure was not observed by the friends who watched at his bedside. His last hours were cheered by the presence of an aifectionate son ; and he dfed surrounded by friends who, during his long illness, had done all that affection could suggest to soothe his sufferings. Although this sad event has been expected for many weeks, the shock it produced, and the innumerable tributes of respect to his memory exhibited on every side, and in every form, prove the depth of the public sorrow, and the greatness of the public loss. w Imperishably associated as his name has been for fifty years with every great event afi'ecting the fortunes of om* country, it is difficult to realize that he is indeed gone for ever. It is difficult to feel that we shall see no more his noble form within these walls — that we shall hear no more his patriot tones, now rousing his coun- trymen to vindicate their rights against a foreign foe, now imploring them to preserve concord among themselves. We shall me him no more. The memory and the fruits of his services alone remain to us. Amidst the general gloom the Capitol itself looks desolate, as if the genius of the place had departed. Already the intelli- gence has reached almost every quarter of the Republic, and a great people mourn with us, to-day, the death of their most illus- trious citizen. Sympathizing, as we do, deeply, with his family and friends, yet private aflliction is absorbed in the general sorrow. The spectacle of a whole community lamenting the loss of a great man, is far more touching than any manifestation of private grief. In speaking of a loss which is national, I will not attempt to describe the universal bui-st of grief with which Kentucky will receive these tidings. The attempt would be vain to depict the gloom that will cover her people, when they know that the pillar of fire is removed, which has guided tlieir footsteps for the life of a generation. It is known to the country that, from the memorable session of 1849-50, Mr. Clay's health gradually declined. Although several years of his Senatorial term remained, he did not propose to con- tinue in the public service longer than the present session. He came to Washington chiefly to defend, if it should become neces- sary, the measures of adjustment, to the adoption of which he so largely contributed ; but the condition of his health did not allow him, at any time, to participate in the discussions of the Senate. Through the winter he was confined almost wholly to his room, with slight changes in his condition, but gradually losing the rem- nant of his strength. Through the long and dreary winter he conversed much and cheerfully with his friends, and expressed "a deep interest in public affairs. Although he did not expect a restoration to health, he cherished the hope that the mUd season of spring would bring to him strength enough to return to Ash- land, and die in the bosom of his family. But, alas ! spring, that brings life to all nature, brought no life nor hope to him. After f ^5 the month of March his vital powers rapidly wasted, and for weeks he lay patiently awaiting the stroke of death. But the approach of the destroyer had no terrors for him. No clouds overhung his future. He met the end with composure, and his pathway to the grave was brightened by the immortal hopes which spring from the Christian faith. Not long before his death, having just returned from Kentucky, I bore to him a token of affection from his excellent wife. Never can I forget his appearance, his manner, or his words. After speaking of his family, his friends, and his country, he changed the conversation to his own future, and looking on me with his fine eye undimmed, and his voice full of its original compass and melody, he said, " I am not afraid to die, sir. I have hope, faith, and some confidence. I do not think any man can be entirely certain in regard to his future state, but I have an abiding trust in the merits and mediation of our Saviour." It will assuage the grief of his family to know that he looked hopefully beyond the tomb, and a Christian people will rejoice to hear that such a man, in his last hours, reposed with simplicity and confidence upon the promises of the Gospel. It is the custom, on occasions like this, to speak of the parentage and childhood of the deceased, and to foUow him, step by step, through life. I will not attempt to relate even all the great events of Mr. Clay's life, because they are familiar to the whole country, and it would be needless to enumerate a long list of public services which form a part of American history. Beginning life as a friendless boy, with few advantages, save those conferred by nature, while yet a minor he left Virginia, the State of his birth, and commenced the practice of law at Lexing- ton, in Kentucky. At a bar remarkable for its numbers and talent, Mr. Clay soon rose to the first rank. At a very early age he was elected from the county of Fayette to the General Assem- bly of Kentucky, and was the Speaker of that body. Coming into the Senate of the United States, for the first time, in 1806, he entered upon a parliamentary career the most brilliant and suc- cessful in our annals. From that time he remained habitually in the public eye. As a Senator, as a member of this House and its Speaker, as a Kepresentative of his country abroad, and as a high # T officer in tte Executive department of the Government, he was intimately connected for fifty years mth every great measure of American policy. Of the mere party measures of this period I do not propose to speak. Many of them have passed away, and are remembered only as the occasions for the great intellectual efforts which marked their discussion. Concerning others, opinions are still divided. They will go into history, with the reasons on either side rendered by the greatest intellects of the time. As a leader in a deliberative body, Mr. Clay had no equal in America. In him, intellect, person, eloquence, and courage, united to form a character fit to command. He fired with his own enthu- siasm, and controlled by his amazing will, individuals and masses. No reverse could crush his spirit, nor defeat reduce him to despair. Equally erect and dauntless in prosperity and adversity, when suc- cessful, he moved to the accomplishment of his purposes with se- vere resolution ; when defeated, he rallied his broken bands around him, and from his eagle eye shot along their ranks the contagion of his own courage. Destined for a leader, he everywhere assert- ed his destiny. In his long and eventful life he came in contact with men of all ranks and professions, but he never felt that he was in the presence of a man superior to himself In the assem- blies of the people, at the bar, in the Senate — everywhere within the circle of his personal presence he assumed and maintained a position of pre-eminence. But the supremacy of Mr. Clat, as a party leader, was not his only, nor his highest title to renown. That title is to be found in the purely patriotic spirit which, on great occasions, always sig- nalized his conduct. We have had no statesman, who, in periods of real and imminent public peril, has exhibited a more genuine and enlarged patriotism than Henry Clay. Whenever a question presented itself actually threatening the existence of the Union, Mr. Clay, rising above the passions of the hour, always exerted his powers to solve it peacefully and honorably. Although more liable than most men, from his impetuous and ardent nature, to feel strongly the passions common to us all, it was his rare foculty to be able to subdue them in a great crisis, and to hold toward all sections of the confederacy the language of concord and brotherhood. 37 Sir, it will be a proud pleasui-e to every true American heart to remember the great occasions when Mr. Clay has displayed a sub- lime patriotism — when the ill-temper engendered by the times, and the miserable jealousies of the day, seemed to have been driven from his bosom by the expulsive power of nobler feelings — when every throb of his heart was given to his country, every effort of his intellect dedicated to her service. Who does not remember the three periods when the American system of Government was exposed to iti, ^'^'verest trials ; and who does not know that when history shall relate the struggle which preceded, and the dangers which were averted by the Missouri compromise, the Tariff com- promise of 1832, and the adjustment of 1850, the same pages will record the genius, the eloquence, and the patriotism of Henry Clay? Nor was it in Mr. Clay's nature to lag behind until measures of adjustment were matured, and then come forward to swell a ma- jority. On the contrary, like a bold and real statesman, he was ever among the first to meet the peril, and hazard his fame upon the remedy. It is fresh in the memory of us all that, when lately the fury of sectional discord threatened to sever the confederacy, Mr. Clay, though withdrawn from public life, and oppressed by the burden of years, came back to the Senate — the theatre of his glory — and devoted the remnant of his strength to the sacred duty of preserving the union of the States. With characteristic courage he took the lead in proposing a scheme of settlement. But while he was willing to assume the re- sponsibility of proposing a plan, he did not, with petty ambition, insist upon its adoption to the exclusion of other modes ; but, tak- ing his own as a starting point for discussion and practical action, he nobly labored with his compatriots to change and improve it in such form as to make it an acceptable adjustment. Throughout the long and arduous struggle, the love of country expelled from his bosom the spirit of selfishness, and Mr. Clay proved, for the thix'd time, that though he was ambitious and loved glory, he had no ambition to mount to fame on the confusions of his country. And this conviction is lodged in the hearts of the people ; ihe par- ty measures and the party passions of former times have not, for several years, interposed between Mr. Clay and the masses of his 9 38 countryTnen. After 1850, he seemed to feel that his mission was accoiuplished , and, during the same period, the regards and affec- tions of the American people have been attracted to him in a re- markable degree. For many months, the warmest feelings, the deepest anxieties of aU parties, centered upon the dying statesman ; the glory of his great actions shed a mellow lustre on his declining years ; and to fill the measure of his fame, his countrymen, weaving for him the laurel wreath, with common hands, did bind it about his venerable brows, and send him crowned, to history. The life of Mr. Clay, sir, is a striking example of the abiding fame which surely awaits the direct and candid statesman. The entire absence of equivocation or disguise, in aU his acts, was his master-key to the popular heart; for while the people will forgive the errors of a bold and open nature, he sins past forgiveness, who deliberately deceives them. Hence Mr. Clat, though often de- feated in his measures of policy, always secured the respect of his opponents without losing the confidence of his friends. He never paltered in a double sense. The country was never in doubt as to his opinions or his pui-poses. In aU the contests of his time, his position on great public questions, was as clear as the sun in a cloudless sky. Sir, standing by the grave of this great man, and considering these things, how contemptible does appear the mere legerdemain of politics ! What a reproach is his life on that false policy which would trifle with a great and upright people ! If I were to write his epitaph, I would inscribe, as the highest eidogy, on the stone which shall mark his resting-place, " Here lies a man who was in the public service for fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen." While the youth of America should imitate his noble qualities, they may take courage from his career, and note the high proof it affords that, under om* equal institutions, the avenues to honor are open to all. Mr. Clay rose by the force of his own genius, unaid- ed by power, patronage, or wealth. At an age when our young men are usually advanced to the higher schools of learning, pro- vided only with the rudiments of an English education, he turned his steps to the West, and amidst the rude collisions of a border- life, matui'ed a character whose highest exhibitions were destined to mark eras in his country's history. Beginning en the frontiers 89 of American civilization, tlie orphan boy, supported only by tlao consciousness of liis own powers, and by the confidence of the people, surmounted all the barriers of adverse fortune, and won a glorious name m the annals of his country. Let the generous youth, fired with honorable ambition, remember that -he American system of government offers on every hand bounties to merit. If, like Clay, orphanage, obscurity, poverty, shall oppress him ; yet if, like Clay, he feels the Promethean spark within, let him remember that this country, like a generous mother, extends her arms to welcome and to cherish every one of her children whose genius and worth may promote her prosperity or increase her renown. Mr. Speaker, the signs of woe around us, and the general voice, announce that another great man has fallen. Our consolation is that he was not taken in the vigor of his manhood, but sank into the grave at the close of a long and illustrious career. The great statesmen who have filled the largest space in the public eye, one by one are passing away. Of the three great leaders of the Sen- ate, one alone remains, and he must follow soon. We shall wit- ness no more their intellectual struggles in the American Forum ; but the monuments of their genius will be cherished as the com- mon property of the people, and their names will continue to confer dignity and renown upon their country. Not less illustrious than the greatest of these will be the name of Clay — a name pronounced with pride by Americans in every quarter of the globe ; a name to be remembered while history shall record the struggles of modern Glreece for freedom, or the spirit of liberty biarn in the South American bosom ; a living and im- mortal name — a name that would descend to posterity without the aid of letters, borne by tradition from generation to generation. Every memorial of such a man will possess a meaning and a value to his countrymen. His tomb will be a hallowed spot. Great memories will cluster there, and his countrymen, as they visit it, may well exclaim — ' Sucb graves as Ms are pilgrim sbrines, Shrines to no creed or code confined ; Tlie Delphian vales, tlie Palestines, The Meccas of the mind." 40 Mr. Speaker, I offer the following resolutions : — Resolved, That tlie House of Representatives of the United States has received, with the deepest sensibility, intelligence of the death of Henry Clay. Resolved, That Uie ofRcers and members of tlie House of Representatives will wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days, as a testimony of Uie profound respect this House entertains for the memory of the deceased. Resolved, That tlie officers and members of the House of Representatives, in a body, will attend the funeral of Henry Clay, on the day appointed for that purpose by the Senate of tlie United States. Resolved, That the proceedings of this House, in relation to the death of Henry Clay, be communicated to the family of the deceased by tlie Clerk. Resolved, That, as a furtlier mark of respect for tlie memory of the deceased, this House do now adjourn. Mr. EWING rose and said : — A noble heart has ceased to beat for ever. A long life of bril- liant and self-devoted public service is finished at last. We now stand at its conclusion, looking back through the changeful history of that life to its beginning, contemporaneous with the very birth of the Republic, and its varied events mingle, in our hearts and our memories, with the triumphs and calamities, the weakness and the power, the adversity and prosperity, of a country we love so much. As we contemplate this sad event, in this place, the shadows of the past gather over us ; the memories of events long gone crowd upon us, and the shades of departed patriots seem to hover about us, and wait to receive into their midst the spirit of one who was worthy to be a co-laborer with them in a common cause, and to share in the rewards of their virtues. Henceforth he must be to us as one of them. They say he was ambitious. If so, it was a grievous fault, and grievously has he answered it. He has found in it naught but disappointment. It has but served to aggravate the mortification of his defeats, and furnish an additional lustre to the triumph of his foes. Those who come after us may, aye, they will, inquire why his statue stands not among the statues of those whom men thought ablest and worthiest to govern. But his ambition was a high and holy feeling, unselfish, mag- nanimous. Its aspirations were for his country's good, and its triumph was his country's prosperity. Whether in honor or re- proach, in triumph or defeat, that heart of his never throbbed with one pulsation, save for her honor and her welfare. Turn to him 41 in that last best deed, and crowning glory of a life so full of public service and of honor, when his career of personal ambition was finished for ever. Rejected again and again by his countrymen ; just abandoned by a party which would scarce have had an exist- ence without his genius, his courage, and his labors, that great heart, ever firm and defiant to the assaults of his enemies, but defenceless against the ingratitude of friends, doubtless wrung with the bitterest mortification of his life — then it was, and under such circumstances as these, the gathering storm rose upon his country. All eyes turned to him ; all voices called for those services which, in the hour of prosperity and security, they had so carelessly rejected. With no misanthropic chagrin; with no morose, selfish resentment, he forgot all but his country, and that country endan- gered. He returns to the scene of his labors and his fame which he had thought to have left for ever. A scene — that American Senate Chamber — clothed in no gorgeous drapery, shrouded in no superstitious awe or ancient reverence for hereditary power, but to a reflecting American mind more full of interest, or dignity, and of grandeur than any spot on this broad earth, not made holy by religion's consecrating seal. See him as he enters there, trem- blingly, but hopefully, upon the last, most momentous, perhaps most doubtful conflict of his life. Sir, many a gay tournament has been more dazzling to the eye of fancy, more gorgeous and impos- ing in the display of jewelry and cloth of gold, in the sound of heralds' trumpets, in the grand array of princely beauty and of royal pride. Many a battle-field has trembled beneath a more ostentatious parade of human power, and its conquerors have been crowned with laurels, honored with triumphs, and apotheosised amid the demigods of history; but to the thoughtful, hopeful, philanthropic student of the annals of his race, never was there a conflict in which such dangers were threatened, such hopes im- periled, or the hero of which deserved a warmer gratitude, a nobler triumph, or a prouder monument. Sir, from that long, anxious, and exhausting conflict, he never rose again. In that last battle for his country's honor and his country's safety, he received the mortal wound which laid him low, and we now mourn the death of a martyred patriot. X 42 But nerer, in all the grand drama wMcli the story of his life arrays, never has he presented a sublimer or a more touching spec- tacle than in those last days of his decline and death. Broken with the storms of State, wounded and scathed in many a fiery conflict, that aged, worn, and decayed body, in such mournful con- trast with the never-dying strength of his giant spu-it, he seemed a proud and sacred, though a crumbling monument of past glory. Standing among us, like some ancient colossal ruin amid the degenerate and more diminutive structures of modern times, its vast proportions magnified by the contrast, he reminded us of those days when there were giants in the land, and we remembered that even then there was none whose prowess could withstand his arm. To watch him in that slow decline, yielding with dignity, and, as it were, inch by inch, to that last enemy, as a hero yields to a con- quering foe, the glorious light of his intellect blazing still in all its wonted brilliancy, and setting at defiance the clouds that vainly attempted to obscure it, he was more full of interest than in the day of his glory and his power. There are some men whose brightest inteUectual emanations rise so little superior to the instincts of the animal, that we are led fearfully to doubt that cherished truth of the soul's immortality, which, even in despair, men press to their doubting hearts. But it is in the death of such a man as he that we are reassured by the contemplation, of a kindred, though superior, spu'it, of a soul which, immortal, like his fame, knows no old age, no decay, no death. The wondrous light of his unmatched intellect may have dazzled a world ; the eloquence of that inspired tongue may have en- chanted millions, but there are few who have sounded tlie depths of that noble heart. To see him in sickness and in health, in joy and in sadness, in the silent watches of the night and in the busy daytime — this it was to know and love him. To see the impetuous torrent of that resistless will; the hurricane of those passions hushed in peace, breathe calm and gently as a summer zephyr ; to feel the gentle pressure of that hand in the grasp of friendship, which, in the rage of fiery conflict, would hurl scorn and defiance at his foe; to see that eagle eye, which oft would burn with patriotic ardor, or flash with the lightning of his anger, beam with the kindliest expressions of tenderness and a0"ection — then it was, 43 and tlien alone, we could learn to know and feel that that heart was warmed hy the same sacred fire from above which enkindled the light of his resplendent intellect. In the death of such a man even patriotism itself might pause, and for a moment stand aloof while friendship shed a tear of sorrow upon his hier. " His life was gentle ; and the elements So mix'd in him, that Nature might stand up And say to all the world, This was a man .'" But who can estimate his country's loss ? What tongue portray the desolation which in this hour throughout this broad land hangs like a gloomy pall over his grief-stricken countrymen? How poorly can words like mine translate the eloquence of a whole people's grief for a patriot's death. For a nation's loss let a nation mourn. For that stupendous calamity to our country and man- kind, be the heavens hung with black; let the wailing elements chant his dirge, and the universal heart of man throb with one common pang of grief and anguish. Mr. CASKIE said: — Mr. Speaker : Unwell as I am, I must try to lay a single laurel leaf in that open coffin which is already garlanded by the eloquent tributes to the illustrious departed, which have been heard in this now solemn Hall ; for I come, sir, from the district of his birth. I represent on this floor that old Hanover so proud of her Henrys — her Patrick Henry and her Henby Clay. I speak for a People among whom he has always had as earnest and devoted friends as were ever the grace and glory of a patriot and states- man. I shall attempt no sketch of his life. That you have had from other and abler hands than mine. Till yesterday that life was, of his own free gift, the property of his country ; to-day it belongs to her history. It is known to all, and will not be forgotten. Con- stant, stern opponent of his political school, as has been my State, I say for her, that no where in this broad land are his great qual- ities more admired, or is his death more mourned, than in Virginia. Well may this be so ; for she is his mother, and he was her son. 44 Mr. Speaker, wlieu I remember the party strifes in which he was so much mingled, and through Avhich we all more or less have passed, and then survey this scene, and think how far, as the light- ning has borne the news that he is gone, half-masted flags are drooping and church bells are tolling, and hearts are sorrowing, I can but feel that it is good for man to die. For when Death enters, ! how the unkindnesses, and jealousies, and rivalries of life do vanish, and how like incense from an altar do peace, and friend- ship, and all the sweet charities of our nature, rise around the corpse which was once a man ! And of a truth, Mr. Speaker, never was more of veritable noble manhood cased in mortal mould than was found in him to whose memory this brief and humble, yet true and heartfelt, tribute is paid. But his eloquent voice is hushed, his high heart is stilled. " Like a shock of corn fully ripe, he has been gathered to his fathers." "With more than three score years and ten upon him, and honors clustered thick about him, in the full possession of unclovided intellect, and all the consolations of Christianity, he has met the fate which is evitable by none. Lamented by all his countrymen, his name is bright on Fame's immortal roll. He has finished his course, and he has his crown. What more fruit can life bear ? What can it give that Henry Clay has not gained ? Then, Mr. Speaker, around his tomb should be heard, not only the dirge that wails his loss, but the jubilant anthem which sounds that on the world's battle- field another victory has been won — another iiicontestahle greatness achieved. Mr. CHANDLER, of Pennsylvania, said: — Mr. Speaker : It would seem as if the solemn invocation of the honorable gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. Ewing) was receiving an early answer, and that the heavens are hung in black, and the wailing elements are singing the funeral dirge of Henry Clay. Amid this elemental gloom, and the distress which pervades the nation at the death of Henry Clay, private grief should not obtrude itself upon notice, nor personal anguish seek for utterance. Silence is the best exponent of individual sorrow, and the heart that knoweth its own bitterness shrinks from an exposition of its afiliction. 45 Could I have consulted my own feelings on the event wliicli occupies the attention of the House at the present naoment, I should even have forborne attendance here, and, in the solitude and silence of my chamber, have mused upon the terrible lesson which has been administered to the people and the nation. But I repre- sent a constituency who justly pride themselves upon the unwaver- ing attachment they have ever felt and manifested to Henrt Clay — a constant, pervading, hereditary love. The , son has taken up the father's affection, and amid all the professions of political attachments to others, whom the accidents of party have made prominent, and the success of party has made powerful, true to his own instincts, and true to the sanctified legacy of his father, he has placed the name of Henry Clay forward and pre-eminent, as the exponent of what is greatest in statesmanship and purest in patriot- ism. And even, sir, when party fealty caused other attachments to be avowed for party uses, the preference was limited to the occupancy of office, and superiority admitted for Clay in all that is reckoned above 2)arty estimation. Nor ought I to forbear to add that, as the senior member of the delegation which represents my Commonwealth, I am requested to utter the sentiments of the people of Pennsylvania at large, who yield to no portion of this great Union in their appreciation of the talents, their reverence for the lofty patriotism, their admiration of the statesmanship, and hereafter their love of the memory of Henry Clay. I cannot, therefore, be silent on this occasion without injustice to the affections of my constituency, even though I painfully feel how inadequate to the' reverence and love my people have toward that great statesman must be all that I have to utter on this mournful occasion. I know not, Mr. Chairman,, where now the nation is to find the men she needs in peril ; either other calls than those of politics are holding in abeyance the talents which the nation may need, or else a generation is to pass undistinguished by the greatness of our statesmen. Of the noble minds that have swayed the Senate one yet survives in the maturity of powerful intellect, carefully disci- plined, and nobly exercised. May He who has thus far blessed our nation, spare to her and the world that of which the world 46 must alw^ays envy our country tlie possession ! But my business is with the dead. The biography of Henry Clay, from his childhood up^vard, is too familiar to every American for me to trespass on the time of this House, by a reference directly thereto; and the honorable gentlemen who have preceded me have, with aifectionate hand and appropriate delicacy, swept away the dust which nearly fourscore years have scattered over a part of the record, and have made our pride greater in his life, and our grief more poignant at his death, by showing some of those passages which attract respect to our republican institutions, of which Mr. Clay's whole life was the able support, and the most successM illustration. It would, then, be a work of supererogation for me to renew that effort, though inquiry into the life and conduct of Henry Clay would present new themes for private eulogy, new grounds for public gratitude. How rare is it, Mr. Speaker, ^at the great man, living, can with confidence rely on extensive personal friendship, or dying, think to awaken a sentiment of regret beyond that which includes the public loss or the disappointment of individual hopes. Yet, sir, the message which yesterday went forth from this city that Henry Clay was dead, brought sorrow, personal, private, special sorrow, to the hearts of thousands ; each of whom felt that from his own love for, his long attachment to, his disinterested hopes in Henry Clay, he had a particular sorrow to cherish and express, which weighed upon his heart separate from the sense of national loss. No man, Mr. Speaker, in our nation had the art so to identify himself with public measures of the most momentous character, and to maintain at the same time almost universal affection, like that great statesman. His business, from his boyhood, was with na- tional concerns, and he dealt with them as with familiar things. And yet his sympathies were with individual interests, enterprises, affections, joys, and sorrows; and while every patriot bowed in humble deference to his lofty attainments and heartfelt gratitude for his national services, almost every man in this vast Kcpublic knew that the great statesman was, in feeling and experience, iden- tified with his own position. Hence the universal love of the ^ 41 people ; heace their enthusiasoi in all times for his fame. Hence, sir, their present grief. Many other public men of our country have distinguished them- selyes and brought honor to the nation by superiority in some pe- culiar branch of public service, 1)ut it seems to have been the gift of Mr. CiiAT to have acquired pecuHar eminence in every path of duty he was called to tread. In the earnestness of debate, which great public interests and distinguished opposing talents excited in this House, he had no superior in energy, force, or effect. Yet, as the presiding officer, by blandness of language and firmness of purpose, he soothed and made orderly ; and thus, by official dignity, he commanded the respect which energy had secured to him on the floor. . Wherever official or social duties demanded an exercise of his power there was a pre-eminence which seemed prescriptively his ovra. In the lofty debate of the Senate and the stirring harangues to popular assemblages, he was the orator of the nation and of the people; and the sincerity of purpose and the unity of design evinced in all he said or did, fixed in the public mind a confidence strong and expansive as the affections he had won. Year after year, sir, has Heney Clay been achieving the work of the mission with which he was intrusted ; and it was only when the warmest wishes of his warmest Mends wera disappointed, that he entered on the fruition of a patriot's highest hopes, and stood in the full enjoyment of that admiration and confidence which nothing but the antagonism of party relations could have divided. How rich that enjoyment must have been it is only for us to imagine. How eminently deserved it was we and the world can attest. The love and t^e devotion of his political friends were cheering and grateful to his heart, and were acknowledged in all his life — were recognised even to his death. The contest in the Senate Chamber or the forum were rewarded with success achieved, and the great victor could enjoy the ovation which partial friendship or the gratitude of the benefit prepared. But the triumph of his life was no party achievement. It was not in the applause which admiring friends and defeated antagonists J 48 offered to his measureless success, that he found the reward of his labors, and comprehended the extent of his mission. It was only when friends and antagonists paused in their con- tests, appalled at the public difficulties and national dangers which had been accumulating, unseen and unregarded ; it was only when the nation itself felt the danger, and acknowledged the inefficacy of party action as a remedy, that Henry Clay calculated the full ex- tent of his powers, and enjoyed the reward of their saving exercise. Then, sir, you saw, and I saw, party designations dropped, and party allegiance disavowed, and anxious patriots, of all localities and name, turn toward the country's benefactor as the man for the terrible exigencies of the hour ; and the sick chamber of Henry Clay became the Delphos whence were given out the oracles that presented the means and the measures of our Union's safety. There, sir, and not in the high places of the country, were the labors and sacrifices of half a century to be rewarded and closed. With his right yet in that Senate which he had entered the youngest, and lingered still the eldest member, he felt that his work was done, and the object of his life accomplished. Every cloud that had dimmed the noonday lustre had been dissipated ; and the retiring orb, which sunk from the sight of the nation in fullness and in beauty, will yet pour up the horizon a posthumous glory that shall tell of the splendor and greatness of the luminary that has passed away. Mr. BAYLY, of Virginia, said : . Mr. Speaker : Although I have been all my life a political op- ponent of Mr. Clay, yet from my boyhood I have been upon terms of personal friendship with him. More than twenty years ago, I was introduced to him by my father, who was his personal friend. From that time to this, there has existed between us as great personal intimacy as the disparity in our years and our poli- tical difference would justify. After I became a member of this House, and upon his return to the Senate, subsequent to his resig- nation in 1842, the warm regard upon his part for the daughter of a devoted friend of forty years' standing, made him a constant visitor at ray house, and frequently a guest at my table. These circumstances make it proper, that upon this occasion, I should pay 49 this last tribute to his memory. I not only knew him well as a statesman, but I knew him better in most unreserved social inter- course. The most happy circumstance, as I esteem it, of my po- litical life has been, that I have thus known each of our great Congressional triumvirate. I, sir, never knew a man of higher qualities than Mr. Clay. His very faults originated in high qualities. With as great self- possession, with greater self-reliance than any man I ever knew, he possessed moral and physical coui'age to as high a degree as any man who ever lived. Confident in his own judgment, never doubting as to his own course, fearing no obstacle that might lie in his way, it was almost impossible that he should not have been imperious in his character. Never doubting himself as to what, in his opinion, duty and patriotism required at his hands, it was na- tm-al that he should sometimes have been impatient with those more doubting and timid than himself His were qualities to have made a great general, as they were qualities that did make him a great statesman, and these qualities were so obvious that during the darkest period of our late war with Great Britain, Mr. Madi- son had determined, at one time, to make him Greneral-in-Chief of the American army. Sir, it is but a short time since the American Congress buried the first one that went to the grave of that great triumvirate. We are now called upon to bury another. The third, thank God ! still lives, and long may he live to enlighten his countrymen by his wisdom, and set them the example of exalted patriotism. Sir, in the lives and characters of these great men, there is much resemb- ling those of the great triumvirate of the British Parliament. It differs principally in this: Burke preceded Fox and Pitt to the tomb. Webster survives Clay and Calhoun. When Fox and Pitt died, they left no peer behind them. Webster still lives, now that Calhoun and Clay are dead, the unrivalled statesman of his coun- try. Like Fox and Pitt, Clay and Calhoun lived in troubled times. Like Fox and Pitt they were each of them the leader of rival^arties. Like Fox and Pitt they were idolized by their re- spective friends. Like Fox and Pitt, they died about the same time, and in the public service; and as has been said of Fox and 50 Pitt, Clay and Calhoun died with "their harness upon them.*' Like Fox and Pitt — " With more llian mortal powers endow'd How high they soar'd above the crowd ; Theirs was no common party race, Jostling by dark intrigue for place — Like fabled gods tiieir mighty war Shook reahus and nations in its jar. Beneath each banner proud to stand, Look'd up the noblest of the land. ***** Here let their discord with them die. Speak not for those a separate doom ; Whom fate made brothers in the tomb ; But search tlie land of living men. Where wit tliou find tlieir like again ?" Mr. VENABLE said : — Mr. Speaker : I trust that I shall be pardoned for adding a few words upon this sad occasion. The life of the illustrious statesman which has just terminated is so interwoven with our history, and the lustre of his great name so profusely shed over its pages, that simple admii-ation of his high qualities might well be my excuse. But it is a sacred privilege to draw near; to contemplate the end of the great and the good. It is profitable, as well as purifying, to look upon and realize the ofiice of death in removing all that can excite jealousy or produce distrust, and to gaze upon the virtues which, like jewels, have survived his powers of destruction. The light which radiates from the life of a great and patriotic states- man is often dimmed by the mists which party conflicts throw around it. But the blast which strikes him down purifies the atmosphere which surrounded him in life, and it shines forth in bright examples and well-earned renown. It is then that we witness the sincere acknowledgment of gratitude by a people who, having enjoyed the benefits arising from the services of an eminent statesman, embalm his name in their memory and hearts. We should cherish such recollections as well from patriotism as self- respect. Ours, sir, is now the duty, in the midst of sadness, in this high place, in the face of our Republic, and before the world, 51 to pay this tribute, by acknowledging the merits of our colleague, whose name has ornamented the Journals of Congress for near half a century. Few, very few, have ever combined the high intel- lectual powers and distinguished gifts of this illustrious Senator. Cast in the finest mould by nature, he more than fulfilled the anti- cipations which were indulged by those who looked to a distin- guished career as the certain result of that zealous pursuit of fame and usefulness upon which he entered in early life. Of the inci- dents of that life it is unnecessary for me to speak — they are as familiar as household words, and must be equally familiar to those who come after us. But it is useful to refresh memory, by recur- rence to some of the events which marked his career. We know, sir, that there is much that is in common in the histories of dis- tinguished men. The elements which constitute greatness are the iravely struggling foi' liberty. That was enough for Henry Clay. His generous soul overflowed with sympathy. But this was not all ; there were graver and higher considerations that belonged to the subject, and these were all felt and apprecia- ted by Mr. Clay. 92 If Soutb America was resubjugated by Spain, she would, in effect, become European, and relapse into the system of European policy — the system of legitimacy, monarchy, and absolutism; on the other hand, if she succeeded in establishing her independence, the lyrinciple of free institutions would be established with it, and republics kindred to our own would rise up to protect, extend, and defend the rights and liberties of mankind. It was not, then, a mere struggle between Spain and her colo- nies. In its consequences, at least, it went much further, and, in effect, was a contest between the great antagonist principles and systems of arbitrary European Governments and of free American Grovernments. Whether the millions of people who inhabited, or were to inhabit, South America, were to become the victims and the instruments of the arbitrary princy^Zc, or the supporters of the free p>rincip)le, was a question of momentous consequence now and in all time to come. With these views Mr. Clay, from sympathy and policy, em- braced the cause of South American independence. He proposed no actual intervention in her behalf, but he wished to aid her with all the moral power and encoviragement that could be given by a welcome recognition of her by the Government of the United States. To him belongs the distinguished honor of being first among the statesmen of the world to espouse and plead the cause of South America, and to propose and urge the recognition of her indepen- dence. And his own country is indebted to him for the honor of being the first nation to offer that recognition. When the magnitude of the subject and the weighty interest and consequences attached to it are considered, it seems to me that there is no more palmy day in the life of Mr. Clay than that in which, at the head of his committee, he presented to the Presi- dent the resolution of the House of llepresentatives in favor of the recognition of South American independence. On that occa- sion he appears in all the sublimity of his natui-e, and the states- man, invested with all the sympathies and feelings of humanity, is enlarged and elevated into the character of the friend and guar- dian of universal liberty. 93 How far South America may have been aided or influenced in her struggles by the recognition of our Government, or by the noble appeals which Mr. Clay had previously addressed, in her behalf, to Congi-ess and to the world, I cannot say ; but it is known that those speeches were read at the head of her armies, and that grateful thanks were returned. It is not too much to suppose that he exercised great influence in her afitiirs and destinies. Years after the first of Mr. Clay's noble exertions in the cause of South America, and some time after those exertions had led the Government of the United States to recognise the new States of South America, they were also recognised by the Government of Great Britain, and Mr. Canning, her minister, thereupon took occasion to sa}^ in the House of Commons, "there (alluding to South America) I have called a new world into existence !" That was a vain boast. If it can be said of any man, it must be said of Henry Clay that he called that " new world into existence."* Mr. Clay was the Father of the policy of Internal Improvement by the General Government. The exjjediency of such legislation had indeed been suggested, in one of his later annual messages to Congress, by President Jefferson, and that suggestion was revived by President Madison in the last of Ids annual messages. The late Bank of the United States having been then just established, a bill passed, in supposed conformity to Mr. Madison's recommen- dation, for setting aside the annual bonus to be paid by the Bank, as a fund for the purposes of Internal Improvement. This bill Mr. Madison very unexpectedly, on the last day of the term of his office, returned to the House of Kepresentatives without his signa- ture, assigning the reasons for his withholding it — reasons which related rather to the form than the substance — and recommending an amendment to the Constitution to confer upon Congress the necessary power to carry out that policy. The bill, of course, fell through for that session. While this bill was on its passage, Mr. Clay had spoken in favor of it, declaring his own decided opinion in favor of the constitutionality and expediency of the measure. Mr. Monroe, immediately succeeding Mr. Madison in the Presi- 94 dency, introduced into his first annual message a declaration, in advance of any proposition on the subject, of a settled conviction on his mind that Congress did not possess the right to enter upon a system of Internal Improvement. But for this declaration, it may be doubted that the subject would have been again agitated so soon after Mr. Madison's veto. The threat of a recurrence to that resort by the new President roused up a spirit of defiance in the popular branch of Congress, and especially in the lion heart of Mr. Clay ; and, by his advice and counsel, a resolution was intro- duced, declaring that Congress has power, under the Constitution, to make appropriations for the construction of military roads, post' roads, and canals. Upon this proposition, in committee of the whole House, Mr. Clay attacked, with all his powers of argument, wit, and raillery, the interdiction in the message. He considered that the question was now one between the Executive, on the one hand, and the Representatives of the people on the other, and that it was so understood by the country ; that if, by the communica- tion of his opinion to Congress, the President intended to prevent discussion, he had "most wofuUy failed;" that in having (Mr. Clay had no doubt with the best motives) volunteered his opinions upon the subject, he had "inverted the order of legislation, by beginning where it should end ;" and, after an able and unanswer- able argument on the question of the power, concluded by saying : "If we do notliing this session hut pass an abstract resolution on the subject, I shall, under all circumstances, consider it a triumph for the best interests of the country, of which posterity will, if we do not, reap the benefit." And the abstract resolution did pass, by a vote of 90 to 75 ; and a trium2yh it was which Mr. Clay had every right to consider as his own, and all the more grateful to his feelings, because he had hardly hoped for it. Referring to the final success, at a distance of thirty-five years, of the principle thus established, in the recent passage by Con- gress of the act for the improvement of certain of the ports and harbors and navigable rivers of the country, let " Posterity " not forget, on this occasion, to what honored name is undoubtedly due the credit of the first legislative assertion of the power. Mr. Clay was, perhaps, the only man since Washington who could have said, with entire truth, as he did, "■ I had rather he I 95 rigid than he President.''^ Honor and patriotism were his great and distinguishing traits. The first had its spring and support in his fearless spirit ; the second in his peculiar Americanism of sen- timent. It was those two principles which ever threw his whole soul into every contest where the public interest was deeply involved, and, above all, into every question which in the least menaced the integrity of the Union. This last was, with him, the arh of the covenant; and he was ever as ready to peril his own life in its defence, as he was to pronounce the doom of a traitor on any one who would dare to touch it with hostile hands. It was the ardor of this devotion to his country, and to the sheet anchor of its liberty and safety, the Union of the States, that rendered him so conspicuous in every conflict that threatened either one or the other with harm. All are familiar with his more recent, indeed his last, great struggle for his country, when the foundation of the Union trembled under the fierce sectional agitation, so happily adjusted and pacified by the wise measures of compromise which he proposed in the Senate, and which were, in the end, in sub- stance adopted. That brilliant epoch in his history is fi-esh in the memory of all who hear me, and will never be forgotten by them. An equally glorious success achieved by his patriotism, his reso- luteness, and the great power of his oratory, was one which few of this assembly are old enough vividly to remember, but which, in the memory of those who witnessed the effort, and the success of that greatest triumph of his master spirit, will ever live the most interesting in the life of the great statesman. I mean the Missouri controversy. Then, indeed, did common courage quail, and hope seem to shrink before the storm that burst upon and threatened to overwhelm the Union. Into the history of what is still familiarly known as the " Mis- souri question," it is not necessary, if time would allow, that I should enter at any length. The subject of the controversy, as all my hearers know, was the disposition of the House of Represen- tatives, manifested on more than one occasion, and by repeated votes, to require, as a condition of the admission of the Territory of Missouri into the Union as a State, the perpetual prohibition of the introduction of slavery into the Territories of the United States west of the Mississippi. During the conflict to which this 96 proposition gave rise in 1820, the deTb-7-i>— d.^^- OBITUARY HONORS TO THE MEMORY OF DANIEL WEESTEE. IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES, Tuesday, December 14, 1852. Mr. JOHN DAVIS, of Massachusetts, rose and addressed the Senate, as follows : Mr. President: I rise to bring to the notice of the Senate an event which has touched the sensibilities and awakened sympathies in all parts of the country; an event which has appropriately found a place in the message of the President, and ought not to be passed in silence by the Senate. Sir, we have within a short space mourned the death of a suc- cession of men illustrious by their services, their talents, and worth. Not only have seats in this Chamber, in the other House, and upon the bench of the Court been vacated, but Death has entered the Executive mansion, and claimed that beloved patriot who filled the Chair of State. The portals of the tomb had scarcely closed upon the remains of a great and gifted member of this House, before they are again opened to receive another marked man of our day, one who stood out with a singular prominence before his countrymen, challenging, by his extraordinary intellectual power, the admiration of his fellow-men. Daniel Webster, (a name familiar in the remotest cabin upon the frontier,) after mixing actively in the councils of his country 12 for forty years, and having reached the limits of life assigned to mortals, has descended to the mansions of the dead, and the damp earth now rests uj^on his manly form. That magic voice which was wont to fill this place with admiring listeners is hushed in eternal silence. The multitude will no longer bend in breathless attention from these galleries to catch his words, and to watch the speaking eloquence of his countenance, animated by the fervor of his mind. Nor will the Senate again be instructed by the outpourings of his profound intellect, matured by long experience, and enriched by copious streams from the fountains of knowledge. The thi-ead of life is cut, the immortal is separated from the mortal, and the products of a great and cul- tivated mind are all that remained to us of the jurist and legislator. Few men have attracted so large a share of public attention, or maintained for so long a period an equal degree of mental distinc- tion. In this and the other House there were rivals for fame, and he grappled in debate with the master minds of the day, and achieved in such manly conflict the imperishable renown connected with his name. Upon most of the questions which have been much agitated in Congress during his period of service his voice was heard. Few orators have equalled him in a masterly power of condensation, or in that clear logical arrangement of proofs and arguments which secures the attention of the hearer, and holds it with unabated interest. These speeches have been preserved, and many of them will be read as forensic models, and will command admiration for the great display cf intellectual power and extensive research. This is not a suitable occasion to discuss the merits of political productions, or to compare them with the effusions of great contemporaneous minds, or to speak of the principles advocated. All this belongs to the future, and history will assign each great name the measure of its enduring fame. Mr. Webster was conspicuous not only among the most illus- trious men in the halls of legislation, but his fame shone with undiminished lustre in the judicial tribunals as an advocate, where he participated in many of the most important discussions. On the bench was Marshall, Story, and their brethren, men of patient ll research aud comprehensive scope of intellect, who have left behind them in our judicial annals proofs of greatness which will secure profound veneration and respect for their names. At the bar stood Pinckney, Wirt, Emmett, and many others who adorned aud gave exalted character to the professions. Amid these luminaries of the bar he discussed many of the great questions raised in giving con- struction to organic law, and no one shone with more intense brightness, or brought into the conflict of mind more learning, higher proofs of severe mental discipline, or more copious illustration. Among such men, and in such honorable combat, the founda- tion of that critical knowledge of constitutional law, which after- wards became a prominent feature of his character, and entered largely into his opinions as a legislator, were laid. The arguments made at this forum display a careful research into the history of the foundation of the Federal Union, and an acute analysis of the fundamental provisions of the Constitution. Probably no man has penetrated deeper into the principles, or taken a more comprehen- sive and complete view of the union of the States, than that great man. Chief Justice Marshall. No question was so subtle as to elude his grasp, or so complex as to defy his penetration. Even the great and the learned esteemed it no condescension to listen to the teachings of his voice, and no one profited more by his wisdom or more venerated his character than Mr. Webster. To stand among such men with marked distinction, as did Mr. Webstee, is an association which might satisfy any ambition, what- ever might be its aspirations. But there^ among those illustrious men, who have finished their labors and gone to their final homes, he made his mark strong and deep, which will be seen and traced by posterity. But I need not dwell on that which is familiar to all readers who feel an interest in such topics; nor need I notice the details of his private life, since hundreds of pens have been employed in revealing all the facts, and in describing, in the most vivid manner, all the scenes which have been deemed attractive. Nor need I reiterate the fervent language of eulogy which has been poured out in aU quarters — ■from the press, the pulpit, the bar, legislative bodies, and public assemblies, since his own productions constitute his best eulogy. I could not, if I were to attempt it, add any thing to the strength or beauty of the manifold evidences which have been exhibited of the length, the breadth, and height of his fame, nor is there any occasion for such proofs in the Senate, the place where his face was familiar, where many of his greatest efforts were made, and where his intellectual powers were appreciated. Here he was seen and heard, and no where else will his claim to great distinction be more cheerfully admitted. But the places which have known him will know him no more. His form will never rise here again, his voice will not be heard, nor his expressive countenance seen. He is dead. In his last moments he was surrounded by his family and friends at his own home, and, while consoled by their presence, his spirit took its flight to other regions. All that remained has been committed to its kindred earth. Divine Providence gives us illustrious men, but they, like others, when their mission is ended, yield to the inexorable law of our being. He who gives also takes away, but never forsakes his faithful children. The places of those possessing uncommon gifts are vacated ; the sod rests upon the once manly form, now as cold and lifeless as itself, and the living are filled with gloom and desolation ; but the world rolls on, nature loses none of its charms, the sun rises with undiminished splendor, the grass loses none of its freshness, nor do the flowers cease to fill the air with fragrance. Natui'e, untouched by human wo, proclaims the immutable law of Providence that decay follows growth, and that he who takes away never fails to give. Sir, I propose the following resolutions, believing that they will meet the cordial approbation of the Senate : Resolved, That tlie Senate has received, with profound sensibility, the annunciation by the President, nf the deatli of the late Secretary of State, Daniel Webster, who was long a liighly distinguished member of this House. Resolved, That the Senate manifest its respect for the memory of tlie deceased, and its sympathy witli the bereaved family, by wearing the usual badge of mourning for thirty days. Resolved, That these proceedings be communicated to the House of Representatives. Mr. BUTLER, of South Carolina, said : Mr. President: This is an occasion full of interesting but melancholy associations, and one that especially appeals to my feelings and sense of justice — I might almost say, historical jus- tice — as a Representative of South Carolina. "Who that were present can ever forget the moxu-nful and imposing occasion when Daxlel "Webster, whose eloquence and ability had given distinc- tion to the greatest deliberative assembly, and the most august tribunal of justice in this great Confederacy; and when Henry Clay, a name associated with aU that is daring in action and splendid in eloquence, rose as witnesses before the tribunal of history, and gave their testimony as to the character and services of their illustrious compeer, John CaldweU Calhoim? They em- balmed in historical immortality their rival, associate, and comrade. I would that I could borrow from the spirit of my great coimtry- man something of its justice and magnanimity, that I might make some requital for the distinguished tributes paid to his memory by his illustrious compeers. Such an occasion as the one I have referred to is without par- allel in the history of this Senate; and, su", I fear that there is no future for such another one. Calhoun, Clay, and "Webster, like Pitt, Fox, and Burke, have made a picture on our history that will be looked upon as its culminating splendor. They were luminaries that, in many points of view, essentially differed from each other, as one star differeth from another; but they were aU stars of the first magnitude. Distance cannot destroy, nor can time diminish, the simple splendor of their light for the guidance and insti'uction of an admiring posterity. Rivals they were on a great and eventful theatre of political life ; but death has given them a common fame. Their contest in life was for the awards of public opinion, the great lever in modern times by which nations are to be influenced. " Witla more than mortal powers endowed. How high they soared above the crowd ! Theirs was no common party race. Jostling by dark intrigue for place : Like fabled gods, their mighty war Shook Realms and Nations in its jar!" Before I became a member of the Senate, of which I found Mr. Webster a distinguished ornament, I nad formed a very high esti- mate of his abilities, and from various sources of high authority. His mind, remarkable for its large capacity, was enriched with rare endowments — with the knowledge of a statesman, the learn- ing of a jurist, and the attainments of a scholar. In this Cham- ber, with unsurpassed ability, Mr. "Webster has discussed the greatest subjects that have or can influence the destinies of this great Confederacy. Well may I apply to him the striking remark which he bestowed on Mr. Calhoun, "We saw before us a Senator of Rome, when Eome survived." I have always regarded Mr. Webster as a noble model of a parliamentary debater. His genial temper ; the courtesy and dig- nity of his deportment ; his profound knowledge of his subject, and his thorough preparation, gave him a great command, not only over his immediate audience, but gave his masterly speeches an impressive influence over public opinion. In the Supreme Court, Mr. Webster was engaged in the greatest cases that were ever decided by that tribunal ; and it is not saying too much to assert that his arguments formed the basis of some of the ablest judgments of that court. His exuberant but rectified imagination and brilliant literary attainments imparted to his eloquence beauty, simplicity, and majesty, and the finish of taste and elaboration. He seemed to prefer the more debuative style of speaking; but when roused and assailed he became a formidable adversary in the war of debate, discharging from his full quiver the arrows of sarcasm and invective with telling efi"ect. Mr. Webster was born in a forest, and in his childhood and youth lived amid the scenes of rm-al life ; and it was no doubt under their insjiiring influence that he imbibed that love of natm-e which has given such a charm and touching pathos to some of his meditated productions. It always struck me that he had some- thing of Bui'n's nature, but controlled by the discipline of a higher degree of education. Lifted above the ordinary level of mankind by his genius and various intelligence, Mr. Webster looked upon a more extensive horizon than could be seen by those below him. He had too much information from his various intercourse with great men, and his acquaintauco with the opinions of all ages through tho medium of books, to allow the spirit of bigotry to have a place in his mind. I have many reasons to conclude that ho was not only tolerant of the opinions of others, but was even generous in his judgments toward them. I will conclude by saying that New England especially, and the Confederacy at large, have cause to be proud of the fame of such a man. Mr. CASS, of Michigan, said : — Mr. President : How are the mighty fallen, was the pathetic lamentation, when the leaders of Israel were struck down in the midst of their services and of their renown. Well may we repeat that national wail, now are the mighty fallen, when the impres- sive dispensations of Providence have so recently carried momming to the hearts of the American people, by summoning from life to death three of their eminent citizens, who, for almost half a cen- tury, had taken part, and prominently too, in all the great ques- tions, as well of peace as of war, which agitated and divided their country. Full they were, indeed, of days and of honors, for " The hand of the reaper Took the ears that were hoary," but never brighter in intellect, purer in patriotism, nor more powerful in influence that when the grave closed upon their labors, leaving their memory and their career at once an incentive and an examp>le for their countrymen, in that long course of trial, but I trust of freedom and prosperity also, which is open before us. Often divided in life, but only by honest convictions of duty, fol- lowed in a spirit of generous emulation, and not of personal oppo- sition, they are now united in death, and we may appropriately adopt, upon this striking occasion, the beautiful language addressed to the people of England by one of her most gifted sons, when they were called to mourn, as we are now called, a bereavement which spread sorrow, dismay almost, through the nation, and under circumstances of difficulty and danger far greater than any we can now reasonably anticipate in the progress of our history. " Seek not for those a separate doom Whom fate made brothers in the tomb ; But search the land of living men, VVTiere shall we find tlieir like again.'" 8 And to-day, in the consideration of the message of the Chief Magistrate, it becomes us to respond to his annunciation, com- mending itself, as it does, to the universal sentiment of the coun- try, of the death of the last of these lamented statesmen, as a na- tional misfortune. This mark of regret and respect was due alike to the memory of the dead, and to the feelings of the living. And I have listened with deep emotion to the eloquent testimonials to the mental power and worth and services of the departed patriot wliich to-day have been heard in this high place, and will be heard to-morrow, and commended too, by the American people. The voice of party is hushed in the presence of such a national calam- ity, and the grave closes upon the asperity of political contests when it closes upon those who have taken part in them. And well may we, who have so often witnessed his labors and his triumphs, well may we, here, upon this theatre of his services aiul his renown, recalling the effort of his mighty understanding, and the admii'ation which always followed its exertion well may we come with our tribute of acknowledgment to his high and diversified powers, and to the influence he exercised upon his audi- tory, and in fact upon his country. He was, indeed, one of those remarkable men who stand prominently forward upon the canvass of history, impressing their characteristics upon the age in which they live, and almost making it their own by the force of their genius and the splendor of their fame. The time which elapsed between the middle of the eighteenth century and oui* own day was prolific of great events and of distinguished men, who guided or were guided by them far beyond any other equal period in the history of human society. But, in my opinion, even this favored epoch has produced no man possessing a more massive and gigantic intellect, or who exhibited more profound powers of investigation in the great department of political science to which he devoted himself, in all its various ramifications, than Daniel Webster. The structure of his mind seemed peculiarly adapted to the work he was called upon to do, and he did it as no other man of his country, of his fige indeed, could have done it. And his name and his fame are indissolubly connected with some of the most difficxdt and important questions which our peculiar institutions have called into discussion. It was my good fortune to hear him upon one of the most memorable of these occasions, when, in this very hall, filled to overflowing with an audience whose rapt atten- tion indicated his power and their expectations, he entered into an analysis of the Constitution and of the great principles of our po- litical organization, with a vigor of argument, a force of illustra- tion, and a felicity of diction which have rendered this effort of his mind one of the proudest monuments of American genius, and one of the noblest expositions which the operations of our Government have called forth. I speak of its general effect, without concur- ring in all the views he presented, though the points of difference neither impair my estimate of the speaker nor of the power he displayed in this elaborate debate. The judgment of his contemporaries upon the character of his eloquence will be confirmed by the future historian. He grasped the questions involved in the subject before him with a rare union of force and discrimination, and he presented them in an order of arrangement marked at once with great perspicuity and with logi- cal acuteness, so that when he arrived at his conclusion he seemed to reach it by a process of established propositions, interwoven with the hand of a master. And topics barren of attraction from their nature were rendered interesting by illustrations and allusions drawn from a vast store-house of knowledge and applied with a chastened taste, formed upon the best models of ancient and of modern learning. And to these eminent qualifications was added an uninterrupted flow of rich, and often racy, old-fashioned Eng- lish, worthy of the earlier masters of the language, whom he studied and admired. As a statesman and politician, his power was felt and acknow- ledged through the republic, and all bore willing testimony to his enlarged views, and to his ardent patriotism. And he acquired a Eui'opean reputation by the State papers he prepared upon various questions of our foreign policy; and one of these, his refutation and exposure of an absurd and arrogant pretension of Austria, is distinguished by lofty and generous sentiments, becoming the age in which he lived, and the great people in whose name he spoke ; and it is stamped with a vigor and research not less honorable in the exhibition than conclusive in the application. And it will ever take rank in the history of diplomatic intercourse among the 13 10 richest contributions to the commentaries upon the public law of the world. And in internal as in external troubles, he was true, and tried, and faithful, and in the latest, may it be the last, as it was the most perilous, crisis of our country, rejecting all sectional consid- erations, and exposing himself to sectional denunciations, he stood up boldly, proudly indeed, and with consummate ability, for the constitutional rights of another portion of the Union, fiercely assailed by a spirit of aggression as incompatible with our mutual obligations as with the duration of the Confederation itself. In that dark and doubtful hour his voice was heard above the storm, recalling his countrymen to a sense of their dangers and their duties, and tempering the lessons of reproof with the experience of age and the dictates of patriotism. He who heard this memo- rable appeal to the public reason and conscience, made in this crowded chamber, with all eyes fixed upon the speaker, and almost all hearts swayed by his words of wisdom and of power, will sedu- lously guard its recollection as one of those precious incidents which, while they constitute the poetry of history, exert a perma- nent and decisive influence upon the destiny of nations. And our deceased colleague added the kindlier afiiections of the heart to the lofty endowments of the mind. And I recall, with almost painful sensibility, the associations of our boyhood, when we were school-fellows together, with all the troubles and the plea- sures which belong to that relation of life in its narrow world of preparation. He rendered himself dear by his disposition and de- portment, and exhibited some of those peculiar characteristic features, which, later in life, made him the ornament of the social circle, and, when study and knowledge of the world had ripened his faculties, endowed him with powers of conversation I have not found surpassed in my intercourse with society, at home or abroad. His conduct and bearing at that early period have left an enduring impression upon my memory of mental traits which his subsequent course in life developed and confii-med. And the commanding position and ascendency of the man were foreshadowed by the standing and influence of the boy among the comrades who sur- rounded him. II Fifty-five years ago we parted, he to prepare for his splendid career in the good old laud of our ancestors, and I to encounter the harsh toils and trials of life in the great forest of the West. But ere long the report of his words and his deeds penetrated those recesses, where human industry was painfully but success- fully contending with the obstacles of natui'e, and I found that my early companion was assuming a position which confirmed my pre- vious anticipations, and which could only be attained by the rare faculties with which he was gifted. Since then he has gone on, irradiating his path with the splendor of his exertions, till the whole hemisphere was bright with his glory, and never brighter than when he went down in the west, without a cloud to obscure his lustre — clear, calm, and glorious. Fortunate in life, he was not less fortunate in death ; for he died with his fame undiminished, his faculties unbroken, and his useful- ness unimpaired; surrounded by weeping friends, and regarded with anxious solicitude by a grateful country, to whom the mes- senger, that mocks at time and space, told, from hour to hour, the progress of his disorder and the approach of his fate. And beyond all this, and better than all this, he died in the faith of a Christian, humble but hopeful, adding another to the roll of eminent men who have searched the Gospel of Jesus, and found it the word and the will of Grod, given to dii-ect us while here, and to sustain us in that hour of trial when the things of this world are passing away, and the dark valley of the shadow of death is opening before us. How ARE THE MIGHTY FALLEN, WO may yet exclaim, when reft of om* greatest and wisest ; but they fall to rise again from death to life, when such quickening faith in the mercy of God, and in the sacrifice of the Redeemer, comes to shed upon them its happy influence on this side of the grave and beyond it. Mr. SEWARD, of New York, said : — When, in passing through Savoy, I reached the eminence where the traveller is promised his first distinct view of Mont Blanc, I asked, "Where is the Mountain ?" " There," said the guide, point- ing to the rainy sky which stretched out before me. It is even so when we approach and attempt to scan accurately a great character. Clouds gather upon it, and seem to take it up out of our sight. 12 Daniel Webster was a man of -warm and earnest afFertioDs, in all the domestic and social relations. Purely incidental and natural allusions in his conversations, letters, and speeches, have made us familiar with the very pathways about bis early mountain home; with his mother^ graceful, intellectual, fond, and pious; with his father, assiduous, patriotic, and religious — changing his pursuits, as duty in revolutionary times commanded, from the farm to the camp, and from the camp to the Provincial Legislature and the Constituent Assembly. It seems as if we could recognise the very form and features of the most constant and generous of brothers. Nor are we strangers at Marshfield. We are guests hospitably admitted, and then left to wander at our ease under the evergreens on the lawn, over the grassy fields, through the dark native forest, and along the sea shore. We know, almost as well as we know our own, the children i-eared there, and fondly loved, and therefore perhaps early lost ; the servants bought from bond- age, and held by the stronger chains of gratitude; the careful steward, always active yet never hurried ; the reverent neighbor, always welcome yet never obtrusive ; and the ancient fisherman, whose little fleet is ever ready for the sports of the sea ; and we meet on every side the watchfiU and devoted friends whom no frequency of disappointment can discourage, and whom even the death of their great patron cannot all at once disengage from efforts which know no balancing of probabilities, nor reckoning of cost to secure his elevation to the first honors of the Republic. Who that was even confessedly provincial was ever so identified with any thing local as Daniel Webster was with the spindles of Lowell and the quarries of Quincy ; with Faneuil Hall, Bunker Hill, Forefathers' Day, Plymouth Rock, and whatever else belonged to Massachusetts ? And yet, who that was most truly national has ever so sublimely celebrated, or so touchingly commended to our reverent affection, our broad and ever-broadening continental home ; its endless rivers, majestic mountains, and capacious lakes; its inimitable and indescribable Constitution ; its cherished and grow- ing capital; its aptly-conceived and expressive flag, and its triumphs by land and sea; and its immortal founders, heroes, and martyrs ! How manifest it was, too, that, unlike those who are impatient of slow but sure progress, he loved his country, not for 18 sometlimg greater or hlglier that lie desired or hoped she might be, but just for what she was, and as she was ah-eady, regardless of future change. No, sir; believe me, they err widely who say that Daniel Webstei; was cold and passionless. It is true that he had little enthusiasm, but he was nevertheless earnest and sincere, as well as calm ; and therefore he was both discriminating and comprehensive in his aflfections. We recognise his likeness in the portrait drawn by a Homan pencil — " Whe with nice