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furthermore, to know, whether he expects his litter of State banks, trading on all the reve nues of the Government, are likely to supply the "ordinary channels of circulation with gold and silver," and to aid in the "effort to restore the Government to its true constitu tional character and destination that of a simple, solid, hard money Government?" But, Mr. President, I will not longer dwell on this topic, but go on to define my position in re gard to others. I read attentively, at the earliest opportuni ty, the report of the Secretary of the Treasury, in answer to the call of my colleague on that officer, in regard to the manner of his execu ting the law authorizing him to sell the bonds of the Bank of the United States; and here, sir, permit me to remark, that I have not the least doubt but ihat the course of my colleague, on that occasion, was strictly parliamentary, because it was permitted; but it was certainly novel and unusual to say the least of it. On that call, he made a long speech, condemning in unmeasured terms that officer on the very points on which, by the permission of the Senate, he was about to seek information. Yes, sir, my colleague made three long speeches against the Secretary of the Treasu ry: in the first he prejudged him without hearing; in the second he condemned him without a trial, and in the third he attempted to execute him without the "benefit of clergy." Mr. President, it is a mournful fact, owing to the imperfection of language, there is noth ing which the wisest mau can indite, that in genuity cannot pervert to mean something totally different from what the author intended to convey; and had I, sir, perhaps have read the Secretary's report, with the same querulous temper and morbid feeling which seems to possess my colleague in regard to that officer, and also possessed the same ingenuity m col lating and construing language to mean ex actly what I wish it to mean, I too might have discovered black spots, and picked many flaws in it. But I do declare, that after an attentive perusal, with a sincere desire to see them, that report did not strike me as being in any manner obnoxious to the severe criti cism and harsh rebukes which my colleague had in anticipation bestowed upon it. After his second speech, his review of the docu ment, in which he confidently asserted that its appearance had fulfilled all his predictions about it, I read it a second time with increas ed attention, and a similar desire to detect its vices; and I was alike unsuccessful in discov ering the frauds and cheats and juggling by which it had been characterized. Nothing upon earth is further from my mind, than to believe that the Government has any, the re motest idea, of forming any, the slightest connection, with the banks, further than is justified by existing la ws, is demanded by the creditors themselves of the Government, or grows out of the necessity arising from the neglect, nay, sir, I may almost say, the refus al of Congress to provide and designs suffi cient depositories for the funds of the Govern ment. If such an intention was manifested, it would, sir, be for those with whom I act to complain, and complain they would. It would seem to me that it would be a source of plea sure to my colleague, unless, indeed, he goes entirely- Yrcfri r itt nUfnSCr banks at all, except in the precise manner, and to the precise extent, he may think right and pro per. Sir, one of these bonds was sold. There is the solemn, written contract for cash. But my colleague denies that any cash was paid, became, I suppose, the Spanish milled dollars were not lugged all the way from Philadelphia to this city, and counted out to the Treasurer. The money, sir, was wanted for immediate use; and why? Because, sir, Congress sat here from the first Monday in December, 1837, to the 9th day of Jul?, 1S3S, and did not, till the last moments of the session, make provision to meet the debts of the nation; most of them, too, growing out of appropriations made by that very Congress, when they knew there was not money on hand to meet them. That is the reason the money was wanted for immediate use; but it was not wanted here. It was wanted in Florida, on the Canadian frontier, and at distant points in the far West, and elsewhere, to pay jour army and navy, and other public creditors; and was, in my opinion, wisely and prudently left in Phila delphia, whence it could be with facility and certainty, and "without cost or charge" to the Government, remitted when or Avhere it was wanted. Sir, is a sale less a cash sale, be cause my convenience or my interest induces me to leave the proceeds in the hands of the purchaser, subject to my order? My col league seems to think that the terms of the law, "cash in hand," or "ready money," would require that the Secretary of the Treasury, or the Treasurer, should have actually received into his bands, should have fingered the mil lions of dollars. Sir, this sale was, to all in tents and purposes, a cash sale. It so pur ports to be in the solemn written contract. It so proved to be, both to the Government and the Bank; and ought so to appear to my colleague above ali others, as it was for specie, or its equivalent that is, the notes of specie paying State banks, which he thinks "as much a constitutional currency as gold and silver," (which I do not.) Mr. President, it is no part of my present plan to go into an analysis, or minute defence of the report of the Secretary. That work has been so luminously and efficiently performed by my friend from New York, (Mr. Wright,) that a further prosecution of it would be supe rerogation. This, however, I will say, that after the most careful examination of his con duct, I do deliberately think that, when the sit uation of the country, the peculiar embarrass ments of the currency, the emptiness of the Treasury in consequence of the failure of Congress, timely, to provide ways and means to meet their heavy drafts upon it his entire privation, ever since the spring of 1837, of the ordinary depositories of the public money, added to the many other difficulties he has had to encounter, shall be duly and impartial ly estimated lie ought, and will receive the thanks of the country, for his steady, patient, and untiring labor, and for his firm, persever ing, and successful efforts to keep the cur rency of the country, as far as existing laws permit, within the range and meaning and limitation of the Constitution. But, Mr. Pre sident, the whole tenor and temper of the speeches of my colleague, prove, beyond all doubt, on the mind of any man .who heard them, that it was not the humble Secretary at whom his barbed and poisoned shafts were aimed. On a former, and a memorable oc casion, when another Secretary of the Trea sury was the object of bitter denunciation in this Chamber, and was held to be responsible for acts required by the President to be done by him, my colleague proved that the Secre tary was but the arm, the organ, of the Presi dent; and, but a few days ago, he said that the present incumbent was his mere "cats paw." It is not with a "catspaw" that he has been intending to deal on the present occa sion. No, sir, he had higher game in view. It was at the President he aimed his javelin; no man who Heard nun can aouui u. sir, nothing that he said more astonished me, than to hear him yes, sir, him above all other men reiterating the stale slang about Exe cutive patronage, and the "purse and the sword," chanting over again the old "doleful ieremaid" about "a power behind the throne greater than the throne nseii. Mr. President, I know nothing about this wonderful thing called Executive patronage. I have never tasted of it, and cannot, there fore, speak of its blighted influence on the moral character and independence of those who bask in its sunshine. There was a time, a few years ago, when it was said to be used to it utmost extent. Complaints of its use, and its abuse, were louder during a portion of General Jackson's administration than ever before, or since. My colleague was in Congress at that time: I do not recollect that he then raised his voice against this corrupt ing influence: but I do recollect that he receiv ed a pretty good slice of the patronag-e of that day. During the same Administration, when a hero, a military chieftain, a conqueror, a warrior, indeed, who had done bloody service with his sword, sat in your Presidential chair, there was a prodigious outcry about the same danger from the "purse and the sword" in the hands of the Executive. My colleague was then a member of this body, and boldly step ped forward to prove that such an idea was absurd and ridiculous, inasmuch as the power to raise money, (the purse,) and the power to raise armies, (the sword,) were both, by the Constitution, confined to Congress. The honorable Senator from Kentucky in my eye, Mr. Clay, will recollect how fiercely my colleague contested this point with him, and how clearly he put down the inference he had erroneously drawn from an expression of Pa trick Henry, about the States having parted with the "purse and the sword," by showing that Mr. Henry only meant to say that the States had given to Congress the power to raise money and to raise armies. And, after all this, is it not most strange, passing strange, that now, when a man of peace a meek, mild, placid man one whose whole life has been devoted to civil pursuits, and who, I dare say, never had an epaulette on his shoulder or a sword upon his thigh, is the President of the United States, my colleague should feel alarm ed about the ''purse and the sword" being in the hands of the Executive! Sir, I can scarce ly realize this. There is something amusing in the thought of danger from the sword in the hands of our President. Why. sir. he ImmII. lift groaaJiai-'e brfkarl sword; but, sir, it is the danger from these "legions" of officers, these "praetorian bands," whom our President is to head, sword in hand, and march to the Capitol, that has seized upon the imagination of my colleague. I hope he will get over his uneasiness on that score, and I assure him that it is too late in the day to frighten the people by such talk. If they could not be alarmed by the sword of Andrew Jack son, they will not be afraid of his pacific suc cessor. But, this other terrible thing that we used, in days of panic memory, to hear so much about, and which my colleague has re vived this "poicer behind the throne gi-eal-er than the throne ilstlf." Perhaps, sir, if, when my colleague put himself behind the "throne," as he informs us he did, and gave his "advice and his warning," they had been followed, and he thus, in his opinion, be come the "poicer behind the throne, greater than the throne itself," we might not now hear from him all these deep lamentations, these bitter denunciations, these fearful forebodings, with which he is attempting to excite the pub lic mind. Sir, when, some days ago, I heard my colleague allude to certain Senators on this side of the chamber in a sarcastic if not a sneering manner, as the pillars of this Ad ministration, it filled me with strange feelings. I could but inquire where I was, and to whom I was listening. Before, and at the time, sir, when I was sent to the Senate by Virginia, I know well that that State claimed the proud honor of having on this floor, a pillar of this Administration. Yes, sir, a lofty, bright, and adamantine pillar; a pillar which had hereto fore stood firm and unshaken against the many rude shocks, violent assaults, and wily arts of Whigery. That pillar was my colleague. I was sent here to twine round and support it; I was sent here to cheer him on in that ca reer, which had already rendered him as dear to the Democratic party of America, as it had rendered him hateful to the self-styled Whigs. My support, I well knew, could be but feeble indeed, except in the honest zeal with which it would be rendered; feeble as it might be, little did I think, and deeply have I been dis appointed and mortified, to find that it has been totally rejected. Sir, feeble as I am, I will stand alone in this chamber, as the pillar of the Democracy of Virginia, an1 should the edifice be battered down over my head, and crush me to the earth, I had rather be the smallest fragment of such a pillar, which can be raked up from the rubbish, than to be the loftiest and proudest triumphal column, which those who contribute to beat it down, can ever erect upon its ruins. Sir, my colleague, strange to tell! deplores most bitterly any thing like parly! He says: "party, party, I go for my country!" Sir, this was an exclamation worthy of a Brutus or Cato; but we do not now-a-days, often see such men as they. Sir, I take no exception to the remark, although the assertion by any one gentleman, that he goes for his country, may carry with it the inference that those who differ with him do not. No, sir, I take no exception because the only way in which we can go efficiently for our country, is through the medium of party; and sir, because there is such a universal admission by the contending parties in this country, that each has at heart. the good of the country, that whenever I hear a man who deems it necessary to say that he cares not for party, that he goes for his coun try, it does not, in the slightest degree, strength en my estimation of his patriotism. No, sir; far from it. Far be it from me to deny, sir, that my colleague has gone for his country. I have labored too often, and too zealously, to shield him from the immolating wrath of the Whigs, and to contribute to his elevation, to have doubted that fact. Sir, he has been highly and justly honored by his country But he should never forget that it was parry which conferred upon him all those honors Sir, I know of no man who has been, more emphatically the child, the nursling of party, than my talented colleague. It was party that first sent him a young man, into the Leg islature of Virginia, where it had sent me a few years before. It was party that sent him to the Congress of the United States in the other end of this Capitol the Democratic . . i . i - .1 party. It was party tnai seni nun meuce as minister to France the Democratic party. T uma nnrtv which, on his return to America. sent him to the Senate of the United States that same Democratic party. It was party that drove him out of this chamber the Whig party! It was party, sir, the same old Demo cratic party, that sent him back into it, and it will be party a new party the Neutral par ty, that will send him I know not where my sagacious and oft prophetic friend from Connecticut, Mr. Niles, thinks to the Treasury Department; or, as it is, in parlance, often called here, the Exchequer (a custom, I think, "more honored in the breach thau in the observance") perhaps, for aught I know, to the White House itself; or mayhap to the dignified chair you now fill, in which some! not I; no, not, I, sir but in which some say he might be now calmly, quietly, and content edly sitting if he had not been jostled out of it. But, sir, to this Neutral party. I must, in furtherance of my object, to define my po sition, say something of it. I wish it to be most distinctly understood, that there is no neutrality in regard to party politics in my composition; and, such is my temperament, that I cannot well conceive how anf man, (as I before said,) who has borue an active share in the storm of party politics which has Ions railed in our country, can possiblj enjoy that state of blessed quiescence and compo sure. When my colleague first begat to file off from those ranks in which he had long stood a prominent and active member, he cal led himself a Conservative. Yes, sir; we heard then of nothing but the Conservative party Conservative a sweet, a koneyed word. But in a little time, those of as who did not agree with this Conservative party, were called "Subservatives," a verjr harsh and bitter word. These Conservatives, how ever, soon began to lose much of their sweet ness, and became very spicy, and again changed their name, and called theaiselve3 the "Spartan band." Yes, sir, we saw the Spartan band, with Leonidas at their head, forcing their way through the strong hosts of Democracy, over to the Whig camp; and now that they "read their title clear" to rank in that camp, they again changed their names, aud called themselves neutrals yes, neutrals and we now hear, as ir from Jupiter "t o rnrrrs himself, of nothing but the diunder of the arm ed neutrality. Now, Mr. President, I have said that I never was, and am not, a neutral in party politics. Should I ever become oue, (which is very improbable,) I do sincerely hope that I may be enabled, with Christian meekness, to fold my arms and say, "God bless the Commonwealth; or, if that div ine I feeling is denied mc, that I may, with the justice of Aristides, and the impartiality of Cato, look upon the battle field, and suffer no i consideration whatever to induce me, in my necessary intercourse between the great belli gerents, to deal in articles 'contraband of war." And above all things, if the great law of nature and justice, self-defence, shall drive me to arm as a neutral, that I may endeavor to deal my blows with strict impartiality; and, if any thing, look rather with a kindly eye to those who had evej been my fi ieuds and al lies, and with one of suspicion and fear to that party who. through all time, had hated and reviled inc. I do not mean, sir, to question or impeach the impartiality with which my colleague will discharge the delicate duties of a neutral armed at all points. 1 trust that it will be his intention to be strictly impartial in the blows which he says he will have to deal out on the right and the left. I do not know how deeply wounded, or how keenly pained have been the great belligerent Whig party, by the blows he has already inflicted on them; but candor compels me to say, that their ad versaries, the Administration party, have felt that his sword "was sharper than a serpent's tooth." But, sir, it may not be amiss to look a lit tle further into this thing of a third party, no matter by what name they may call themselves. Noue that has ever arisen in this country, or in England, has lived long as a distinct, in dependent party. It is not consistent with the nature of man, or with the institutions of either of these countries, that such parties can long maintain a distinctive, separate exist ence; and if a minority, or third party, could long exist in this country, and wield the pow er set up for this aforesaid "armed neutrality," to regulate and control the conduct of the other two great parties, that is, to rule the will of the great majority of the people, I, for one, should think it a most deplorable case indeed; aud have no hesitation in saying, that the pre tension thus set up for this party is more dan gerous to the liberty of the people, and more directly hostile to the principles of our blessed Constitution, than any I have ever yet heard urged against them. Do you, sir, recollect the memorable third party, yclept, the minority party, that sprung up about the year 1806? I am sure you do much better than I John Randolph of Roan oke was at the head of that party. Yes, sir, John Randolph the great, the taleuted, the proud, the daring John Randolph, was its head and founder. Compared to any minori ty party, before or since, it was greatly supe rior, both in talent and numbers. And what became of it? It melted away; and in a few years not a trace or vestige of it was left. "Like the snow falls irt the river, A moment white, then gone forever." It was fierce aud formidable for a while; but it soon lost all its strength and dissolved, and its members took their stations in one or the other of the two great contending parties of the day; which, most assuredry, with some slight shades of difference growing out of the altered condition of the country, aud a change of name, were the same identical two parties that fought die battle of '98, and are now again struggling for nscendancy. It may be worthy of remark, as to that minority party, to state that John Randolph, with all his talents and zeal, and fiery temper, and love o con quest, never set up the pretension to "an arm ed neutrality." He laid no claim to the de lusive inference, speciously drawn by sophis tical analogy, and with diplomatic subtlety, from the posithori of Queen Catherine of Rus sia to coutrol the destinies of the nation, and subject the will of the majority to the pow er of a small minority of the people. No, sir: John Randolph of Roanoke, with all his peculiarities, was, in many respects, one of the purest Republicans America has ever had. He adhered with pertinacious nicety to the principles of the Constitution as its framers intended them, and not as its latitudinous construers would have them to be; and, above all things, he valued the great principle at-the root of all our institutions, that the majority should govern the minority; and however haughty and aristocratic he might seem in his personal carriage, he more than once, in a manner and under circumstances which evinc ed his devotion to that great principle, bowed to the "majesty of the people," when ostra ciled by a majority of their suffrages. No, sir, the great object of the third party headed by John Randolph, in the year 1806, was to change the minority into a majority; and in that way, and that only, to rule the country. Failing in that plan, the party was dissolved, without a resort to argumeuts drawn from the position of Queen Catherine of Russia, to break in upon the great principle which lies at the foundation of our institutions. No, sir, John Randolph scorned, knowing that he was in a minority, to exert power in any other way. He scorned to hold the balance, and, as did the monkey iu the fable, who weighed for the two cats, pinch off first from the one scale, and then from the other, till he had robbed them of all their cheese. Sir, the longest liv ed minority party I have ever heard of, is the one which has existed for some years past in France, under the name of the third party. What has been its history? In reading, a short lime ago, an extract from a French newspaper, I was struck with its speaking of the "Sofa party." 1 at tirst supposed mat a fourth political party had risen up in France to confound their confusion; but, on reading a little further, I discovered that the writer was speaking of the same old French third party that has made so much noise in the world; and which had acquired the cognomen of the "Sofa Party," because what do you suppose, Mr. President, was the cause? Why, sir, be cause they are now so reduced in numbers that they can all sit together on a sofa!! Such, sir, will be the fate of this Conservative party, this Spartan baud, this armed neutrality. They may, sir, have to sit for a season on what, I believe, in some of our churches is denominated the anxious bench; and may, perhaps, be required to subscribe their faith, gain full admission into the temple of the great church militant of Whiggery, and take their seats on the sofa, alongside with the fathers and ciders of that renowned sect. Mr. President, I am truly sorry that I have been compelled to break silence at all, on this occasion, and pained to be compelled to break it in strains which may not be agreeable to my colleague; but, sir, it is the misfortune of this life that most of our sacred duties are of a painful character. The one which I have been constrained to discharge this evening, is of that description. Being so, I have post poned its discharge to the last moment, and to a period when none could say that I was interfering in the relations now existing be tween him and our mutual constituents. No. sir, I have been perfectly content that, with out any, the least, interference on my part, he should manage those relations in his own way. I have meant no personal offence to him. This is not the place in which I would seek to indicate such a feeling, if I entertain ed it. My difference with him is entirely of a political character; and it has been mv pride, and frequently my boast, that that dif ference had not disturbed our personal rela tions. I only seek, sir, and this is the only time, according to my notious, (which may have been fastidious,) in which I could find the opportunity to present myself fully and fairly to our mutual constituents, iu the auta gonistical position which it has been, most unexpectedly and painfully, my misfortune to hold towards ray colleague, from the first mo ment I entered this chamber to the present. I stand where I did when I was sent hither by Virginia. He, however, has thought proper, at this critical moment, to throw himself, with all his great weight, into one of the scales of that balance in which we are both to be weighed; and it is not in my nature, sir, to per mit that in which he has left me to stand alone, to "kick the beam," without a solitary feeble struggle to maintain its equipoise . No man, Mr. President, in thi3 Senate cares less than I do about retaining his seat in this Chamber. I would not, sir, to hold it for life, make an overture for the Whig vote of the Legislature of Virginia, or permit, know- j ingly, a single man in that Commonwealth to doubt my opinions in regard to this ad ministration, or any of the lead iug measures or men of the day. To the Whigs, as a party, I am utterly and absolutely opposed; as indi- j viduals, no man is disposed more folly and more liberally to appreciate them than I. Some of the dearest friends of my heart are of them. Both in the General Assembly of Vir ginia and throughout that Commonwealth, there are Whigs, as they call themselves, whose friendship I am proud to enjoy. I have long enjoyed it. They know that I never did, and never will, deceive them. Now, sir, by way of summing up, and recapitu lating the definition I have desired to give o my position, in terms not to be doubted, or misunder stood by any, I take leave to say, that as at present advised, I prefer Martin Van Buren as the next President of the United States, to any man who, to my knowledge, has been as yet named, or thought of, as his successor. I give him this preterence, be cause I thus far, in the main, approve of his admin istration of the Government; because he is in lavor of a strict construction of the Federal Constitution, as laid down in Madison's celebrated report; be cause he is opposed to the Bank, a Bank, or any Bank established by Congress, or ; any other de partment, or power of the General Government; because he is- opposed to a system of internal im provement by the General Government; besause he is opposed to a protecting tariff", and is for quadrat ing, as near as possible: the revenue of the country, to a reduced expenditure of public money, so as never again, if avoidable, to have a large surplus fund in the Federal Treasury, with which to de bauch the State Governments, and demoralize the people. And last, though not. least, 'I am for him because he is a "Northern man with Southern feel ings." Thanks to him for the stand he timely and magananiinoiJoly made, and is ever ready in the hour of need or peril to make, for the sacred com- ; promises of the Constitution in regard to that great, vital, and delicate subject, which ia at tlrs moment ! a burning torch in the hands of the vile incendiaries of the temple of our liberty and the Union. He did not, sir, wait till the battle had been fought and ! won before he denned his position to the vile Alio- ! litiomsts. He stood side by side with us during ! the "heat and burden of the day." No Southern ; man ouht ever to forget his stand on that question, j Mr. President my colleague has very frequently i advisrd and invoked the Administration members of the Senate, of whom he knows me to be one, to bethink themselves, and pause in their mad career j ot party, and chanae their course. Let me now, sir, in turn, most earnestly and most anxiously im- ! plore him to pause; yes, sir, to pause for it is not I . - Hi I'l I V-V.V 1 1 1 1 1 V. 1 ins. IIJ.ti I IVI P j J the fold of his old Democratic Rrpuhlcan friends, companions, admirers, and supporters I do assure him that there is not one of them who is not griev ed to part with him, and is still willing to give him the fraternal hu, and forgive and forget all ihat has passed. We have r-quired no sacrifice by him of ; his opinion or his conscience or any isolated mea sures. We are all prone to differ from each other in opinion, and it ia in the part of charity and kind ness to think nothing of minor differences. There is nothing, sir I know it there is nothing about which my colleague was ever more mistaken, than in the intimation, if not the assertion often made by htm that there was a settled purpose to drive him from the ranks of the Administration party! When the first symptoms of his disaffection were manifest ed, no mother ever treated her infant babe with more tenderness than his old political associates in this chamber were disposed to treat him, and they endeavored, to the utmost of their power, and by all their conduct, to afford him no pretext of that kind, if he should ultimately determine to abandon our camp. And may I say to my colleague that if any newspaper editor, or scribbler, or "orjan," has injured or slandered him, he should have put it down to the freedom, if not to the licentiousness, of the press; and that, under any circumstances, it is far below the "elevated statesman-like feelings" he professes, to make their abuse a justification for leaving a party with whom he has so long co-operated, and who would so willingly have continued in fellowship wit h him; and of his co-operating with those between whom and hiin there has been, for on equally long period, a reciprocal hostility of the strongest character. But, sir, if my colleague will not or cannot continue in communion with us, we may dcplore,'but we cannot help it. And, sir, as, on a recent occasion, my colleague, imagining that he saw a marriage about to be solemnised between the Government and the Pennsvlv ?nia Bank of the United States, assumed, in the "name of his coun try to forbid the bans," so sir, should I perceive that a marriage is about to be solemnised between my colleague and the great Whig party, as I think certainly will be, unless there is the most cunning coquetry on the one side, or should be a cruel jilt ing on the other. I will assume, :n the name and behalf of the Democracy of my country, to confirm and ratify the bans, and give him away in mar riage, (and certainly I nev.r expected to stand sponsor to a runaway match;) and, sir, I will, on the solemn occasion, say to his new spouse, that we have parted reluctantly with one of our dearest and most favorite children that if he is treated with kindness and distinction, he will be a valuable ac quisition to his new connection for that his dowry is rich indeed, consisting of all those precious se crets, which we never impart to any of our chil dren, except to those of them who, we have good reason to think, will never quit the household, or marry ut of the family. Mr. Preside.it, 1 have done. I have discharged a paintui amy. ir a..r ..;.CTr .1 others, could alleviate the painful task, it is the kind and profound attention with which the Senate, exhausted by a session of unusual length, have honored my remarks. My heart assures me that I shall never forget the comoliment. and reduces the expenses below twenty mil lions. Then come the pensious, which con stkuto no part of the expenses of the Govern ment, but are gratuities bestowed for past ser vices, real or supposed. The appropriations of the last session for these, are two and a half millions; but nearly as much more will have to be paid under permanent pension laws; but as only two and a half millions are in the appropriation bills of this year, only that sum will be counted; and this will brine down the expenses to eighteen millions. Then comes $500,000 for the protection of tho Northern frontier, and for the Western fron tier military road, $52,000; all three of these being extraordinary objects of expenditure, incident to our relations with the British and the Indians. They make $162,000. Then comes numerous heavy appropriations for" public buildings, towit: $100,000 for the new Treasury; 150,000 for the new Post Office? 50,000 for the new Patent Office; 30,000 for the new jail in Washington City; 150,000 for the new custom-house in New York; 75,000 for the new custom-house in Boston. Deduct all these, and you have less than seventeen millions for the expenses of the Government. Then comes 90,000 for the survey of the coasts of the United States, and also the large sums for fortifying and defending the coun try and in the increase of the navy, which, be ing permanent objoot for the security of Tne country, have no more to do with the expens es of the Government than the fencing and improving a plantation has to do with the, personal expenses of a family. Make these fair deductions, and others which might be named, and the expenses of the Government for the year 1839, will be found to be on the strictest scale of economy, and such as to in vite and defy the attacks of the Opposition. The authentic list of every class of expen ditures was published in the Globe of March 27; and we would suggest to our Democratic friends throughout the Union that they should carefully look it over, and then lay by the pa per for future reference, to be ready for the Federalists, if they should attempt again to deceive the people about extravagant appro priations, as they did last year." POLITICA T. Private claims, 45,o65 27 $36,862,242 78 The following remarks upon the appropri ations made for the year 1839, we copy from the Globe: "The Opposition have heretofore endeav ored to deceive die public into a belief that the Democratic Administrations have become quite extravagant, carrying up the appropria tions to above $40,000,000 per annum. The attempt had success for a while, until it was shown that of these large amounts about the one-half wej for occasional, contingent and extraordinary objects, no way connected with the expeuses of the government; and that, de ducting these, the cardinal feature of democ racy, that of economy, would be seen to have been duly attended to. So it is of the year 1S39. The appropriations are, in round num bers, $38,000,000; but, after the proper deduc tions, it will be seen that the expenses of the government are considerably below the one half of that sum. The first item to be deduct ed is $10,000,000 for the contingent calling into service of fifty thousand men to repel, if neeessary, the aggressions of Great Britain. The second item is $5,100,000 for the Post Office Department, not one dollar of which is paid from the Federal Treasury, but comes wholly from the Post Office itself. These two items reduce the thirty-eight to twenty three millions. Then comes $1,850,000 for the expenses of the Florida war, over and above the expense of the regular army. Then comes $1,65,000 for the Indian Department, the greater part of which refers to the removal and subsistence of the emigrating Indians, and compensation for their property and lands. This makes three aud a half millions more, LITERARY. From the Augusta Constitutionalist. The acts of a public nature, passed at the last session of Congress, are now iu course of publication in this paper. We begin on our first page of this day's paper, and con clude on the next page, the ac t making appro priations for the civil aud diplomatic expens es of the government. Iu obedience to an act passed ia 1836, the Clerk of the House of Representatives has published in the Washington papers, a state ment of all appropriations made during the session. Y e have room only for the recapi tulation of the statement, which is as follows: Civil and diplomatic, 9,010,CS1 57 Army, fortifications, and Mil itary Academy, 16,556,253 65 Navy, 5,130,7S1 64 Revolutionary and other pen sioners, 2,499,02u 15 Current expenses of the In dian department, 1,755,607 28 Preventing and suppressing Indian hostilities, 1,S56,774 GO To promote the progress of the useful arts, 9,259 22 From the JVeto York Evening Star. INDECISION, A Tale of the Far West, and other Poems. By J. K. .Mitchell, JU. D. Philadelphia: Carey .$- Hart. 1839. That this poem should have been written in "the midst of arduous and professional duties," is surprising; but not more so, than the same versatility of talent displayed throughout the entire volume; which comprises, besides the principal poem, mauy sacred and fugitive of ferings; some of which are of exceeding beau ty. The opening of this narrative-poem is spirited and fine A vessel leaves old Scotia bound for the Western World. Upon her deck are emigrants and others, occupied with their own peculiar thoughts and sad feelings. The farewell is spoken, and "The hills of Scotland swell on either side, And 'neath the vessel heave the waves of Clyde." After leaving the shore, to beguile the time; "As chance or taste decide, the groups on deck, Of home or wilderness, of port or wreck, Converse." and an American imbued with the wonders of his own transatlantic home bursts forth into a "Song of the Prairie," than which, nothing cau be more descriptive, of the mo notonous and wearisome beauty, of the vast ocean of grass in its "billowy pride;" so re markable a feature in the more Western States. The song of the Scotchman ensues; which for tenderness and pathos, and natural feeling, we might fancy Burns' ain sweet lyre had been struck, and it now reverberated among his native hills in this exquisite fare well to them. Iu perusiug the first division of the poem, we involuatarily surmise, why the hero, Nor man, with wealth and youth if lost.- i'ltellee t, and feeling heart, MnKched !y to tune and adorned by art." hen honors thronged, fastidious choice 1 w n , And Lov illumed the home, where Hymen , loiii had been," with "wife and child, and hope and health," why he should moodily withdraw himself, with au appearance of blighted happiness or pre vious guilt; as "Apart from all upon the airy shroinJ Sat one, whose sadness taught to than the crowd," and allow this unwholesome spirit to attain such entire possession of his mind, as gradu ally to impair reason; progressively evinced itself, first, "the open book, Its noble home in Norman's face forsook ;" "To drink in fury from the very eye, Whose smile before, to him, was extacy."" And then in his strange hatred to his fond aud beautiful wife, to whom, broken-hearted and dying, "It was some solace to her heart to find His loss of love to her, was loss of mind." But this unhappy temperament is explained in the morbid sensativeness of a highly gifted and proud mind, struggling against loss of station and wealth; that "Could not bear the coHness of the proud, The lessened homage of the venal crowd, The flight of summer-friends the common places, Of sympathy from those who lent their face, In ostentation still." And, " 'Twas Norman's fate, one single fault to know. The fruitful cause of many a future woe. That noblest virtue, moral courage, knew No place within his bosom, where there grew All else to dignify, adorn and bleasf But, wanting that, he wanted happiness. 'Twere vain to tell how like a blight it fell On life's young spring, how potently the spell Despoiled his summer time of hope, and bunt The ties that bound him to the land, where first He drew his infant breath; where nature smiled Propitiously on fancy's favored child." It is, perhaps, generally more in keeping with a truly noble nature, to possess that very