II 707115124 Va IVOW'AIIiED.&.B WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1845 Tea Ferniest. Oasvon.—Our first page, this week, is occupied by the Funeral'Oration delivered by the Hon. 13C5JAMIN F. Brrian, at New -York. It is the best tribute to the Old Hero we have seen, and does credit to B.'s head and heart. The funeral obsequies—of Ulrich this was a part—were performed in magnificence, and Constituted an imposing and impressive ceremonial.' sr-President Van Buren and Governor Wright, with many distingnisheti members of the Administration, were present, and the appearance was greeted by warm de-, bonstrations of popular esteem. The procession, which Was 'estimated at 50,000, Was three hours and fifteen Inientes in passing a tivOn voila. The address was .Nreildbed with a very limited notice. A B, ti3 zlv or Lira ii Ctrtss.—lfit Were not that we find the " t h o f the following acconnt In amender 'reach ;xi for by the mvecta Se editor of one of the most respect hie Magazines our conn:ty can boast—we mean the "New York Knickerbocket"- - we would not have be lieved it. Even now, for the honor a human nature, end especially the Boston portion of it—we trust this . , ~. Charcoal sketch" has been largely embellished. universal heart ; It promotes the formation of - " The following affecting sketch comes to us in the - a true national di° ratter; it softens the asperi hand-writing of a correspondent in Boetow.th whose pen ie.s of party ;it incites to a virtuous emulation. our readers have been indebted for many a pleasant corn- lieN l , in purity and m,?etness, to the thanks girivg which we owe the God who gave, and in 'cation. We call upon our friend for the name of guided, aud.sustained them, is; the. feeling of the prosecutor in the case referred to. We desire to as 1 sist in handing it down to perpetual infamy : There are ! 1 grateful reverence we should over cherish to wards those w, 4 to are the instrument: of His scenes necsning sitn9st daily In F ur Police Court that goodness. To th" claims of our great ine;.l, of I are well worthy of more than a passing record, if but for every age and - thus. of every sect and party, the glimpses they give us of poor humanity under some let us then be faithful. Let history transmit slits more melanchOly phases. A week or two since, I to other generations, the tore of their lives;. happened to be present when as Irishwoman was brought I let the canvass and the inatide perpetuate the before one of oar police justices on a charge of stealing. image of their forms ; let prwttry and music She was young, had a pleasing and rather a handsome breathe forth their names in hyton.s 3lld khartno countenance, was clad very tidily, and altogether looked vies ; let the united voice of their countrymen like bee who had seen better days, and still in her pover. echo their praises to the remotest eta Tee - -so my preserved some of the pride of that more happy period. that wherever an American footstep sha ll trNad, In her arms she held a little boy of some three or four or the lever of American liberty be found, there, greatness . shaq abide— joy of all the years, with a profusion of light curly hair clustering too the memory of their about his temples, but-whose pale cheek and sunken a beauty and an excellence--the lustrous eyes told too plainly that Disease and pinching earth ! The facts. and incidents which belong Want had even thus early marked him for their own. to the romantic and eventf ul .life of Andrew the Jack s on are to numerous to allow net, on the The mother was charged with stealing bread from the present occasion, to attempt. any extended bin door of a grocer. The complainant a hard featured,shresvd < graphical sketch. After a brief notce of his looking man, with a long nose, and sharp, restless eye, early life. 1 shall, therefore, confine myself to was called to the stand. He told a straight-forward, cir- a general view of such portions of his more ac comstantird story, the substance of which was, that his tive career, as seem to me heat calculated to baker was in the habit of leaving bread for him at the Illustrate the prominent features of his charac shop door before it was opened in the morning. For se- I ter, and hismore important services to his coon vend days past he had missed part of it ; sometimes a try. He was the son of respectable parents, whole roll, sometimes more, and once or twice only part belonging to the most hardy, virtuous and Use of a roll. In order to put a stop to these depredations fat of all orders of society—the greet middle on his property ;he one morning lay in. wait for the class. His parents, as is well known, were natives of Ireland, though some of their ances trespasser; when, about daylight, he saw the prisoner tore were originally from _Scotland. ;They come out of her miserable under ground abode, leading l her sickly boy by the band. Passing by where the wit- emigrated to South Carolina in 1765. -p i e was h new was concealed, she stopped at his door, took up a born at the Waxaw settlement, in that'iState, on 1767. He a v H i n e a d h i e e e d n o n s S a u r end roll, and breaking it in two pieces, gave one to her boy, , day, l t e h e l 5 8 1 thh of day a March. of J ti and restored the other to its place. She then turned to the good old age of more than ' 7B ear l : re back, when the complainant seized, and hurried her ins- taming to the last, in a remarkable de y gree; his mediately to the watch house; taking care, in the mean . extraordinary intellectual power's, Hs ardent time, to snatch from the half famished boy the moiety of affections, and his deep interest in the happy. •the loaf he was so eagerly devouring. The witness here ness of his friends and the welfare of his coon- produced the piece of bread, and pointed to the marks of the child's teeth, in part corroboration of his testimony. After hearing the story, the judge turned to the woman and asked her if she had any thing to say in denial of of the truth of the charge. " Nothing, nothing, your Honor," replied the poor woman, laying her face on her boy's head, and,straining him to her bosom, while her body swayed ER and fro in the agony of shame and grief; " I am guilty, guilty ! But it was not for rneself I took it. Ab, Sir! I'm a poor lone woman, and Work hard when I tan get work. But for the last ten days I have had nothing to du, and my money was all gone ; and since yesterday morning we hadn't had a morsel to eat. am used to it meself ; but I could'nt hear little Dennis I cry for bread, and not give it to him !" The Judge was evideutlitouched by the woman's distress, and turning to the complainant, asked him if, under the circumstances, he should persist in the prosecution. "-If' said he "you will withdraw your complaint, it will be pc:for/Mug an act of mercy which I should be very glad to second." Vain appeal Though the eye of every man in court was fixed upon the prosecutor with looks that pleaded fur hie victim, no emotion stirred the repose of his hard and ad fish features. He kept no account with Mercy. The right of property had been violated, in his eyes the most sacred of human rights, and he claimed the penalty of the law. "This is a cruel case," said the the Judge; "and really, i feel extremely iothto punish thispoor wo• man for an set so venial, crime though it be in the eye or -the law. Bet although this plaintiff might have pur sued a very different course, without doing any injury to the muse of justice, or impairing in the leastdegree what ever title he may have to the love and respect of his fellow men, still my duty in them.. in imperative; the the law allows me no discretion. I would it were other wise. Ptit her down for one " month do the house of Correction Mr. Clerk." " Oh, Dennis, Dennis !" exclaim ed the poor woman, in a paroxysm of grief, as she strain okher boy still closer to her bosom, and bathedlim with tears; "what'll you do 7)020, my poor child, when you've no mother to look after you, and keep you from that harm's way I" " Don't grieve yourself about that, Mrs. Mc Ginnie," said one of her own country women, who had hitherto stood in the back ground, but now came forwerd, and took the prisoner by the hand ; " don't grieve for the likes of that Ma'am ; I'll take care of your boy ; and while Pee a platy in the pot, he shall have his month falL "God bless you!" exclaimed the mother, winging the woman's hand ; " try the holy Virgin smile an you !" "Come, step along' Maras," said the offsier, as he, put the minim ax in his pocket: "don't stand growling here ; the cart is waiting for, you." The wcaUdaloirly and mechanically obeyed, followed by little Dennis, with one hand clasped in that °lbis new • friend,and the other Pulling at the skirts of his mother's dress. Arrived at the outer door, the little fellow was assigned *with many tears" to the care of his kind pro. lector; the mother went alowly and droopingly down steps, without again lifting her head, or lookiiag beck aping' her half weeping, half Wondering boy ; and: in a iitOment lane she *slanted in the covered heanse.like wagon that was to carry her aerate the " bridge of sighs" to the felon's home." THE BRADFORD :REPORTER I & The Funeral Oration, Delivered by non. B. F. Buller of New nournfdl but pleasant, friends and fellow citizens, is the service in which we are en gaged. Andrew Jackson upon chose bed of sickness and suffering have been sci intently fixed the filial and solicitous regards of the millions of America, is no more.' Hie great soul has ascendedffo its Author; his venerable form has sunk into the grave. To iliat grave, with swelling hearts and tearful eyes, and sad funeral rites, a nation is repairing. We have come to it to-day. While we linger within its sacred precincts, the praises of the Hero we reverence, the Magistr 4e-we honored, and the man we loved, rise instinctively to our lips.— To their free utterance, affection prompts, duty enjoins, nature compels us. It is fitting, it is right, that such tributes should be paid to those, who in council or in camp, have advanced the gNory of their country and the welfare of their kind, TheAustage thus bestowed is at least disinterested. For the dead who are its ob jects, rosolosible alike to praise and to blame, can make no return to the living who proffer it. it exert,: a humanizing influence on the try. The peculiarities of his character are in harmony with his extraction. The martyr blcod of Scotland, blended with that bf the Emerald Isle. and modified by the residence of his ancestors in her genial clime, coursed in his veins ; and no man, probably, eter lived, "who united, in a higher degree, the firmness and perseverance of the one race with the quick and ardent temperament of the other. 'Depriv ed, soon after his birth, of his father; his eldest 11 - rother slain during the war of the revolution. by British troops, himself eninpellel. by the approach of the enemy, to abandon. at the age 14. the academy at which he had been placed; freely offering himself, with his sole surviving brother, to the military service of his country ; both soon after captured by the ene my ; both assaulted and wounded, because scorning to submit to personal indignity ; the other of the two brothers dying of the wounds thus received ; his mother soon after pressed by -fatigue and grief into an untimely grave ; was ever an ardent and susceptible youth plac ed in circumstances more likely to make a deep and tasting impression on his character ? " he child," (to use the words of a great poet of our own time,) " the child is father of the man.". And when we consider the baptism of blood by which Andrew Jackson, in the spring time of his youth, was dedicated to the service of his country, can we wonder at the undying faithfulness, or the burning zeal, with which, from youth to age, he presented himsell a liv. ins sacrifice at her altar ? Passing over the intermediate space, we find him, at the age of twenty-one, established in the practice of the law, in what was' then one of the back settle ments of North Carolina. It was a region . of ' restless activity, of stirring interest, of wild ad venture. The scanty population, thinly scat tered over an extensive territory, was constant ly exposed to the inroad" of powerful tribes of Indians, still the occupants of its primeval for ests. They bad been subjugated; during the war of the Revolution, by the American arms, but were ever ready, when occasion tempted, to surprise the incautious traveler, and to cut off the unprotected family. In the' border con diets which grew out of this condition of the territory, Jackson renewed the instructions in the drill and muster which he received in boy hood, and added to them lessons' to the war fare of the . lndiane,,beth destined' to be after wards employed on 'a-yeider theatre and for in finitely greater ends. Intestine feuds also dis tracted the inhabitantri.many,iof their number were rude in ruanneretkratutricle ofthem.reck less in character; the,ceitlec on of nebta, by force of law, .was a ;,litskof;litriculty 'and of danger, and the lawyer arti undertook it need ed 'activity of body as Welt **pi intellect, firm ness of nerve as welk.rur -p fps% vigor of arm as well as of ewlp sot ding. Jackson, bringing with him an Res reputation; was immediately employed i nrifes; of . this son; and he entered on the d' arge of his pules.; atonal duties with the a e promptitude and PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY, AT TOWANDA) BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. S. GOODRICH & SON. energy, so often displayed by him in matters of higher and more extended interest. In these, and other professional efforts of the like nature, i lie s beset by opposition, and embroiled in collistene,- which might have proved fatal to one less honest and courageous ; but his man lyl bearing and his inflexible pursuit of justice, in' despite of every impediment, establish his reputation ; and professional success is the necessary consequence. Another result is, that be becomes universally known as one of the first citizens, in point of character and in fluence, of the young community, now rapidly increasing in numbers, and about to be organiz ed, with the consent and by the cession of North Carolina, as a Territory of the United States. This even takes place in 1790, and Andrew Jackson receives from George Wash ington, then President of the United States, his first appointment to office—that of Attorney of the United States for the. new Territory. In the short apace of six y ears the territorial go vernment is superseded by the admission into the Union of the State of Tennessee. Jackson' is a member of the Convention which forms the constitutton, and he takes an active part in i the preparation of that instrument. 'lt contains some peculiar provisions which deserve a mo ment's notice. The members of the Legisla ture are chosen for two years, and meet only biennially, except when called together on ex traordinary occasions. This arrangement is founded on the idea, while annual meetings of the legislative body are indispensable in coon tries having a hereditary executive, the like necessity does not exist where the executive is chosen by, and responsible to, the people ; and that the people themselves are the beet conser-i raters of their rights. The bill of rights in this Constitution is one of the most liberal and comprehensive adopted by any of our States.' It asserts, in the strongest terms, the inherent and uncontrollable sovereignty of the people, and th-ir right to instruct, as well as to peti tion, theirrepresentatives ; it denounces per petuities and monopolies as contrary to the genius of a tree State ; and it forbids the grant of any hereditary emoluments, privileges, or honors. From the subyquent life of Jackson, i t is Cagy to see that he must have assented, with a ' , warm heart, to all these provisions.-- Immediuteli on the admission of the new State into the Union, Jackson is chosen one of her delegates in the [rouse of Representatives ; and the next year he is appointed one of her Sena tors in Congress. He nerves in this distingu ished body, over which Thomas Jeffersob was then the presiding officer, until 1799, and thus enjoys opportunities of form'ng a personal friendship with a statesman and political phi losopher, with whoie sentiments his own en tirely concur, and for whose genius he cherishes the highest admiration. In 1799, he retires' by voluntary resignation from the honorable post. Most unexpectedly to himself, he is immediate ly appointed a Judge of the Supyme Court of his Slate, a station which he accepts with re luctance, and from which he withdraws at an early day. He does so with the design, which he then supposes he may be permitted to ac complish, of spending the residue of his days in the quiet retreat of a country life. Little does he dream of.the brilliant destiny that awaits him. In the mean time, as another preparation for that destiny, the field officers of one of the divisions of the Tennessee militia, no strangers to his lofty patriotism, or his martial spirit, had chosen him without consul tation with, or notice to him, their Major Ge neral. This commission hey retaitie - d until 1814, when he received the like appointment in the army of the United States. We are now to contemplate Andrew Jackson in the new and - conspicuous theatre in which he attracted the regards not only of America. but of the world. Rallying to his•standard at the first moment when the action of the govern ment enabled him to do so, the gallant spirits of his division. 'he dedicates their persons and his own to the service of the nation. From November. 1812, to the cessation of the hos tilities, he is constantly employed in creating and leading the armies, fighting the battles, and vanquishing the enemies of his country. It is not my purpose to enter into the details of his military exploits. Of all and of each it may be said that in' each and in all he acquitted himself as no other man but Andrew Jackson could have done. With his first touch of the marshal's truncheon; the hand of one borne to command at will the energies of his troops, to intule into them his own daring spirit, and successfully to cope in any and every field with the most skilful and Courageous of his enemies, is evidently seen. Throughout his whole military career he exhibits in felicitous combination all the great qualities of a great commaeder—comprehensiveness and accuracy of view, genius to devise, skill and courage to execute, coolness and self-possession in every emergency, perfect command of his resources, sagacity' to discover and ability to defeat the plans of his opponents. In his campaign against the Greeks, so formidable by their , numbers, their obstinate bravery, and their proficiency in all the arts of sagage warfare he adds to the hardihood, the patience and the the self-denial of a Ilannibal—the vigor t thee' celerity, the'succese of a Cwsar. When he plants, upon his own reeponsibility, the Amen> can Eagle on the forts of Pensacola,statesmen see that the instincts of a heart and wilide voted to the public weal, 'can anticipate the rules of public law ; and the nation recognize and honor the clearness of his judgment not less than the pm:aptitude e.fa energy of his conduct. In his compand at New Orleans, from his arrival at the beleaguered city until his departure froittlt, we seem to follow some heaven-appointed and heaven-assisted warrior of the aecieotilispensation, rather than a chief tain of modern times. Such superhuman Such. assumption and exercise of pow est, Such chisalroul daring and cogpummate address in striking the fi rst blow in thTunequal conflict;' such cautious preparations for the 'final. struggle; such perfect success , in its triumphant issue; such frightful havoc in the troupe of the enemy and such shnostmtracu• haus preservation ,of his own ; . , who, in these things,:thies not lee the' band of God, On York. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QVARTER." and by his energy and renown our national character is raised to a height of glory never before attained by the American Republic. In the meantime Jackson has been involved at hoot,. in Conflicts protracted and severe. Fired with the love of democratic liberty, end filled with zest for the constitution, he pursed sys tems of policy, and adopts s course of measures which bring on violent collisions with the in terests, passions and prejudices of men in dif ferent quarters of tne Union. In the midst of the outhrusts of party, produced by these col- , lision, he is re-elected by a vote of thtee to one over all the other candidates, although the State of his nativity, formerly foremost in his support, withholds her approving voice. Op position to him is followed; on her part, by resistance to the laws; the integrity of the Union . is threatened ; and the nation is exposed to the dangers of a , civil *sr. 'Now* is, that Andrew . Jackion,•soperior tithe &eget, and equal to the remedy It requites, by agency of an instrument ordained, prepared, and guided by Himself ?' 1 must content my self with the briefest possible reference to the war with the Seininoles, in 1817-18. If the exploits of Jackson' in this campaign had con stituted his whole title to military renown, they would have been amply sufficient to place him high on the roll of fame. How does it enhance the estimate of his former achieve ments, when it is constlered that the Seminole war is scarcely thought of in the comparison; and that Jackson is seldom named in connec tion with it, except by those who refer to it (or the purpose of denouncing him for the exe cution of Ambrister and Arbuthnot ! Having ponied this incident, I fie! it right to state my entire conviction, that in this. as in every other' act of his public life, he proceeded under a deep sense of whit he believed to be the in junction of duty ; and duty was ever to him as the voice of Heaven. "My God would not have soiled on me," (was hie characteristic remark, when speiking of this affair to him who addressed you)" had I punished only the poor, ignorant savages, and spared the white men who set them on." The hour has at length come when Jacksjon believed he may a second time retire to rural occupations, without danger of any further call to engage in the service of the Union. The nation is at peace with all the world ; the Indian tribes have been reduced to submission ; peace reigns in all our borders, and tranquillity throughout the land: He resigns his commission in the army ; reluses the appointment of minister to Mexico, conferred on him by President Monroe, not only because he desires no office of emolument or honor, but because he will not countenance, by his' presence at the court of iTIMBIDE, the substitution of O'monarchy in place of a repub lic, nor the mean by which it has been effec ted. Other reasons concur, to enforce the step he has taken. Incessant toil in the various duties of his command—exposure to the hard ships of military service in the warm climates of the South. and especially in the swamps and morasses of Florida—have undermined his constitution; and retirement seems as needful to the preservation of his own life, as it is to the happiness of those who have so long been denied the pleasure of his society. He does not deem it inconsistent with this feeling, to accept the office of Senator in Congress, again conferred, on him by hie beloved Tennessee ; for this honorable and comparatively easy ser vice will still leave him, the greater portion of the year. an inmate of the Hermitage. But his mission is not yet ended, " Peace bath her victories, No less renowned than war." And many such victories he is yet to win.— By spontaneous uprisings of the people. in his own and other states, he is presented to the nit :ion as i candidate for the highest trust.— Th.ough not first invested with the dignity. his three competitors, each long and honorably identified with the civic service of the Union, lare left behind him in the race. In due course ,of time another contest ensues. Ile is raised to the Chief 141a0tracy by more than two to one of the electoral rotes. In surveying, from this high eminence, the field of duty to which he has been called, he perceives that with ma ny foreign Stales we have unsettled subjects of dispute. growing out of claims to justice tong deferred, for spoilations of our commerce, during that reign of lawless violence which, in the beginning of this century, disgraced and barbarized the.maritime wars of Europe. Ile sees that unless speedily adjusted, they tt ill expose us to the alternative either of sacrificing our national honor or of vindicating by the sword of our unquestionable rights. He re. solves that this state of things shall not con tinue ; that no needless delay, no evasive sub terfuge shall be allowed; that he will proceed, with all possible despatch, in the prosecution of his duty, "asking nothing that is not right, and submitting to nothing that is wrong;" and he believes that if this course be steadily and wisely pursued, peace will be preserved, and justice be obtained. The result shows the sa gacity of his conclusions. One after another, treaties are made and ratified by which these • objects of irritation, so grave and so danger ous, are all, at length, happily disposed of.— In one case' only is there any serious delay ; but this is the most important of them all ; for it is our ancient ally, the beautiful, the brilliant France of our own Lafayette, that neglects the performanCe of her duty. Jackson does not hesitate or waver in his course. Ile deals with the greatest and most honored as he would have dealt with the weakest and mos humble ; he sees to it that while the respec,tf ii courtesies due to so distinguished a delinquent are sedulously observed, no jot or tjtle or the national honor is lost or comprothyted. In the end justice is secured ; the faithlif treaties vin dicated ; the peace of Empiyeti preserved ; and France herself. on a full s understanding of his course, does honor, with characteristic chivalry and grace, to the • , ,,tife de fer"—the_ iron will of the stern oll,tfian. ..His name :through Europe rings, Fillitureach mouth with envy or with praise, And all her jealous monarchs with amaze, , A 4 rumors loud that daunt remotest kings; his firmness and his wisdom, achieves.the moat splendid and most enduring of his victo ries; averting from his country the stain and curse of fraternal blood ; and giving .to his memorable pledge, " OCR FEDERAL UNION*- , IT SIM DR PRESERVED," the strength of a fix ed resolve, and the majesty of a perpetual truth. While the plaudits which now rise from every quarter of the Union are yet sound ing in his ears ; when by mere inaction in re spect to other sources - of political convulsion, he 'could have secured for the remainder ulhis official term a larger degree of personal repose and general approbation, than was ever enjoy ed by any of his predecessors, he is again compelled, as he believes, to a clear and tnexo. table duty, - whose execution he well knows will revive anew the animosity of party, in volve in bitter and painful conflict the remnant of his public life, and bring upon himself, per haps, the censures of many whom he loves. and I with whose good opinions he would not light ly part. Inferior minds would have shrunk from this new trial. So did not Jackson.— What efforts were made to drive him from his purpose—with what inflexible' resolution he adhered to his position, and how the people sustained him in this conflict also, is it not written in the history of the times, and fresh in the recollections of all who hear me In teference to this, as well as to every other de bateable portion of his public life, I purposely refrain, lest I should transgress the just bounds of this occasion, from any attempt to vindicate their expediency or their rightfulness. Only one claim in his behalf do I now think it need ful or becoming to assert ; that if in any of his official acts he erred, his errors were of the understanding, not of the heart; and that in them all, he acted from hottest, disinterested, and patriotic motives. On this point he thus speaks. in the lofty tone of conscious integrity,' in one of his recorded vindications. "Id vain do I bear upon my person enduring memorials of that contest in which American liberty was I purchased—in vain have I since periled pro petty, fame and life, in defence of the rights and privileges so dearly bought, * • • • I if any serious doubts can be entertained as ti4l the purity of my purposes and motives. * • In the history of conquerors and usurpers, ne ver, in fire of youth, nor the vigor of manhood, could I find an attraction to lure me froth the path of duty, and now I shall scarcely find an inducement to commence their career of ambi tion, when gray hairs and a decaying frame, instead of inviting to toil and battle, call me to the contemplation of other worlds, where con querors cease to be honored, and usurpers ex piate their crimes. The only ambition I can feel, is to acquit myself to Him to whom I must soon render an account of my stewartship, to serve my fellow men, and live respected and' honored in the history of my country; No; the ambition which leads me on, is an anxious desire and a fixed determination to return to the people unimpaired the sacred trust they have confided to my charge, ' • * * * • to persuade my countrymen, so far as I may, that it is not in a splendid government, sup ported by powerful monopolies and aristocrati cal establishments, that they will find happi ness. or their liberties protection ; but in a plan system, void of pomp—protecting all. and granting favors to none—dispensing its bles sings, like the dews of Heaven unseen and un felt, save in the freshness and beauty they con tribute to produce. It is such a government that the genius of our people requires—such en one only under which our States may re main for ages to come, united, prosperous and If the Almighty Being, who has hitherto sus tained and protected me, will but vouchsafe to make my feeble powers instrumental to such a result. I shall anticipate, with pleasure. the place to be assigned me in the history of my country, and die contented, with the belief that I have contributed, in some small degree, to increase the value and prolong the duration o American liberty." Andrew Jackson has ow retired to the sequestered shades of pripte life, with the benedictions of a grateful people and the respect and admiration of the/world. He enters his loved and peaceful Ilirmitage, at the appointed limit of human i fistence, with an enfeebled frame ; the vie o f mof complicated and incurable maladies. which leave him little res pite from pain, anOio strength or relish for the pleasures of GNI(*) life. - Yet' has,this been, in many respect‘ the happiest and not the feast useful portinn of his rootlet career. Feeling that he has fulfilled with fidelity and zea,l-the course of public service to which Pro ence had directed him, conscious of the sin- gleness and purity of his motives, and happy in the belief that the great mass of his political opponents dcrhim justice in this respect ; thrice happy in the knowledge, that the principles by which he has been guided, are warmly.cherish. ed by a great majority of The people ; receiving continually, and in a thousand forms, proofs of affection and esteem from all classes of his countrymen ; full of faith in the vitality and perpetuity of our system of government, State and federal ; anticipating, with delight, the ad vancing glories of his country, and surrounded by a family he loves, and by each member of which he is held in the profoundest veneration; the retirement of Andrew Jackson, notwith. standing hie bodily infirmities. is all that wis dom or patriotism can desire. and such as fen , statesmen and heroes in the history of Mankind have been permitted to enjoy. For more than eight years he is spared to our affections, and though for the last thtee of them he seldom quits his dwelling, except to bow filmset( in the Noose of God, his mental faculties remain unimpaired, nor ate they idle for a day. His correspondence, whether of friendship ; or of private or public busitiess, ie kept up with steadiness and aetititt. Alive to everything that concerns his . belo'ved country. and taking daily note of her struts. he Founds from his lone watch-tower the voice of counsel of of warning, according to the Vision which lie Fees, and to the message which has been given him. And though at times adall eat is, turned to his most prophesying.. yet in eases. and (epeeist ly to the latest, his wads have been clothed With their aneietit lifter over the minds and actions of his fellnwei - . • • . ~ If there be any to whoin these Otte:anent .I seem futile and needless, they will yet allow I, that each of them breathed the language of thi /I heart, and is manna with teat for the glory and I happiness of Arnerica. But it ili Aril to the , public cause that all his , thoughts are giien.--; ji Weighty and instant as, are the dunes of •the citizen to his 'country, ANDREW hiatuses —re. I, members that he owes to his Maier higher I I and more solemn responsibility.. This semi.. meat had been implanted in his youthful bread by a mother's lessons and a mother's loye.e-- It had been nourished by the example of a wife —one of the excellent of the earth ; brprovi- tlential deliverances and favors, by the perusal II of the Book of God, and by the instructioni of the pulpit. II td r the circumstances in which he is now placed, these influences acgitirenetg, and by Divine blessing, decisive force: They lead him to the Garden and the Cross; he seeks and obtains the 'orgiverfess of his gins ; he avows before the world the hopes he has re ceived, and publicly enlists in the army of the 11 faithful. Henceforth he addicts himself, with a child-like docility, tb the,duties and piiiilee gee of the Christian life. He findo in thee) his chief enjoyment, and they produce in biro their appropriate effects—peacm with God, fortitude in suffering, patience and resignation in the midst of pain, serenity and hope in the pros: pect t f his departure. And tells Mit length the final hour has come, hew does it illustrate the humility of his charactei, the warmth Of his benevolence, the sincerity, the vigor of his faith ! W A prayers for household; his friends,; his country, with the words of love and imitrueJ lion to all around him ; With entire ielianceo I the merits of his Redeemer. he commits, with out a murmur or a sigh, his immortal Whit t the God of hie salvation, his periehing body t ii dust from wheneeit came ! siiett, fellovi-citizens, were the last moment of Andrew Jackson. how unlike those usual ly assigned by poetry and romance to their fa,' bled heroes ! And yet, in the soberjudgme4 of enlightened reason, not less sublime and hehl roic than if passed on the field of battle and the chariot of victory. The greatest of all tritimphit is that which is achieved over the lath enemyl, and this, through the faith which is in Jesu Jackson was able to achieve. The fifes of th last day shall consume the laurel wreaths o f earth ; most of them. indeed, will have!Wither ed ere it comes ; and all ever worn Or won, ill the tide of time, would furnish no compensi; tion for the loss of a single soul. But the chaplet awarded to the faithful soldiet of. the Cross, shall be a crown' of glory, " that fadelh not away." How poor.• in comparison, the deeth-scenes enacted by the warriors of the heathen world ! Jackson was a Christian, and . lie died the Christian's death. In view of this fact and of its blessed issues, how rich, hOw unfailing our sources of consolation ! In notes as melodious and sublime as those which waft ed to the skies,by the aid of Milton's immo rtal genius, the departing spirit of the Hebrew mg r: r tyr, the chorus of American sympathy se ils up from our Jackson's bed of death, its rein of mournful exultation--- " Nothing is here for tears, nothing mini%/ Or knock the breast I no weakness, no contempt, ii / Dispraise or blame ; nothing but well and fair, /i 1 • And what may quiet oin a death so noble."/ 11 The Valley of the Mississippi; 114 theitre . of his youthful valor and his meridian renown' —the sanctuary of his declirring age— f' idet within her bosom the ashelyrif. her H.eib- i ll /11 the centre of that young and vigorous state, whose destinies, oneezhis anxious rare, w a re long the objects of is satisfied re g ard ; onithe seen) , banks otzthe Cumberland . where the strong verdure/Of the VC eat begins reluctantly to yield to / the luxuriant beauty of the Smith ; enibosenced in a sacred Solitude, stands ithe 'tom of the Hermitage—henceforth to diide 11,,, with / Mount Vernon, the respect , the ad I ira -icon and the reverence of mankind. The g,int pitchy of his life, the calm dignity Of his death, are all exemplified by the humility of his grave. You remember how he rejected the imp l erial honor that was proffered to his bones. Pi o I cannot permit my remains to be the firs t , in these United States to be deposited in a sa i rco; phagus made for an emperor or s king. I have prepared an humble depositnry for my mOrtaL body beside that wherein lies my beloved tire; where, without any pomp or naiads.. I -ace requested when my Cod calls me to sleeplWith my fathers, to be laid ; for both of us the e to remain until the last trump rounds to cal the dead to judgment, when we, I hope. steal rise y i. together, clothed with that heavenly bed I pro.: mised to all who' believe 10 our glonotis Re. f deemer, who died for us that we inigh live and by whose atonement I hope fora bl e ssed injmortality." This was the answer of ihris: lien Meekness, of Republican simplicity, of- Ainekican patriotism. Catching the strait:olom the lips of the dying Hero, we may elo its lofty inspiration. More than this, w Lamy give it to-day a new and sublimer signifie nee. Sleep sweetly, aged Soldier, Statesman,age. in the grave of kindred and affection. l lmat= tens little where hia Lady is laid, whose Imerri ore is enshrined in all our hearts ; the is mitt of,whose fame is the country that ved ; the inscription. of whose greatnel the praises of the world. But if there li solace in memory ; if any virtue in the temptation of heroic deeds t_ any purity. lessens of sublime example ; to the sett! Of Jeeitsthe let the pilgrimage of haream made--m the ardor of a generous enthil the 'eympaitiy.,of a fraternal loge, the co 666' Of a Christian (aid,. ACCOMMODATING BOTH' WAYS -.rt. York 'tribune has the following : Cot 'Graham has Stair ted and Roher ris naktirted the Postmasteiship. It is sa Morris, on taking possession, looked atom Post Oflire m the different doors M:d sal s. Well Colonel. y'u hare a good Mail of getting in here." Yes," answered Graham, and also • many trays of zellinsr oul." A Nam"; carrying a sickle through th accidentally let it fall. whereupon it was r , ed that said person evidently had a dr, _ complaint. . liNliffslo:l)V, 4 ol o'nu le ear- CEO any con the 7 be Eff Mor 'd that d the ways good street mark diedl