a 11 BM E 6 [ COMM= FROM THIRD PAGE. to take possession of the government and to be come the predominating influence in its admin istration. Its" dark form attended the Southern re presentatives up to the capital ; tyrannical, re lentless, it dictated the legislation of the nation, forcing every other interest to yield to itself. It invaded the cabinet and the executive man ion, and with iron and despotic menace dealt life and death to presidents andpolitical parties according as they administered the, government in obedience or opposition to its behests.. It selected Presidents by intimidating ,the popular will. It wasted the blood and treasure mind credituf ,the nation, like water, in,thaac quisition bothbytreatyand conquest, of territo ry-over which to extend theareaof itsinsatiable Itmade treaties and broke theta. It made` compromises and broke them..• No compact, no • treaty, nomonument, was sacredif it' stood in the - way of its purposes. Na conceptlKin too bold for itattUdaeity if it extended:its despotic sway.• • The .Supreme Court, the great national fountain of justice, the, last great fmal- interpreter, ex pounder, guardian,. ;conservator and• hope of the oonstitntional .. tights of ~the nation, has. not • escaped. • Even here, this !over whebninv power f with, its .iron grasp, has -enforced its•dictation.- • It has shrouded the ju dicial ermine with itstaan darkness and,reckless of the appeals of humanity. and, philanthropy, reckless of the asPirations.of. freedom. over the world,.and in bald defiance of the. indignation of •the civilization of the age, it 1:04 forced the sanction of all its kwrongs,.and extended a de cree aganist liberty, , and in•favor of universal slavery over the land. It governed the nation, directed its policy, and all the interests and hopes of,fretlabor went dbwmunder its crush ing weight - The Constitution was prevented from all the.purposes of its establishment; and the people had forced _upon .them the moment ous issue, whether the „great interests of free-, dem should:be surrendered:and become.forever subservient to slavery, or :adminiatration : of the country be brought back, to , its-original• channels andpurposes, the Constitution restored to its trite interpretatiorq and-liberty and very brought ,Iwk to their trtte.relations—the relations designed for them by the ,fathers of the Republte,, and , directed by ;the rule:of. the• Constithtion--,liberty national and. slavery , See- Mona, -tbmlnterests of freedom parmnbudit and , slavery Secondary. ,-t, Tile issue' was prederited to the peoPle of this country, whether the great - North, with its dende - Optilatitm,lts intelligence and wealth; with its g - reaS, clevelopmeatOf natural resources, 'trith. Systexii 'Of morality and editeatiOn- - whether' these eighteen northern Statee,,:con- • tainiug eighteen millions of intelligent freetnen, or the fifteencsatithern States with about-eight, millione,ShOuld bepredomimukt in this country whether freedom with her great progressehould not lead in the nation's onward march. Mr. Smtrirat, here was the great issue—the grand est and most MOmentous issue ever .resented to a people. '''We ha* heard , much Of What.the people will say -upon the subject of these resolu tions. What have they said on this question ? What verdict have they given? ' Have,they ren dered a. verdict for or against " the interests of freedom? It has been said here to-cley that a, nafkigity of the p&Ople are 'opposed to the Re publican party—that the last election was not carried by a majority of the people—that Abraham Lincoln was not 'elected by , a majority. I assert that Abraham Lincoln is elected President of the United States in a 'constitutional way,' and by a constitutional majority—that a constitutional' majority of the intelligence of this nation have declared.that he shalrbe their President for four years to come, and they have elected him as thdrepresentative of, certain great doctrines. Along with -him they IlaYq: ateted those doctrines, and they have repudiated the amendment of the Senator from YOrk. And I will 'say farther, ott.thia subject 'of the majority, that the - election. of, Abraham Lincoln and the triuMph' Of 'the Ile publican cause islhe noblest political triumph that has ever been achieved in this country from. the foundation of the government; to: this•day. Mr poUgla,s attempted to elect - .himself Presi dent. He rallied a party upon the doctrine .of populir •soVereignty; and while 'was -quib bling and . squabbling with the people t,) con-' vince them that half-a-doien squatters first ima terlitmi li.td the right to fix the • goierthient thereof, for all those who should opine afterthem , - and a.a - ainst the wishes of ihe , NthcAe nations out side of - the MAiterf, the - RepublicawriartY;lin the election of Abraham Lincedn;illustrated the" ' -111ffe pOpniai sovereignty of this' nation: They: , stdoffin the proud positionof *lndies:4llg the fundamental principle 'of this goveniment, that the Majorit'y hag a right to 'There was a time 'when 'it-was the bat-of the 'Dernockatio party that their cardinal doetrine•waii; , "the jerityshbuld rulo— • *then they beaded that the Constitution 4>f-this colintrY rested upon the will' Of the people. They' gloried! in it. It Was their and their beacon light. But how DenVicraCychaiiged! How have the might 'yfall , en! • Blair. 13reckinxidge; who stood utiensthe doctririe-Whialithe Senator from 'York advanees here, to=day ; propose to be elected - Prekident the people? Did - Mr. Douglas'' entertain a hope.? Did the Bell-Everett party believe that it ever had any chance of. success before the Peo-• ple?• No, sir, , :The proposition weal and they_ set out with that cardinal leading idea', to Wrest' from the people of this wintry, the right of popular suffrage ; to take away , their' popular ir,vereigri4, and carry the election of the Presi dent into the Congress of tke United Stales_ Their, whole aim and object was to'rob the pee , pie of the right of electing their own President - , ~to take this great:fundamental right of a nation to elect its .own rulers away from the people; , and transfer it to , Congress, in which rase the' fßate. of Delaware (about as large as threeerinii _ties like Dauphin) casts one vote; and the great State of Virginia one, vote ;- the „great - State of Pennsylvania, and little'Rhode Island each-one vote: IS gait Democracjr ? that*millEidsPi' - ereignty 7 In God's ,name, What is it lint tramp= liag on the popular will and repudiating the. right, Of thimajoai tY to rule ? The It.epublican party triumpheeoVer - them all, and vindicated the.popular will •by electing their candidate by nearly as many votes as all the other three candidates received, nptivith; standing the multiplied choice presented to ,the people. I tell you, Mr.' SPiAKHR, no party on earth ever stood in so noble an 'attitude as didtlie Republican party during the laat campaign.— They shied 'upon the right of thipeople:to elect their, own rulers in their own Way ; and I thank • Heaventliey have triumphed. When the opposi tion talk to me of DemocracY, - When they, on mi' omasion like this; make a parade about Democ ricy, and ask us to come up to the *ark,. I tell' them that we have come up to the work, and' have performed it in tilde - good old;wayin which it- as designed to be done when the Constitutibn was formed. We have fought for the Wilrof the principle Majority--tho that, underlies all Dem *MOW government, the principle that was Plantod here beforolong before—this gdorieui' government was founded. It calne here' with the Pilguitn'fatherii in the Kai - flower. On that bleak Deceneber day, While yet I tOseing in the surf-boat, with the stormy ocean behind . theta, and the gloom and of the savage! *Adel:- flees before them, ere they.light6d`thb'fired'of civil and religious libeity On' Pliniouth Rock,' they soneecrated this principle for all lime, by forming, colony of. offence and defencifV,to - hc gcrierned'iri the will of the inaiiiiity,i r and . theY !elected theii*-PiMitibiitg!'"Tliby' planted r this' 40 13 0P 1 ,i11 3 Pi.11.111ctoutkPocikin Yeeiii62o =alb haeLgr i om And ei?twhigA iteelfinith6' 11 1 W-: drThe 1661 'Age, tin t t a yb o tif hipe , pairttgatfroiltPlavalh-Wrd ekAtt err' EhlAirthitahiliattibl that wllllsn fut. This nation to-day is wr in the la- Mince of its blase, and, thank'Ekal, the pathway ai the Republican party is lighted by its glow. We are Called' loctum3l. Pray, sir, who is it that:heti - prat:rolled 'seetionalisirt?As naitten, . ?Ass- .a have heretofore borne 'Val many a battle field to victory and glory the stars and stripes, with "not a stripe_ crossed or polluted, nor a single star obscured." Who are they to-day who pro pose to tear off fifteen of these stars? Are they Republicans ? No, sir. We have declared over and over again that, where slavery was legally established, thatinstitution shall never be dis turbed ; and we are pledged by every tie of fealty and every emotion' of patriotism to stand by the South and defend her rights whenever and wherever they may be threatened or assail ed... Rut we claim the right to the expression of oar own principles and doctrines wherever we may go within the broad limits of this Re -Wto Sasettrthelittli thatlibeity isriteP tional,- and slavery sectional-; ; that slavery lives and breathes only by state enactment, by the, jurisdiction of the State creating it; that it id limited, , and the moment •it passes the bounds of that limitation it dies. What have the people said ? They looked - to New England ; with her bleak cold _climate .and sterile soil, yet the home of •industiy, gence, manufactures and all the arts—the den seat population and the highest civilization on the continent ; then to the Empire State, with her internal imProVrements, her agriculture and 'her commerce • therito the, great West, a World in itself, spreading out in magnifiCent` beauty; from the lakes. to the Mississippi; Wen they Went and stood on the Allegheniee; where our enterprise has riragged after it over:mountain and gorge the iron track upen t which' the Dace motive hauls half the commerce, of the conti nent, and - where on the mountain'stopmost. crag, it hourly whistles out 'the triumph of art and 'genius over nature's proudest barriers; they looked at old •Pennsylvania, founded on Deeds of Peace, 'the first to rid herself of slavery,' spreading away West to the Ohio, and East to the Delaware. They beheld her bright rivers,' her green fields, her cities, towns and villages,, filling the :whole: heavens with the spires and domes of her scheols, colleges and churches. They 'contemplated this magnificent tableaex, as it stretched away to the mist of . the ocean, and her three millions of hardy, self-reliant, self-Serving and self-rewarding free men developing, her, inexhaustible mineral re sources, and' rep:Aced in the trinniphs of . the higher civilization of freedom. They :looked to the Smith, and mourned over its ,s on and decay ; and they derided in or_ 'of 'freedom — and progressive goverimie.nt, and declared to' the world that that iiimense area of territory, expanding away from the "Father of Waters".te where the. Pacific breaks ite.eolen}yl- dirge on the Western shore Of the Con- - , 'anent, should be devoted to liperty and hit-, manity.• ...When the choice came ,tobe made by our people, whether South. Carobria 'should be extended from the•Atheatic to: the•Paelfic, or ,:whethr.Pennsylvania 'with her ,gidrious bide pendence and cultivated intelligence, should be multiplied. there in State after_StaM, they- said, let it be preserved forever for freedom and from the contaminating touch of slavery. , This is what a constitutional majority of the people of this country have said by , the election of:a man who is the representative of that doc trine; and old Pennsylvania herself, not, excited, never, thrown off her balance ~'or insane by fanatical appeals—she, tiro, , has said it. Permsxlvania, the. Keystone a this glorious Arch,'the balance wheel of the Union, has said it by fifty thousand majority. And, moreover, she has said it more emphatically than• any other State in this Union; for the reason that se long as slavery was a predeminating element in the polities of this country, just long there wad Ma hope,for Pennsylvania's fritereits. She became convincedvafter thirty yeara • hard ex perience, that the slave interest -is, antagonistic - to the interests of free labor ; and that so long as that interest shouldt control , =the national 'comicihclennsylvankt. had -no hope' for protec tion to 'her .industry mad ManufactUres. Our good :old' Cominonwealth emphatically pre claimedlier detotirdittithe interests of her own` §9hBj h4-40r9tion te:the doctrineS of free labor. acting thus &A vivid notrio. Otherwise than proclaim her adhesion to the --Prillullldes - uf the - Repirblican party I—to the cause of education, intelligence an national proginesr. So Much for the. question of •an election :by,. the,majerity- 7 ,-thp will of that maprity,,d ek ,hav only., aningle -purpose. rn supporting: these-mac: • Illtions; that ist to caatiittute c An, some : - waNy4 l euritalh,this Union, Constitadions and, -the, jaws ofAnkr-uouTrtry- T Yo. hold ~up. the hands of patriots•in aidingdhe government-and by. our - counsel to. devise Kne, mearat, for ,perpetuating and, preserving the:greatFat and: 'best..!gir,verrv, meat,,. under which any people ,eyes If dlstinlon•mnit.comeify. one after another, .the 'States of this Union go ,reeling,-down in the wild death dance, of fahatichnnondlthrow-froM theirhrows thasyrabols ofthe Unioh, let Penn sylvania still .be • true; Let -her ...conuramding voice still be for theiUniomand the Constitution. If :this glorious fabriexnuskgo down,-let Penn:. sylvania be thastariding cxqumn-deftond hold within herselfithe 'sembodiment and concentra tion of the virtues and:the: glories of the! Re public, so that in.better times•wherk Providence shall blebs , the'American...people with -I wiser `counsels ? and Tatriotirni zsh all resuthe Ate, sway, she may stand Defore the • world the Ittpa. of liberty ; and : the beacon-light•to guide - some some patriot • baud,- some -Washington, Jeffersoni. Adams. and Franklin— some ;Madison and Ham ilton—to reconstruct =•fronl the, scattered frag-. ments; and restore- to us again,. this • glorious Let what may coine,l trust Pennsylvania will be true to'herself. - 'Can she ignore her own ver diet'and' declare, to the world that all we have done in the past campaign, has , been an • error and 'a sin ? 'lf we had Veen acting the'park of traitius;'we might •• ebiasisfently -, repent-Lpfead guilty and receive :judgment at the hands of those who have taken the 'oppbsite' course. Thd resolutions' are at war with' the 'rights of the South:'` Their objeOt 'is - to enable the general GOverninent to-take care 4g the- whole country. ' thia &k the I Senator from York, and fellow' Democrats; , to aid "Us. Shall ive 'adopt 'a miSerable party< platform, 'against the - will' of a majority of ;- the people ? or'shall we rather 'wine tip 'like' patriots in ~def ence of the 'Constitution and laWs of- the -whole Mr Sraktraii; - there is no- room for dign l Ment here. It has' come ': to this'^question' Shall...the country' . he - .saved or shall 'We'igiire itup ? If • Great - France,or ,any "43 foreign,: power' should' invade Orl . shores;' tare. Rossession of our forte; tear flag, - and' vaisliij it their own, the man who would hesitate to d.'& ' 'fend the epinitry'rind'' punish the = ' indignity; *Mild' be branded'a traitor. ' It matters not Whence 'the enemy comes'; the Whether our donatitritionol -? fight&canlbe garded, Oarnational dornairi' flag insulted and trampled' Mikirt.' When such a - thing done;' it matters not- to' hie who the 'ene m y' of the coin:ll4May be,l shall treat him as tin - enemy'; - and 'as 'orufi•ent the'representatiVei: !of Penfidylvitnial 'Fin - ready' to 'sustain 'the Government in preserving and, taking care or itself' - Thia‘tait of:a - partnerehipthiS: idea of the'Goverfinient country beihe merely a temporary arrangement liabie to`- be 'tern} nalAcwherieder ink! of lts - tOrtiesllecbirie disaitirified=4Sliotici be tolerated" When the people founded thia"GrivernMent, !Which has iOun'the Pride and glerrol"thierVhcile 7 'earth," they declimeed'thet - weak: -to the cause of ' icons forever. no people of this riatiOri thrMigh . G.iiinsininejit''te be' the guardiari'of'their' itid :the tiAttrof - th'eti OtteAty' -- " , for `;idlliiithe,=:"J'Pheyyllarde 4 tiokether Etit It oiferiketti4taolSotAatlie - pm= 1 40 2 of.eiffile!RiatiatrAwtfidOtibVeci one great IflifskitAtfhialt4 errnent 'of South Carolina or any other par ticular State—but of a government of ..t4e ' whole country ; and When - they made-it** eccoessicess, all State ilietkustiook Stator pennovtpania„Raila eltiegapty, ittuegbav 'Afternoon, Janum 15 1861. individualities, from the sovereignty thus yield ed up "Ter this purpose by the States, dis appeared forever, and this union of powers be came a new consolidated general sovereignty superior to all, and over all, free by their own solemn consent and declaration. I deny the right of revolution under any circumqtanoes mi -1 der this Constitution. There are some gentle men who talk 'about the sacred right of revolu tion, asserting that there is no right for rebel lion, but that there is a right for revolution.' I deny that there is any such right. I assertthat the people of this nation, when theyformod the Constitution, agreed to be bound _ by that Con stitrition and acknoWledged .that ' they should not even alter that instrument except in such a Way as the '-Constitution itself should direct.— When they adopted the Constitution, they bOund therm elves , never to nullifyq it, and they surrendered `that right to, revolution. 'South eardrum talkti about'lief 'skovereignty and her rigt to •` nullify the' Constitution ! When 'she, aking'ivith the other States; agreed at the time Of its foimation that it never should even be WI tered or amended; except by the 'consent Of three-fourths of 'WIT Union. ' It is tlie sovereign power controlling andgoverning Oa:bps:rifle, and can be altered' only in such a Way as its own Provisions dictate. If'arrynortherrier southein State of this UniOn islfronged, the Constitution proVides ample 'redress.' 'Reit let the South come in the spirit of fraternity; let her' demands be regulated by reason and juirtke, and her right always will be, aithey always have But, sir, the Southiebels'againetithe Govern inent, not for any wrong done her by the Gov ernment butbeauise the 'Government has passed into the 'hands of a pithy opposed to universal slavery. They rebel because • their politica - power has poslo - from them. 'For this I can se, no remedy in the . way of peaceful' Settlement: The power which has, passed'from them will not be surrendered to there. The people will' not yield it. - The people'have taken the Govern rrient and Will'adMinister it; let it; cost what, it Ict - ay. At all hazards - the Goireriun — ent must be sasCaint:d. ljport . the prompt, decided neer:4l6f the States hingsthe fate of the nation: Let the Statesrallyareundthe Administrationpromptly,- with their 'power sympathy - and the patri °than of the country will be able to' rescue our country liCorn the danger that surrounds it, `and restore it to its once happyand . Prosperous con- . . Mt. IRISH. I - desire exprets,'at the Out Set of the very little I`hive td 'say, the mfr, tsfaetion" with Which I hate listened to much hat' lute transpired' in the CburseArfthiadebite. I wish particularly to declare My' hearty ap- DrO4tleii of the elxtuehtientimenta which fell , from the Senator'from Bridfatd i texixut,) this morning:" The:Style 'and,anguagais : not only clear , forcible; but' the argaMent btable„, ilMrottgli Mid profound 'throughout. Vie,nr.o 7 :MI tone of the speech ianot less tefreslnto and admirable. .Sir l it warms the h e art withorier-, ous emoticin,..tonieet,.arnid the tOtinous- mind ings ci . politic ans, an occasional-exhibition )f such high moral potpeie, and unswerving dove tiori to principle. - While I "ani"idir.fhis subjeet, permit me to call attention "to in:Other feature of this diseourie, Which I ale() 'desire: to coni. mend . manly — it, is free' from all cant and hypoCrisy. The Senator does not wish to mislead or deceive the &nth, as to our position or, as to our real feelings and inten tions. . They sir ) are„ so far as rebates to the majority of this. Senate and' the.rairty they ,re present—pretty fully expressed in the Chicago platform. • It . would - idle, - even :were we . so dispeded„ to . disclaim them. The' South ,is . not . be cheated or !deceived !! by emp ty :professions and plausible, resolves. They know lor instinct .where -; we naturally and necessarily stand; That the extension of slavery is not in' our creed. - 'That:the recommendatien • of Our :present Governor, ' permit or tolekite 'the' Southern, or any Other syetem, 'of 'ntiniatt slavery:in Pennsylwania, , is..not to ; bethought of. _:!lbe exfiresceoic of the peoPle , at the ,polls in November last, was their. deliberate Verdict. Its - nothae- disclaimed .or resisted, but Main- . Mined and enfotced hi:the:usual prescribed arid 'constitutional Manner.: :-Does any one imagine that lit. Lintoln ie.:kr:sneak- into the Presiden- • tial chair' behind the-screen and shadow of : false , preteltatind dissembling 'exgressioria on the part of his friends This is not the , way , to dispel apprehension "and restore: confidence.:' His'po-' sition hatilbeemfully: and clearly defineda-that :or hit( party ialiefore -the. world. . tnyophrion; nothing: to be added ; and no r thing' to be: taken 'aw.4.Y from -it at:thia time. I think we should'hereerefullhodt doinganything.that :looks:towards shifting out- position during the present dritioal state7of 'affairs.- , - '"When , the reacantionaofferedflby the! SenaV* l fibre Philedelphim , a-feiv. 'dela since, were pro-' , rented; I Mndeistoodz them, -however; not Ss a challenge lb Partisan strife, but-as intended to :furnish ' W:Ootiniontgroundi upon:which Might meet, and utter a united and ;unanimous 'elpieSsibii - Of -"the prevailing :feeling-upon 11.;t: course and'attitude of the.receaagiStatett. though I' doubt the propriety of any expr.' e s s i i s u , by . way of resolution- et this time ), ;all:sough I opinien - that when wa gp ea k,.... un this subject it should ba threughtbe medium. of acts and meataires, 'rather= than resolution ; although I - consider - the - resolnliona wanting in tone, tame iii',' expression,'` to.ths Ong', and' short of the altPectatioias of the pee-' had concluded; for the Baked presenting to the 'country a'united - Fri:Mt:upon-this question, to:cast my vote in favor of Mast, and with one amendinent,, all the resolutions ' of the Senator frone -"I had , hoped to -find this the dispesitiort of the entire Senate, but the pro- Cee,:lings:of leateiday„ and to-day, have shaken tbe expectation. We have since - been pretented with'two' entire sets of re - a - Cautions, breathing , a: different spirit ! arid dm:Minding different treat, wont. We are now beset with all manner' of. propositions to compronalse, conciliate, renounce: our rincipleta, Sit - milder our rights, and forsake our - Atapdard. , ----tc'dnanything rather thaia iairtie and . - the -- cab:oi •tesolute," loyal position which' the' necessity ! of the. times and the' plain 'dictates of reason and duty - require. I heed nerenumerate'the sweeping concesaions prOp*-inthetesoltitions offered by the: Sena- tor. frem Hunting:don - - and the Senator- from York. believe' they iptik towards conceding pretty much all the'startling demands which are-' Made, by Toonibtf, - -Yancey, Wig - fall and,the test;a:E. the pretended condition of their stm..mit ting 'to the authority of the 'Federal Govern ment. I.'need' not say - that I have but 'one an= swer for:all'auch-propositions ; : As often as the opportunity may be presented, Ishall pi:afoul:4 record Myself againit them-' ' • . • It Seems 'Wine strange that therdatunild exist, et 'this :time; any. difference of,: opinion among ,• respecting the wiid acid F atty iehemes, plots and ekploits; of the `conspirators at the South. I should beSt' a less account for the:se:aims labors of the ociailiaton3 - : and eonapromisers were it net:that they seem to be infatuated with an idea thatlthey are really doing something to save the Union. Why; sir, the has been *reeked by just suc h ti 'kering :as this: If. twenty years ago, the'North: had stood squarely and firmly up', and said to the slave power="stand - Where you are —'not 'another inch"--Anstead of the datk and threatening troubles in 'Which we are now in= Volved, 'Mir Skits would have - been clear to , day,: We have temporized, yielded; submitted and sUrrEnder'ed, nmil we.' hare led - the banded cue; Mica Of - thegtivcinment 'to - intagine, , that We' have no spirit wEich can be insulted, no princi ple we Rill -not' surrender; no courage -which they need regard, no manhood need. respect. And now sir what .p.:lasibie tocheibiediti**Ubril awl , o 4 Ortards' failitesh , elititigiba ic iitiYut UTltha. ill:lead& Wiling' ! isttirraltrikidolllchittoetz•lt44su. -brtelf 4 W~. : ,- -AAteirWg ' eVentr4fllenghto: r adopt it. Conoeselcins now, only incite contempt end stimulate rebellion. You may write eon- SW.at* all over the State House, You may ecenprotaisemarl the deals* of the OM spiratots are consummated, you ;may tattle the State by craven professiOns, • and degrade her character by servile expressions anti Ole resolves, but you cannot, by such childislitthams, arrest tht wild whirl of revolution. ' 'We have been pushed to the wall—we cannot, reed& an other inch. I urge no hasty or inconsiderate proceeding, I-recommend no rash or , doubtful step.-- You may fold your arms and see the Union perish if you like. It is not for me to define how long we shall wait or how far we shall go. lam urging no-leap in the dark, but simply protest ing against the adoption of degrading resolves which can only complicate our - difficulties and prolong our troubles. ..For myself 4 Bhp uld.pre.fer e whon do,speak o . that we should come squarely up to - the ques tion: I dint consider it simply as "a nigger question,". as it has been termed .by many. It is rib -.more a nigger, question than the Revolu tiorutry war was a ,tea ,question. The question is Wffiether this grand experiment of Republican' selflovernmerit is to'be 'a failure, Or the befilfr-• cent dispenSer of justice, liberty and happinesS, as its founders designed.. It is .a question which .may be presented in many fca-ms. It comes to . . us now in the of aquery Whether, a consti- Ultima/ majority of thspeople, having -elected a Erasident.pledged to carry-OUt, wording to the forms of the Constitution, the .pokicy preseribed` by them.as best calculated` fo prombte the na tional -IVelfare, lICS-'peOple' will tolerate a de,4 feated and rebellious factiOn in defying - the ant,ho rity:of the government.... Shall the government work right onunder the direction of ' the incoming 'Administration, according to •the forms .- 45 f 'the. COnstition, or shall it fall to _pieces at theAouch of lawless violence? • . These are the questions._ There ought to be but one ' response. ' There aould beno unbar -rasstneut or heSitation t in indieating' where - `we Stand.- For one- ..I have'.uo diffieulty. 3My an ewer is always . ready. : I. shall record' my vote Against the reso4o4ns. of thS - Senator from Buirtingdon, - as - well is 'against those offered by the• Senator froniTork.' ilax&alsa.aisfully - prispared ;to Notes in favor of . the .resolutionooffered by the SenatojfromPhil adelphia, altliOngh.l consider thein, as I have before statekinadeqUateand imperfect in many , r a ve d is .. s: I-. now..aint the-:Senator ; from Allegheny(air.laisp)whether, he ,recognizes the : right to reelahn fogitiVe:SlaVei under ue - Con- Atuticiri of.the United States? Mr. ISlStf.'.. I do. not cenSider thatithat sub-. .. ject js,nt present before the. Senate. ; ;: 1 07lierkAt is,,. I will answer the Senator.: , ;.. Mr. S.INNEY: I did' Mit eXpeet :thOlerig" thy .discussion Which: has been had Upotitlie' questioni now agitating the country, and more. particularly Upon - What recognized the country as the *a:Of theriationatjarge:"lrpon that glatu.s*l.l6raic4ied the PrOPOintion of the Senate' . from PhiladelPhia: his ncrw generally ascertained that.there gsists m this country a wide :spread conspiracy,, and which ha:sheen ex isting fora long time, hy Meani of an eigarible-' tionof..menwho are endeavoring;ricitAto effect secession exactly,lbut a revelation - in' this- Goy s . emment,: ;Them plans are discovered to a:cer 7 Min extent ; one of which is to, seize the . Capitol of . this Goverment,. ina-ta.(itganite Government of their own, assuming that to -be: the (loVernment, de facto of this country.`; That is to be the. United. States, and certain States are to be put outside, of that organization. Then they. are to. treat with us and invite : as Marry of • those States as are.willing to co,operatemith theni. to consent to the:proposition of an organic ; structure which 'they will, lay down to you as. the basis of Government.JD:dais. of tbili&S well understood thimut the coun try at this titre. -- fhote.Tineri. seise. - ripen the 'Government the' example@ 'Of history show: , what' Would` be the natural& risequenee: they seize. upon the Governinent, and its arsenals, flu_ nuiy, iondfitsarmyandrebenues',an - dlp oxiiiee,ariti come therei:xigruz* d Governmentabrmikptittine "us really 'hito.thoposition inithicirtheyvesdi to throw us. These resolutions assert the, fact of rebellibri; and also assert that . Penney,'4.wia is opposed to the doctrine' orseceasior,;and Will -array herself- on ,the sid& of Abe Go - ieniinent' fnrs, and Willextend to the go our. sympathy and - Material aid ; and upon that _in this Senate. NoW, lifthe-praVeition . Wok been Dii,ne he& to' levy" an a.rinyr- Orl'itwv raise 'ninny 'for' that scar - cely have had:more 401,' einn speeches' made . r4h.d. more patriotic upneale, 'than. upon . scsiiiiple4hopogithin. of this cliarac teu-,which,ought,.co b e - passed. over without-de bate. I had intended makeitarre, marks on a....ese resointione,„ hir,itrWeoconteni 10.,.1.atedjWilXiii, 'thePrOfojiiiitioiii:ivere made, that 'tneY' 4 krild 'recogniied . 'liyall. Pardee as 'the • Propel:, adntiment of Pennsylvania; , m o thin:ngli her legiglatiVe•benrat this time; ,rep , :t re, ;en ting the peopleof. all parties. Isthere a, partyf this State. . which noW.'',## o ,l:l, with that .. - body of: men: who are endeavoring .iseize Upon . the. Capitol of , the; United Statek and-who May,sWithin a fortnight,:,Or a very few days, take 'suck'a step? Does...the Deniocratic party wish to assert here, that because :We Offer such resolutions' as 'these, we 'may bring civil . . war among ourselves? are asserting the: piMei - plea - of the 'Constitution, the . duty of our citizens, to Maintain. them,. and ourwillingness sto give all material aid for their support. Is there a party this . State - which: belongs , to that e tewinch I have referrek and who when propositions of-..this kind are "made, wish to delay them; thattime may boaffordedfor the consummation of. their plot ? What is this .question of tho repeal of bur Perional Liberty Laws, that has already been referred to.the'4. diciary COmmittee, to ;do with that now 'before us The' oestion here to-day is,Eriinply,do we as sentto thopropcsition thatit-littherluty of Penn sylvania to array herself on the Side of the go*;. , erument i mid to sustain the Constitution; and her frees institutione under that 6:institution? If there a party here which 4oeiros to make all those questions turn :upon - the' - ntestion of. whether: we'willwastain, iipon our statute books,consti tutional: laws which ,are passed to protect and 'preserve the Personal liberty Of our citizens— that. - Whichevery Northern man cherishes above' 'every.Other .right secured toldinhy the Consti tution-:if .they assert to us, 'unleso you make. that.. the turning point - to repeal: those laws, then our sympathies go from you, and we will arrayauiselvect . with those Wha. are' te' bring civil war and discoid ameng„.ua ; then we say,,. gentlemen, count. us out, •We inVite.them to nW, such a consummation. We:'simply ; say to them, to-day, are yen that treason shall be put ? _I will ; itemise. ibis matter. We have before .the :Senate . &proposition frtini the Senator from York. ,- I, wish: to • say, net-its per-, serail to that Senator, but - as a characteristic. of his' party PenrusYlvenisi;andevei kith*, that - their policy ever . has been to assert certain idokui,tci take the the initiative, and charge upon others some offence, putting the .party charged upen , the defensive, when the - charge .merely. an assumption: Such has AlWayobeen the ride: Whenever it has, en the . assumption of Penn sylirania to ...haVe.' a . ; Pripteetive party to sus tain her free labor, her represeritativ.e&have been sent to Congress to represent that prinei ple protectien; bet when they 'got there they were . overawed and yielded to, arrogance and. assumption-of the South, where the rmpectatle ppltion of that, party:lies. ' The people then be coining itronsect,;•those; -men who - falsely ; *pre-, rented:than have been defeatectin - their Strilg2 gle fOri plecel . .. Then the SOut,h rises up and threatens to dissolveD thenion; and the Demo, oratiatarty.torn tiporrthoiae who are endeavor- . iog'tck . elary ont the sentiment of the:State and say; yonso -Avery ROPUblininile [ thielState.lialkheewiierionnoed.,threughont-ite i ' • e sstli , %M4ll l leadth,4B a Afienieniew t NA T ' -- p *41:47 itieA k e to take the hiltiatiVa - Spd the` ala 3 / 4 0 to their opponents , thereby snakingn ne act on the defensive. Do not we know, and don not W pane Use ill Otte teen -tht It :-113.Eimply- - the 4)0117 - '9f. the Democratic party which has brought thiscoinatr9 ha this perilous crisis'; and do not Democratic Senators stand up here ,to-day and say, ."you:bave done it ; beware, or yoti will bring civil war — among us?" We are law-abiding citizens; simply asserting the right of free thought and . free labor. We are not negro-stealers, nor are any great per • tion . of. the people-of =Pennsylvania negro stealers ; but they are rather a people banded, together in defence of the Constitution of the United States ; and when you hear assertions thrown into our teeth, in pursu trice of Demo cratic policy, then we see Senators rise in their, places trying to excuse' themselves, and -trying, to argue that we are not guilty of the. wrongs rhalged,epeit,4ll,e. l 4.eiwilietermokaltPx.;eo4.;%,... y„,, I Wish' to put these men of the Democratic par ty where they lailiang„ ,and to - have them de clare where they belong—whether they belong to the party of the people, determined to : defend the _United States Geverpment, or whether they belong to a band ntrneit who have:united there... Selves' by'-awe - in Obligatienifor the support tiLit peculiar kindof property?- Are they going , sestain„the geyemineut t ,ef „personal liberty, illid woh. aisAt of tibb Ihkut, or. the govern ment which iikpimialted upon the idea of pro , . tection to three millions of property? Are they gel.* to Make; ,' 4eVer4tinciple; subservient to the miiinte ince of an institution which has trampled-upon everything sacred, and to instil-. trite; in place . of theviarantsegi handed down to us by our,_ferefathers, "vigilance committees" to take 'away'rnen'ilives? 'Why de they not , 1 *leek out4larit '-'...iiiial'aiii 4,/ieir: 'Aenthnental I --.that , .z.liecause .- wei men of the NOttif "do . I not love._ elaxery„ _and our , not:isms' .6f.: right, ,are . not based upon the. value of- -prop erty,Jherefore,*nardliet, consistent? One or the other_pertWunl, this Union must be bathe, ascendant ; and those gentlemen say that if we gain . the ascendancy; "they - .will break up the government.... It ,is ..contraryto - .history, expe [ Aimee, . common-sense., and truth, . that. -when these chargel are made upen the Republican party; some proof should JrA* suppOrt:-. Nert:ene;single.instancelnie been.ad-. ducedin.ell, this .discursion, to, show wherein any law'upon our statnte 7 heek. has operated in juriously, to rinilivinglirein, With respect to any notions e entertained of southern rightiC' I undertake ter Say Aritorriere fugitive Slaves are returned tban.,stolen -4horees , ; . and„.eay further, that, as wards tliie State, there net so much obstruction in the war beiecovering a.' fugittie stave, ' as .there Is in: the;rebovery of ' a stolen horse: i ....., .... - -... ..,i ..:...-=, • '- - aO ecteWhilnkheti.. - *Lest made,thet; the , -writ of Ackaver/ppy,ewerki..badly„.:. AO are yerfgo: big t,,i, get rid' of it? '7SuPpoSe - a - negro-Miter: 1 OniMlaiiis 'to the proper - authorities that...the , Services nf:a. Certain negro are,,, him, and .the negro claims, to be a,citigen of P,enneylvania, and in have the right to itiiiiit of tabwt 'eoires, ' in order to inquire into' he facts'Stated. Now, , whet a - -man claims alorse, he has no proof for. his _ assertion,and the matter. is, settled; by. a. : Writ of replevin to Show property. • But with respeet ton. claim made tothe ewriershiri' of a human being; these gentlemen -woulddeny a: riglit.whichis allowed with respect to the. own= ership of ahem; and because we are not -dis- , : . posed to - agree with them, 'they: proceed to •, Charge lie with being opposed' to - this Union. They set out here -:-..-, .. - ' .4trel whereas, it becomes the duty of the peo- . pie of Pennsylvania, through their representa- .' fives in General Assembly met; to declare their '', 'sense of the he - pending denger.nrel their opin- i ions in relation to.. the duties and:- obligations iter...ikui by the-Federal Constitution." - 1 .:.. „Setting that ,all out as .an inducement for Os i to vote as they deSite;.'what is the'"lame. and i impotent conclusion?" Itis that we shall re- 1 Peal sri act in reference to personal libertv,-.. • They propoitea,remedy,for existhig, vi - eils lithe . irePeal.ef a,persorwklibe'rty r lawogninie,whiCh ....rrien_eaneay- (might, except that it isintend- r 64 faillie,protettiontif biU z . em6fthiS,Ceirimen- Widtt'' : TheYinither statethat the citizens of this _Commonwealth are 'now,-as they 'belie tevii ~ ,been, ..One :to the Constitution end :Vie , Union,. . If.that is s,o, where is the occasion, for arraign- ing the ItepUblieni 'Party here Ail assertion is Contained 'in.' those resolirtibne...tela,tivelo the government:otthe Territories; -"that the People of Pennsylvania ,fidly.recogruze, and acknow ' ledge the equal rigliti of 'all the people of the several' 'States in - the'..' : einitirion'territories of the , Federal , Union/'. -,. So -we ..do; ' But that is not :What .the Democratic.,party . want.— They lire not, pleading for our own: citizens. 'Whence do lliejr - get - these ' Sympathies ?J•--- ' c- Frain the "Knights of the Golden - Ring, Fleece" , Circle- , 'or - whatever..tit is ....called, I deny that .a citizen.. of . l'emisylvenie r WteArty any .superior .. right in one feet Of the ,_terri.:„... tort' of the United Statei over ie citizen of _Vir•-• ginia.'` "Aii 'act of - Oongress - :.es - YriFthat'.'altMery' shall:no - the takeninto certain - terxitory, - tind if ' .the „provisions of , such .an act are just to the South,. they are just also hi the North: - If it'eXelialea eighteen niillieril of 'the people of the North - from 'introducing. that- institution within a certain: portion of territory,,. it must ' neoxsarily exclude . also the South. It is merely. areenactment of 'the Government, made' in'the furtherance bf - civilization - on -'behalf Of • the intelligence and truthfulness of -the age. It is simply_wrying outthe intention.s . Of the found ers of this Government, who, when they in stitute.d it, swept away every vestige of slavery from the territories.. The Senator froni York has asserted that he had:no political principle which he woUldnotgive up for this Union. I Undertake to say, On. the contrary, that I hav'e not kvpiditical principle which I would-give up for the Union. „Every political principle which I have to vindicate,- I will vindicate in the Union, or out of it. • ' I will never Surrender One iota of political 'principle 'I may give up political ex-. pediency-; but-when it comes to a matter of duty, -1,. will.,not ::yield, one princiPle.',. - ,if it Domes to, such a ,question, then let the con sequences'of ' 'rebellion come ; and' -instead of:standing here to discusi about a - .Matter of •great importance,l let us-come. -to , the'llnestion of all questions 9n the present controversy, of voting supplies to raise an. army which will ,Coefront...rebellion; et . ..taking the argintrent winch is now Offered' to tu3,' that - Of the bayonet. We do not know but that on this'very day our citizens areattacked„at:Oharlestori. ••••"We'litiv seen by the papers to-day that our vegeglielveldete .went there on a peaceful errand, to - , Wririrtip= . plies to our army;iliiVe been' fired upon. .:If such be the fact,- the .'only way .to meet,. • :qinistienAs by, force.. ;But for God's saN' : not .Ict. ns ,have, any. more' of - this twaddle', of succumblng to any eVerlasiting taunts of Locofocolain; that its opponents aziAteiraillf opposed to' the Union.' I insist that it -is the duty of every Republican, instead of arguing; to repudiate such .a. doctrine. Our people in, the north, ' during - the last' twenty years, lutie Ea: Corneae accustomed to these assertions, which live been , dirined into. their ears; because they do not act iriacecrdance _with the ideas of those .who-have-had :possession of the gOverninerit for: about seventy years of ' its 'existence, that they have become dispirited. Whenever any '&01 )0 4' sitiOnlasbeen made to -the owners 'of alaye property, by the people of: the north, an attack has instantlybeen made by thcee'inen,through , the -- Demociatie party, .upon our. people ' for thinking' -end 'speaking-, as they please ;'` iina., *lien northern:a:deal:tame' appeared irethesouth,l they:have. had 'no respect shown thent; , they, have„Wri M peril of their 'lives,, and have. had their 'property taken fromtheta, and been drive ' out oft certain 'States, when they olaimed-tet American- chisel* ~ W here is the's:le:apathy; ti thel Democratic party : for the men thus t Ohy.ereSerintorir here se kind andnrrenttedin? theirtclau idijeefrom'the people of Perirt;, Sybraialarl.',lttethxdorwhati" litera we paes;-] i ndiny l ee s i mithilheeterbilkwhickliallatistituld • c ' . ~, frlaltmirttile& " . fr'3l.bewg 4,.. takingixo. of a fugitiveslave. It Istvan ktkowathatit is not l expedient foiis to paps say such ud, at tlds' , ..- as would beraut swam to Mom with their slaves, in this State that such an act would not be intro orand at this time, among the North and West? Senators on thi s there is a propriety in such the South lisks it."No more Liar to the peace of our citizens could I._ day, in the State of l'ennsyleark:-., authorizing slave holders to bring • here and hold them for six mold shall we consider in this ruatttr happiness, peace and prosperity of zees, or the arrogance and assumpf, outside of our• State, who• would sz - comfort whatever? How many r litightliave been hung during th, mizjitincow i th s t imp i n g which these : Zill — hace slept quietly over the n 4 tlicted on- ode citizens. Before. n., sweeping assertions, charging us with charity and benevolence towards leeyther State, let them cultivate I theft bosoms, with regard to the peg r 1 tbo own-Stake: tep I 110131*TD,_, After the exeeedin, menintiiie'address of the Senator from Piiiiiir);rexperience great diffickm . g.O to make aAw remarks on the que.4l ,Ltia the Senate. That Senator has ans IMF and eirtire' ly, all • the charges that urged against the loyalty of Pennsy, 2 4 14 .„ der the: Constitution and laws of t: States. .11e has answered the assent,- Flo! array of;facts that are incontrev t • n:/ 11 I aingladliuit he has taken the prui this'question in the argument he ims 'the Consideration of the Senate, and .11 ing.all party platforms and the interpel, -party creeds. Why, Mr. Speaker, Iv • simple propcsition before the Senate • lAre Ceive it to be contained in the resolutli .Senator •from. Philadelphia. Iha hoped that there was not a man in t , .. ate who' *mad not boldly and gaud tipoa that.proposition without , .lion or eirmike for it is the common n ; - :'a COnstittitiori as it is,and the maim theolawsi pure -and intact, upon whUr. en patriot - and lover of. his country ma) : co But we are met with quibbles respeeth,. : al liberty talsand the repeal of laws 2.. #atute •boolia not uriconstitutional,:th e ,are, I believe,. obnoxious-Gaily to the ly sensitive _feelings of our brethrni South. We have 'heard something as ty - platforits m this , diSensiiion—about Cage. pled:inn 'and ..the platforms Baltimore and Charleston. - Slr, there form , now.beinginatigurateil at Charlie a d being thundered -- forth, in the voices c Carolina cannon, againit _the.flag of our theintegrity and sovereignty of thiti grea • pig Do not talk-tome of platforms-when hellion and open treason; 'with their hands, stalk forth into the arena and ch. a d the United. States to arms. Great GO n a there should .be, in.such r a state of au::: apology, made by anylixtan , 3vearing the m a-man and claiming to'be tveithien of cr.: re mon country. '• I have my' indictment Er! against South Carolina: and every oth, -3k Diat.is-disloyal to the .Union in this el '0 emphatically a and- one demand -- Lb high an impress of character and prud• ; that which was demanded in "the ea • au tried men's souls." . 3 f A crime unparalleled-in human. hi-.- just been committed,- in the noor , :a'ay of the nineteenth' century :.intke fun ChristianitY and the:Ameriehtt political not the crime of one tuan, nor a doz, bUt of one hundred cod sixty - nine rei tives of a whole &ate, who,• the: huur sion, have , 'oeen driven to madness by th, lion, of wicked leaders ! It is a crime humanity—a crime against civil crime against free- representative guar --a crime against the unrestricted rigin 000,000 a .point •at which no argui, that of • the cannon will be of What ;we propose to do is to sustain ti, mentin vindicating the laws, and in .. allegiance, in every section, to the • Wipes, under which, in the days of ft, .. lion, and in:the war of 1812, our co:.: . rallied.in their majesty and strengti honor and glory of the nation. sullied that glorious banner \xi.' streamed,onton every plain of this :• aid in every ocean of -the world, rep. pitorditrthat- banner «iii I plug-- on on, to our elline;Whiehjwas - Unfurled at Palo Aitn dedaklllnbr, 'Monterey; Matamoi as fa , I,.... V e..._tlattxtlipiL_lvesborne by Y ' length, by their invincible pro« ess. t thee%Ealbi thei, Monte.zurnas.” tizeils of nth Caiolina trample . f nog; thef forgot the very moth , them, and allthat should make ti •L Sear to their souk And now we t. • i a, state of facts, -of conciliation to nt in the field Witlfarms in their hand , / the Senators on this floor, stawin ' With heart, against heart, that ywoe," they„will resolve to maintn:'. in - their. power :the Union as it I : to will discard all the quirks Which• - meefmt 'from the Democrat' ' ; Yf e llich itend , to make this a euesti , I would have e',l ' P .the Hag of our country Clusteng isiinanygedden memories in , freramess i , and uphold the Ct. '• strengthen the hands of the Who tam holds the reins of fy,(...."-1 t sanistakeablye deelaring that ti remain firm and stable and net We should alumna the position of and losing sight of partisan di-T"`''' ". along `by thoqtnnse,4 3 of wisdom P ,. ;, to fhe Great Ruler of assert that I would sacrit , cZ .. reibdirOalPialthysomil lay all Pot d i ` on..illin - lantefinir country, if I conk., Wreserve this Union. I prefer, from Crawford, rather to fight Iv Union under the glorious hag o f 111'1' ba E 3 II