N COLUMBIA AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. LEVI L. TATE, EDITOR. "TO HOLD AND 'TRIM TUB TOUCH JF TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER TUB DARKENED EARTH." TERMS: $2 00 PER ANNUM, VOL. 17.NO, 5. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PENN'A., SATURDAY, APRIL 4, 18(53, VOLUME 27 DEMOCRAT, it C'JLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. published every Saturday, by LEVI L. TATE, 1M BOOMSBUIIO, COLUMBIA COUNTY, T., o ffTo e fi ft ZTrictc RaUdlug, cppoilti Us rzcJanf e, Ijr iti iae vturi llouit. "Dtmotrane utaa iwrri," Select Poetry. f iVfllton for tho Philadelphia Sunday Mercury. THE PILGRIM'S PIIOUKKSS rr.ox PURITANISM TO NIGGEKISM. 'Oore on i time, old hooka relate. Oat when, it matters not to state, There w a mighty blow i The Jews, willi reins' horn,. strange t tell. Blow tutli e blast that dovu there fell The walls of Jcrlchn I fiumo folks declare that such a feat rt ie impossible to Lett, Out thie ii ell a blunder ; For Abolition, alt mm t owu, Without rami' home, hei fairly Mun'n The Uulnu bond asunder I nvr It eorumrnced 1 will relate It wai In n New England ttati'. Where ntennre fond of cheating; When, apple nan,, flail foils abound, And pork and beans the whole year rouad. Are reckoned first-rate eatiuK. With pumpkin pie and Johnny cake, And oft they get up a clam bake, Being fond of rusted cUtni ; A-peddling notions, too, they ;o, Like Batan, roaming to aid fro, With docks and wooden hain. With nasal Iwri j! nnd f.ice of brass, Pei lylu; noro (tin thru surpass, Kit uiukinit spurious wacei ; N matter wheth't friends or fiiai, They delist to poke their note lu every atie's alfuiri. Korhalf a cent they would disput Au honrtliny are so very cute, A tent would net thi'in raving i And though they would it halt' dsy, T whittle n pine log ,11 ny. They would not give n shaving. The country long withstood the stifle. Tor kack a far an Plymouth reek, U's easy now to tract' it; Tkf farta are nicking out in plain, To rnb Iheru nut men try in vain, rVr uo ,ue nn erase it. Kach year snrnefo'ls their voices rals. New Knjlnnd's "blanioy mono" to pri. Or to it write a eoiinet ; Yet history cleurly proves to triio There usver was a viW crew Thanlt.ajc nltn landed it. Although they would not curse or sw-s.r, t'rJi ludiana' heads th eralp ih-v'.i tsar. Plug woman and mast witches; Besides, ihosn pirirKtmng kuares. All owned, at wull as dealt iu slares, Prt, iwcr-ia-e their riches. And wonld hare held them till to-dny ; But when the nigger would not pay No longir wonld they hold thein ; Alan fur niggers, it appears, TTa lunde, hut postponed sevtral year Till Mr. rilgrim sold them. Away down south the elaros were sent. Hat Mr. Pilgrim not errurnt Within a new condition ; For R hen he had received the pay Per all his niggers sentavtuy, llu preached np Abelition. Thongh every year, ships hy the score, He fitted siutfor Afrlc's shore, More niggers for to capture ; And when he had the darkeys sold, n'd curse the trade ami count In a gold. And "freedom" cry itli rapture. , Rut while a sent was to be made, Us stack fast to tho nigger trade Continued to supply them ; tilt what is rather strange to toll, Uo thought it very right tn sell, But very wrong to buy them. When he a fortune had acquired Hy niggcrism, te retired With pious consolation Declared the thing by hlrh he'd aiade Ilia fortune, was a hellish trade, And needed reformation. Though for reform he daily cried, And his old customers belied, (Ie stnek fast to his pelf, Like every rogue throughout the nation, Who eriee aloud for reformation, Hut don't reform himself. Dot Pilgrim could not live in p;ne, Ner from ills niggcr-stenling cease, In spite of all his bother ; For he somehow with sluvea must deal Po off down south he goes to steal The nigger from his brother. Although lie bid before ngrccd, And swore hy the Apostles' creed, In spite of all disasters, If any nigger ran away, He'd scad them back without delay, L'ato their southern masters. tlut now he proved as clear as mud, It must be for the niggers' good To leave the old plantation, And eorac up north to loaf about, Pick ragsand bones, clean foul pools nut Ret pious consolation, Thrice bappp must that darkey be, To have evch blsssings and be free, The rilgrim eft would utter ; N'a master now baa he to dread. Moreover he cm earn his bread Dy pickings from the gutter. (tut why should I enumerate Hew Pilgrim went fromtate to Plata t Pufflce fsrme to tell, With other rascals he intrigued Wbo awere the Union was a "league And covenant with bell," Tbui years passed by, converts were made, ' Aad many a plot by tbem was laid Together in communion ; A Thoueh often foiled, with mleht and main. Tbeytrted, and tiied.and tried again, For to break up tbe Union, ' At last tbey by one desperate stroke, , Ainnder ourold Union broke, Out new they cry amain ; Ob dearl cbdearl what shall wa do J Cemsjoio our Aielition rrew Tic Union Join again." r 0 I I H 1 111 A Fl ) HI n r n l W UU 11 L 1.11)1 II UI'JIH U "J llll 1 UlilTrH) MY I.BVI t,. TATIJ, PROPItlUTOIl a:- SATUItDAY, AI'IMIi 1, 1803. Democracy Past, rrosc.it and Future, Wc ngreo with tho Viillcu Spirit that with all the coiitcniptuoui sneers and vitu- perativc abuse heaped upon Democrats and tho Democratic party, the past histo- its cn as wit: present position oi mat in.iit.v mill in in,,ii!ior: liolXen I.f ...lil la II .1 . ... .. an enviable one. No intelligent man w.ll pretend tc deny that, from the formation and adoption of the Constitution down to the election of Mr. I.iucoln, with the ex- ecpticn of a few brief years, tho DeniO' cratio party controlled the policy, 'main tained the honor, extended the territory mid made the history of the eountiy. These fact: have already gone into histo ry, and are accepted by tho civilize d woild. During this time its policy was I to keep pare villi the progress, and, ns occasi.ui permitted, to develope the rc-s-ources of the country. In all these measures it met th fu rccsl opposition at every step ; and yet in years rolled nrotiml, and reflation and calm judgment took the place of pa-sion and excitement, hc!fo s rune measures wero universally en dotted by the popular voice, and all of (hem remain upon our statute books un repealed to the presont day. Almost ev ery oppo ition s"iiytor vot-d ngaiiit the ratilicition of Jefferson's treaty for the purchase of l.oui-i:ma ; ad ytt who, in the noxt generation, would have been will j inj; to see that vast nod rich ti nito y again I in possession o!' it foreign power, or who ' to-dav is willitiK to let her cut loose from , suu block up lite mouths ol the .Ml-'-ris'ippi against the trade cf the great Wo t? 'The Federals lo ft man were op posed to our second war with Great llrit jam; sud yet who to'day docs not look ! back with pride to the gallant fijit we i then made for the lights of nur young commerce upon the high .-ea-". The ail I minion of Tex was violently opposed, and yet to-day wc nro lining a powerful military force to keep Te:c.iin the Union. The Wit'g party were universally hostile to our war wilh Mexico; they counseled tho Mexican to "welcome our troops with bloody hands to ho-pi'ablc graves;" and yot who to day wishes Clilornia out of the Union, coming to m as the did with her h tntls fu'l of goldeu treasure, or who would be willing to give up the other vnl liable territory then acquired ? The Doni cratic part- steadily adhered to tho Mon roe doctrine refusing any fuithor foothold m the North American continent to anv of the Kuropean Monarchies ; and the hu initiating experiences of the past year the possession of .Mexico by the French - tell us that the only safe policy for the United States would have been to star.d by that doctrine to the bitter end. These arc but a few of 'he many in-tanccs in which lime and sober judgment have on doried the policy of the Democratic par- I. ! l ... 1 - .1.. ... j, uowever vtoionuy me vanous meruit-:, she originated wore assailed at their in- ecption. Verily, ho has good reason to bo proud of her history. And what is her presenl position in rcf- orcneu to the great crisis through which our institutions arc passing .' It is true, in the heat and passion of lite moment, she has been bitterly and malignantly as- s.iilcd and misrepresented. The foulest epithets have bcou applied to every one who dared to hold fatt by the old organi- zation, Her public men have been dc - nounecd and defamed. Hut this has been the caso before, limes without number, And now that tho reaction of the sober j second thought is coming on, let us throw , j ....................... w. viiu,u.iuiiuu, J.1H1H uvtiutliliv, , leiUIIUl V, UUUUll- political pnjudicc to the winds, and sco honored cry ''.Millions for defonoe but how fair her record shines in tho clear not ono cent for tribute." This convoys blaze of tho noonday sun. , tho exact fooling of the Gonntry willing With the first note of war that came up to spond wealth and life to put down rc fiom Charleston harbor, Democracy, true bullion and maintain tho integrity of the to her ancient principles and her plcdgus j Country, but determined to do neither in to tho peoplo, avowed her loyalty in tin- order to carry out tho pet plans of a pack uiistakle terms. Sho sent her thoasands of aboliliou difunionists, into thc army, sho oponcd her purso, sho , bed her bio ul on our first batfo fields. . Two Republican newspapers in Congress assembled and soon followed tho hour of gloom after tho defeat of our army on the plains of Manassas, wheu fear, despondency and dismay filled all hearts. Then it was that Congress, by an 'almost unanimous vote, dcolarcd that ''this war is not waged in any spirit of PPrtssin- r any purpose of conquest or subjugation, or purpose of overthrow ing or interfering with the rights or csub lished institutions of those States, but to dtfeud niiil maintain tho supremacy of the Constitution and to preset 'o tho Union, with nil the dignity, equality and rights of the several Slates unimpaired.'1 Dim ! ocrats took tho resolution in good faith. j Under tho now calls for volunteers, bun j drills of thousands mors offered their sor : vices to tho country, and thoir graves are . t0 1,0 fou11'1 011 uVer ba,llc Ccld h'om "ul1 ' llun n nd Fort Donelson to Fredericksburg ! and Murfreesboro. Tlio rcular session ' of tho 'J'liirty-soventh Congress met, and then began the darkest days of the war. It took but a short time to prove that rad - ... . ... ; icaiism uau control ot the national legis-1 Intin,, :.Mnni;M.,l.lrt : stitutional and iniuiious measures wero hurried through, with all the blindness of the wildest fanaticism. Democrats and j Conservatives of all parties pleaded and remonstrated, but a deaf car was turned to their entreaties. Then Democrats and Conservatives cpetily opposed and de nounced these measures, as subversive of liberty North and South, as sources of weakness rather than strength, and as tending directly and inevitably to the very end all o much dreaded an ultimate dissolution of the Uuiou. Hut radicalism regarded neither tears nor threats, and the.-e measures were put upon our statute books. Then Democrats declared their '. policy, boldly and Grmly. Let it becv- jeryuhiT's asserted," said Senator Ducka- lew, ''that the Democratic party has never agreed, does Lot now agree, and has no intention of agreeing in future to a disso lution of the American Union.'' "Wo propose.'' said Senator Clynier, in a late speech iu llu- State Senate, 1 to accomplish the preservation of the Government and the Constitution by the union of the sword and the olive branch. For those who will re.-ist the power of the Government not the power ol the UlmiuWtraiion not its uiicousti'utional acts hut the power of this Government rightfully administered under the Con-titution, tec huvr the sward. To thoio who are wi ling to submit to its benign, iu healthful, its peaceful sway, t'i" teill hail out lUc olive brunch of peuci" And, said the same Senator tc his Itepub licrn hearers, ''Wc mean to toll you that we are going to bring yon back to the ! cause of the Constitution and the Union We mean to tell you that wo arc going to e the sword and the olive branch in .-cttlingthis difficulty that whether North or South, wo will use the sword u on those who are opposed to the Constitution that we wi not nn,W any pcW()Uj whoUu er in the South or in the North, to diso boy, to di-regard, to ignore, or to set at defiance the Constitution of the United j States. We moan to tell you that the same law which is to be obeyed at the South' i to be obeyed at the North." Here is our platform in brief but cxprcs- sive words. Let It bo boldly, proclaimed before all the people. Let every senti ment, every sentence, every word it con tains, be weighed in tho scales of public opinion. Let it be hold up in tho clear light of buoad day, and let its compichcn ivc length and breadth and highth and depth be measured by Union-loving, ( on- ! stitutian- revering, law-auuliug, conserva- evcrvwlmrn. And. if W!n virfu0 b(J no, yct M in t,(J hcortg Qf thc pe ,plCf ;, horc vct burng ,nt tQ Jnmost B,tur ,ho patrii;tic fl.)me firgl 1.;Iltic3 hy the fathers of the Republic, it is not too mc, t0 expect that tho citizens will rise ; their might, as they have douo in days gonc 0Vi anj peaCcabIy, quietly, by their Votrs, at the approaching elections, will 1 SWCep sectional fanaticism forever from 1 tlio faco of the land, - - - 1 je3r' 'Millions for tho Constitution, but ' not ono cent fur emancipation" was tho motto displayed at a great public meeting at Chicago a few days ago; arid no better parody has ever been made of the old and x Illinois, one in Edgar and tho other in Coles county, have rceontly repudiated' that party and joined thc Demooracy, BS3- An angel without money is not thought so much of now-a days as a devil ' .:.U - t r.M ...f with a bag full of guinea State of ll)c (Eou.nirn S 1' E E 0 II o r ni;is'rr;st clYiHF.k, 9ZOi OV Dl'.tlKS COUNTY, In Tiin Senate of PsnnsyTiNAMia, j March Gth, 1803. On the Joint Hesnlutlnn tendering the use rf the Senate Chamber to Et Uovcrnors Johnson and Wright, ' Mr. Speaker: On this day, at this' hour, iu this place, a great issue is on trial, fraught with interests, not only fori tho present, but for the future ; ami if i, in tuoaeeiSion ot this issue, liavo acted a ' part, however uumpnrtant, I shall here- !afl" look back t0 tllis ',;IV lo ihU ll0Ur 1 a"d.it(? ' 'J.!' PlaCC wl,h fcul nfiS of " littlc 1 K' oiiuvioiiuu, I The isuo involved is not one of person-; ' ! : : ..c i.:.i. , . ii. . . ' It 13 UUU Ul III"!! IlllllCtpiU C01II1J U.ICK III ' 'be foundations of this GovctDineut. It is, sir, whether tho loyalty of tho citizen is to he ludecd ol bv his fealtv and ad hcrenco to an aJuiitristralhn , or whether ' it is to be determined by his fealty and ml-, hercneo to the Government of the United , States. ' I In order to decide this q lestion, it is , necessary to present this brief exposition of tho situation of affairs that without a tjon.-iitutiou there could have been no Government and no Union, and that unless there is fealty and adhoaroncj to that Constitution, there can bo no tine luyltt to thc Government and Union btscd on it. That is tho issue to be tried to-day. Di guise it as you may attempt to confine it for party purposes, party reasons, and by party chicanery the issue presented by every Republican Senator who has preceded me in this discussion, is that my loyalty is to he tested, not by any adher eucc and devotion to the Constitution of the United States, but by my adherence to tho (I'lnin'stratioii of Abraham Lincoln the prc-enl occupant of the Presiden tial chair I ! I say to you, sir, I say to every Sena tor, I say it lo the people whom I repre sent, I say it to the people of this State, that there is no such test known to the Constitution, nor to any tribunal before which I. you, they or any one cancvif he summoned to answer. I repent it thai the Government is founded upon the Con stitution ; that thc administration is u mere crcaturo of that Constitution and that Government; and that where, in de fiance of that Constitution and the Govern ment erected upon it, an adniiii'stintiiin strays from its pri" ciples strays fro.n the pathways cut by our ancestors through tho r ck of uncertainty and danger then he is only a truly loi,-a-. man who uses every effort to bring back tho admini-tra-tion to the old beaten path winch avoids the dangers of fanaticism anil error. Thai is the question to be tested here and now. in tho vote upon this resolution. That is the question to bo decided : and the people of this State, outside of these halls, will so consider it$ and I new, as heretofore, appeal to the people from whom spring all power to sustaiu me, ami those who may voto witlt me in deciding this ques tion as best befits our judgment under our oaths, What is thc question presented ? It is a proposition to invite Andrew Johnson, the so called Gotcrnor of Tennes-tee, to address tho peoplo of Pennsylvania from the Senate chamber of this Slate- I have various reasons for opposing this propos ition. In thc first place, I hear boldly proclaimed that he is not at this hour and never has been, by the Constitution or under tho laws, the Governor of the State of Tennessee, except when years ago ho was elected to that office by the people I say, ir, that his appointment by tho President of thc United States to that po- sition was a usurpation of power on the J part of tho Prcs'nleut, and that there is no j warrant under tho Constitution, uo author- ity in tho laws for his appointment ; and that every net which he has assumed to' perform by virtue of his uncon-titutional and illegal appointment has been in dero gation of the rights of a sovereign State, and iu lint violation of the Constitution of the Uuitcd States. I say, sir, further more, that no such position as Military Governor oi tho State is known to tho Constitution of the United States to ap point a Military Governor over that State and that to make such an nppoiulment was to create the Stato of Tennessee a military province and that, his appoint ment was made to carry out and subs-.rvo the purposes of the present administration, j which is to reduce all the otatcs ol tins Union to tho condition of mere depend encies of a consolidated oligarchy or des potism. That is my position, so fat as concerns this pretended Governor of Ten nessee, Andrew Johuson has not been for years, and is not now, tho Governor of that State; and I will never recognize him as such, by voting for this rosolu tion, Rut. sir, without regard to any question of his offioial position, take An drew Johnson as an individual, assuming that he is rightfully clothed with tho robes of office, and may constitutionally exer cise thc duties of that high position ; even then, I say to you, Mr. Speaker, that I , UOVor by my vote will allow a man to como into these hulls and from this place speak to the people of this great Stato in support rf what I know to bo illegal, un constitutional and tyrannical acts of tho Federal Government. I know, sir, that Andrew Johnson has gone as far as tho farthest, and h ready to go still further, to destroy, to uproot, to upturn every principle upon which this great and good government of ours was founded. I know that he has bent with suppliant ktieo be fore tho throne of power ; I know that, for pelf or some other consideration, ho has succumbed to every measure present ed to him for approval or disapproval ; and I know that in speeches delivered in tho capitals of other States ho has enunci ated doctrines which, if adopted by the people of the great North, would be sub versive of individual freedom, and personal right. Sir, by no vole of mint; can any person holding such viow.i address the peoplo of Pennsylvania in this chamber. Never, sir, never, so long its 1 have a right to forbid him, Let me, sir, tct this question by contrast. Let mc ask the majority of this Senate, whether ho who has lately been baptized by tho votes of three hundred thousand men iu the Em pire Stale of this Union one of the greatest of living statesmen aud most pa triotic of men Horatio Seymour wheth er, if that distinguished Uutcrnm, wa on his way from the Kant to the West, through this capital, he would get a single vole from the Republican side of this chamber permitting him to address his fellow-citizens in this hall I Not one not one. Would Joal Parker, that Governor of New Jersey, elected by the people, get one vote for such a purpose ? ould David Tur pio, who by the votes of the people of In diana is tho successor of one of the men whom, by the resolution, it i proposed lo have address us would David Turpie be permitted by tho votes ol members on the other side of this chamber to occupy this hall for thc purpose ot delivering an ad dress ? Not one vole would he rrceive. Yet ho is tho chosen rcprc cnJativo of the majority of the people of Indiana anoint ed by tiieir sanction, I aptized by the ma jority of their votes. Not one vote would ho get, and you Know it. You, gentlemen on the other side, fear tho verdict of thc people ; you have reason to know what it means; and he who coinc3 to you cloth ed with all the glory of the popular will, but lately expressed, you will cast off for a mere hireling of Federal patronage and power. Mr. Lowry. Is not the man of whom the Scuator speaks a disloyal man? Mr. Clytucr. Tho people of Indiana have sent him to the United States S 'n atcand you dare not deny oT quction the choice of a sovereign State, lim, sir! who is the individual whose name we ask shall Lo embraced iu this resolution ? Who is he whom wu would ask to come hero and receive the hospitalities of this State? He who next lo him who was 'first in war, first in peace and lirst in the hearts of his countrymen." is the people's idol he who amid doubt and gloom, up on more than one occasion, has rescued oitler from anarchy he who upon more than one occasion has been thc means of saving this government he who has the great heart of the greatest army upon tlii continrut throbbing every day, every hour, every moment in unison with hh own Majoji Gkx. Gno.R McCr.nr.t.AN ! He, sir, has been denied-tho hospitality of a Legislative body iu which you Republi can! have a majority. You will not vote I to tender hint tho'c hospitalities aud why' Recau-o ho too is anointed not only by i the voice of the groat people, but by the adoration of the hearts of the Army of the ' Potomac. You will not pass such a res olution if his name is to be included. No, you who have thc power now for a few months or years will nofrsatiction anything that savors of what the people desire. You are determined that they never sh ill bo seen, never heard. That is the deter mination which you arc acting out hero and elsewhere. I tell you, sir, that those who have been disrobed and di-owncd by tho people, who are tho incro minions of executive power, and who submit to thc subversion ofthe people's rights and lib ties, I never will consent shall speak from your chair to tbe people ol this State never, sir, never ! It is known to you, sir, whoso legisla tive experience in this hall extends hack to a period commensurate with my own, that 1 am not in tho habit of wandering from thc paiticular i-uhjret heloro thc Sen ate to introduce general issues aud cxlcu ded arguments. Rut, sir, this debate has been far diverted from tho original ques tion. It has embraced all the subjects that could agitato the public mind at this time. If it could have cvon rested thoro, I should hare remained content. Rut gentlemen upon this floor have chosen to single ine out amongst the Democratic Sen ators here '11111 reler to tho prohahle re suits of my action upon my own future. I, sir, am an individual individuals as compared with principles and great results arc nothing. Piineiples ami truth arc eternal. Man is mortal and goes to his kindred dust ; but if, sir, in his person, in his acts in public or in private life, ho represents principle if when powers, pas sion or prejudico threaten to destroy the rights of the people, ho daro stand up in defenco of them, ho may die, he may go to his fathers blessed or unblessed. A Hnuipdcn and others have illustrated this. They hiivogono down in gloom ; but thoy nro now held up in brightness aud in glory, and, sir, no matter what may become of mo in regard to this day's action, I know I shall be sustained when the passion and prejudico and violence of tho hour havo given way to the sober thoughts which govern nieti when ihey arc not bereft of reason, I might in this connection repel repel indignantly, repel with truth--thc sFjaults that havo been attempted to be tuailo upon j tho groat party with which I havo thc hon or to act. You, sir, were hero in April 18(11; you will recollect that when the lirst jjun was fired upon Fort Sumptcr, that ono shot fused the great heart of tho people of this Stato and presented it as a wall of adamant against rebellion and treason at tho South. You know that without stint, without measure, that great heart , 'Democratic aud Republican, poured out everything for a common purpose. You recollect thatiu July, I SO 1 , when wc had been defeated upon tho plaim of Hull Run, when the army of the republic caino j into Washington with tattered banners j j wheu there was fear and dismay there, hero and elsewhere; when the Republic was tottering and tho President was almost a suppliant for hi place, you know there ' was no division of sentiment or foiling. ' You further know that in tho Congress of the United b'tatos, on the 'i'iil of July, after! that deteat, a resolution was offered dolin ing and setting foith the objects ofthe struggle. You know that resolution wa j adopted by a nearly unanimous voto. I You know that in the hour of fear and dismay, of tiial and danger, that resolu tion came as the voice of hope from Heav en. It reassured tho people; it told them that this was to be no visionary, no fan' atical struggle ; but it was to bo purauod for the purpose of suitaiuing thc cotisti u tion and restoring tho Uuiou of our fath ers, and that when this objict should be attained, peace wojld reigu once more. What win tho result ? From the disorgan ized, helpless and beaten materials of that army, he hy whom it is asked to-day to invito to the capital of his owu State, and to whom that boon is denied by Republi can Seu.itors, seized hold of thoso discor dant materials, aud with the hand aud mind of genius prepared thcui again to go upon the enemy. I will not trace his liis tory It i written iinperishably upon the annals ofthe past; audit will shine in those ofthe future. Rut I will turs for a moment to a peiioda.yoar later, when ano'her disaster met our arms ou tho same field, and when the panic-stricken Presid-n aud his advisers again crouched with fear withi i the walls ol Washington, when they felt that the Goths and Vandals were at their gates, when hey were providiug for flight lo some spot of safety and when they felt that power and place were vatii-h-ing. Again ie palsied fear they appealed to him whom for parly purpose they had degraded, aud again, like a true patriot, like one who never acts from sordid or improper motives, he assumed the com mand of that routed and demoralized army ar.d in less than three weeks he had again organized it and had commenced the pur suit ofthe common enemy across the hills of .Maryland and into a plain where many of those who now hear me met thc ene mies of their country faco to face. What did he do ? A second time he saved the Republic be saved it by snatching victory out of the very jaws of defeat, and 1 now place upon record thc universal sentiment of every man who crvcd under him, tint if it had not been for the confidence ofthe Army ofthe Potomac in General M'Olel lan, Pennsylvania would have suffered an invasion whic would have been destructive to the life and property of her people ; and vet Senators refu-e to receive the nrotcetor and defender of the State in the halls of her1 Capitol. Hut what is tho sub-cquent h s ' tory of this matter ? Shattered and bro ken, his legions lay awhile for rest, to be ' clothed, to bo fed, to be restored to their wonted vigor ; and thou again ho was in pursuit ot thc enemy whom he had met at , Antictam and at South Mountain and dc- feated. Rut, sir, when hi was about to t strike his blow, ho was again pursued by , the miscreants who wis'.icd to divert this' war from tho purpo-cs set forth in the res-' oHition of July, lSISl , and dragged down' from his position as commander of the army, j lie loft it dispirited, broken hcaitud. deject ed obedient, it i true, but without nerve, 1 without vigor, without power, lie left it at the dictation and command ofthe ultra Abolitionists of tho North. Georga H. 1 M Clellan was not an Abolitionist, and therefore he tens' nU a gnicial ! ! ! Thc remaining history of that campaign is written in blood and in .disaster. Hut, sir, I will tell you that along the camp fires of the Potomac at night, no soldier goes to sleep without praying God for blessings upon the head of his old com inander; aud oh ! sir. if those in powet ' could summon the resolution to cast be hind them the prejudices aud the passions ol those who do not wish to sec this Union rosiored unless slavery be abolished, that ncblo commander would bo put again at the head of that army and he would cuvc out vielory and would bring buck to us once more triumph and peace aud union , I know it, they know it, you. gontloman, ' know it ; ami if you hud the manhood which you should possess you would by joint resolutions speak this truth to tho powers that bo and make tkin hear you .' Mr. Speaker, it may bo p'oper for mo at this timo to stato what I believe to bo the purposes of the great part) with which I havo tho honor to act. In tho words of another, who from bis exalted position has a right to speak, I will tell you i'that tho Demoer 'tie party has never agreed, does not now agree, and havo no inten tion of agrcoing in future, to a dissolution of tho American Union ;"and 1 will say to you further, that wc propose to accom plish tho preservation of tho government and tho Constitution hy tho union of tho sword with thc olive branch. For those who will resist the power of tho govern ment -not tho power of tho Administra- I tion not iti unconstitutional acta, but tho power cf this government rightfully administered under the Constitution y a have tho sword. For thoso who aro will sing to submit to its bonign, its healthful and its peaceful sway, wo will hold out the olive branch of peace And horo I will say to you, sir, (and in sayiug it I feel that I express tho opinion of thc groat Democratic party of this State,) that wo believe, and will over believe, that tho laws which have been passed by tho Con gross just emlcd-Mho confiscation and other acta which havo stcclod tho heart ol the peoplo of the South thcro is no such thing as a Union man left in those Statos now engaged in rebellion, and wc toll you that we iutuud to melt tho heart of that people by repealing your unjust,' your un coiistititional laws; and, when it is molt ed, we expect out of thnt heart to bring peace aud happiness lo the peoplo North and South. Wc say to you, Mr. Speaker that wc do not believe it is in thc power of twenty millions of men to subdue and bring back that people, unless you have among them allies who are attached to to your cause, devoted to the principles of the Constitution and its guaran'ecs, and desiring, its protection that you can never, never exteruiinato or subjugate them. Rut wc tell you, str, that if you will do only what the Constitution and tho prin- ' ciples springing from it demand, on overy inn ami in every valley thoro will bo rais ed up allies lor our assistance, Thc lead ers who desiro place and power may be against us, but when tho peoplo of tho South, recollecting the glories of tho past, and looking to those of tho future, feci that every right is to bo guaranteed, every privilege restored to them, then, as I be lieve iu my God, I believe that they will come back to the Constitution of tho old Government aud to tho Union. I tell yon now, Mr. Speaker, that all thc blood, all the treasure you have spent or may spend, will be in vain, unless you repeal the un constitutional, oppressive, tyrannical laws which were enacted by the last Congress; aud I ttill say in passing that I believo "(tho Supreme Arbiter bcingr my judgo) that if that Congress had never met, or if, having met, they had simply voted appro priations and dissolved, leaving tho whole question to bo settled under tho resolution adopted in July, 1801,his contest would ere now have been settled, and at this day wo would bo enjoying unity, peace and amity. Upon tho heads of those who prevented such action upon the heads of the iron who enacted those unconstitution al and damnable laws, and did everything in their power to combine the southern heait against us, fb'cvcr be thc curso of tho blood and mourning that fill this land. If tho demou of destruct ion and hate if tho father of evil hinwclf could havo been thsro dictating their counsels, actuating them to deeds which muse result in thc utter dis memberment of this Union, he could not more thoroughly have effected his hellish purpose than it has been effected by tho dominant majority iu the Senato and in the House dm ing the last Congress. And when the history of these times comes to be written, (and I pray to God that tho historian of this era may not be obliged to write of the decline and fall of tho American Republic, but that ho may only write of its trials past and present and of its future greatness,; ho will record the hour when the nation came so near to des olation aud death, and he will ascribe tho disasters of that hour to tho unremitted, persistent, diabolical machinations of Ab olitionists in aud out of thc last Congress. Such a historian if ho has the philosophy ol Hume if ho has his far-seeing penetra tion, and can trace effects from causes, caj) not fail in the contemplative hour of tho future to say what I say at this moment, that to them solely and thecrly belongs the terrible calamity that still darkens and enshrouds this land. In conclu sion, sir, what do we propose to de clare by voting agiinst this resolution T Wc propose to say that no one who has been the instrument, the partaker, the sup porter of these tyranical, these unconstitu tional, these arbitaiy measures which havo fused thc Southern heart and divided our owu, shall be heard from thc capital of this Stat?. Wc proposo to say that wc will not listen to him as a body representing the people of tliis State ; wc propose to say that thc verdict of the people of the State at tho last election was ngainst all such da ii n i able heresies. We mean to tell you, gentlemen, that although wc have not a majority bete, we have it on thc other side of this hall, and wc have it among tho p?ople. We mean to tell you that that majority counted by three thousand last year will b tun times three tbousaud at tho next election. We mean to tell you that wc are going to bring you back to tho cause of the Constitution and tho Union. Wo mean to tell you that wo aro going to uso the sword and the olive branch in settling this difficulty that whether north or south, wo will uso thc sword upon thoso who are opposed to the Constitution that we will not allow any person, whether iu tho south or in tho north to destroy, to disregard, to ignore or to set at defiancs the Constitution of tho United States. Wo mean to tell you that thc same law which is to bo obeyed nt tho South is to be obeyed at iho North. Tho people aro with us, and by tho graco of God and tho voice ofthe people, before niue months roll around wo shall have it in our power to put in execution all that wo Bay, The Duke do Irvis, who died recently in France, chimed to traco bis descent j from a first cu in ofthe Virgin Mary,