1 II The whole art of Government consists in the art top being honest, Jefferson. ' STROODSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1841 VOL. 2. No 30. ' RPINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THEODORE SCHOCH. niimin advance Two dollars TiSKMS.-Tffo oouan P", if not paid bef0rc the end of and a quarter, half yearly,--f Tn h j thcir thn vonr Turn flnllarS anil , . . ... . j , - J' -ticc drivers empioyea oy wiepropne papers by a earner or stage ar. extra. No moot Sntinued until aU arrearages are paid, except a TTA?OiSernents notexceedin5 one square (sixteen lines) wiKertSreeweeksfor one dollar, twenty-five cents iu ue . !nsertion : larcer ones in nrooortion. A i8fn Mlceoniit wU be nade to yearly advertisers. n?AU tettefs addressed to the Editor must be post paid. Foem by John Q. Adams. Correspondence of the-Albany Evening Journal. Washington-, Aug. 31, 184L John Quincy Adams is one of the intellectu al prodigies whose characters distinguish eras of time. Mr. Adams is now 74 years old. But years have made no impression upon his intellect. That is still fresh and vigorous. He is, as has been so frequently stated, always in his seat; always watching the course of business, and always ready to shed light upon the question before the House. The Hon. Mr. Morgan, whose seat is next to that of Mr. Adams, has obtained for me, with permission to publish in the Journal, a copy of the Poem which I enclose. It was written in July, 1840, under these circumstances. Gen. Ogle informed Mr. Adams that several young ladies in his district had requested him to ob tain Mr. A's Autograph for them. In accor dance with this request, Mr. Adams wrote the following beautiful Poem upon " The Wants of Man" each stanza upon a sheet of Note Paper. "What American young lady would not set a pre cious value upon such an autograph from this illustrious statesman The Wants of Man. " Man wants but little here below, Nor wants that 'little long." Goldsmith's Hermit. I. "Man wants bufKttle here below, Nor wants that little long," Tis not with me exactly so,- t But 'tis so in the song. My wants are many, and if told Would muster many a score; And were each wish a mint of gold, I -still should long for more. . II. What first I want is daily bread, And canvass back and wine; And all the realms of nature spread 7 Before me when I dtne Four courses scarcely can provide My appetite to quell, With four choice cooks from France beside, To dress my dinner well. -HI. What next I want at heavy cost, Is elegarit atlire ; Black saole furs for winter's frost, And silks for summer's fire, And cashmere shawls and Brussels lace My bosoms front to deck; And diamond rings my hands to grace; And rubies for my neck. IV. And then 'I vant a mansion fair, A 'dwelling house, in style, Four -stories high, for wholesome air, A massive marble pile: With halls for banquets and for balls All furnished rich and fine; With stabled studs in fifty stalls, And cellars for my wine; V. I want a gatden and a paik My dwelling to surround, A thousand acres, (bless the mark) With walls encompass'd round, Where flocks may range and herds may low, And kids and lambkins play; And flowers and fruits commingl'd grow All Eden to display. VI, I want, when summer's foliage falls, And autumn strips the trees, A house, within the city's walls For comfort and for east? JBut here as space is somewhat scant And acres rather rare, Jly house in Town I only want 4E0 occupy a Square. VII. 1 want a Steward, Butler, Cooks, A Coachman, Footman, Grooms; A jibrary of well bound books, And picture garnished rooms, Corregios, Magdalen and Night, TJie Matron of the chair, iG,uido's .fleet coursers in their flight And jclaudes at least a pair. VIII. Ay! ;and Jto stamp my form and faco Upojo the solid rock, I want, their lineaments to trace, Carrara's milk white block; And let the chisel's art sublime, By Gheenough's hand display, Through all the range of future time, jIv features to the day. IX. I want a cabinet profuse 0 Of medals, coins and gems; A printing press for private use Of fifty thousand cms, And plants and minerals and shells, Worms, insects, fishes, birds; And every beast on earth that dwells, In solitude or herds. X. I want a board of burnish'd plate, Of silver and of gold, Tureens of twenty pounds in weight With sculpture's richest mould, Plateaus with chandeliers and lamps, Plates, dishes, all the same, And Porcelain vases with the stamps Of Sevres, Angouleme. . XL And maples of fair -glossy stain Must form my chamber doors, , And carpets of the Wilton grain Must cover all my floors. My walls with tapestry be deck'd Must never be outdone; And damask curtain must protect Their colors from the sun. XII. And mirrors of the largest pane From Venice must be brought; And scandal wood and bamboo-cane For chairs and tables bought, On all the mantel pieces, clocks Of thrice gilt bronze must stand-, And screens of ebony and box Invite the stranger's hand. XIII. I want (who does not want?) a wife-; Affectionate and fair; To solace all the woes of life, And all its joys to share. Of temper sweet 'of yielding will, Of firm, yet placid mind; With all my faults to love me stilly With sentiments refin'd. XIV. And as Time's car incessant runs And Fortune fills my store; I want of daughters and of sons From eight to half a score. 1 want, (alas! can mortal dare Such bliss on earth to crave?) That all the girls be chaste and fair - The boys all wise and brave. XV. And when my bosom's darlings sings With melody divine, A pedal harp of many strings, Must wih her voice combine. A piano, exquisitely wrought Must open stand, apart; THat all my daughters may be taught To win the stranger's heart. XVI. My wife and daughters will desire Refreshment from perfumes, Cosmetics for the skin require And artificial blooms. The Civet, fragrance shall dispense And treasur'd sweets return; Cologne revive the flagging sense And smoking amber burn. XVII. And when, at night, my weary head Begins to droop and dose A southern chamber holds my bed For nature's soft repose; With blankets, counterpane and sheet: Mallrass and bed of down, -And comfortables for my feet, And pillows for my crown. XVIII. I want a warm and faithful friend ' ' To cheer the adverse hour; Who ne'er to flatter yill descend Nor bend the knee to power. A friend to chide me when I'm wrong, My inmost soul to see; And that my friendship proves as strong For him, as his for me. XIX. I want a kind and tender heart-, For others' wants to feel; A soul secure from Fortune's dart-, And bosom arm'd with steel. To bear divine chastisement's rod And mingling in my plan, Submission to the will of God With charity to Man. -V r XX. V I want a keen, observing eye; An ever listening ear; The truth through all disguise to spy And wisdom's voice to hear. A tone to speak at virtue's need In Heaven's sublimest strain; And lips the cause of Man to plead-,. And never plead in vain. XXI. I want uninterrupted health Throughout my long career; - - And streams of never failing wealth To scaltar far and near, The destitute to clothe and feed, , Free bounty to bestowt ; tv, Supply the helpless orphan's need And sootho the widow's woe. XXII. I want the genius to conceive, ,A . The talents to unfold - - - Designs, the vicious to retrieve; ..-; The virtuous to uphold. Inventive power, combining skill; A persevering soul, Of human heart's to mould the will And reach from Pole to Pole. XXIII. I want the seal of power and place, The ensigns of command; Charged by the People's unbought grace To rule my native land Nor crown, nor sceptre would I ask ' ' But from my country's will, By day, by night, to ply the task Her cup of bliss to fill. xxiv:' I want the voice of honest praise To follow me behind; And to be thought in future days -j" The friend of human kind, j. 1 . That after ages as they rise Exulting may proclaim V v In chorul union to the skies. Their blessings of my name. . v XXV. X These are the wants of mortal man-,. I cannot want them long; For life itself is but a span And earthly bliss a song. My last great want absorbing all Is, when beneath the sod, ' , And summons to my final call; The mercy of my God. XXVI. ; And oh! while circles in my veins Of life the purple stream; And yet a fragment small remains Of nature's transient dream; My soul, in humble hopB unscar'd Forget not thou to pray, That this hywarft may be prepared To meet the judgment day. "Ma, ain't Joe Smith a courtin' our Meley?" "No; what makes you think so?" 'Why, always when he comes near her she sorter leans up to him like a pig to a warm lamb." "There, Alley, "go and bring in some chips." There is a young lady in Connecticut so modest that she puts brandy into her water be cause she is ashamed to touch the naked el ment! Boston Post. My Old Coat. It is better to turn the old coat, said my aunt Prudence, than to run in debt for a new one. But see, replied I, there is a hole in it! Never mind that said she, put in a patch, a patch upon the sleeve, is better than a writ upon the back. The Post thinks the best contrivance for keeping people aw'ake in chnrch, is a clergy man who is wide awake himself. The printing for the 25th Congress, 1838-9, amounted to $217,084 44. No wonder the Globe kicks so viciously at the new administra tion. It's enough to make such a man "strke his father." Ainericaak liovc of Occupation. There is probably no people on earth with whom business constitutes pleasure, and indus try amusement, in an equal degree with the in habitants Of the United States of America. Ac tive 6ccupation is not only the principal source of their happiness and the foundation of their na tional greatness, but they are absolutely wretch ed without it. Business is the very soul of an American; he pursues it not merely as a means of procuring for himself and family the neces sary comforts of life, but as the fountain of all human felicity. From the earliest hour in the morning until late at night the streets are thronged by men of all trades and professions, each following his own vocation, as if he never dreamed of a 'cessation from labor or the possi bility of becoming fatigued. Neither is this hurry of business confined to the large cities; it communicates itself in evety village and ham let and extends to and penetrates the western forests. It is as if all America were but one gigantic work-shop, over the entrance of which there is the blazing inscription, "No entrance except on business." English writer. A Good Toast. At a late agricultural din ner in Massachusetts, the following toast was given: "The same of fortune: shuffle the cards as you will, Spades will always win." Seventeen hundred, and ninety-one dogs have been killed in New York, since the 5th of June. The Woollen Factory of Mr. Jcssop at Ber wick, Pa. Was burned on the 7th. Loss $3,000. From the National Intelligencer. The Inciters of Resignation. The following letters of the Secretary of the Treasury and the Attorney General, resigning their respective trusts, have been placed in our hands for publication: Wa shington, September li, 3 841. Sir: Circumstances have occurred in the course of your administration, and chiefly in the exercise by you of the veto power which con strain me to believe that my longer continuance in office as a member of your Cabinet will bo neither agreeable to you, useful to the country, nor honorable to myself. Do me the justice, Mr. President, to believe that this conclusion has been adopted neither capriciously, nor in any spirit of party feeling or personal hostility, but from a sense of duty, which, mistaken though it may be, is yet so sincerely entertained, that I cheerfully sacrifice to it the advantages and distinction of office. sBe pleased therefore to accept this as mv resignation of the office of Attorney General of the United States. Very respectfully, yours, &c. J. J. Crittenden. The President. Treasury Department, Sept. 11, 1841. Sir: After the most calm and careful consid eration, and viewing the subject in all the as pects in which it presents itself to my mind, I have come to the conclusion that 1 ought no longer to remain a member of your Cabinet. 1 therefore resign the office of Secretary of the Treasury, and beg you to accept this as my letter of resignation. To avoid misunderstanding, I distinctly de clare that I do not consider a difference of opin ion as to the charter of a National Bank a suf ficient reason for dissolving the ties which have existed between us. Though I loQk upon that measure as one of vast importance to the pros perity of the country, and though I should have deeply deplored your inability or unwillingness to accord it to the wishes of the People and the States, so unequivocally expressed through their Representatives, still, upon this and this alone, unconnected with other controlling circumstan ces, I should not have felt bound to resign the place which I hold in your administration. But those controlling circumstances do exist, and 1 will, in my own justification, place them in con nexion before you. It is but just to you to say that the bill which first passed the two Houses of Congress, and which was returned with your objections on the 16th of August, did never, in its progress, as far as I know or believe, receive at any time either your express or implied assent. So far as that bill was known to me, or as 1 was con sulted upon it, I endeavored to bring its provi sions, as nearly as possible, in accordance with what I understood to be your views, and rather hoped than expected your approval. I knew the extent to which you were committed on the question. 1 knew the pertinacity with which you adhered to your expressed opinion, and I dreaded from the first the most disastrous con sequences, when the project of compromise which I . presented at an early day was rejected. It is equally a matter of justice to you and to myself to say that the bill which I reported to the two Houses of Congress at the com mencement of the session, in obedience to their call, was modified so as to meet your approba tion. You may not, it is true, have read the bill throughout, and examined every part of it; but the 16th fundamental article, which became the contested question of principle, was freely discussed between us, and it was understood and unequivocally sanctioned by yourself. The last clause in the bill, also, which contained a reservation of power in Congress, was inserted on the 9lh of June, in your presence, and with your approbation; though you at one time told me that, in giving your sanction to the bill, you would accompany it with an explanation of your understanding of that first clause. In this condition of things, thotigh I greatly regretted your veto on the bill as it passed the two Houses of Congress, and though I foresaw the excitement and agitation which it would produce among the people; yet, considering the changes which the bill has undergone in its passage, and its variance from the one you had agreed to sanction, I could not find in that act enough to disturb the confidential relations which existed between us. I was disposed to attribute this act, fraught with mischief as it was, to pure and honorable motives, and to a conscientious conviction on your part ihat the bill, in some of its provisions, conflicted with the constitution. But that opinion of your course on the bill which has just been relumed to Con gress with your second veto, I do not and can not entertain. Recur to what has passed be tween us with respect to it, and you will per ceive that such opinion is impossible. On the morning of the 16th of August, I call ed at your chamber, and found you preparing the first veto message, to be despatched to the Senate. The Secretary of War came in also, and you read a portion of the message to us. He observed that, though the veto would create a great sensation in Congress, yet he thought the minds of our friends better prepared for it than they were some days ago, and he hoped it would be calmly received, especially as it did not shut out all hope of a bank. To this you replied, that you really thought there ought to be no difficulty about it; that you had sufficient ly indicated in your veto message what kind of a bank you would approve, and that Congress might, if they saw fit, pass ouch a one in three days. The 18th being the day for our regular Cab inet meeting, we assembled, all except M'essrs. Crittenden and Granger, and you told us that you had had a long conversation with Messrs. Berrien and Sergeant, who professed to coma in behalf of the Whigs of the two Houses to endeavor to strike out some measure which would be generally acceptable. That you had your doubts about the propriety of conversing with them yourself, and thought it more proper that you should commune with them through your constitutional advisers. You expressed a wish that the whole subject should be postponed till the next session of Congress. You spoko of the delay in the Senate of the consideration of your veto message, and expressed anxiety as to the tone and temper which the debate would assume. Mr. Badger said that on inquiry he was hap py to find that the best temper prevailed in the two Houses. He believed they were perfectly ready to lake tip the bill reported by the Secre tary of the Treasury, and pass it at once. You replied, 'Talk not to me of Mr. E wing's bill; it contains that -odious feature of local discoun ts which I have repudiated in my message.' 'I then said to you, I have no doubt, sir, that the House, having ascertained your views, will pass a bill in conformity to them, provided they 'can be satisfied that it would answer the pur poses of the Treasury, and relieve the country.' You then said, ' Cannot my Cabinet see that this is brought about? You must stand by me in thi emergency. Cannot you see that a bill passes Congress such as I can approve without inconsistency?' I declared again my belief that such a bill might be passed. And you then said to me, ' What do you understand to be my opinions? Slate them, so that I may see that there is no misapprehension about them.' I then said that I understood you to be of opinion that Congress might charter a bank in the .District of Columbia, giving it its location here. To this you assented. That they might authorize such bank to establish offices of dis count and deposite in the several States, with the assent of the States. To this you replied, 'Don't name discounts; they have been the source of the most abominable 'corruptions, and are wholly unnecessary to enable the bank to discharge its duties to the country and the Gov ernment.' I observed in reply that I was proposing no thing, but simply endeavoring to state what I had understood to be your opinion as to the powers which Congress might constitutionally confer on a bank; that on that point I stood corrected. I then proceeded to say that I un derstood you to be of opinion that Congress might authorize such bank to establish agencies in the several States, with power to deal in bills of exchange, without the assent of tho States, to which you replied, "Yes, if they be foreign bills, or bills drawn in one State and payable in another. That is all the power ne cessary for transmitting the public funds and regulating exchanges and the currency." Mr. Webster then expressed, in strong terms, his opinion that such a charter would answer all just purposes of Government and be satis factory to the People; and declared his prefe rence for it over any which had been proposed, especially as it dispensed with the assent of the States to the creation of an institution ne cessary for carrying on the fiscal operations of Government. He examined it at some length, both as to its constitutionality and its influence on the currency and exchanges, in all whicl views you expressed your concurrence, desirt that such a bill should be introduced, and esp cially that it should go into the hands of so of your friends. To my inquiry whether Sergeant would be agreeable to you, you rej that ho would. You especially requested Websterand myself tocommunicate with K Berrien and Sergeant on the subject, to you said you had promised to address but you doubted not that this personal nication would bo equally satisfactoi desired us, also, in communicating w gentlemen, no: to commit you, perso this being recognized as your measr be made a subject of comparison to dice in the course of discussion. Webster then conversed about f wording of the 16th fundamental taining the grant of power to dea' and of tho connexion in which f ' be introduced; you also spoke tho institution, desiring that changed. To this I objected ably be made a subject of ri sisted that there was much institution ought not to bo Webster undertook to ada to your wishes. Mr. Bel Webster and myself that A 4 1 tesss cornq nallyj your p ne' part . article,! nat gwnt tf of the im kUnt shoi iasitwoul aiculo, but ; it a name, aatted ban otitinrtrisp; .IthenobseiY. we nad no