FREEHAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISHED EVERT MONDAY AND THURSDAY. TUOS. A. BUCKLEY, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year $1 60 Six Months 75 Four Months 60 Two Months 26 Subscribers are requested to watch the dute following the name on the lubcls of their papers. By referring to this they can tell at a glance how they stand on the books in this ottice. For instance: Orover Cleveland 28JuneM3 means that Grover is paid up to June 28,1898. By keeping the figures in advance of the pres ent date subscribers will save both themselves and the publisher much trouble and unnoy- Subsorlbers who allow themselves to fall in arrears will be called upon or notified twice, aud. If payment does not follow within month thereafter, collection will be made in the manner provided by law. FREELAND, PA., JANUARY 30, 1893. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, D. C. Jan. 27,1893. The fifty-second congress may die in a senatorial dead-lock if Mr. Harrison follows the advice that is now being given him by prominent members of liis party ami nominates a Republican as successor to the late Justice Lamar. The United States supreme court is in theory, if not in fact, a non-partisan body, and the death of Justice Lamar leaves only two men—Chief Justice Fuller and Jus tice Field—on its bench who were Democrats before their appointment thereto. After a man takes his seat upon that bench he is not supposed to have any politics, but the Democratic party knows to its cost what a mistaken idea that is. It is only justice to the people whose interests are constantly at stake in questions coming before this court that its membership should be as nearly divided between the political parties as possible, and for that reason the Democratic senators are disposed to resort to every honorable method to pre vent the addition of another Republican to the six already sitting on the bench, and if Mr. Harrison nominates a Repub lican to the vacancy they will, if they can, deadlock the senate, even if it re sults in hanging up all legislation ami forcing an extra session of congress. In view of Mr Harrison's early retirement and the fact that the new justice cannot ! take his seat until after President Cleve land's term begins, it would only be a common decency for Harrison to leave the vacancy for Cleveland to fill, and if it were not for the pressure that is beirg brought to hear upon him by his part* associates it is believed that he would adopt that tnanly course. Secretary Foster's r port on the condi tion of the treasury and his estimates of the probable receipts and expenditures for the remainder of this and for the next fiscal year is at last in the hands of the house ways and means committee. It is far from satisfactory, as it is known that the surplus which he figures out is obtained by failing to deduct liabilities amounting to $46,000,000, which will have to be met in the period covered by bis estimates, and there may be more yet. That the committee is now at work trying to find out, and Mr. Foster will probably have to undergo a rigid cross questioning. An amusing episode took place in the house one morning this week, just be fore the session began. Chief Wolf, of the Palouse tribe of Washington Indians, in all the glory of a red blanket and red paint, was taking in the sights. After strolling around the hall for a while he walked up to the speaker's chair and taking a seat therein camly surveyed the members. While he was sitting there a witty member remarked: "That is the first savage who has occupied the speaker's chair since Reed vacated it." Reed was sitting near by ami heard the remark, and he joined in the laugh which followed. There is an interesting rumor here to the effect that the Republican national committee is engaged in setting up pins tomakeJ.S. Clarkson the Republican candidate for president in 1896. The idea is not taken very kindly by the Harrison lb-publicans who regard Clark son as a "hoodoo" of the first order. By 1890, judging from present indica tions, the Republican party will be past "hoodooing." A Republican caucus of senators was held to determine when and how the four territories that are ready for state hood might he admited. The first thing I the caucus did was to strike Arrizona from the list, as being too certainly Democratic. Then it proceeded to ar range a programme, which, while ac quiescing in the demands of Oklahoma, Utah and New Mexico to be admitted to the family of states, only gives them about one chance out of a possible hun dred to get the bills, proyiding there fore, through at this session of congress. The programme arranged gives the right of way to the territorial bills after the Cherokee strip, the anti-option ami the Nicaragua canal bills are disposed of. What that right of way is worth may be judged from the fact that the senate has not yet disposed of a single one of the appropriation bills. The contract for the inauguration fire works has been awarded to the St. Louis Fireworks Company, the price being |4,650. S. All those who have used Baxter's Mandrake Bitters speak very strongly in their praise. Twenty-five cents per bottle. Sold by I)r. Schilcher. The name of N. 11. Downs' still lives, although he has been dead many years. His Elixir for the cere of coughs and colds has already outlived him a quarter of a century, and is still growing in fa vor with the public. Sold by Dr. Schil cher. When Baby was sick, wo gave her Castorla.' "When she waa a Child, she cried for Caatoria. When she became Misa, she clung to Caatoria. When she had Children, she gave them Caatoria. Lane's Medicine Moves the llowela F.acli Day. lii order to be healthy this is necessary. THE MAN FROM MAINE. John Clark Ridpath Reviews the Life of James 0. Blaine. HIS INFLUENCE AND GENIUS His Entire Career XVas Picturesque and Drumutic —His Achievements in States manship and I.iterature—Honors and Triumphs of His Later Years. by American Press Association.] Slow sinks, more glorious ere his race be run. Along Morea's hills the setting sun- Not us in northern climes obscurely bright. But ono unclouded blaze of living light. —Byron. It is tho day of Endymion —tho hour of tho setting 6un! The splondid orb which has shone for more than a quarter of a century across tho landscape of civ ilization gilds with his last beams the domo of the Capitol! He is gone! Wo may now estimate dispassionately the life and genius of JAMES GILLESPIE BLAINE. The conspicuous place which he has held in the estimation of his coun- JAMES G. BLAINE, trymen calls for something more than a passing repetition of the facts of his career. The mere facts were easily re cited. It were a briof and cursory task to recount the capital events and land marks of his life. Born in West Browns ville, Pa., on the 81st of January, 1830: educated first at home and afterward at Washington college; teaching for a short ' time in a military school at Blue Lick Springs, Ky.; finding there and taking in marriage Harriet Stanwood, a teacher Like himself; returning to liis native state to teach in Pliiladelpliia; going with his young wife to her home in Maine and making that state his future home; editor at twenty-four of tho Kenne bec Journal; associate editor of the Port land Advertiser; bounding into politics; reaching the legislature of Maine and then a seat in congress; seven terms a member of tho house of representatives and for six years speaker of that body, briefly in the senate—an arena unsuited to his genius; aspiring to the presidency; four times voted for in national conven- I tiona of liis party and once nominated: twice secretary of state in tlw cabi nets of his competitors; leader of his party; publicist; diplomatist of the first rank; creator of policies national and in ternational; statesman, author, man of genius, and therefore an enigma—such have been the critical stages and evolu tions of this remarkable career. But biographical annala do not suffice in the case before us. The so called life of Blaine is already a twice-told tale, tt is known in the quick memories of hi. j I countrymen and to the world. Blaine deserves rather now that outward I bound he passes the remotest bar of hu man vision—to be fairly estimated, justly ; interpreted to the understandings of his countrymen, revealed without partiality j faithfully portrayed upon the screen in I the backward look of memory. Blaine was favorably but j)aradoxical ly born—favorably, because of the en placement of his birth. Pennsylvania is one of the empire states of the Union Out of her borders many of the great liavo arisen. But he also came paradox ically. He was born in a Quaker com monwealth and of the cross blood of a Presbyterian and a Catholic! Was he not from birth the product of contradict ory conditions and inconsistent elements of life? It concerns us little to note the cir cumstances in the early career of James G. Blaine. His ambitions, intellectual powers and easy attainments were re- j marked from his boyhood. Tradition has made it evident that ho was a youth of unusual powers. Glimpses of great ; purpose flash out here and there. His j collegiate training at Washington col- I lego was not unfavorable to the promo tion of his native forces. As a youth ho gained much by forensic practice. Con tention made him, or at least gave him, his bent. Already at college he gathered many of the historical, literary and sci entific resources which were to stand him so well in hand in liis riper years. Blaine's mind was one of those that are ! particularly susceptible to the influences lof education and environment. The j completed man, as he appeared in this 1 remarkable personage, was very different ) from the completed man as he is discov ered in such characters as Franklin and Henry, Thaddeus Stevens and Lincoln. Blaine from his earlier years grew and assimilated to himself all the sap and po tency of his surroundings; he flourished in his soil and sprang from the arena. We may pass by the somewhat obscure influences of his domestic estate. The ' world knows that in this regard he was not a happy or an inspired man. This has been true of too many of our recent great Americans. Somehow or other in American life it rarely happens nowa days—though it seemed to happen in the : colonial epoch often—that the domestic reaction upon the man of genius and purpose works out its most beneficent results. Blaine has been indeed singu larly unfortunate in his family. Many are dead. The most promising lias lately ' fallen; others are broken with hurt. Doubtless the proud man, as husband and father, lias suffered much and wept bitter tears over his losses and wounds. May all these be closed —as they will bo —with the closing of the grave! Blaine's rise to public notice was aus picious, but not singular. He entered easily and successfully into the stormy j life of politics. He devoted himself to that pursuit with native zest under the sharp spur of an unusually active am bition. His early experiences in jour nalism stood him well in hand. The period in which ho held the editorial pen was precisely that in which the old stylo of explosive and redundant oratory was giving place to the exactor and truer forms of sj>oech. The transformation demanded that the orator of the new period should be a man of exact language and cogent argument Blaine's quick and capacious mind con formed readily and in excellent measure to the new demand, and when he ad vanced to the national platform he went with the equipment of perfect linguistic forms, a fair measure of imagination and ever improving argumentative re sources. The editorial career of Blaine had an intrinsic 2is well as secondary merit. By ; his pen he commanded his first public applause. The young Republican party laid the Pathfinder for its candidate, j Blaine was in at the birth. He was then twenty-six years of ago. He was a dele gate to the audacious convention which j nominated Fremont for the presidency. ; Such a candidate was worthy of such | support. The aspiring young Maine ed itor made his columns flame with passion and appeal. Glorious spring days were those when human liberty began to re vive! Happy fortune of the young men ' of 1850 to appear on the stage when truth was put on trial; when party debate had not yet degenerated into wrangle, in triguo and falsehood; when the defense of principle siiU promised as fair reward as is now promised for hateful subserv iency to the caucus! Blaine's virgin ed itorials were eagerly sought by the jour nalists of Boston and were reprinted in Ohio and Michigan. Ilis name was al ready beard as far as Minnehaha and the Platte. James G. Blaine entered the house of representatives in 1803 to continue in active service in that body for fourteen consecutive years. This was the period in which he achieved his national repu tation. He was one of the many aspiring young civilians upon whom the after forces and passions of the great war played and reacted with striking effect. Ln proportion as his faculties were strong er and his ambitions more prevalent than those of his fellow members ho roso above them until only a few competitors re mained of like stature and mettle. On one side was seen in tho samq rank with himself tho persistent Garfield, and on the other the magnificent and arrogant Conkling. These three perhaps already saw the presidency afar off. They also saw each other. Not all of them could reach the goal. Blaine at this epoch had many advan tages. in addition to native gifts and well earned attainments he had the pove. of growth. He was always a growing man. To the end of his career —or very nearly to the end—he continued to branch and flourish. His growth was strong and conspicuous. Each year added to his stature. His figure, his intellectual and personal life, became picturesque and striking. Herein is a difference between tho strong man and the weak. The strong man grows long and well. The weak man grows for a short space and then grows 110 more. Ho has a brief efflores cence and thon a dwarfish delivery of sour fruit! But the strong man grows and continues to flourish in thought and spirit to the end of his days. It wero not amiss to ascribe to James G. Blaine this unusual power of develop ment. Have his last years been years of weakness? Has there been in him intel lectual decline? Has ho hud an epoch of senility and the second childhood of old age? Nay, the last estate has not been of this color in tho case of the great secretary. We need not hero repeat to what ex tent James (>. Blaine wrought himself and his purpose into tho legislation and history of his times. Three times speaker of tho house of representatives in the 6torniy and anarchic period which fol lowed the civil war, ho must needs have contributed much to those public meas ures in which tho current history of our country was recorded. Upon all of the issues arising in the train of tho ro- MUS. BLAINE. I hellion ho laid a strong and ambitious hand. Ho was a determinative force in the financial measures upon which the business and wealth of tho United States have found a profitable but unstable equilibrium. He pressed forward with ceaseless activity the meas ures of reconstruction. He ascended I the sharp and jutting crag of party leadership. With tho statesman's mo tive, not unmixed with the motive of tho politician, ho flung himself into tho heated and iinbittered debates of the epoch. Tho legislative career of Blaine was touched in many parts with tho first penciling of those policies with which j his name has become associated. Al | ready wo may discover in the tono of i his debates and the spirit of his outside j speeches the outgivings of those views j which as secretary of state he was to develop into permanency and system. I Ever and anon while still in the house of representatives he struck out with original force the first sparks of that ■ policy between which and tho high jingo ism of British politics so many points of similarity may be discovered. It may i be defined as the policy of acute Ameri- j canism! It develops itself into the i theory of the complete segregation of tho American republics and of the affiliation of all under the aegis of the United States. It is a form of patriotic indig nation of which one of the fundamental principles is attachment to tho Irish cause and aversion to British influences on this side of the sea. It is probable that the doctrine of protection, to which Blaine gave such powerful and rational advocacy, was by him held as secondary to the deeper motive of American self sufficiency and of the confirmation of the United States in the primacy of the three Americas. Blaine's whole career in congress was spectacular and dramatic. The genius of the man favored display and great acting. Witkout doubt Blaine had the power to grasp a situation, to extract from it its dramatic elements and to work those elements into a scene. In this particular American history has not j furnished his equal. His audacity al ways stood him well in hand. Time and again he was brought into collision with dangerous men and still more dangerous facts. It may be doubted whether in such contingencies he ever suffered dis jaragement, to say nothing of defeat. Time and again he issued from tho most serious complications, portending ruin to his fortunes, with victory on his crest. In such contests there is little doubt that he was capable of supplying in his own cause, by well placed fiction and unsup ported declamation, those elements of fact which truth withheld. In the crises of his career he was wont to shoot the rapids like a skillful and daring boat man. There were days when his proud ship and valuable cargo were crowded hard between Scylla and Cliarybdis, but ho always went through with a shout and was answered by the roar of the sur rounding seas. We may here refer at once to Blaine's personal antagonisms and ever recurring encounters. No other American states man of great rank has had so many and such serious battles. Some were battles with men and others with circum stances. These cost the gladiator dearly. It was his antagonism, be it said, that I finally stranded him on the shores fds side of tho White House. Ho attacked, and attacked bitterly, all of his rivals. He seemed to be inspired with the belief that ho must vanquish them and put them down. As he roso toward the speakership, and from the speakership toward tho presidency, ho discerned witr l clear eye the facts and the men with whom he had to contend. There was Roscoo Conkling for ono. Blaine at tacked Conkling, and in that hour Nem esis looked down from the gallery! Ho eyed Morton askance. He saw Garfield with a jealousy which became acute as Garfield pressed up to his fiank. His impetuosity knew no bounds. At times it seemed that he could not curb him self. lie flung sarcasms and ironies and invectives by the handful. They struck where they might. Ilis was to be a lead ership by conquest and by the humila- I tion of the foe. In Blaine there was, however, a strong mingling of the calm, the judicial, the conservative method. Strange how just ho could bel The house of representa tives never had a better or truer speaker His personality in the desk was immense. As presiding officer ho not only won but merited universal respect. His rulings were impartial. Ilis eye had the glance of the eagle, and his pose and self posses sion were magnificent. He was capable of justice and truth. Ho would not brook such infamy as the caucus occa sionally propounded. At one time he was well nigh losing the allegiance of his party by a defiant counter ruling in fa vor of the Democracy. The strange thing about Blaine was that though lie in that crisis set himself against the first force bill with the determination of duty and truth we aro still left doubt ful whether he was inspired with the belief that his ruling was good politic® for himself or whether ho felt the power of tlio speaker's oath upon liis conscience. If Blaine attacked his great rivals with all the resources of his genius, what sliall we say of the onset upon the political foe in both houses? The recriminations of the war were hot within. There was one spectacular episodo after another. Did Blaine purposely devise and plan the situation and the day of his famous deliverances? At any rate he provoked Benjamin 11. Hill and made him his foil. Jefferson Davis should not be pensioned as a Mexican veteran—not indeed because he had been president of the Confed eracy, but because he had been responsi bio for Anderponville and Libby! That indeed was a bombshell. It exploded, and the roar of it was heard to Cali f or nia. Vainly did the man of Georgia ral ly and countercharge and assail. He j was vanquished, and the plume of Blaine was the one conspicuous sign seen above the field. The ago following tho civil war was corrupt. That word, in its radical sense, means broken up and confounded. The times conformed exactly to this defini tion. The sluices of a redundant cur rency flowed bankful through every channel. Victory had come and brought power to the victors; patriotism had great profit! Hitherto the scrutiny of the American people had not been acute. Many unseeable things had remained unseen, and many other things were blinked at. They who now had full sway felt tho reins loosely thrown on the neck They had freedom, license and vast op portunity. It were impossible to say how many of the prominent men of that epoch en riched themselves by ways which, if not positively dark, were at least obscure. Men dabbled and dabbled again. Now it was, however, that the sharp eyes of rivalry began to penetrate tho processes of semitheft that were flourishing on every side. Leaders began to discover that other leadtrs were dishonest. Credit Mobilier exploded with a great smell, j Many were blown away. How easy in this wise to dispose of our rivals! Would that Blaine himself might be tints de stroyed! We will try it. 110 has pnr- I chased railway bonds. 110 has received ! moneys from the Union Pacific. He is I waist deep in the securities of the Little Rock and Fort Smith railway. He shall be investigated. Mulligan shall produce his letters. We will have a scene. It is the stli of June, 1870. Blaine rises from the speaker's desk and holds aloft a bundle of papers. It is the incrimi nating package. He himself will read them through one by one. Certainly he has humiliation and mortification to do it, but ho will read them! Courage is necessary for such a task, but the letters must be read. "I invite the confidence of 44,000.000 of my countrymen while I read these letters from this desk." The reading was completed. None could have done it better. The shaker then turned upon the chairman of the com mittee and scornfully charged him with purposely withholding and suppressing a communication which would have ab solutely exonerated him from the charges which had been circulated against his honor. The crisis broke in another tri umph, perhaps the most dramatic and sensational ever witnessed in the house of representatives. Blaine has been held to stem account by the American people in the matter of the Mulligan correspondence. So bo it. He is neither wholly cleared nor wholly condemned. The transaction was ambig uous and tortuous. In the retrospect it hath ugliness. It should be said, however, that Blaine in this matter was more to bo blamed for acting and tergiversation than ho was for the original business < This trait has been ono of the prime weaknesses of the great character before us. While he possessed many kinds of audacity he was lacking in a certain ele ment of moral courage. It was the bane of his lifo to have a weakness at certain points where he should have been strong. Satan never uttered a more sterling truth than when he said, "Spirit, to be weak is to be miserable." Blaine in soino particulars has been both weak and miserable. If, for example, ho had simply said, "I made honorable purchase of railway bonds: it is nobody's busi ness, and what are you going to do about it?" the matter would have ended. James G. Blaine would bo president of the United States. This was the domi nant passion of his soul and life. What ever interposed between him and his purpose was in the nature of an eclipse It is a strange thing that American statesmen have not yet learned that the presidency of the United States goes by accident and indirection, and not by ambition, contrivance and endeavor Who has long sought the presidency and gained it? The groat office not only goe without the ambition of the winner, but with little regard to his merit. Blaine THE HOUSE WHERE MR. BLAINE DIED, strove for twenty-five years to reach the presidency. He paid down the honest coin of great talents and great endeavor He had merit and accomplishment. His capacity for the highest place has not been questioned by any. America k.is not produced a man who in native gifts and brilliant attainments was more fitted for the presidential office than James G. Blaine. But he missed it! It was with him a quest and struggle of Tantalus. Once and again the glittering prize was within his grasp. At Cincinnati in 1876 only twen ty-eight votes were lacking to his nomina tion. Certainly had ho been nominated he would have received as many votes as Hayes. In that convention the faces of his rivals looked leeringly from the cau cus rooms, and Blaine was beaten. In 1880 he was again in the arena and well nigh successful. In that year the nomi nation would certainly have brought election, as it brought the prize to Gar field. Four years more, and the man from Maine captures tho preliminary choice | and is launched on the sea of tho can vass. He manages his own campaign. Tho antecedents of success are com passed. The two pivotal states are won, and then, on tho eve of the election, the greatest of the two is suddenly trans ferred to the enemy by a farcical per sonal incident which brought defeat to the great leader and gave to an unknown preacher such fume as Empedocles got for jumping into The quest wont on. Another four year period passed, and Blaine stood dubiously on the horizon. Of a certainty he might have had tho nomination. Probably he would have taken it but for the belief j which ho doubtlessly entertained that at ! least one of the pivotal states would vote ; against him. The man whom ho had | employed four years before as his law -1 yer walked off with the prizo and strode ! into the White House! A second time Blaine is secretary of state. It might i well appear that the phantom of the presidency had now vanished, but not so. Probably it never vanished from the : mind of any one who has once seen tho vision. Could wo penetrate tho mind of Blaine during the last quadrennium of his life we should see tho cross currents of early ambitions and of mature reason flowing together and breaking in long lines of foam. ! They who find interest in such facts as i national conventions, and who suppose 1 that bodies of that kind are really forces • in human history, may well discover ; food in the Minneapolis convention of ! 1892. Let it be said that if ever Blaine 1 was outwitted by a competitor it was by Benjamin Harrison! With the ap ; proach of the presidential year Blaine | found himself impeded with obstacles, weighted with circumstances, liobbled I with unbreakable official relations, and. ! worst of all, weakened with the aj J proacli of age. The tire still burnt j within him. hut the volcano was less ! active than of old. Tho result was that j the upflaming of his .ambition at Minne apolis was only a fitful glare. He blazed , feebly and went out. Partisanship had kindled its fires on all the surrounding heights, and the light of the great lumi nary was quenched in the crackle of the j officeholders' bonfire! t© ' | I MARGARET BLAINE. WALKER BLAINE. JAMES U. BI.AINK. - R I.M .lONS BLAINE. We thus have the remarkable spec tacle of a man who has been Jive timea conseculivelv before the national con ventions of his party, and always pre ferred by his party to any other com petitor whomsoever, and always greater | than his competitor, whoever that might be—greater in the sense that ho was LH t i ter qualified for tho presidency of the United States than any who stood | against him—and yet but onetime nomi nated and never elected! It is a repe i tit ion of I lie irony of fata, j Wo may hero note the reactionary ef- I feet of this long continued, arduous and . unsuccessful struggle upon the great ac- I tor himself. This effect has been that ' which generally comes to greet character I under such trials and abrasion of des | tiny. It is the effect of discipline—the I improvement of human nature by the j hardships of experience, by sorrow and ' iby defeat. It were not far from true to ! say that James G. Blaine has been more ! improved in his moral and intellectual • nature and in his purposes ami methods ; and theories of statesmanship by the va j rious hurts and disappointments of his career than have any of his rivals by • their successes, however great. Blaine's character has been lifted up and perfected in a remarkable degree. ! and it isriin astonishing fact that what l ever is true and lasting in his statesman ship and the most of that which is beau j tiful in his personal life have come from ; the hard discipline of the last fifteen • years. The fact is that Blaine in the hour of tho setting sun has not been far from t rue greatness as it is measured by j historical standards. He has come to I this by tribulation rather than by glory. ! His spirit lias been moderated, chastened ! and purified from dross by the bufferings to which he has been exposed and by the ! very ruin of his political fortunes. I Something of the same fact has been seen in many great Americans. It was seen pre-eminently in Lincoln, though ; Lincoln was always great. It was oee in Samuel J. Tilden. It was seen and : exemplified most strikingly in that other j conspicuously successful American be fore whoso stubborn frofit Blaine him j self quailed and went back in 1884. I In his last years the life of James G. Blaine stood forth in striking outline ! against tho horizon. He was always : sustained by a following which never drew back or doubted. His magnetic power and great personality prevailed to ! the last. The excellence of method as I well as the sterling genius of the man shone forth with unusual luster and j flashed tine light into every department I of his activity. ' In the literary work to which ho gave himself at all times, according to oppor tunity, but more particularly in tho last I I decade of his career, we discover an un- I | mistakablo superiority. Many of our i public men have essayed something in j tho way of iermanent production. With j | most it has ended with the trial. Poli- 1 ! tics and literature are not bedfellows, j The oue puts the other out. There is not j i much concord between Belial and the t angel. In a few great uiinds, however, j there has been union of the literary and • tbo political faculty, and this was pre eminently true of Blaine. The country ; ought to have been more astonished than I it was at tho excellence, the greatness of i his book. "Twenty Years of Congress" i is ono of many such works; but taking ; them all in all, from Benton's "Thirty | ! Years' View" to Sunset Cox's "Three 1 Decades," Blaine's work is distinctly and i emphatically tho best. I As an author ho is innocent of the ! egotism of Benton. As a statesman lie shows himself to have been, with his pen ! ! at least, incapable of the partisanship and j passion of Cox. As a matter of fact, there ! is hardly a more dispassionate or rational j work on the public history of our coun j try than is the "Twenty Years of Con j gress." In no other part of his product I aro Blaino's capacity and his better tem | per shown to so great advantage. The j time comes when, all current sentiment dying away, the great secretary shall b known to his countrymen by the calm ' statement of fact and the cogent and im- j partial deductions which ho has left on record in his book. What has James G. Blaine contributed to his age and country? Has he really ac complished anything? Has he left a per manent impress? Has he transmitted from himself to his times and to after ; ; times something that shall survive and flourish, giving its leaf and fruitage in the Twentieth century? These questions j ■ must bring with their answers the true estimate of Blaine's life and work. If he has done nothing, let him pass. If he has left no impress, let the grave close ! and the grass grow; for the morrow, in , that event, will be even ns today, j Blaine has contributed something to | his ago and country. He has been a liv- j ing, inspiring force among the motives of American patriotism. Let ns concede to him sincerity, and in so doing dis cover the essential patriotism of his na ture. It would be difficult to find in his whole life aught that was inconsistent with this interpretation of his character His public career of more than thirty years, ever widening and deepening in the channels of national life, has been an example of patriotic devotion to Ameri can institutions. The very vices of his statesmanship—if such there be—have had a like root and vitality. If he fought off the Chinese it was because he was blinded vfitk his passionate American ism. The great idea with Blaine seems to have been the establishment of a com plete republican autonomy in this na tion. He desired the individuality and glory of America. lie was seriously in spired with the sight of his country's flag. Nor may we well, now that this remarkable career is ended, speak lightly of that fervid, unwavering passion which Blaine ever displayed at the very men tion of his country's name. It is well that such an example should have been set in a high place of our na tional life. The young men of our coun try have seen it from afar, and in pro portion as they have imbibed from this fountain they are better and truer than if they had drunk from the cold and drib bling waterspouts of the caucus. Let us hope and believe that the living part of Blaine has entered into union with the soul of his country, and that the Ameri can nation will feel through several ages the warmth of his surviving blood and genius. In the next place Blaine has demon strated that a man can be great without success. This proposition has a strange sound in American ears. It is against the teaching of the schools. Our doc triuo is that only the man who is elected is anything; the other is nothing. Blaine has shown that the man who is not elected is greater than the other. As a matter of fact, few examples in tho his tory of the world have been more inspir iting than that of Blaine in tho last period of his life. Note the esteem in which be is held by his countrymen. Mark well bis reputation in foreign lands. In England, in France, in Ger many, Italy, Russia, to the ends of civ ilization, it was Blaine who was known and honored. After Grant he istheonly j recent American who law been thus dis tinguished with cosmojwditan fame. Let him he known as the great secretary and honored as the man who survived and flourished ami won tho esteem of the world without the occupancy of the White House. Blaine was a civilian. Though he had the instincts of battle, it was the battle of mind, the contention of thought, in which he delighted. Though he was an intense patriot, it is doubtful whether he had pleasure in the struggle of the bat | tlefield and the clamor of arms. Though j Ills activities belonged to the age which was shaken by the greatest war of mod ern times, he participated in it only to | tho extent of considering its sequences and deducing from it its best results for his country. Blaine was not only American; he was pan-American. Nothing less than all Americanism could satisfy him or even appease his purpose and ambition He was also pan-republican. His congress j of American republics, if not a brilliant success, was at least reputable. Tho project issued from his fecundity and was his. It was the potential beginning of an American state system which might stand in likeness and counterpoise of that European state system which has been the woof of political hiHtory since the treaty of Westphalia. Blaine would unify the policies and methods of the American republics, and they should all flourish because the great republic tiour | islies and is in the lead. More practical j still was the movement for intercontinen j tal railways. Hudson's bay and Argentina ( should shake hands. Chicago and Buenos Ayres should greet. Boston should re j ceive by rail from tho Grand Cliaco. Tho | bull hides of the pampas should be hung 1 up green in the tanneries of Buffalo, and j tho Fuogians should wear new prints from the mills of Providence. The | scheme was like the man. It pleased his . genius, and by and by it shall be trans muted from imagination and vision into reality. Blaine is gone. No more shall this striking figure attract the gaze of two hemispheres. But his memory shall sur vive long, and his influence will stream out far into the coming century. In the shadows of the last hours we have sin cere grief for his going. Would that he might iiave lived longerl There are tears of true affection at the open door of bis tomb. Blnifte outlived nearly all of his great contemporaries. He saw every Union general of the first rank and every Con federate general of the first rank, with the single exception of Longstreet, go down to the grave. He survived nearly all of his competitors in civil life. Slier- BLAINE'S BIRTHPLACE. man outlived him, but did not reach his stature or his fame. He attained the grand climacteric and went at the age of sixty-three. He had an unclouded sun set. His last days were spent within sight of the Capitol. Thither his gaze will be turned no more. Against him all avenues of earthly hope and ambition are closed forever, but he went away with the radiance of a great life linger ing around his couch. An imperishable chaplet was held above his white and honored head and tho weeping genius of his country hid for awhile her face when his spirit issued forth into tho shadows. JOHN CLARK RIDPATH. V