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Henry Clay's
Eulogy (a very famous statesman and candidate for presidency yet never got
it) as given by Abraham Lincoln
Henry
Clay, the Kentucky politician whom Lincoln called his "beau ideal of a
statesman," died on June 29, 1852. The same day, Lincoln appointed a
committee in Springfield, Illinois, to arrange a public tribute. On July
6, while stores were closed and business was suspended, the Rev. Charles
Dresser read the service for the dead at the Episcopal church. The
procession continued to the statehouse, where Lincoln delivered this
eulogy in the Hall of Representatives.
This eulogy emphasizes Clay's devotion to liberty and praises him as a man
"the times have demanded." In an ironic twist, Lincoln concludes, "Let us
strive to deserve, as far as mortals may, the continued care of Divine
Providence, trusting that in future emergencies, He will not fail to
provide us the instruments of safety and security."
On the fourth day of July, 1776, the people of a few feeble and oppressed
colonies of Great Britain, inhabiting a portion of the Atlantic coast of
North America, publicly declared their national independence, and made
their appeal to the justice of their cause, and to the God of battles, for
the maintainance of that declaration. That people were few in numbers, and
without resources, save only their own wise heads and stout hearts. Within
the first year of that declared independence, and while its maintainance
was yet problematical -- while the bloody struggle between those resolute
rebels, and their haughty would-be-masters, was still waging, of
undistinguished parents, and in an obscure district of one of those
colonies, Henry Clay was born. The infant nation, and the infant child
began the race of life together. For three quarters of a century they have
travelled hand in hand. They have been companions ever. The nation has
passed its perils, and is free, prosperous, and powerful. The child has
reached his manhood, his middle age, his old age, and is dead. In all that
has concerned the nation the man ever sympathised; and now the nation
mourns for the man.
The day after his death, one of the public Journals, opposed to him
politically, held the following pathetic and beautiful language, which I
adopt, partly because such high and exclusive eulogy, originating with a
political friend, might offend good taste, but chiefly, because I could
not, in any language of my own, so well express my thoughts--
"Alas! who can realize that Henry Clay is dead! Who can realize that never
again that majestic form shall rise in the council-chambers of his country
to beat back the storms of anarchy which may threaten, or pour the oil of
peace upon the troubled billows as they rage and menace around? Who can
realize, that the workings of that mighty mind have ceased -- that the
throbbings of that gallant heart are stilled -- that the mighty sweep of
that graceful arm will be felt no more, and the magic of that eloquent
tongue, which spake as spake no other tongue besides, is hushed -- hushed
forever! Who can realize that freedom's champion -- the champion of a
civilized world, and of all tongues and kindreds and people, has indeed
fallen! Alas, in those dark hours, which, as they come in the history of
all nations, must come in ours -- those hours of peril and dread which our
land has experienced, and which she may be called to experience again --
to whom now may her people look up for that counsel and advice, which only
wisdom and experience and patriotism can give, and which only the
undoubting confidence of a nation will receive? Perchance, in the whole
circle of the great and gifted of our land, there remains but one on whose
shoulders the mighty mantle of the departed statesman may fall -- one,
while we now write, is doubtless pouring his tears over the bier of his
brother and his friend -- brother, friend ever, yet in political
sentiment, as far apart as party could make them. Ah, it is at times like
these, that the petty distinctions of mere party disappear. We see only
the great, the grand, the noble features of the departed statesman; and we
do not even beg permission to bow at his feet and mingle our tears with
those who have ever been his political adherents -- we do [not?] beg this
permission -- we claim it as a right, though we feel it as a privilege.
Henry Clay belonged to his country -- to the world, mere party cannot
claim men like him. His career has been national -- his fame has filled
the earth -- his memory will endure to `the last syllable of recorded
time.'
"Henry Clay is dead! -- He breathed his last on yesterday at twenty
minutes after eleven, in his chamber at Washington. To those who followed
his lead in public affairs, it more appropriately belongs to pronounce his
eulogy, and pay specific honors to the memory of the illustrious dead --
but all Americans may show the grief which his death inspires, for, his
character and fame are national property. As on a question of liberty, he
knew no North, no South, no East, no West, but only the Union, which held
them all in its sacred circle, so now his countrymen will know no grief,
that is not as wide-spread as the bounds of the confederacy. The career of
Henry Clay was a public career. From his youth he has been devoted to the
public service, at a period too, in the world's history justly regarded as
a remarkable era in human affairs. He witnessed in the beginning the
throes of the French Revolution. He saw the rise and fall of Napoleon. He
was called upon to legislate for America, and direct her policy when all
Europe was the battle-field of contending dynasties, and when the struggle
for supremacy imperilled the rights of all neutral nations. His voice,
spoke war and peace in the contest with Great Britain.
"When Greece rose against the Turks and struck for liberty, his name was
mingled with the battle-cry of freedom. When South America threw off the
thraldom of Spain, his speeches were read at the head of her armies by
Bolivar. His name has been, and will continue to be, hallowed in two
hemispheres, for it is--
`One of the few the immortal names That were not born to die,' "To the
ardent patriot and profound statesman, he added a quality possessed by few
of the gifted on earth. His eloquence has not been surpassed. In the
effective power to move the heart of man, Clay was without an equal, and
the heaven born endowment, in the spirit of its origin, has been most
conspicuously exhibited against intestine feud. On at least three
important occasions, he has quelled our civil commotions, by a power and
influence, which belonged to no other statesman of his age and times. And
in our last internal discord, when this Union trembled to its center -- in
old age, he left the shades of private life and gave the death blow to
fraternal strife, with the vigor of his earlier years in a series of
Senatorial efforts, which in themselves would bring immortality, by
challenging comparison with the efforts of any statesman in any age. He
exorcised the demon which possessed the body politic, and gave peace to a
distracted land. Alas! the achievement cost him his life! He sank day by
day to the tomb -- his pale, but noble brow, bound with a triple wreath,
put there by a grateful country. May his ashes rest in peace, while his
spirit goes to take its station among the great and good men who preceded
him!"
While it is customary, and proper, upon occasions like the present, to
give a brief sketch of the life of the deceased, in the case of Mr. Clay,
it is less necessary than most others; for his biography has been written
and re-written, and read, and re-read, for the last twenty-five years; so
that, with the exception of a few of the latest incidents of his life, all
is as well known, as it can be. The short sketch which I give is,
therefore merely to maintain the connection of this discourse.
Henry Clay was born on the 12th of April 1777, in Hanover County,
Virginia. Of his father, who died in the fourth or fifth year of Henry's
age, little seems to be known, except that he was a respectable man, and a
preacher of the baptist persuasion. Mr. Clay's education, to the end of
his life, was comparatively limited. I say "to the end of his life,"
because I have understood that, from time to time, he added something to
his education during the greater part of his whole life. Mr. Clay's lack
of a more perfect early education, however it may be regretted generally,
teaches at least one profitable lesson; it teaches that in this country,
one can scarcely be so poor, but that, if he will, he can acquire
sufficient education to get through the world respectably. In his
twenty-third year Mr. Clay was licenced to practice law, and emigrated to
Lexington, Kentucky. Here he commenced and continued the practice till the
year 1803, when he was first elected to the Kentucky Legislature. By
successive elections he was continued in the Legislature till the latter
part of 1806, when he was elected to fill a vacancy, of a single session,
in the United States Senate. In 1807 he was again elected to the Kentucky
House of Representatives, and by that body, chosen its Speaker. In 1808 he
was re-elected to the same body. In 1809 he was again chosen to fill a
vacancy of two years in the United States Senate. In 1811 he was elected
to the United States House of Representatives, and on the first day of
taking his seat in that body, he was chosen its speaker. In 1813 he was
again elected Speaker. Early in 1814, being the period of our last British
war, Mr. Clay was sent as commissioner, with others, to negotiate a treaty
of peace, which treaty was concluded in the latter part of the same year.
On his return from Europe he was again elected to the lower branch of
Congress, and on taking his seat in December 1815 was called to his old
post -- the speaker's chair, a position in which he was retained by
successive elections, with one brief intermission, till the inauguration
of John Q. Adams in March 1825. He was then appointed Secretary of State,
and occupied that important station till the inauguration of Gen. Jackson
in March 1829. After this he returned to Kentucky, resumed the practice of
the law, and continued it till the Autumn of 1831, when he was by the
legislature of Kentucky, again placed in the United States Senate. By a
re-election he continued in the Senate till he resigned his seat, and
retired, in March 1848. In December 1849 he again took his seat in the
Senate, which he again resigned only a few months before his death.
By the foregoing it is perceived that the period from the beginning of Mr.
Clay's official life, in 1803, to the end of it in 1852, is but one year
short of half a century; and that the sum of all the intervals in it, will
not amount to ten years. But mere duration of time in office, constitutes
the smallest part of Mr. Clay's history. Throughout that long period, he
has constantly been the most loved, and most implicitly followed by
friends, and the most dreaded by opponents, of all living American
politicians. In all the great questions which have agitated the country,
and particularly in those great and fearful crises, the Missouri question
-- the Nullification question, and the late slavery question, as connected
with the newly acquired territory, involving and endangering the stability
of the Union, his has been the leading and most conspicuous part. In 1824
he was first a candidate for the Presidency, and was defeated; and,
although he was successively defeated for the same office in 1832 and in
1844, there has never been a moment since 1824 till after 1848 when a very
large portion of the American people did not cling to him with an
enthusiastic hope and purpose of still elevating him to the Presidency.
With other men, to be defeated, was to be forgotten; but to him, defeat
was but a trifling incident, neither changing him, or the world's estimate
of him. Even those of both political parties who have been preferred to
him for the highest office, have run far briefer courses than he, and left
him, still shining high in the heavens of the political world. Jackson,
Van Buren, Harrison, Polk, and Taylor, all rose after, and set long before
him. The spell -- the long enduring spell -- with which the souls of men
were bound to him, is a miracle. Who can compass it? It is probably true
he owed his pre-eminence to no one quality, but to a fortunate combination
of several. He was surpassingly eloquent; but many eloquent men fail
utterly; and they are not, as a class, generally successful. His judgment
was excellent; but many men of good judgment, live and die unnoticed. His
will was indomitable; but this quality often secures to its owner nothing
better than a character for useless obstinacy. These then were Mr. Clay's
leading qualities. No one of them is very uncommon; but all taken together
are rarely combined in a single individual; and this is probably the
reason why such men as Henry Clay are so rare in the world.
Mr. Clay's eloquence did not consist, as many fine specimens of eloquence
does [do], of types and figures -- of antithesis, and elegant arrangement
of words and sentences; but rather of that deeply earnest and impassioned
tone, and manner, which can proceed only from great sincerity and a
thorough conviction, in the speaker of the justice and importance of his
cause. This it is, that truly touches the chords of sympathy; and those
who heard Mr. Clay never failed to be moved by it, or ever afterwards,
forgot the impression. All his efforts were made for practical effect. He
never spoke merely to be heard. He never delivered a Fourth of July
oration, or an eulogy on an occasion like this. As a politician or
statesman, no one was so habitually careful to avoid all sectional ground.
Whatever he did, he did for the whole country. In the construction of his
measures he ever carefully surveyed every part of the field, and duly
weighed every conflicting interest. Feeling, as he did, and as the truth
surely is, that the world's best hope depended on the continued Union of
these States, he was ever jealous of, and watchful for, whatever might
have the slightest tendency to separate them.
Mr. Clay's predominant sentiment, from first to last, was a deep devotion
to the cause of human liberty -- a strong sympathy with the oppressed
everywhere, and an ardent wish for their elevation. With him, this was a
primary and all controlling passion. Subsidiary to this was the conduct of
his whole life. He loved his country partly because it was his own
country, but mostly because it was a free country; and he burned with a
zeal for its advancement, prosperity and glory, because he saw in such,
the advancement, prosperity and glory, of human liberty, human right and
human nature. He desired the prosperity of his countrymen partly because
they were his countrymen, but chiefly to show to the world that freemen
could be prosperous.
That his views and measures were always the wisest, needs not to be
affirmed; nor should it be, on this occasion, where so many, thinking
differently, join in doing honor to his memory. A free people, in times of
peace and quiet -- when pressed by no common danger -- naturally divide
into parties. At such times the man who is of neither party, is not --
cannot be, of any consequence. Mr. Clay, therefore, was of a party. Taking
a prominent part, as he did, in all the great political questions of his
country for the last half century, the wisdom of his course on many, is
doubted and denied by a large portion of his countrymen; and of such it is
not now proper to speak particularly. But there are many others, about his
course upon which, there is little or no disagreement amongst intelligent
and patriotic Americans. Of these last are the War of 1812, the Missouri
question, Nullification, and the now recent compromise measures. In 1812
Mr. Clay, though not unknown, was still a young man. Whether we should go
to war with Great Britain, being the question of the day, a minority
opposed the declaration of war by Congress, while the majority, though
apparently inclining to war, had, for years, wavered, and hesitated to act
decisively. Meanwhile British aggressions multiplied, and grew more daring
and aggravated. By Mr. Clay, more than any other man, the struggle was
brought to a decision in Congress. The question, being now fully before
congress, came up, in a variety of ways, in rapid succession, on most of
which occasions Mr. Clay spoke. Adding to all the logic, of which the
subject was susceptible, that noble inspiration, which came to him as it
came to no other, he aroused, and nerved, and inspired his friends, and
confounded and bore-down all opposition. Several of his speeches, on these
occasions, were reported, and are still extant; but the best of these all
never was. During its delivery the reporters forgot their vocations,
dropped their pens, and sat enchanted from near the beginning to quite the
close. The speech now lives only in the memory of a few old men; and the
enthusiasm with which they cherish their recollection of it is absolutely
astonishing. The precise language of this speech we shall never know; but
we do know -- we cannot help knowing -- that, with deep pathos, it pleaded
the cause of the injured sailor -- that it invoked the genius of the
revolution -- that it apostrophised the names of Otis, of Henry and of
Washington -- that it appealed to the interest, the pride, the honor and
the glory of the nation -- that it shamed and taunted the timidity of
friends -- that it scorned, and scouted, and withered the temerity of
domestic foes -- that it bearded and defied the British Lion -- and
rising, and swelling, and maddening in its course, it sounded the onset,
till the charge, the shock, the steady struggle, and the glorious victory,
all passed in vivid review before the entranced hearers.
Important and exciting as was the war question, of 1812, it never so
alarmed the sagacious statesmen of the country for the safety of the
republic, as afterwards did the Missouri question. This sprang from that
unfortunate source of discord -- negro slavery. When our Federal
Constitution was adopted, we owned no territory beyond the limits or
ownership of the States, except the territory North-West of the River
Ohio, and east of the Mississippi. What has since been formed into the
States of Maine, Kentucky, and Tennessee, was, I believe, within the
limits of or owned by Massachusetts, Virginia, and North Carolina. As to
the North Western Territory, provision had been made, even before the
adoption of the Constitution, that slavery should never go there. On the
admission of the States into the Union carved from the territory we owned
before the constitution, no question -- or at most, no considerable
question -- arose about slavery -- those which were within the limits of
or owned by the old states, following, respectively, the condition of the
parent state, and those within the North West territory, following the
previously made provision. But in 1803 we purchased Louisiana of the
French; and it included with much more, what has since been formed into
the State of Missouri. With regard to it, nothing had been done to
forestall the question of slavery. When, therefore, in 1819, Missouri,
having formed a State constitution, without excluding slavery, and with
slavery already actually existing within its limits, knocked at the door
of the Union for admission, almost the entire representation of the
non-slave-holding states, objected. A fearful and angry struggle instantly
followed. This alarmed thinking men, more than any previous question,
because, unlike all the former, it divided the country by geographical
lines. Other questions had their opposing partizans in all localities of
the country and in almost every family; so that no division of the Union
could follow such, without a separation of friends, to quite as great an
extent, as that of opponents. Not so with the Missouri question. On this a
geographical line could be traced which, in the main, would separate
opponents only. This was the danger. Mr. Jefferson, then in retirement,
wrote:
"I had for a long time ceased to read newspapers, or to pay any attention
to public affairs, confident they were in good hands, and content to be a
passenger in our bark to the shore from which I am not distant. But this
momentous question, like a fire bell in the night, awakened, and filled me
with terror. I considered it at once as the knell of the Union. It is
hushed, indeed, for the moment. But this is a reprieve only, not a final
sentence. A geographical line, co-inciding with a marked principle, moral
and political, once conceived, and held up to the angry passions of men,
will never be obliterated; and every irritation will mark it deeper and
deeper. I can say, with conscious truth, that there is not a man on earth
who would sacrifice more than I would to relieve us from this heavy
reproach, in any practicable way. The cession of that kind of property,
for so it is misnamed, is a bagatelle which would not cost me a second
thought, if, in that way, a general emancipation, and expatriation could
be effected; and, gradually, and with due sacrifices I think it might be.
But as it is, we have the wolf by the ears and we can neither hold him,
nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and self-preservation in
the other."
Mr. Clay was in congress, and, perceiving the danger, at once engaged his
whole energies to avert it. It began, as I have said, in 1819; and it did
not terminate till 1821. Missouri would not yield the point; and congress
-- that is, a majority in congress -- by repeated votes, showed a
determination to not admit the state unless it should yield. After several
failures, and great labor on the part of Mr. Clay to so present the
question that a majority could consent to the admission, it was, by a
vote, rejected, and as all seemed to think, finally. A sullen gloom hung
over the nation. All felt that the rejection of Missouri, was equivalent
to a dissolution of the Union, because those states which already had,
what Missouri was rejected for refusing to relinquish, would go with
Missouri. All deprecated and deplored this, but none saw how to avert it.
For the judgment of Members to be convinced of the necessity of yielding,
was not the whole difficulty; each had a constituency to meet, and to
answer to. Mr. Clay, though worn down, and exhausted, was appealed to by
members, to renew his efforts at compromise. He did so, and by some
judicious modifications of his plan, coupled with laborious efforts with
individual members, and his own over-mastering eloquence upon the floor,
he finally secured the admission of the State. Brightly, and captivating
as it had previously shown, it was now perceived that his great eloquence,
was a mere embellishment, or, at most, but a helping hand to his inventive
genius, and his devotion to his country in the day of her extreme peril.
After the settlement of the Missouri question, although a portion of the
American people have differed with Mr. Clay, and a majority even, appear
generally to have been opposed to him on questions of ordinary
administration, he seems constantly to have been regarded by all, as the
man for a crisis. Accordingly, in the days of Nullification, and more
recently in the re-appearance of the slavery question, connected with our
territory newly acquired of Mexico, the task of devising a mode of
adjustment, seems to have been cast upon Mr. Clay, by common consent --
and his performance of the task, in each case, was little else than, a
literal fulfilment of the public expectation.
Mr. Clay's efforts in behalf of the South Americans, and afterwards, in
behalf of the Greeks, in the times of their respective struggles for civil
liberty are among the finest on record, upon the noblest of all themes;
and bear ample corroboration of what I have said was his ruling passion --
a love of liberty and right, unselfishly, and for their own sakes.
Having been led to allude to domestic slavery so frequently already, I am
unwilling to close without referring more particularly to Mr. Clay's views
and conduct in regard to it. He ever was on principle and in feeling,
opposed to slavery. The very earliest, and one of the latest public
efforts of his life, separated by a period of more than fifty years, were
both made in favor of gradual emancipation of the slaves in Kentucky. He
did not perceive, that on a question of human right, the negroes were to
be excepted from the human race. And yet Mr. Clay was the owner of slaves.
Cast into life where slavery was already widely spread and deeply seated,
he did not perceive, as I think no wise man has perceived, how it could be
at once eradicated, without producing a greater evil, even to the cause of
human liberty itself. His feeling and his judgment, therefore, ever led
him to oppose both extremes of opinion on the subject. Those who would
shiver into fragments the Union of these States; tear to tatters its now
venerated constitution; and even burn the last copy of the Bible, rather
than slavery should continue a single hour, together with all their more
halting sympathisers, have received, and are receiving their just
execration; and the name, and opinions, and influence of Mr. Clay, are
fully, and, as I trust, effectually and enduringly, arrayed against them.
But I would also, if I could, array his name, opinions, and influence
against the opposite extreme -- against a few, but an increasing number of
men, who, for the sake of perpetuating slavery, are beginning to assail
and to ridicule the white man's charter of freedom -- the declaration that
"all men are created free and equal." So far as I have learned, the first
American, of any note, to do or attempt this, was the late John C.
Calhoun; and if I mistake not, it soon after found its way into some of
the messages of the Governors of South Carolina. We, however, look for,
and are not much shocked by, political eccentricities and heresies in
South Carolina. But, only last year, I saw with astonishment, what
purported to be a letter of a very distinguished and influential clergyman
of Virginia, copied, with apparent approbation, into a St. Louis
newspaper, containing the following, to me, very extraordinary language--
"I am fully aware that there is a text in some Bibles that is not in mine.
Professional abolitionists have made more use of it, than of any passage
in the Bible. It came, however, as I trace it, from Saint Voltaire, and
was baptized by Thomas Jefferson, and since almost universally regarded as
canonical authority, 'All men are born free and equal.'
"This is a genuine coin in the political currency of our generation. I am
sorry to say that I have never seen two men of whom it is true. But I must
admit I never saw the Siamese twins, and therefore will not dogmatically
say that no man ever saw a proof of this sage aphorism."
This sounds strangely in republican America. The like was not heard in the
fresher days of the Republic. Let us contrast with it the language of that
truly national man, whose life and death we now commemorate and lament. I
quote from a speech of Mr. Clay delivered before the American Colonization
Society in 1827.
"We are reproached with doing mischief by the agitation of this question.
The society goes into no household to disturb its domestic tranquility; it
addresses itself to no slaves to weaken their obligations of obedience. It
seeks to affect no man's property. It neither has the power nor the will
to affect the property of any one contrary to his consent. The execution
of its scheme would augment instead of diminishing the value of the
property left behind. The society, composed of free men, concerns itself
only with the free. Collateral consequences we are not responsible for. It
is not this society which has produced the great moral revolution which
the age exhibits. What would they, who thus reproach us, have done? If
they would repress all tendencies towards liberty, and ultimate
emancipation, they must do more than put down the benevolent efforts of
this society. They must go back to the era of our liberty and
independence, and muzzle the cannon which thunders its annual joyous
return. They must renew the slave trade with all its train of atrocities.
They must suppress the workings of British philanthropy, seeking to
meliorate the condition of the unfortunate West Indian slave. They must
arrest the career of South American deliverance from thraldom. They must
blow out the moral lights around us, and extinguish that greatest torch of
all which America presents to a benighted world -- pointing the way to
their rights, their liberties, and their happiness. And when they have
achieved all those purposes their work will be yet incomplete. They must
penetrate the human soul, and eradicate the light of reason, and the love
of liberty. Then, and not till then, when universal darkness and despair
prevail, can you perpetuate slavery, and repress all sympathy, and all
humane, and benevolent efforts among free men, in behalf of the unhappy
portion of our race doomed to bondage."
The American Colonization Society was organized in 1816. Mr. Clay, though
not its projector, was one of its earliest members; and he died, as for
the many preceding years he had been, its President. It was one of the
most cherished objects of his direct care and consideration; and the
association of his name with it has probably been its very greatest
collateral support. He considered it no demerit in the society, that it
tended to relieve slave-holders from the troublesome presence of the free
negroes; but this was far from being its whole merit in his estimation. In
the same speech from which I have quoted he says: "There is a moral
fitness in the idea of returning to Africa her children, whose ancestors
have been torn from her by the ruthless hand of fraud and violence.
Transplanted in a foreign land, they will carry back to their native soil
the rich fruits of religion, civilization, law and liberty. May it not be
one of the great designs of the Ruler of the universe, (whose ways are
often inscrutable by short-sighted mortals,) thus to transform an original
crime, into a signal blessing to that most unfortunate portion of the
globe?" This suggestion of the possible ultimate redemption of the African
race and African continent, was made twenty-five years ago. Every
succeeding year has added strength to the hope of its realization. May it
indeed be realized! Pharaoh's country was cursed with plagues, and his
hosts were drowned in the Red Sea for striving to retain a captive people
who had already served them more than four hundred years. May like
disasters never befall us! If as the friends of colonization hope, the
present and coming generations of our countrymen shall by any means,
succeed in freeing our land from the dangerous presence of slavery; and,
at the same time, in restoring a captive people to their long-lost
father-land, with bright prospects for the future; and this too, so
gradually, that neither races nor individuals shall have suffered by the
change, it will indeed be a glorious consummation. And if, to such a
consummation, the efforts of Mr. Clay shall have contributed, it will be
what he most ardently wished, and none of his labors will have been more
valuable to his country and his kind.
But Henry Clay is dead. His long and eventful life is closed. Our country
is prosperous and powerful; but could it have been quite all it has been,
and is, and is to be, without Henry Clay? Such a man the times have
demanded, and such, in the providence of God was given us. But he is gone.
Let us strive to deserve, as far as mortals may, the continued care of
Divine Providence, trusting that, in future national emergencies, He will
not fail to provide us the instruments of safety and security.
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