SPEECH OF RICHARD DOUGLAS, ESQ., OF CHILLICOTHE. DELIVERED BEFORE THE WHIG CONVENTION, HELD IN COLUMBUS, FEBRUARY 22 AND 23, 1836. Richard Douglas, who describes himself in the letter here- with, as "in birth a Yankee, in habit a Sailor, in adoption a |
|
Buckeye, in profession an Old Court- Circuitizer, in occasional circum- stance, a Blovian, in principal a Whig, etc." was born in New London, Con- necticut, September 10th, 1785. From early youth, like many other New London boys, he followed the sea and travelled much to the Greenland seas as a whaler and to other parts. He ultimately studied law, partly in the "Crow's-nest," and in 1808, having re- ceived from his father, Captain Richard Douglas of the Continental Army, a warrant for land in the Western Reserve, he came West, lo- cated the warrant in what is now |
Huron County, and started to join his brother, a physician, who had located in Nashville. But while stopping in Chillicothe he learned that his brother had fallen a victim to an epidemic of cholera; and being attracted by the possibilities of the new town in the Scioto Valley, he remained in Chillicothe. He was soon after admitted to the bar and successfully pursued the practice of law until his death in February, 1852. He served under Colonel McArthur in the Detroit Cam- paign in 1812; he served in the Legislature of Ohio and was once nominated for Congress, but withdrew his candidacy in favor of General McArthur. He became prominent as a lawyer and as a public speaker throughout Southern Ohio. He had from his youth cultivated a good taste for books, history, poetry and the classics and had a most retentive mind; so that one biography says of him that if any one would repeat any line of (381) |
382 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
Paradise Lost, Butler's Hudibras, Tam
O'Shanter, or other
long poem of which Mr. Douglas was fond,
he could quote
the following line.
In stature Mr. Douglas resembled his
relative, Stephen A.
Douglas, "the little giant,"
being below medium height and in
his latter years of rather portly
outline. He was a man of great
industry, integrity, earnestness of
purpose and strength of char-
acter. He was an active and eloquent
advocate of Temperance.
What is said to be the first Episcopal
Parish in the Northwest
Territory, St. Paul's in Chillicothe,
was organized in his library.
He had a rich fund of humor and a ready
wit. In 1840 he
held a large crowd waiting long in the
rain for the arrival of
General Harrison by hitting off the
characteristics of the men
before him in impromptu doggerel. Thomas
Ewing in his auto-
biography published in the QUARTERLY
last January, in giving
some account of the lawyers "on
circuit" in the early days of
Ohio's history, speaks of "Dick
Douglas, our wit par excellence".
The following speech delivered before
the great Whig Con-
vention held in Columbus on February
22-3, 1836, with the ac-
companying letter from Mr. Douglas to
the Committee who re-
quested it for publication, tells its
own story.-EDITOR.
CORRESPONDENCE.
Columbus, Ohio, February 23d, 1836.
DEAR SIR-A large number of the members
of the Conven-
tion having expressed a desire that your
very excellent remarks,
made before the Convention, should be
published; the under-
signed are requested to solicit that you
will have the goodness
to furnish a copy thereof for
publication.
We have the honor to be, very
respectfully,
Your friends and obedient servants,
A. H. CAFFEE, J. M. BELL, IRA BELKNAP,
T. L. PEIRCE,
A. PIER, HORTON J. HOWARD, R. C.
SCHENCK,
GEO. SANDERSON, EDWARD W. DAVIES, JOHN B.
REED, J. N. WILSON, JAMES R. STANBERY, JOHN
CREED, JOHN G. CAMP, L. D. CAMPBELL, W. B.
CALDWELL.
RICHARD DOUGLAS, ESQ.
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothc. 383
Columbus, February 23d, 1836.
GENTLEMEN-When a thousand voices rose
and reverb'd
from Pit, Box, Stage and Gallery-"A
Speech from Douglas"-
"we can't adjourn till we hear
from Old Dick;" I was stand-
ing like the "Catastrophe of the
old comedy," cap in hand and
"half heel'd," ready to escape
through the scenes to the back-
door of the play-house, upon an
adjournment already announc'd.
Still, Gentlemen, to be honest with you,
I could not then, nor
can I now, exclaim with Iago-"Aha,
I like not that:"-For
although, in birth a Yankee-in habit, a
Sailor-in adoption, a
Buckeye-in profession, an
Old-Court-circuitizer-in occasional
circumstance, a Blovian-in principle, a
Whig-yet in operative
politics, "I am materially all
the way from Old Kentuck." I
not only approve the great leading
precept in her own native
science, "down horse and up
stump," but with her, I go it, from
snout to tail, "the whole
hog."
I think it was Voltaire who made the
assertion, that we
North-Americans had lain hold upon the
further end of civiliza-
tion; if so, the transition from the
Forum of Rome, to the stump
of Kentucky, is not any-wise too sudden;
and no longer need
the glowing appeal of one of her ardent
sons, remain unintellig-
ible to the most fastidious literary
ear. "With my firm foot
planted upon this stump, pinion'd by
the bail-ropes of the Con-
stitution, and canopy'd by these big
walnuts, I don't vally the
rules of Aristotle and Quinctilian,
tantamount to a chaw-tobac-
co."
It is no effort at sincerity, Gentlemen,
to assure you, that
until the moment of being called on, I
had not the most dis-
tant idea of opening my mouth in this
Convention, further than
became the necessary discharge of
detailed duties; nay, Sirs,
the arrangements were otherwise, and
until "fairly stumped,"
had equal thought of uttering one of "Rumble-belly's
sax-hoor'd
gadely sarments," as what might have escaped me upon the oc-
casion. I am happy if anything was said
worthy of being en-
dured.
But, Sirs, to be called on almost
simultaneously, by verbal
and written messages from all the
districts, to furnish a copy
384 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
for the press, is paying me almost too
severe a compliment.-
Had there been some
"Chiel amang ye takin not's,
"Faith he might prent it,"
for all my letting, had he done
"the cause and me" even quarter
justice; but when told to my hither ear
by such old friends as
the Creeds, the Satterthwaites, the
Scofields, and hundreds of
the Whig party, that I ought to do it,
where is the capacity for
objection ?
If I undertake, Gentlemen, it must be
upon advice like that
of the cleanly housewife to have on
hand, in "Joe Burton,"
who, when she had washed out all his
chalk accounts upon the
pantaloon administered much comfort to
his inconsolable feel-
ings, by kindly advising him to
recollect what he could and set
down the rest to better men. I shall,
therefore, (speaking in
county court vein) at the trial upon one
plea; and that is-the
Pennsylvania liberal-of "trial upon
the merits, with leave to
add and alter"; at the same time
under the honest endeavor,
not to "travel out of the
record" further than may be justified
by the rules of good pleading; always
keeping heart under
that consoling passage of our own
Squire-law, that "nothing
shall be 'squashed' for want of
form if it contains any substance."
Gentlemen-Such as it is you shall have
it. Take it for the
design rather than the coloring. It is a
feeble off-hand tribute
to our cause; and if nothing more, may
furnish to the west a
precedent for which the files of old
Kentuck herself might
probably be searched in vain-"a
printed Stump Speech."
I am, Gentlemen, Your sincere friend,
and fellow-operator,
R. DOUGLAS,
MESSRS. A. H. CAFFEE,
J. M. BELL,
J. SATTERTHWAITE, and others.
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothc. 385
SPEECH, ETC.
After the call had subsided, Mr. Douglas
rose, and spoke
to the following effect.
Mr. President and Gentlemen-
That the eye of this most imposing
assemblage should be
so suddenly bent, and its voice so
ardently raised upon me, as
possessing the off-hand capacity to say
something worthy of
them and the occasion, fills me with a
pride of feeling to which
I am incapable of giving utterance-but I
shall attempt no pref-
ace and make no apology, Gentlemen,
other than to thank you:
-For duller must he be than the weed
upon Lethe-Wharf, and
little versed in the great matter that
appertaineth to the stump,
that could not be moved, yea, inspired,
by such a call from such
a quarter as this,
"Whose form and cause conjoin'd,
Calling to stones might make them
capable."
If ever, Sirs, there was emphatically a
voice from the
people heard in Ohio, it has been upon
this ever-to-be-remem-
bered day-a day big with various
"pomp and circumstance" to
our Country-for-
"It is her Father's natal day,
We hail it and adore."-
That sun which peered upon us on the
morning of this Conven-
tion, and at this hitherto almost
sunless season, was the sun of
Washington. It seemed to bespeak that
its genial rays were
not wholly withdrawn from his country,
and that at its going
down it did not sink in interminable
night, to rise no more for-
ever.-This Country, Mr. President, has
had sufficient trials to
test the value of its parentage-and
never was there a time
when appeals strong and often were
needed to the precepts,
counsels and legacies of the Father of
his Country more than
the present.-It has been said by an
eloquent foreigner writing
upon this nation, that its glory came in
and went out with Wash-
ington. We trust and believe not, but
rather that
Vol. XII -
25.
386 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
"Enough of that glory remains on
our sword,
To light us to victory yet."
In standing upon this stage, Sir, and
casting my eyes out upon
this unprecedented assemblage from all
parts of this beautiful
Ohio, which like the Cytherean Venus has
so lately come forth
from the deep wilderness, I am ready to
call to some "spirit
from the vasty deep" to tell me
what they have come out for to
see !-what they have come up for to do,
upon this holy day of
Washington ?-But, Sir, the spirit seems
to be already come,
and whispers me in the eloquent language
of Mrs. Barbauld-
"The spoilers are among the
works of his hands." Yea, Sir,
the tragic spirit already pervades the
theatric stage itself; and
the tender language of Chamont in
"The Orphan," of the lover
and beloved, seems in appliance to fitly
speak forth of our be-
loved Country-
"Long she flourish'd,
Grew sweet to sense and lovely to the
eye,
'Till at the last, the cruel spoiler came."
But, Sir, do we expect to parry or
repair the blows and
wounds that are being inflicted upon
this great work of Wash-
ington by the aid of tragedy, comedy,
flimsy farce, or monstrous
pantomime?-No, Sir-but still the part
that we are enacting
is essentially theatrical. We are in the
midst of the fifth act
of a great National drama in twenty-four
acts, called "The
Harrison Reformation;" the first
act of which was opened in
Pennsylvania, the second in Maryland,
third in Indiana, fourth
in New York, and fifth in Ohio-and we
intend to enact it by
what the rules of the Stagyrite, or the
powers of the Bard of
Avon himself, could not effect-I mean,
Sir, by a strict preser-
vation of the unities-we are now holding
as 'twere the mirror
up to our country.
If there be any in this extended
assembly-any dear friend
of Jackson-any chivalric and high-minded
Southron-any
full-soul'd-staunch-oak-hearted
Northman-nay, from "Sea's to
Mississippi's shore," or as the
Sailors have it, "from Casco bay
to the Straits of Magellan;" or
hear me, "land o'cakes," from
Maiden Kirk to Jonny-Groat's house-any
honest hearted poli-
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 387
tician who originally supported General
Jackson-let me ask
him and them, what were the
incontestable reasons of preference
upon which this support was given?-Will
not your full hearts
answer-"we supported him for his
straight-forward, noble, and
high-minded bearing-as possessing more
of the Roman than
any man living-for the honest and
unsuspecting qualities of his
heart-one that possibly might 'be dup'd,
but never dar'd'-
one who had fought and triumph'd for us
in the trying hour-
yea, the old Anchises who bore the Eneas
of his Country through
the flame and round about Troy-wall-the
Man, (as we be-
lieved) of a sound head and honest
heart.-That such a man
would honestly and fearlessly administer
the Government we
had no doubt. With these views and
feelings we rush'd to the
polls and gave him our heart-felt
support."-Here let me pause,
my honest friends, long enough to ask
you what one "Martin
Van-Buren," of a certain place
called Kinderhook, was about
while you were making these honest
determinations ?-Why,
Sirs, turn to the columns of his
hundred-ey'd Argus; there you'll
see his productions-he is aptly called
the Magician, and you'll
see him wiping his magic glasses for
fresh observations: for in
true Astrologer style,
"He'd search a planet's house to
know,
Who bought or sold a vote below;
Inquire of Venus or the Moon,
Who'd take the pap from silver
spoon!"
And as to the paragraphs of his own
paper, let us have them-
they will show what his ideas of Jackson
were at this time.-
I quote from memory, but am quite sure
that I am right in sub-
stance:-"It is heresy in the
Republican party to attempt to
favor the pretensions of
Jackson."-Again, "This Mister Jack-
son has no feelings in common with the
Republican party."-
And again, "It is impudence in
Jackson to attempt to impose
himself upon the Republican party as
their candidate."-And
still again, "He affects to say
that he is no party-man. Who
can tell what he is, unless an abductor,
gambler, and horse-
racer?"-All this was said by him
who when his ends were
served declared to the world that "it
was glory enough for one
388 Ohio
Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
man to have served under such a pure
Republican chief."-
No hypocrisy here, I suppose; all
sincerity-no abuse, Hal-
no abuse, Ned-all made up boys.-We of
this Convention, Mr.
President, have nominated our own
Citizen, General William
Henry Harrison, as a more suitable
person for President of the
United States than this Mr. Martin Van
Buren. We offer him
to our Country-to Jackson men-and to
original ones in par-
ticular. The question to all honest men
is one of mere prefer-
ence: let it be honestly given-but of
both these candidates anon.
Among the ideas, Mr. President, that are
being developed
by the working of our popular
institutions, that of love of coun-
try and country's friends is
sufficiently prominent; and the dan-
ger now is, that the former notion of
the ingratitude of Repub-
lics has oscillated to the opposite
extreme.-It is that danger
which Carnot felt and uttered on the
question of making Bona-
parte Consul for life-that we are too
ready to reward the de-
fenders and supporters of our liberties,
by the surrender of
those liberties themselves. The historic
world is peopled with
a set of beings who have ever stood
ready to make a mercenary,
selfish appropriation of that amount of
reputation which prop-
erly belongs to a country. In the
quality and apt denomina-
tion of pimps, snails, parasites, or
favorites, they have ever hov-
ered about the path, bed, and Court of
Princes, and have we
not cause now to say with equal truth of
American Presidents?
The Edwards had their Gavestons and
Spencers-the first
James his Carrs and Villiers-the
beautiful Mary her Rizzio-
the great Catherine her Orloffs and
Potemkins-and him of
Orleans and The horse-shoe, his Hills,
Kendalls, Pearces and
Cambrelengs. They are a set of beings
that cannot show or be
shown in the regular progressive order
of things-in such a
state they have no room for
action-possessing no intrinsic
value themselves, they can manifest none
to the public. Junius
told Wilkes that such belonged to the
bottom of the pool, and
there remained during the stillness of
the waters; it was only
the concussion above that brought them
up, and kept them upon
the surface; when the calm came on, back
they returned to their
native mind and filth-they are the
little toads of the Windham
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 389
Boys that come down only in the hard
storm-the fish of the old
Father Croswell, that the Devil always
catches in troubled waters.
With a mean, selfish, lick-spittle
fondling, they are ever ready
to poke their Dog's-ears under the
gabardine of their Master,
and with a music called in the old
Moralities "Sneaks' noise",
to bear tales and administer to his
passions and prejudices. Each
one has a peculiar aptness to believe
himself the particular fav-
orite-the heaven-born-the highly
favoured one-and all, that
they are not only the tenants, but the
very blood of the white-
house; and bound to resent all its
injuries, not by an open,
manly resentment, but by spying,
pimping, and tale-bearing. In
religion, they appear to be all
Transmigrationalists, not only of
spirit but of body, and (before the
death) fully believe that the
old Chieftain, body, soul and all, has
entered their carcasses.
If so, much to the point are the verses
of Mr. Congreve:
"Thus Aristotle's mighty soul that
was,
Is now condemned to animate an ass,
Or in this very house for aught we know,
Is doing painful penance to some
beau;"
And the old Hero may well
exclaim-"O wretched man that I
am," &c. Not a word can be said
to the disparagement of their
course, but out it comes-"how
basely the President is slan-
dered." Stick a spade into their
dirt, and you are at once a tres-
passer upon the holy grounds of the
Hermitage. Commence
the savory operation of tanning their
Dog's-hides, and "Sneaks'
music" is up like the call of a
Boatswain's Yeoman-"Oh how
the Old Hero's back smarts!" That great historic character,
Sir John Falstaff, found precisely such
a set, not only sneaking
about the ante-chamber and ward room of
the Palace of King
Henry the Fourth, but sometimes at the
Boar's-head in East-
cheap. The good old Knight describes
them to the life. Prick
the Bull Calf, says he, in shin or
finger, and he roars out-"O
damning treason! how his Majesty
suffers"-"there goes a little
more of the royal blood," &c.
I am no "regular establish'd"
prophet myself, Mr. Presi-
dent, although there is prophetic blood
near my veins, for I had
an Aunt that is said to have died
prophesying-yet I will here
390 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
upon this stage, this fitting place for
the representation of the
future, as well as the past, venture the
prediction that if ever
General Jackson's reputation fails with
posterity, it will fail upon
the ground of his having yielded too
easy and unsuspecting a
confidence to this horde of domestic
mercenaries. His friends
cannot then-indeed, Sir, his real
friends cannot now defend
his total vacillations from himself, and
his own solemn rules
and precepts, upon any other grounds, or
place the imputation
to any other cause than their
"malign influences." They have
almost finished the work of putting out
the eyes of the old Belis-
arius, and instead of "Gloria
Ronanorum," fable may become
history in its application, "Date
Belisario obolum quern virtus
evexit, invidia dipressit." The
retreat to the Hermitage so ar-
dently desired by the spoilers, will be
the Ponte-corvo of the
chief, where (give them the spods) his
reputation may sleep with
his bones forever, unless some other
Marmontel shall arise to
bring it forth in the habiliments of
romance. The magic scissors
of Delilah, one of the blazoned gules of
their leader's coat of
arms, will hang pendant at the
Senatorial chair, until the shorn
Samson has gone down to Timnah.
Where then in his days and goings down
of the Sun,
"When pale concluding winter comes
at last,
To shut the scene:"
Where then, I say, will he seek the
consolations of those old
and tried friends, which according to
the Son of Sirach, are
the medicine of life, and balm of death?
Will he send out a
distant Macedonian cry, for the
Van-Burens and Beardsleys to
come over and help him?-or will he give
a "Grundian" call
nearer home?-Ah! says one, the veil of
that friendship is so
loosely, flimsily, and carelessly worn,
that it
"Shows its satire to a nation's
eyes."
Will the whole mass of insect matter
which has since vegetated
upon the mantle of the Regency pool,
with their green-eyed
visages, come to minister those bland
and holy consolations so
grateful to his closing hours?
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 391
"Schueig Du Hund-Das nenn'ich
mir cinen Konig,
Selig der den er im Siegerglanze
fendet"
says Van Buren.
Where are then-nay-where are now the
pure "White"
napkins that erst were at the kindly
office of wiping those patri-
archal hands, that were touched and
fain would have smelt of
the mortality of the spoilers? Where those clear "Village
Bells" that now pealed upon his ear
"in cadence sweet, then
dying all away"-that gently sounded
and warned the approach
of the Brigands?-All done, but not to
death-their candlesticks
removed, but not their lights put out.
The fiery, open and un-
suspecting Othello, still extended his
confidence to "that honest
creature" Iago, and Jackson's arms
still encircle another one-
"While softly sweet in Lydian
measures,
How Van soothes his soul to
pleasures."
under the ministering song of those holy
angels, Kendall and
Blair-and so perchance, Sir, may it be,
until fatally too late
discovered for him and his country, when
darkness shall have
become the burier of the dead, "and
the rude scene shall end"
with-"put out the light-and
then-put out the light!"
To break in upon this servile state of
favoritism, and pre-
vent its perpetuation. To protest
against the establishment of
the two great fundamental principles of
Van Burenism-viz.
1st.-That a government of the people is
to be carried on by
secret party organization; and, 2d.-That
the benefits arising
from that government do not belong to
the people at large, but
to the party, and to be distributed
exclusively among partisan
friends and favorites. To oppose with
determined firmness the
nominee of the Hockers and Ruckers-and
lastly, to bring in a
more suitable successor to Jackson, the
Penns-men of the Key-
stone State have led off and fixed their
eyes upon a citizen of
our own-WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, of Ohio.
And
who, Mr. President, is this Harrison?
"Tell us, for doubtless thou can'st
recollect,
His birth, and nature, age, and state,
and place;
Thou deign'st to reply."
392 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
Why, Sirs, he is of the city of
Benjamin, of the house of
Jefferson, and tribe of
HANCOCK.
"Look on the Declaration, thou
shalt see,
The names George Wythe, and Richard
Henry Lee."
and next, TH. JEFFERSON,
BENJ. HARRISON.
What an association!!!
Col. BENJAMIN HARRISON of Virginia, the
Father of him
who, upon this birthday of Washington,
has received our nom-
ination for Washington's chair, was a
prominent signer of the
Declaration of Independence-he was the
stoutest and the bold-
est of the old Congress of Seventy-six;
yea, essentially, the
"Greatheart" of this American
pilgrimage. It is related of him
that after he had lifted Hancock into
the Chair to sign the Dec-
laration, and the members were gathering
around the table,
he had turned his face toward
"little John Hart" of "the Jar-
seys," and was observed as if figuring with his pencil. On
Hart's wishing to know what, he was
doing, he answered, "I
was just figuring, Johnny, by a rule in
arithmetic, to find out how
much sooner this thing will be over with
me, than with you and
Han. My weight will soon do the work,
unless I break the
rope, while you two are likely to hang
dangling and kicking for
half the day."
Of the genealogy of Mr. Van Buren, some
difficulty is said
to exist by reason of the confusion in
some of the early records
of "the renowned City of
WEISSNICHTWO,"* especially those
of the two great chroniclers, Heuschreke
and Hinterschlay, and
even the authority of both these,
according to Major Noah's la-
test and best, is likely to be much
shaken by the Irish claims
lately advanced, and may raise that of
Mr. Van Buren to a royal
line, instead of that of a
"signer." "The Van
Burens, (says
Terry O'Lafferty,) were of the Irish
pissantry; I knew the fam-
ily well in Carrickfergus, and one
Bryan Van Buren was of the
ould Kings of Connaught, sure."
But leaving genealogies, let us come to
personal merit, which
it will be allowed in and by a democracy,
is what a public man
* Know-not-where.
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 393
may well call his own. Let us compare
the men themselves,
both in faculty and action. What:
"Van Buren and Harrison,
Oh the comparison ! !
Harrison-Van Buren,
'Tis past all endurin."
"Look then you on this picture-then
on this."
Q. Where was Harrison in 1791?
A. A stripling youth upon the lonely
road, like Bunyan's
Pilgrim, with pack in hand, and his face
from his own dear home,
finding out his "uncouth way"
to these lonely Western wilds, to
prepare this fair inheritance for us-now
the best hope and
heritage of ourselves and our children.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Learning the letters of his political
horn-book, accom-
plishing himself for pettifogging and
future politics, as time and
chance might determine.
Q. Where was Harrison in 1794?
A. Side and side with him whom we
famililarly call "Old
Mad Anthony," in the heat of savage
war, and gaining the first
and greatest victory over them at the
decisive battle of the Mau-
mee Rapids-and that too, upon the very
territory which Van
Buren and his satellites would now
surrender to Michigan, for
the purchase of its votes-then repairing
the preceding disasters
in the West, and relieving our frontier
settlement from the hor-
rible dread of the savage tomahawk and
scalping knife.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Preparing himself for the sublime
operation of bar-
room pettifogging, and political
juggling, about him then well
known as "old Federal
Gardenier."
Q. Where was Harrison in 1795?
A. Still at the right hand of Old Mad
Anthony, carrying
out, as secretary and assistant in
council, what he had done as
aid in action-Wayne and Harrison sitting
together at Green-
ville-securing at that great treaty what
their valor had won
in the field; being no other than this
lovely land of Ohio, in-
cluding the very ground on which we are
now assembled.
394 Ohio Arch. and Hist.
Society Publications.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Still at famous Kinderhook-clawing
off from his old
patron, and preparing for the political
cloud then appearing in
the horizon, and to set up the trade of
politics for himself.
Q
Where was Harrison from 1796 to 1810?
A. Employed in organizing the government
of the country
which his services had so greatly
contributed to secure, and build-
ing up its rising institutions-acting in
the various departments
of Military Commander, Governor, member
of Congress, and
Territorial and State
Legislator-superintending and settling the
governmental control over the Indian
tribes-establishing the
great system of subdividing the public
lands into small tracts,
for the benefit of the settlers-taking
the settlers by the hand and
leading them out upon those lands which
he had acquired by his
arms and secured by his councils, and
organizing, settling and
fixing the local military force of the
country.
Q. What
was Van Buren about during all that time?
A. Preparing and putting in operation
his political ma-
chinery, particularly that great one
called the Van Buren Roster,*
* Within this celebrated machine, the
oracles are said to have been
kept as profound secrets, and only
imparted to the initiated, and so re-
mained, until Van Buren's second quarrel
with the Clintons, when a friend
of that family, who had been unwarily
admitted, is said to have procured
a copy and published them-some of which
are as follows:
ORACLES OF VAN BURENISM.
1st. In political management, the end
justifies the means--therefore,
all is fair in politics.
2d. It is easier to operate upon the
credulity and feelings of men,
than to inform and enlighten their
judgments-therefore, our party must
be called "the Democracy," and
our opponents "the Aristocracy."
3d. "The Democracy" must
be kept together and all means whatso-
ever, must be used to secure a majority
to "the party."
4th. Whoever supports our partisans, is
a democrat, no matter what
principles he holds, or by what rules of
faith or morals he is governed.
5th.
In all novel political movements, be cautious and uncommitted,
until you are legally informed what
course "the party" has determined on,
respecting them.
6th. All political management must be by
caucus.
7th. The State must constitute one grand
Caucus, the focus at the
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 395
by which the Empire State was divided
and subdivided into dis-
tricts and hundreds, each voter
registered, and the proper means
taken for securing his vote.
Q. Where
was Harrison in 1811?
A. Again meeting and defeating the
ruthless savage upon
the battle-ground of far-famed
Tippecanoe,
"Which tells each deed his arms had
wrought,
"Upon this sacred hill,
"Where Owen, Spencer, Warrick
fought,
"In death unconquered still."+
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Organizing and keeping up the Tammany
Buck-Tail
seat of Government, and under the
constant supervision of at least twelve
of our distinguished select democrats.*
8th. Effectual means must be taken to
have every voter's name and
residence, with his political
sentiments, reported to the Grand Caucus.
9th. Never trust any measure or movement
to the fortuity of open
debate, until it has been decided upon
in caucus.
10th. In any great and sudden political
movement, continue uncom-
mitted, both within caucus and without,
until it is well ascertained what
course the majority is likely to take.
11th. A majority must be secured to
"the party," no matter by
what means, at what sacrifice, or at
what hazard.
12. No office of any kind to be given to
any one but a partisan-a
fundamental oracle.
13th. Circumstances alter
principles-therefore, talk little of party
politics openly-and be sure never to lay
down any thing as a fixed prin-
ciple.
14th. Listen to no political speeches,
and read no political docu-
ments, except those of "the
party."
15th. No political legislative measure
must be moved until the views
of the party are known upon it.
16th. Service money must be obtained and
disbursed under the forms
of law.
+ This quotation is from a poem of some
spirit called "Tippecanoe,"
composed for the occasion, by a young
man bearing a name of historical
and heroic aptness, "William
Wallace," and by him recited at the great
Harrison celebration upon the battle
ground, at the last anniversary of
the battle, November 11, 1835.
* "The Albany Regency."
396 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
party, in order to destroy and put down
that great public-spirited
statesman and patriot of the age, DeWitt
Clinton.
Q. Where was Harrison in 1812, '13, '14?
A. Guarding the North-western frontier;
and then, like
Scipio in Africa, high on the Thames of
Canada, shoulder to
shoulder with time-honored Shelby of
Kings-Mountain, and by
the victory there won putting an end to
the second war for the
independence of America, as the great
Africanus had upon a
foreign soil put an end to the second
war for the independence
of Rome.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. At Kinderhook, "ein dieupe
steudiment," whether it
would serve his own ends best to carry
out his plans for the over-
throw of Clinton, or to lay hold of the
advantages presented by
our reverses to render the war
unpopular, and thereon oppose
Mr. Madison by putting up Mr.
Clinton-and finally deciding
upon the latter.
Q. Where was Harrison in 1823-4?
A. Like Cincinnatus, at his plough,
waiting the call of his
country.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Getting up his Caucus at Washington
for the avowed
object of opposing Jackson.
Q. Where was Harrison in 1829-30?
A. Serving his country essentially for
his bread, in the mat-
ter of a small appointment to one of the
Southern Republics.
Q. Where was Van Buren at that time?
A. Introducing the real spoils system at
Washington, ac-
cording to his oracles, and insisting
upon and finally obtaining
the recall of Harrison, in order to
reward that most accomplished
electioneerer,-Free Tom Moore.
Q. What is Harrison at now, in 1835-6?
A. Occasionally at his little farm, and
acting as Clerk of
the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton
county: he being very
poor; having become so by works of
security and charity for
his friends and neighbors; his poverty
being thrown up to him
in the Post, and Times, the two leading
Van Buren papers in
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 397
New York, as rendering him too mean and
unfit for President
of the United States.
Q. What is Van Buren at, these times?
A. Chiefly at Saratoga Springs, in
season, prigging his
cherry whiskers, and adjusting his clock
stockings in the long sa-
loon, the sweetest little pink of the
Madonnas: there, with his
$3000 English Coach and full English
livery, riding "through"
hill and dale; he being able to afford
it, as he is considered very
rich,-worth $250,000, which he has made
by speculating in pol-
itics; all which he keeps very snugly,
it not being known that he
has yet been caught at the foolish
anti-democratic business of
parting with any for the works of
charity or mercy.
Mr. Douglas then turning to the Chair,
said-
Mr.
PRESIDENT:-
It is an incident not the least
felicitous in the many that do
honor to this consecrated day, that you
are in that chair. Had
there been any thing wanting to have
given a lasting habitation
and an honored name to this greatest of
political meetings, the
name of JEREMIAH MORROW were sufficient. It
seems to have
fallen to your envied lot not only to
have been of the commodity,
but the very staple and preservative
principle in the west of the
democracy of the old dispensation. And
sir, lest nothing should
be wanting to complete the figure, we
have in you a full sample
of the working of its institutions.
After passing through all the
honors, civil and political, which a
grateful people could con-
stitutionally bestow, you have returned,
and in these days and
ends of the earth, are again their
representative in the most pop-
ular branch of the State Government.
It is another of the most fortunate
incidents of the occasion,
that in the association of time, place,
and circumstance, you are
side and side with him who has this day
received the honors of
our first advancement. HARRISON and MORROW were not only
the pioneers but the patrons of the
west-with the red man of
the wilderness, be it with Tomahawk or
Calumet, has it long
since been their lot to meet-while the
gloom of these lonely
woods and wilds have been passing from
before you, and giving
place to "the pomp of towns and
garniture of fields," you have
398 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
been both engaged in building up the
civil and political institu-
tions that now exist among us-you are
now living to see and
enjoy the prosperity of the work of your
hands.
"Look now abroad, another race has
fill'd
These populous borders-wide the wood
recedes,
And towns shoot up, and fertile realms
are till'd;
The land is full of harvests and green
meads;
Streams numberless, that many a fountain
feeds;
Shine disembowered, and give to sun and
breeze
Their virgin waters; the full region
leads
New colonies forth, that toward the
western seas
Spread like a rapid flame among the
autumnal trees."
Mr. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN:-
We are called by the spoilers, the
Aristocracy. It is surely
the weakest trick in their game. What a
satire! Look at this
caliography of engraved and colored
Aristocrats, bodied forth in
this chair and its supporters? The
magic-democracy might well
envy "these lendings" of
Shetland hose, and Virginny cloth,
could they endure the sympathy of
returning them. Sir, were
our masks and pickers as ragged as those
of Jordan Plumb, who
put on his trousers over his head, and
our habiliments as coarse
as Cuddenhunk Osambriggs, of three
threads to the armful, or
Nantucket chintz of fourteen to the
stone-throw, the little ones
of the Regency-school would still gnash
teeth and wag head at
us as those to the seer of other times,
"Go up, ye bald-head
Aristocrats." But such is their
teaching; they have taken the
Hysham for it, and have the oracular
sign; it is the last para-
graph of the second oracle of Van
Burenism.
But, sir, if to obtain the allodium of
the soil as the fair
reward of your industry-to enter the
dark recesses of the for-
est, and cause it to bow before the
sturdy stroke of the wood-
man-to loose the ox from the stall and
"drive the team afield"
-to "shear your own wool and wear
it"-to raise your own
bread and eat it-to cling to the constitution
as the palladium
of our security-to assume and maintain
that self-respect which
is the characteristic effect of free
institutions-to assert that
independence of soul and person which
disdains to become the
dupes of demagogues-yea, that bends not
the supple knee in
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 399
any servile office of man-worship-nor to
any being, created
or uncreated,
"Save when to heaven you pray,
Nor even then; unless in your own
way."
If these things, I say, constitute
aristocracy, then verily,
verily, are many of you Aristocrats.
Such Aristocrats occur
all along down this fertile vale of
Scioto, one of whom this
moment fills my eye by his seat upon the
bench which I am
addressing, as one of the honored
Vice-Presidents of this meet-
ing. Yesterday we witnessed the moving,
and to-day we test-
ify the chewing effects of his
aristocracy. That being which
the day before moved about these
streets, bearing the name of
his native river and vale upon his
frontlet-which were it the
streets of ancient Thebes instead of
those of modern Colum-
bus, would have been worship'd by
prostrate thousands-who
standing upon the balance kicked the
beam at 3,375 pounds,
and upon this morning presents us 2,386
pounds neat, is one
of the samples of such aristocracy.
"If I must have conserves,"
says Christopher Sly, "let them be
conserves of beef," and if
we must have an aristrocracy, we are
content to take it either as
the cause or effect of the same
commodity.
But what is the practical commentary for
this text of
aristocracy, even upon the silk-stocking
theory of the Van-dal.
democrats ?-Let us take it up, and in
the order of the old-
school sermonizers divide it into heads
as it naturally lies.
before us, and as we may have light and
liberty. Well, my
dear friends, although a little dark in
the pit, we have light
enough to see two of the heads of our
discourse naturally
presented before us, and we have liberty
to enforce the great
lesson of practical wisdom which may be
drawn from them;
and we beg your most serious attention,
for they are illustra-
tions, which according to the climax of Doctor Ochiltree are
(next to the exordium) the most
important heads of a dis-
course. Well, say you, what heads are
they? Why, my dears,
they are the heads of the Johnsons
and the Fosters, from
away-down-Scioto, at the Big-bottom-and
what are the items
of soft-clothing which
"clepes" them aristocrats, and stamps
400 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
them as the dwellers of King's houses
?-Why, sirs, most com-
fortable clean red baize shirts, with "open
collars," friends,
without cravat or stock, save and
except a good and fertile
stock of sound principle and love of country.-If Van Buren
should get them into his three thousand
dollar English coach,
driving round Saratoga, preceded by his
out-rigger, the pre-
monitory symptom, Van might incur some
danger of hurting
his "population" with his
Regency democracy, for being
caught in company with such sprigs of
the aristocracy of Ohio.
These and hundreds more such aristocrats
have at this
inclement season, come their three, six,
and eight score miles,
up hither, to give their willing aid in
the work of this, to
them, important cause. These men are
actuated by no mer-
cenary motive. They want no offices
except those of freemen,
-no preferment except that which is the
natural result of at-
tachment to the constitution, and
obedience to the laws,-no
political desire except to see the
government administered
in its purity; and their chief dread is
to see the New York
system of the spoilers levied upon the
country. They do not
believe that the followers of Mr. Van
Buren have any sound
reasons of preference for the man, or
that he has done any
thing to merit the office of President.
For they know that
there is no delicacy pretended in the
matter,-for that the
party openly avow that they have associated
together, for the
purpose of obtaining the offices and
revenue of the country,
as the legitimate "spoils" of
political victors.-They know
this to be the practical doctrine of Mr.
Van Buren himself, and
that the essential ground of his
standing, (not popularity,) is
that he himself has placed it upon that
footing; that his
political philosophy is to make it for
the interest of men to
support him; his antithestical dilemma
is-"vote for me or
lose your bread."-Mr. Van Buren's
estimate of the sources of
human motive "hath this extent, no
more," that every man has
his price, and that the surest way to
win the heart is to untie the
purse strings. And finally, were there no other moving con-
sideration, the men of this Convention
believe that WILLIAM
HENRY HARRISON has done more for his
country, and is better
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 401
deserving the office of President of the
United States, than Mar-
tin Van Buren.
'Tis "forty year ago," since
your cabins were built, and you
"Sowed the seed, and trees did
plant"
at the places where you are now looking
upon the hither gen-
eration. Let the "Vandal
Democrats" have it if they will, that
you are really dwelling in Kings'
houses, for surely you are the
founders of this new, and great, and
noble Dynasty, "The house
of Buckeye". Tell these collarites that until manumitted and
cast loose so that they can enjoy
freedom of speech and motion,
they are not the subjects of your
house-nay, they do not be-
long to the domain by either of the
tenancies in villeinage, ap-
pendant, or in gross, and never can
obtain any copy-hold estates
from your stewards. You are now sitting
under this old vine
of your own right hand's planting, and
its draughts are yet sweet
to your taste. The chalice of the new
beverage has not yet been
commended to your lips: for with
reverence I hear you speak
forth-not from the oracles of Van
Burenism, but from the
oracles of your holy belief, "no
man having drank old wine strait-
way desireth new, for he saith, the old
is better."
"From the centre all round to the
Lake,"
From away beyond Still-water
north-about, and the Miamies on
the south-western board-from
"Possum-run" to Defiance, clear
across and far over that land where
"The lowing herds wind slowly o'er
the lea;"
you, de-fader-land, and its suburbs; the
political Israel of the
old covenant, have come up on this
pilgrimage to drive out the
money-changers, and rebuild the Temple.
"Through city, town, and village,
And wheresoe'er we rove;"
the sledge is seen lying upon the anvil,
the lapstone under the
seat, the plane among the shavings, and
he that measured the
tape has "countered" the
yard-stick for a season-nay,
Vol. XXII - 26.
402 Ohio
Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
"The special pleas and demurrers
too,"
of the poor old
"County-Court-izan," are left half written among
the rubbish of his old penknife cutten
desk-he by hard salvage
finding enough in from his old
third rate fee-notes to render him
"tick-able," and without stopping to shut his office door, (where
there is not much to drink or steal I
suppose) is off here in a
tangent-yea, from the rivers down and
"then agin" off at right
angles for quantity, the young men who
are strong in nerve and
good works, and able to overcome the
spoilers, are up hither also
-all, all in aid of this great
prospective work.-Such as these are
we-speak of us as we are-all
Aristocrats-all Democrats. Of
such an aristocracy all may exclaim with
Father Paul, esto-
perpetua.
My good friends, we are now about to
separate-you and
your children to your homes; but
"Though lands extend and mountains
rise,
and rivers roll between,"
no separation in principle-together they
remain bound as in
one common bond, and so let them remain
forever.
Mr. President and Gentlemen:
We emulate the social virtues, and feel
endeared to him that
loves us; we are taught to respect and
admire genius and talent
much for their effects, and some for the
sake of the possessor.
The political criterion with Jefferson
and Jackson once was, and
was only; "is he honest, is he
capable, is he faithful to the con-
stitution?" But of what avail are
all these now, under the dis-
cipline of the Regency-school? If the
transit of partisanism but
separate, it is as impassable as the
gulf of Dives, or the Styx of
Charon. The old time-valued quality of
Republican patriotism
seems (in Yankee phrase) to be
"warn'd out of town," as of no
avail in carrying on the government; Honesty
and Capacity, are
two old toothless hounds that are
whipp'd out, while Lady my
Brach, Favoritism, "may
stand by the fire and stink." Creatures
that were generated in the last
Saturday's rain water, under the
refraction of the golden lens, are up
like Pharaoh's frogs, hopping
about the north and east rooms of the
gray and white houses,
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 403
not only playing "wag-tail"
but wag-tongue, like Thersites in
the play, babbling among heroes; the
next day they are toasted
as pure patriots, and the third, Van.
Buren has them off upon a
greasy mission, or at home upon a fatter
contract. Sir, these
things are essentially wrong; they set a
most mischievous prec-
edent by holding out inducements for
advancement directly op-
posite to that which ought to obtain
even in the political world.
Old Reginald Scott complained of just
such a state of things
under a weak reign, when times were much
out of joint. "Albeit
(says he) the way to Bedlam lyeth on the
road to Hogsden, yet
is it there withal in the line of
promotion." But Sir, the evil
most to be dreaded from this corrupt
system of rewards and
punishments, is its effects upon the
moral perception of the coun-
try; it is a vortex that draws not only
the old, but the young
and the unwary into it. Already is the
calculation being made
by the matured practical dealer in
politics, to watch well for the
strong side, and be sure to get upon it;
it is the tide in his affairs
which must be taken at the flood: for if
"Omitted, all the voyage of his
life,
Is bound in failures and no
offices."
It is a voyage in which he must stand by
the helm and braces,
ready to tack the political ship as the
wind may veer, or haul
off the weather-bow, or under the
lee-quarter; for if she "miss-
stays,"
"Hard a-port goes the helm,
The ship's brought by the lea,
And she founders in Botany bay."
Tell the talented young man just
emerging from the Aca-
demic grove-let his grand mother tell
him in the virtuous vein
of her old Psalter, and John Rogers,
that "if he goes on to
serve," &c.-yea, let his mother
tell him in the later and smoother
precepts of an Edgworth and a Sherwood,
to follow fast in the
path of virtue and innocence and purity,
and that his country
will finally crown his successful
endeavors. Ah! mother, (re-
plies the youth) were I as fleet in the
path of virtue as Diana
herself in the chase, as innocent as the
fawn that followed fast
404 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
at her heel, and as pure as the icicle
that hung pendant at her
temple, what would it avail me in this
country should I hap-
pen to get upon the wrong side in
politics? To the American
Youth, where
"The world is all before him, where
to choose
His place of rest,"
And in a country where honors are too
willingly bestowed upon
political distinction, and no chance
except in a majority, this
argument is all controlling, and the
transition from principle to
expedience is too short and easy. And
further, sir, is its tend-
ency still downward, until the little
streamlets become impure;
the poison is commended to the lips of
the whip-top at Dow's
school in the shape of the sugar stick, and he becomes as pert
as a cricket with the "Cassian"
argument in his teeth, that all
this fuss about politics is only a
question between the ins and the
outs; that if they do grow up in the
paths of political piety, they
must get it under the preaching of that
holy man, the Vicar of
Bray; that principles must accommodate
themselves to circum-
stances, according to the 13th
oracle of Van Burenism-So wink
at the sunbeams, and laugh at old Mosey
and the prophets to-day,
and in the language of poor old John S.,
"lay upon your backs
and eat sugar" to-night, and think
about principles to-morrow.
And so you have it boys.
"Handy, spandy,
Jackey Dandy,
Loves treasury pap and sugar-de-candy;
He tastes it at the spoiler's shop,
And away he goes-hop, hop, hop."
Thus the only and indispensable
qualification for office, as
held by the old and taught to the young,
is to resign principles
and join "the party;" for
until this is done all the other qualities
of head and heart might as well be
planted in the coral grove of
the deep blue sea, as worn by the
honored possessor.
What a different state of things was
promised at the coming
in of General Jackson. From his former
invocations to Mr.
Monroe to obliterate and blot out
forever all party distinctions
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 405
and party names; to take to his
administration indiscriminately
from both parties, and that by so doing
he would gain to him-
self a name as imperishable as
"monumental marble"; that the
patronage of the government was never
more to be brought into
conflict with the freedom of elections;
all pure politicians began
to hope that the auspicious work begun
by Mr. Cary in his
Olive Branch was to be consummated in
the election of General
Jackson; and that the sun of the
political millennium had already
risen upon us, when the same basket
should contain in common
the broken fragments of the spears of
Federalism and pruning
hooks of Democracy; when
"Federal Bulls should learn to
browze
And feed with Democratic cows"
And why have not these things been
realized? Sirs, the
original friends of General Jackson have
long since seen the
cause-yea, the cause, my soul-and are
now seeing it; and my
head for it, that General Jackson will
see and proclaim it if his
aged eyes are permitted to look upon
this world for four years
to come. Is it to be supposed, that a
man of Jackson's feelings
would make the promises he did in the
face of the world with-
out any intention at the time of
performing them? Why, to
think it, is to think him the veriest
hypocrite and deceiver in
the conclusion-any friend of his ought
to seize now upon the
true reason for the sake of his
reputation. Sir,
"Prone on the flood, the arch-fiend
lay,"
And then, squat like a toad, at the ear
of our great Federal
mother, he pours in the leprous
distilment-
"That swift as quick-silver it
courseth through,
The gates and alleys of the hero's
body."
Then straight erect like the Nachash of
the Phenician poet,
the "seizing is cut," and the
wand of the Magician is waving
over the head of the old Roman.
If it be asked if this be consistent to
a strong-minded self-
determined and bold man, thus to yield
himself away with his
406 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications.
acute powers, to another-let it be
answered that nothing, histor-
ically speaking, is more common or so
common-especially tak-
ing the characteristics of the two
men,-the one
"A soldier, open, bold and brave,
The next a scrivener, an exceeding
knave;"
The one bent on accomplishing an object
which the other had
not conceived. It is incident to human
nature, and particularly
to that of Jackson, and is done chiefly
by the persuasion that all
political opponents are personal
enemies-and that he is the first
of warm confiding and enduring friends.
"Thus Nature gives us-let it check
our pride."
The rapid advance of Jackson stock in
the political market
presented too splendid a speculation to
be eluded by such job-
bers as the house of Van Buren &
Company-nothing was now
in the way of their entering as the head
dealers on 'Change ex-
cept the Crawford stock on hand, which
could be easily refunded
or reduced into Consols. Accordingly we
find that before the
Arguses could be well suppressed
containing the abuse of Jack-
son, Van & Cam. are "off to
the south" with their Tender-for
the double purpose of settling with
Crawford, and sending in
their adhesion to Jackson; when, like
Yankee boys playing mar-
bles, they take the destruction of
Calhoun as a "shot in the range"
This distinguished patriot is the only
wall lying directly across
Van Buren's path, but like the salient
angle of a well found
citadel is impregnable to any metal they
can bring to bear upon
it, (indeed, open shots is not their
trade), and it can only be
reduced by mining. The distant
excavations are commenced,
the trains are in laying, and five years
after the mine is sprung.
And what have we gotten in exchange, and
who are the
Gauls that have entered the capitol? Nor
the Lees and the Law-
sons of Bloomsbury Square, nor yet the
Hackets of Burton-heath;
but a set of names as endearing as
Byron's Seige of Ismail, or
the Clutterbucks, the Bondelunts, and
the Teufelsdrocks of the
new Ditch philosophy of old clothes; led
off and on by their
fugileers of the house-the Beards-lies
and the Vander-poils or
Van and spoils.-I may be wrong,
Gentlemen, in recollecting
Speech of Richard Douglas, Esq., of
Chillicothe. 407
names aright-but after all, what is
there in a name? the ancient
authors tell us, that
"Skunks by any other names will
smell as sweet."
They all come from Regency-square,
across Marcy's Island,
baited upon a "Kinder-hook"
than Iron, and attracted by a more
heart-soothing "Bell" than the
solid and abiding copper and zinc
of the old Tennessee church. They have
come harp in hand
to build up "the party," and
their sweet music, like a Lincoln-
shire bag pipe, steals upon the ear as
they approach-
"We'll build it up with silver and
gold,
Dance over my Lady Lee;
We'll build it up with silver and gold,
My gay Layde.
But silver and gold will be stolen
away"-
Ah-by whom?-
They approach, none in White garments,
but all "party-col-
ored," but chiefly of the purple tinge-some among them,
"That if not dyed clean in the
wool,
Old Fed'ral still-but that's no
rule."
It needs no stretch of forethought to
divine that if the hand
of those seeking the perpetuation of
power through the Court
succession, cannot be stayed, that the
vital principle of the re-
public-"its virtue,"-must be extinguished, and thereon the
days of its existence fixed and
numbered. You cannot now,
gentlemen, be taken down to the sylvan
groves of Ashland to
inquire at the doors of its hospitable
mansion why the Phocion
of his country cannot lead us forth to
the victory. Nor is there
time to pass to the fair "City of
the lady Arabella," the Athens
of the West, to make to her and her
country's Aristides, the
assurance of our high regards, and speak
to him of dry matters
of expedience-Sir, he needs them not-for
if the granite of his
native State and head should fail, yet
is there a living principle
about him that shall abide forever-
"For on his deeds no shade shall
fall."
408 Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications. Mr. President and Gentlemen: It does appear to me that you have felt the state of things of which an hasty etching is attempted in this rugged picture, and have come up here in "high-north-bend" to make another effort at its correction and prevention. Your lots are fallen upon those who have "done the state some service." The time and the season, gentlemen, seem to be auspicious-not only by the flights of birds, but by the flocks of freemen. And although the genius of our cause at the last fall seemed to have gone down, yet like a Right-Whale on the Brazils, she went down headed to windward. We have "fore-layed" for her, and upon this glorious day she is up and has broken water right alongside of our boat. Let us then to the work in spirit under the three rules of the provincial critic, 1st Rule-Action. 2d Rule-Action. 3d Rule-Action. In this cause, my friends, I see you already "like hounds in the slips straining upon the start."-From the suddenness of this call, I was of necessity unprepared for the hunt; yet have done what I could toward filling up the cry-and who would not cry on such a scent and when such game's ahead-therefore, "Once more unto the breach, good friends, we go," And all for Harri, Francis, and Big Joe." |
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SPEECH OF RICHARD DOUGLAS, ESQ., OF CHILLICOTHE. DELIVERED BEFORE THE WHIG CONVENTION, HELD IN COLUMBUS, FEBRUARY 22 AND 23, 1836. Richard Douglas, who describes himself in the letter here- with, as "in birth a Yankee, in habit a Sailor, in adoption a |
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Buckeye, in profession an Old Court- Circuitizer, in occasional circum- stance, a Blovian, in principal a Whig, etc." was born in New London, Con- necticut, September 10th, 1785. From early youth, like many other New London boys, he followed the sea and travelled much to the Greenland seas as a whaler and to other parts. He ultimately studied law, partly in the "Crow's-nest," and in 1808, having re- ceived from his father, Captain Richard Douglas of the Continental Army, a warrant for land in the Western Reserve, he came West, lo- cated the warrant in what is now |
Huron County, and started to join his brother, a physician, who had located in Nashville. But while stopping in Chillicothe he learned that his brother had fallen a victim to an epidemic of cholera; and being attracted by the possibilities of the new town in the Scioto Valley, he remained in Chillicothe. He was soon after admitted to the bar and successfully pursued the practice of law until his death in February, 1852. He served under Colonel McArthur in the Detroit Cam- paign in 1812; he served in the Legislature of Ohio and was once nominated for Congress, but withdrew his candidacy in favor of General McArthur. He became prominent as a lawyer and as a public speaker throughout Southern Ohio. He had from his youth cultivated a good taste for books, history, poetry and the classics and had a most retentive mind; so that one biography says of him that if any one would repeat any line of (381) |