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defence was conducted; and the great final summing up, to which he brought, and in which he needed, the utmost exertion of every faculty he possessed, to persuade the jury that the obligation of that duty, the sense of which, he said, 'pursued us ever: it is omnipresent like the Deity if we take the wings of the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, duty performed, or duty violated, is still with us for our happiness or misery'-to persuade them that this obligation demanded that on his proofs they should convict the prisoner; to which he brought first the profound belief of his guilt, without which he could not have prosecuted him; then skill consummate in inspiring them with a desire or a willingness to be instrumental in detecting that guilt, and to lean on him in the effort to detect it; then every resource of professional ability to break the force of the propositions of the defence, and to establish the truth of his own: inferring a conspiracy to which the prisoner was a party, from circumstances acutely ridiculed, by the able counsel opposing him, as stuff,' but woven by him into strong and uniform tissue; and then bridging over from the conspiracy to the not very necessary inference that the particular conspirator on trial was at his post, in execution of it, to aid and abet-the picture of the murder with which he had begun-not for rhetorical display, but to inspire solemnity, and horror, and a desire to detect and punish for justice and for security; the sublime exhortation to duty with which he closed-resting on the universality and authoritativeness and eternity of its obligationwhich left in every juror's mind the impression that it was the duty of convicting in this particular case, the sense of which would be with him in the hour of death, and in the judgment, and forever-with these recollections of that trial, I cannot help thinking it a more difficult and

higher effort of mind than that more famous oration for the Crown."

From Mr. Webster's forensic ability, as exhibited in this remarkable trial, the reader may form some adequate conception of the variety and diversity of his talents. It mattered not whether it were in the Senate-chamber, among the leading statesmen of a great nation, or in the popular assembly, where a stormy multitude were to be addressed by moving and declamatory appeals, or in the courts of civil justice, where recondite learning and dry, profound, abstract principles were to be discussed before calm and deliberate judges, or in the criminal tribunal, where a thorough knowledge of human nature, skilful management and consummate oratory were required in order to secure success;-in all these varied and almost incompatible arenas of intellectual power, Mr. Webster appeared uniformly as the most gifted of men, the most gigantic in his mental proportions, and the most triumphant in his exercise and display of them.

CHAPTER VIII.

Accession of General Jackson to the Presidency-Mr. Van Buren Re jected as Minister to England-Mr. Webster supports the Renewal of the Charter of the U.S. Bank-Removal of the Deposits-Disastrous Consequences-Mr. Webster's Speeches on the Subject-Nullification in South Carolina-Mr. Webster's Celebrated Speech thereon-The Action of the President and of Congress-Accession of Van Buren to the Presidency-The Sub-Treasury Scheme-Mr. Webster's Opposition to it-Abolition of Slavery in the District of Columbia.

THE election of Andrew Jackson to the Presidency in 1828 opened a more turbulent era in the history of the politics and government of the country. Upon the peculiar qualities of the inflexible hero of New Orleans it is not necessary for us here to dwell. Even Mr. Calhoun, who had been conciliated by the important office of VicePresident, soon found the yoke of the Presidential tyrant too heavy, and became restive under it. At the commencement of his administration, General Jackson endeavored also to conciliate Mr. Webster, being well aware of the vast power which he possessed as the ablest member of the Senate; and he treated him with the most marked. and significant courtesy. But Mr. Webster was not to be bought by the utmost blandishments of those who might be in the possession of power; and accordingly, when Mr. Van Buren, the special favorite of the President, was by him appointed Minister to England, Mr. Webster opposed his confirmation in the most emphatic and energetic terms. The wrath of the incensed President was poured out upon the head of the offending

statesman in overwhelming torrents, but it availed not. Mr. Webster's reasons for the policy which he pursued were quite satisfactory; the chief of which was, that Mr. Van Buren, when Secretary of State, had instructed Mr. McClean, his predecessor, to make a distinction between his country and his party; to give the latter the preeminence in his relations with foreign powers; to convince the English Government that their own interests required that they should aid in maintaining the ascendency of that party; and thus to make ignoble and despicable concessions to Great Britain. These reasons for opposing the confirmation of Mr. Van Buren Mr. Webster openly and fearlessly avowed in the Senate. Even Mr. Calhoun coincided with him; and the supple nominee of the President was successfully resisted, and eventually recalled.

In May, 1832, Mr. Webster made an important speech in the Senate in favor of the bill which had been introduced by Mr. Dallas for the renewal of the charter of the United States Bank; and he stated clearly and conclusively the reasons why he supported an institution in this case which he had formerly so bitterly opposed. It was because the principles upon which the two institutions were to be founded were totally different and antagonistic. The bank which he defended Jackson and Calhoun had themselves formerly opposed; and the reason for their change of policy was the same,-a fundamental difference in the nature of the several institutions. The charter of the bank was renewed in spite of the veto of the President; and its operation was found to be in the highest degree beneficial. But the foiled Executive had in reserve an expedient by which he still determined to crush "the monster," and thus indirectly attain the result in which he had been ignominiously defeated. This expedient was the removal of the deposits of the moneys of the Govern

ment from the vaults of the general bank and their distribution among certain favorite State banks. The charter of the bank itself provided that the public moneys should be deposited therein, subject to removal by the Secretary of the Treasury, on grounds which were to be submitted to Congress. In 1832, Congress had adopted a resolution to the effect that, in their judgment, the deposits were secure while in the custody of the bank. But this recommendation availed nothing with the President; and he proceeded to execute his purpose. The Secretary of the Treasury then in office, Mr. McClean, declined to make the order necessary for the legal transfer. He was at once removed, and Mr. Duane, of Philadelphia, was appointed to fill his place and perform his functions. That enlightened statesman readily perceived the appalling consequences which would ensue from the execution of the measure, and declined to accede to the demand of the President. He was also unceremoniously dismissed, and Mr. Taney, subsequently the Chief-Justice of the United States, became his substitute. This gentleman had no scruples in reference to the measure. The deposits of the Government funds were then withdrawn from the capacious maw of the monster. Immediately those terrible results ensued which every intelligent and impartial observer had anticipated. So vast and sudden a demand being made upon the bank, it was compelled to collect all its claims and resources from the smaller banks throughout the country with equal precipitancy; the latter were constrained to be equally peremptory and stringent with their numerous customers and debtors; and thus the fatal blow was felt throughout every rank and class in the nation; for it was impossible to meet so many requisitions upon so slight a notice. Repudiation ensued, from the highest to the lowest, and universal bankruptcy threatened the

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