political. Mr, Randolph's Speech, -Wis regret extremely our inability to lay entire be: fore our readers, the masterly Speech of John Randolph of Roanoke, on Mr. Chilton's retrenchment resolutions, re cently debated in Congress. The Speech has been published in pamphlet form, with notes by Mr. Randolph, and is al so inserted at large in most of the news papers. Wc give the passages only, which have a direct bearing on the alle ged understanding between Messrs. Adams and Clay, previous to the last Presidential Election: Mr. RANDOLPH rose and said: I cannot make the promise Which the gentleman who has just taken his seat (Mr. Everett) made at the outset of his address; but 1 will make a promise of a different nature, and one which, I trust, it will be in my power to perform I shall not say with more good faith than the gentleman from Massachusetts, but more to the letter ay, Sir, and more to the spirit, too. I shall not, as the gentleman said he would do, act in mere self-defence. 1 shall car- i i i i Ti.nfprnrv that 1 nrove this! The j Jackson, in the end, proved t the hare and many friends. I he cessary uiai i muo ftWpct;anv otHer mm " it Gau 0 ennsn of nil this is to be found inching proves itself. The object any otn man it Allows cieaN ry the war into Africa. Dclenda est Carthago! I shall not be con tent with merely parrvinji no, Sir1 dented nrcdicnmnntl -it l can, so Help me Ood, 1 will pens it, that they alone, ot all the cause of all this is to be found in the manner in which they came into power the cause of, this ' p r e m at u r e' ' o p po s i t i o n 1 i e s t h e r e and there mainly. I would defy, all the public presses in the world to have brought them to this pass, had there not been a taint of ori ginal sin in their body-politic, and which cleaves to them even as the sin of our first parents taints our fallen nature and cloaveth to us all. The gentlemen refers to those who compose the party who are called the Opposition, and says, It is formed of very discor dant materials. True. Sir: but what are the materials of the par ty which upholds the Adminis tration! Nay, of the Administra tion itself! Are they perfectly homogeneous. I know one of them who has been raised to a higher station than most men in this country Was that because he opposed, or because he espou sed the election of the present Chief Magistrate! Permit me, Sir, again to ask, how comes it, that this Adminis tration are brought into their pre sent vcrv curious and unnreee- II ow hap- . i. rtf t mnwrfiRS v w in nnv othnr mnn was 10 uriug in unu ui rwnv. v ...Ull wtis, v12, to the compact, whom the Consti- one other man iV est, myself, (,; tution subsequently wuuu.u..-, r ...... .....rMA frti tlm other. House J A gentleman, (Mr. Clay,) then of But, bir, as soon as this g0 ' i tt onrlilntn. was nut nf t lip. nno.sti nn .. tins nousu, was uumuuutv, p - i . " c oi the trt tlm lnQt hmir. cast manva feouth lost all our influent loiujinff, although not lingering "we ot the West gave us of th look, with outstretched nccK,-to- oouin ims very jonn uuincy wards Louisiana jttgulo quccsita ncgatur to discover whether or not he should be one upon the list. Sir, it is impossible that he could, in the first instance, have looked to the elevation of ano ther, or have designed to promote the views of any man. but in sub serviency to his own. Sir, com mon sense forbids it. But, Sir, all these calculations, however skilful, and Dcmoivre could not have made better, utterly failed. Mr. Crawford most obstinately, and unreasonably, I confess, refu sed to die. It was certainly very disobliging in him. I saw him before I went abroad. And I thought it was an hundred to one that he could not survive the sum mer: he was then dead to every purpose, public or private. Loui- siana refused to vote as obstinate ly as Mr. Crawford refused to die: and so the gentleman was exclu ded. It was then that Mr. Ad ams was first taken up, a3 a pis allcr, which wc planters of the feouth translate, a hand plant. Sir, I have n right to know; I had a long while before an inter view with this very great man, (Mr. Clay,) but not on that sub ject: no, bir it was about busi- thrust also; because my right arm; administrations which have been', is nerved by the cause ot the peo-jin this countrv, find themselves in pie and of my country. the minority" in each House of The gentleman, with much gra-! Congress; "palsied by the will of vity, with some dexterity, and with their constituents;" when the ve grcat plausibility, but against cer- ry worst of their predecessors tain principles which I have held kept a majoritv till midnight on in this House, ab avo, and which the 3d or 4th of March, whichev I shall continue to hold, vsquc ad er you please to call it! Ay, Sir, mala, till I lcave thn " ivvu.-i) fc?JVlY. v.vVl lllb UVilllllZIli lltlOll H.J I ! I U I I I J M.My, K.M lb lHO ULIHUl UUOl of the headlong commencement of I allude, there were none of those ness of this House and he solar the Opposition, before the Admi- compunctious visitings of nature, descended, or I should rather say !unI. ..1.1 .i i . . I r iiisirtiuuii cuuiu give reasonable at the attacks made on private cause of discontent. 1 have now character. We had no chapter no palinodid to sing or to chant of lamentations, then, on the rav upon that subject. 1 drew from aging and desolating war on the that fountain which never failed fair fame of all the wise and vir an observing and sagacious man, tuous and good of our land, and which, even the simple and i Sir, 1 have much to say, which inexperienced (and I among the neither my own weakness, nor my rest) may drink at it is nature (regard to the politeness of this and human life. I saw distinctly,! House, will permit me now to say. from the beginning, that, if we As 1 have tixnr:itpd tlm nrlnm. permitted this Administration if j pal in that weighty affair of the billiard tab e. 1 a so we had listened to those who cri ed to us "wait, wait, there is a li on in the path," (and, Sir, there always is a lion in the path, to the sluggard, and the dastard,) and which cry was seconded, no doubt, by many who wished to know how the land lay before they ran for a port on which side victory would incline, before they sounded their horn of triumph. If wc had thus waited, the situation of the coun try would have been very differ ent from what it is now. But I wonder it never occurred to the gentleman from Massachu setts what could be the cause why such a hue and cry should be rai sed against an Administration so very able; (permit me in this, how ever, to differ from the gentleman dc gustibus non est) what, I say, could have been the cause why Acteon and all his hounds, or, ra ther, why the dogs of war were let slip against this wise and able and virtuous and loving Administra tion; these patterns of political friendship and consistency; and have continued to till they lie panting and gasping ui urtaiii on thn in exonerate him and his Lieutenant from eve ry charge of collusion in the. first instance; and, if it is in order. I will state the reasons for my opi nion. When the allianrn u n firt patched up between the two reat leaders of the East and VVost (Air. Webster and Mr. Cla0 nei ther of the high contracting par- tics Had the promotion of the pre sent incumbent at a I in vimv. Sir, I speak knowingly as to one of these parties, and with the highest degree of moral probabili ty ot tiie other. Can it be ne- Aftcr my arrival in Europe, I saw in the newspapers Mr. Webster's toast, given, ifl forget not, on the 4th of July -"Henry Clay, the orator of the west," &c. &c. 1 quote from memory. N. B. Mr. Clay was then the rival and decla red enemy of Mr. Adams. Mr. Clay, in the debate' on the Greek motion of Mr. Webster, and in the affair of Mr. Ichabod Bartlett, (a name, of omen,) was ostentatious in redeclarations of friend ship and connexion with Mr. Webster, whom he gratuitously assumed to have been assailed by the said Ichabod! that he might manifest his devotion to his new friend. 1 then looked unon Mr. Clay as laying an anchor to windward some, and the man of unshaken firm- ui urea i on the highway unt and eastivard ami in 7 r i ' " nMC characteristics unite in hey realize the boamitulUle of bll person, ennot be oper.ted.cn of so vcrv irreat a man. condes- o ' 11 1 ccnueu, as to electioneer even . I I with inc. lie said to me, among other matters, "it von of the South will give us of the West any other man than John Uuincy Adams for President, we will support him." Let any man deny this who dare but remember, he then expect ed to be a candidate before the House himself. "If you will give us anv other man! tSir, the jren- iieman in question can have no disposition to deny it. It was at a time when he and the present incumbent were publicly pitted a gainst each other, and Mr. Adams had crowed defiance, and clapped his wings against the Cock of Kentucky. Sir, I know this to be a strong mode ol expression. d'.d not take it literally. I understood the meaning to be that Virginia by her strenuous support of Mr. Crawford, would further the success of Mr. Adams. "Any other man, Sir, besides John Quincy Adams." Now, as nei ther Mr. Crawford nor General I 1 thought person of Mr. Webster, while at the same time he proclaimed his strength in that quarter as the ally of Mr. Webster, and the powerful party of which he is the leader and mouth-piece. If the maxim be true ars est 'celare arlem then there lives not a less artful man in the world than Mr. C?.y, His svstem consists in soothing by flattery, or bul lyingthese constitute his whole slock in trade and very often he applies both to the same person. The man of delica cy to whom his coarse adulation is fnl- nnd the iiiia lur x rusiuum, anu rccpi from him the 'very office, which being held by him, we of the assigned as the cause of our port, considering it to be a sort of reversionary interest in the IV; dency. (Seethe letter toMr.F ISrooke.) it was, indeed, 'rats, bane in our mouth," butweswaj. lowed the arsenic.f I will take the lettnr tti. President of the Court of Anni, in Virginia (Mr. Clay to.Mr,F lirooke) and on that letter, and on tacts which are notorious the sun at noonday, it must bees- tablished that there was a colk siwij and a corrupt collusion, be tween the principals in this affair. 1 do not say the agreement was a written or even a verbal one I know that the language of the poet is true that men, who "meet to do a damned deed," can not bring even themselves to speak of it in distinct terms they cannot call a spade a spade bit eke out their unholy purpose with dark hints, and inuendoes, and signs, and shrugs, where more is meant than meets the ear. Sir, this person was willing to take any man who would secure the end that he had in view. Ha takes office under Mr. Adams, and that very office too, which had been declared to be in the line of safe precedents- the very office which decided his preference of jI r. Adams. Sir, arc wc children! Are we babies! Cant't we make out Apple-pie, without spellinj and putting the letters together A, p, ap, p, 1, e,ple, ap-ple,p,i,e, pie, apple-pie! Sir, the fact can never begot over, and it istliii fact which alone could make this Administration to rock and totter to its base, in spite of the indis cretion, (to say no worse,) in spite of all the indiscretions of its ad versaries. Sir. there are crises in which suspicion is equivalent to groot; and not only equal to it, hut more than equal" to the most daranin? nroof. rrhnn is tint fi husband here who will not ratify this dec laration there may be suspicion so agonizing, that it makes u'c wretch cry out for certainty as a relief from the most damning tor tures. Such suspicions are en tit has been sujrsrested to mc since th above was spoken, by one whoouspn' know a good deal of New-York poli105' and to whom it occurred while I was mi king this development, and in conse quence ot it that Mr. Adams, could not be blind to the game that playing between Mr. Clay and Mr.eJ' ster, caused the votes which Mi'- Craw ford got in New-York, to be ffiren., him, then no longer the most tortnw'. ble onnonent. for thn pvnress nurposeUi excluding Mr. Clay from the House, ensun ng ivir. Crawford s return. 1 " . the biters mp.rp hit. nnd Messrs. C'3, 3nd Webster had to make terms Mr. Adams, who, in requital or vote of Mr. Clav and his i'nods, Sl ciously received them into faror.