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Canal do. 60 half bbls. Canal do. Joat received by ADAMS & McGARY. JVwr. 28tb, 184. ll-tf vswnm I'U.uJii New York. 4l-tf SPEECH OF ITIR. HAYWOOD, OF NORTH CAROLINA, ON THE OREGON QUESTION. Delivered in the Senate on the 4th and 5th March. . . , ! The joint resolution for giving the notice to j terminate the convention between the United "C i.aiu n. iciii c iu me vie- gon territory being under consideration Mr. Haywood addressed the Senate as fol- lows: Mr. President, the subject before the j Senate is an important one. Viewed in con- nexton witn me topics ttiat nave oeen orougnt into the discussion of it, it is one of momen- tous interest; and I confess that its magnitude oppresses tne. My want of experience in po- litical affairs naturally made me reluctant to! enter into it as a speaker, when I must neces- sarily feel, in addition to the high responsi- nnmes oi me occasion useii, 111. emoarrass- act ot necessary duty on the part ot the Kxero ment of addressing those who are my seniors tivewould be perverted intoan occasion for de in age and in political knowledge. Besides, bating, not the question of notiue or nonotice, I have though j, that a silent vote, could it have j which properly belongs to the Legislative de heen obtained, would be much moremposing. prtment. but also our negotiations with Great But the occurrence of the last few Weeks have j Britain, whm her Minister is in the city and left me no choice. Silence would now be a even in the lobby of the Capitol, and cuir for compromise with my conscience and my duly eigh .elations and our grievances, real or sup- to the country, and 1 must speuK. It will lake posed, with all the kingdoms of the earth, me some time, hut I throw myself upon the, which legitimately belong to the Executive patience f the Senate, with a pledge that my department? Perhaps he" felt a strong reli heart shall he opened sincere'y, at this the j arice upon the prudence, moderation, and wis pouncil of our common country. 1 have no dom of Congress the assembled lepresenta actions of the past to explain, and no aspira- tives of the people and the States and hoped tions for the future to restrain me; and, if j that they would in jsuch a case talk less but God gives me strength and utterance for the j deliberate, and then act. Perhaps he thought work. I will do my whole duty according to that, upon a question of this kind, the neces my poor ability. !s'ly he was put under to disclose what was The President of the United States, who is 'done by the Executive before he had termina authorized by the Constitution to make, but i ted negotiations, would hardly be made a pre not to unmake treaties, hns a negotiation on i text fot snatching negotiations outW his hands. foot which was commenced or opened before j which he did not recommend, instead of enact his term of office began. The object of it has j inn- a law to arm him with a notice that hedid re been to fix a line of division by compromise commend. How far he was mistaken, if he between the UnitedStates and Great Britain, ! did so feel and so think, need not to be said and thereby to adjust the conflicting claims of. to this Senate. The events of the last few tne two Governments to the territory lying j weeks speak for themselves. Believing that, west of the Stony Mountains, commonly call so far as the President lias been concerned, ed Oregon. I assume for the present here- ; the British Government has got no advantage after I will demonstrate that in the view of of us, I confess I did feel mortified in reading our President, as well its the British Minister, the news by the hist steamer at the necessity the negotiation is still a pending one. The of conceding to the debates of the British Par assumption is warranted by every incident of j liament a decided superiority over those of the subject in this country and in Great Brit- i ourselves in their dignity and moderation; ain except the absurd conclusions and unau-j and it would be quite a satisfaction to me to thorised constructions given by some of my ; get news by the next packet of an outrageous own party friends to the message of the Pre-debate rn the British Parliament; at leastsuf sident. And it is confirmed beyond all f. irjficient to put us evi n with them on that score. doubt, by the silence ot the President upon j that point, when, if tne negotiation hud termi nated. Executive silence would be unpardbn ahle live m ore especially as his jurisdiction over the subject will cease the moment neo-, 1 . . tiation ends. I he negotiation once closed con- eluded, put an end to. by the Executive, and j all the remaining questions about Oregon will become forthwith subjects of legislation by Congress exclusively. But to ppfct-eed. At the meeting of Con gress in. December the negotiators of the two Governments had been unable to agree upon a compromise or-iueir counseling claims, ana the President, believing lint, under the exist ing convention of 1827, the United States can not 44 rightfully assert or exercise exclusive jiiiisdiction over any portion of the territory without giving a year's notice, declared to Congress th t, in his judgment, would be proper to give the notice; and thereupon, by ;tis message, he recofrfniendeo ttiat nrovision be made by law for giving it accordingly, s?nd . to presume that Congress are wise and pru-! dent has informed Congress plainly and dis- j ed pretty strong signs of the Emperor's inten terminating M in this manner'1' the convention i dent legislators ; that they would say nothing ; tinctly lhat this British proposition to us can- I lion to maintain hers against all the world, of the Gth August, 1827. This then is the J to embarrass negotiations unless Congress re- j not he entertained hy him, hut that it is j The American Government (aftera long delay question: What shall we do 1 iallv wished to defeat negotiation', and even j "wholly inadmissible." So far there is no growing out of our policy towards Spain whom The message of the President was aecorn- j in that case he may have thought that, as by j difficulty. Every thing is plain and directly we did not wish to offend by setting up our panied by a copy of all the correspondence the Constitution treaty-making helon2ed to j to the point, as it ought to be. claims prematurely) finally acceded tn a pro- which Irad taken place in the m gotiation ; and ; the President, under the advice of the Senate, i Next, we are informed bv the message that j posal of opening negotiations with Russia and we have subsequently been furnished, by our request, with such further correspondence as had taken place in it up to February, 1846. In the meanwhile, various propositions in the Senate, em :natifir from individual Senators, but not from the Executive, have been offered and proposed ; and it is true, as some honora ble Senator said the other day, that we have exhibited the singular spectacle in this Capi l of a discussion by Congress with open doors of nearly all the foreign affairs of the nation, and more especially of our affairs with Great Britain upon this very subject of the Oregon territory, although at the same time, j negotiations have been going on at the Exe-1 cutive Department with the British.MinhUry ; j to Oregon was "clear and unquestionable." and it was rather intimated than charged thatjln prosecuting the negotiation, he found it to the President was to blame for it. Now, in be his duty to offer a line of compromise at the spirit of kindness which characterized this 49, and to'give up James K. Polkas opinion complaint, suffer me, a friend of the Adminis- j to the President's obligation to preserve na cration, to answer why I do not concur in it, tional honor. From some cause or other, the and how I suppose the sending of this corres- public mind had been pre-occupied with ihe pondence here may be vindicated. belief that this offer had not been made by The President, believing that the conven-1 him. But, as it had been made, the Presi tion of 1827 had better be abrogated, we know i dent might have felt and probably hedid feel, that he could do that in either one of two a solicitude at the meeting of Congress to tell ways, but in no ctherv Either he mustgetan j the whole to let out the secret and to pre agieement with Great Britain to abrogate it vent, if he could, clamors or calumny upon by mutual consent, and then Conguess need j the subject. Had the President dreaded the not be applied to at all; or hn must get the 'same clamors, and sought to avoid, by such a mandate of a law, authorizing him to give a ' disclusnre, denunciations like ihose which year's notice. The first mode was not at- have been unceasingly poured out upon the templed. j heads of the great men who negotiated and The other manner of doing it is by a law of i voted for the Washington treaty, I am sure this Government; and the President recom-j the Senate would not fame him much for it mended to Congress Congress alone being! not very much. That Washington tre'aty . . 1 ml . a f competent 10 enact u mat provision be made for giving the notice accordingly, and for ter-ihaps it is to be kept a going until it can get minating, ' in this manner," ihe convention company. It may be that the President did of 1827. Can it be said that the President not wish to furnish the companion for it by erred in choosing ibis m-nner" of terminat-! keeping his M friends" unapprized of the im ing the convention, it being the only mode by I portantfact that he had offered a compromise, which that object could be legitimately ac- I should not wonder at it, if hedid not. As complished without closing his negotiations it je, that thunder will all be spoiled as far as ura compromise: ine complaint against me mesa-age implies ne nao no intention to do lhat. it being indispensible to apply to Con- for a law to give the notice, was it not sress Congress every thing that had taken place in of an old speech, abridged to be sur?, but not j that he could not speak for himself, nor au the negotiation, as far as it had progressed, ! improved. Our politicians seem determined j thorize another to speak for him. so long as when the President made his recommendation? t0 convince the woild abroad, and the people , negotiation was pending, or not concluded. The case is a peculiar one; but that peculi- at home, whether or not. that our'nation is al- j Oh ! I wish it were so that he could speak amy am notarise out of any thing that thisiWavs overreached, cheated, and disgraced. Administration nas done, but altogether from the convention it is desired to abrogate, and the limited constitutional power of the Amer - lean Executive. Look to the message itself, 9 ,M , wo "X" . more or less; than what the President w 3S ids ?rsa t H p or rno obliged to disclose to toe legislative depart ment, under the peculiar circumstances of the subject. That Congress might determine this question of notice, they must know the state ' ! ..- - ana condition ot the negotiation. I hey would , 1.- i ... .... . . Know mat oest by sending up all the corres-jit pondence; and, in order that they might see ana juage ior tnemseives. the president com-jines municated to Congress the whole corrcspon- uencc which uau HKfn piace. ne nas aone : no more,and he is responsible tor nothing more, Had he anv ricrht to sunnose that ihis would 1 be made the foundation for violent, invective ! - - - - " ? " w .... v J- " J - j sifions that have, fallowed itl If he had ap-s ann irrecrn ar nisotissions. 3 no nr trip nronn-1 prehended any such consequences, would that , have authorized him to withhold the recom-1 mendation of a measure of legislation which ' he deemed to be essential to the interest of j the nation, and which he mav have sunnosed to be important to Ihe peace of the country ? Upon making such a lecommendation, how could he conceal the information that was ne- eessary to aid Congress in considering it? Had he any means of forseeing tliat this simple I cannot help wishing it may bp so (Some Senator: "'Tis likely yon'M be gratified.") But surely the fault is not altogether that of the President. H;;d he known ever so well that his recommendation to legislate. Con gress saw fit, so as to help his progress in ne - trotialion would be misconstrued into an invi tation for all sorts of interference by Congress with the more appropriate duties of the Exe cutive, he would hardly have been justified by it to omit all or any one thing which he j has done. He has, as I understand his mes sage, but done his dnty, and no more; and he dared not do less. I hone Senators will see in all :his an excuse for the President, if they j that arbitration is out of the question. We do not find in it a justification for his message cannot help it if we would, and I owe it to can to Congress communicating the correspondence dor to say that J would not if I could, of the British Minister. That the President , Well, then, we have seen in his message sent this message td 'Congress might be ex-j that Great Fritain made an offer of compro ensed indeed for other reasons, without a I mise, which was rejected by the American heavv lax unon our charitv. He was hound his own "friends," without any recommen dation from him, would lono ago have propo sed and voted directly " that the President shall he advised by the Senate that he is mistaken in supposing the nation committed itself to any compromise, and that the negoti ation upon that basis ought to be concluded, if that indeed be the decision of the people." That would be DOING something. I do not affirm that the President thought all this, or any of it. Yet another thing has struck my own mind with some force, and j possibly it ini"ht not have been without its i influence upon the President. When he came into office, he declared his belief that our title I seems in hvp Unmp a favonle hobDV. rer concealment goes. I have sel lom heard a discussion, Mr. Pres- id en t, about our '.erritorial rights in any quar ! ter, that Benton's speech against Webster' ; But why do this, if at all, long after a treaty ; has been solemnly ratified by a vote of 39 to U in the American Senate ? Let notSenators I eivlheir aid to it. I say, as we love one an- other and the country. I utter no complaints against the speech itself of my honoiable friend from Missouri, (Mr. Benton.) Like every thircr else that comes from him here, it was eloquent. It was in season and at the right time when hemae it. The occasion which ........ - the strong excitements under which the ; speech was made. The constitutional author- h tne Government overruled his ohjec-i lions, and it is no disparagement to the fame I oi tne speecn or ot that Senator, to oelieve that hi& noble and generous heart would be able io see now fn.l manlv i-kan!- would let him own it) that there was quite e- -gy- - w w u I I U UU7 i 1 t I 111 HIV when it was made. I know not how he feels non an or mvpr ivp anr Minn nn tho cnoco . under its repetition, with or without notes, but I have admired the patience of Senators implicated by denunciations about the Wash- ington treaty, and wondered how they could silently endure it. Certainly, when such . a v - . tnings are introduced here, they are in exceed ing bad taste, and very like what a venerated friend of mine used to call the dullest thing in the world to listen at " old psalms sung over dead horses." Out of the Senate, it is the game by which great men of this nation are to be killed off, and more room left for exalt ing little. men to big offices. But, Mr. President, letall this be as it may, and let it be right or wrong in the President to have sent his message, and the information in it, to the Congress of the United States : he has done it the act is past recall. The sub ject is before the Senate, and, with all its em barrassments, it has become necessary for the Senate to act upon it, and, in my judgment, the sooner we do that, the better for the coun try. In order to act aright we must look to the President's messages, and see for ourselves what position he occupies. I agree entirely j with some other Senators that we cannot take our position upon this question of the notice until we see the position of the President. See it, l mean, with a reasonable certainty; as positive certainty cannot be arrived at, and cannot be expected. If he means to negotiate for a compromise, or if there be a pending ne gotiation, it would be unwise, unprecedented, and indelicate, for the President, either him- selt directly, or indirectly through another person, to declare beforehand any determim- tion of his own mind upon questions to arise in the further progress of such a negotiation, I shall, in justice to him, have occasion to called it forth has now passed, and along with point out to the Senate hereafter how I think (tant negotiations at that time in progress be this silence this necessary silence proves ! tween us and Great Britain. He knew that almost of itself that his "thoughts are turned on peace. But what is the position of the President in this negotiation 1 About it there would be less doubt if there had been less eTort to as sign the President an extreme position and a false position. What say the records 1" W here does he stand 1 We must see before we fling him the notice to terminate the con-!tially, I mean, not in all its details.) And al vention of 1827. j though our Ministers were instructed to insist First, we all know that the President upon it, they were unable to get the consent whose assent is indispensable will not agree ' to an arbitration. I do not stop to defend or to accuse him for this; it belongs to some other! occasion. It, in the providence ot uod, tins Oregon controversy should terminate in a con flict, the responsibility of having rejected ar bit rati on will be a fearful one, and he will have to meet it. But the responsibility has been taken by him. The Senate, therefore, must now proceed upon it as a f ct, a "fixed fact," overnment in August. 144. and in e rresi - '.he President himself made an offer to Great Britain by which the territory of Oregon be tween the parallels of 42 and 54 40 was proposed to be divided by a compromise on the line rf 49, and that the British Minister re jected it without submitting any other propo sition, &c. This offer of our President was made on the 12h of July, 1845 refused on the29th of the same month. But on the 30th August, 1845, the President withdrew his re jected proposition, and re-asserted, by his let ter to the British Minister, our claim and title to the whole of Oregon ; which letter has not been answered ! The President does not say that the negoti ¬ ation has been abandoned, nor that it will be concluded by him without waiting to receive another offer. No such thing. He does not inform Congress that he will or will not re new, or that he will or will not entertain his own offer, which he adopted as that of the na tion, for a compromise. I repeat that it was, under the circumstances, impossible for him to do that, provided he considered compromise stiil admissible. But he does say that he has receded, notwithstanding his opinion as to ti lie, to the line of 49 as a compromise, and his reasons for it are given reasnnsquite as con clusive in favor of accepting the offer now as they were for making l last year. And, as I understand the President's position, he stands this day upon thatline of 49 as a compromise, if compromise is to be had. Once for all, let me explain, that when I have spoken or shall hereafter speak of the " compromise line ff 49," I do by no means intend to be under stood literally. But I mean that line in sub stance not "every inch" I mean the same compromise substantially which this Govern ment has frequently offered, without regard to slight variations ; which may be left for set tlement by "equivalents." I do not measure my own or other people's patriotism by the "inch." I shall not recognize lhat measure ment in deciding upon the merits of the Ad ministration or the wisdom of a treaty not at all. at all. Mr. President, I disavow any authority to speak FOR the President. I have already said , out. But I must be allowed to speak tor my self, since the Administration has been so per severingly put where I ought not to stand by it; and I will dae to speak to the President, and ff the President and his Messages, from mv station upon this floor, as I judge him and them. And I say, in answer to certain Sena tors of my party, that the President did right, exactly right, in continuing this negotiation for a compromise wnieh he lound on iooi, uuu in renewing the offer ff 19 as a fine ff eom- .promise. And in reply to them further, 1 say that he ought not, and my convictions are as strong as death itself that he cannot, will not. disgrace himself and his Administration, by refusing his own offer, should it be returned upon him refusing, I mean, to entertain it; repulsing it, and rashly putting a final termi nation to his negotiation for a peaceful com promise ; and madly forcing his country into a war, without even consulting his constitu tional advisers, the Senate ; who are this day assembled. Yet that is said of him day after day in this Senate. A war for what? Why, Mr. President, a war between two great Chris tian nations upon the meaning of the word settlements in the Nootka convention ! A war. perhaps, of twenty years, to determine which of these Christian Governments shall enjoy the privilege of cheating the poor Indians out of the largest portion of Oregon. No, sir; no, sir. The President will not do that. As he loves his country, and values his own fame, he dare not think of it. But I have said the President did right in offering a compromise of this controversy. Other friends of this Administration have said he did wrong, particularly the Senators from Ohio, (Mr. Allen,) Indiana, (Mr. Hannegan,) and Illinois, (Mr. Breese.) Friends and ene mies, (if he has an enemy here,) will you hear another friend in his detence ? It is a serious charge, if it be true. What are the facts ? Let him be tried by these, and there can be no doubt of the decision. Hear them He found it in our own history a fifct, an undeniable fact, that, so long ago as forty years, in negotiations between this Govern ment and Great Britain, the United States had maintained and asserted lhat the true line of our national rights, west of the Stony Moun- j tains, was at the 49th parallel cn the nortn, 'in virtue of the treaty of. Utrecht, and of our treaty with France in 1803. He found that il was urged by our Government upon the oppo site party as a fact, too, that commissioners had been appointed to designate the line west j of the Stony Mountains, constituting the south boundary of Great Britain and the north boun idary of France, who sold us Louisiana ; and ithat that line had been settled at 49; and this 1 fact was assumed as the basis of very impor this was in the days of Jefferson and his com patriots. xvoooay, i oencve, ever suspecieu jrjjcrsun j being " British .'" He found that in subsequent efforts to ad just this long pending controversy, to wit, in at i i. rl.i j J T.er. ..f 1817, the American Government had proposed i this samf compromise line at 49, (snbstan of Great Britain; and that negotiation finally terminated in a convention for what we call a joint occupancy of the whole territory, entered into, I believe, by our request, and certainly done with our consent, which convention was to continue for ten years and no longer. That 'convention was sent to the Senate, with all the j correspondence, and it was ratified and approv-1 j ed by a voie of ayes 38, noes none all Brit- ish '" He found that this convention was not sat - isfactory ; but the Government of the United Mates grew anxious to settle and adjust me line of division between us and the European Governments claiming territorial rights westof the Stony Mountains. Russia and Great Brit i lan notn asserted rignis mere, nussia nirnisn- ! Great Britain abont 1824 for a line of compro- mise. uur Ministers were insirucieo to get this line adjusted upon a compromise with both nations at the 49th parallel, and we hoped at one time to unite Great Britain with U3 against Russia. But Great Britain, al though a "joint occupant" wilh us, managed hei diplomacy better than lhat; and after the United States had agreed with Russia to aban don all our rights viz. "not to settle" north of the parallel of 54 40v his Mnjesty the King of England, &c. made a separate treaty with the Emperor of Russia.and took to him self a laere share of what we had surrendered .' Our 54 40' friends ought to go font all back Mr. D'Wolf,) and of all our people and their Ke again, according to,their doctrines, and perhaps j preventatives for two generations consiitu England,fwith Russia to help her, would favor j ting, as It were, a nation's opinion- would us with a fight, and that s something. In our negotiation of that convention with Russia, and in our attempts to negotiate at mat lime wnn Great Britain, the American Government yiel ded no her claims between 54 40 anJ 61 unto Itusia. (What an unconstitutional anu disgraceful dismemberment!) And the same . . m-m-. 1 1 old compromise line, substantially that which i God grant that he may stand firm to his posi the President re-offerd in 1845, was tendered tion! to Great Britain and declined urged and re fused ! fHow one's American blood boils at the thougt rht of ceding an inch ! The treaty with Russia, which, in view of Senators, so dishonorably and unconstitutionally dismem bered the national domain, (for the benefit of crowned heads too!; was submitted to the American Senate, and with a full knowledge tf the rorresnondence. the Senate approved it all by a vote of ayes 41, no 1 ! Who was it!" exclaimed several voises. "Where was he from !" Ans. R. Island. His name was D'Wolf. All " British," save one ! In nassintr. the Senate will suffer me to say that this treaty with Russia was made wiihin! m. . mm the very year succeeding ihe famous declara tion of President's Monroe's message against new European colonies on this continent! Made by him ! It is of itself a contemporane ous construction of the meaning attached to that declaration. Attention is due to the j the Baltimore Convention 1 shall speak here namea of Ihe forty-one Senators who approv-! after. And now as to Mr. Polk's opinion ed of it. There are illustrious names in that upon our title. However clear, and whenso list; but I have not time to go into such de-jever entertained or expressed, let me say that tails, and, if I had, the Senate would hardly j Mr. Polk's opinion, nor the opinions of the have patience to hear mo through. j Baltimore Convention, nor those of the people , The President further found lhat our impor-, themselves upon the title to Oregon, touch this tnnitvtnfiTiinon the line of49 as a compromise was again manifested as soon as me conven tion of 1818 was likely to expire; and lhat, in the correspond enc preceding that identical con vention of 1827, which it is oor present wish to abrogate by a notice, the American Minister was instructed to adjust the controversy at this same line of 49 ; and the convention was made only because that cm -promise lire cojld not be got. That correspondence a??- was . j 1 . - laid before the Senate along with the convention of 1827, where, in despite of Ihe opposition of my honorable friend from Missouri (Mr. frkn tor,) and in defiance of his predictions the convention was approved by a vote ayes 31, noes 7. The "British party seems to have been still a strong party in the American Senate ! The names of some of them stood high on the rolls of Democracy, and some are now in high pla ces. I will not tax the paiience of the Sen ate by reading them over. He found that under the administatton suc ceeding the ratification of this convention, all of them Adams, Jackson's, Van Buren's, Harrison's, and Tyler s, too we made no complaint of Great Britain abont Oregon, and sounded no alarm to the people to prepare lor a repudiation of our own oners to compromise an lnh, below 54 40 ; but quietly submit- le to let this remain as they were until Octo ber, 1843, when the message informs us that our Minister in London was authorized to make an offer of compromise similar to those made by U9 in 1717 and 1827; in other words, to renew our offer of the compromise line of i9. Thus stood the question when the ne gotiation was transferred to Washington. Here I beg the Senate to observe lhat Mr. Ty ler's message, in December, 1843, informed Congress that M the negotiations for an adjust ment and settlement had ?gain been proposed, and were in progress to a resumption." Yes, proposed .by us; and the President said that 'every proper expedient would be resorted to for the purpose of bringing it to a speedy and happy termination." And, again, by his mes sage to Congress, in December, 1844, he said : 41 A negotiation has been formerly en 1 tered upon between the Secretary of State and her Brittanic Majesty's Minister, &c. ' residing at Washington, relative to the rights of their respective nations in and over the 4 Oregon territory. That negotiation is still pending." This, too, after Mr. Polk's elec tion after the Baltimore Convention of 1844. But no where could the President find that any of the 44 true friends of Oregon" had re corded their opposition to it by their votes ik Congress. If he did, it is more than 1 cat! find. The Senators from Ohio, Indiana, and IPinoi (Messrs. Allen, Hannegan.and Breese) were all Senators at the lime. No, Mr. Pre- I sident, the Senate did not advise nor protest j against negotiation whpn it was only 44 in pro- giess to a resumption," nor had Senators bro't themselves up to the point, so far as 1 know, of only moving, so late as two years ago, whilst there was time and opportunity for it, to stop the negotiation itself, which has now become so unconstitutional and so dishonora ble to the nation. But again : He found that these persevering efforts to fix our northern boundary in Oregon at the forty-ninth parallel by a compromise these well-considered instructions to our Min- isters. and often-repeated propositions la the adverse claimants for a compromise made before Spain had released her rights, and re peated afterwards were long since exposed to the public eye; and that neither the Peoples Representatives in Congress, nr ne Slates, j nor the People themselves, had complained (against the Presidents, and Statesman, and 1 Senators who had been endeavoring toaccom lish a compromise at 49 for nearly half a cen tury. No, sir. Until very recently, indeed, the complaints, when made at all, were aim ed at Great Britain for refusing to accept this reasonable and just compromise of our conflic ¬ ting claims. Memorials, when sent at all, were applications to settle and adjust the con troversy ; and our efforts to legislate over the subject were confined to the valley of the Co lumbia river this side of 49. Well might the President pause, tlin, not withstanding his own individual opinion lhat our title to the whole of Oregon was "clear and unque3tienable," ere he took the respon sibility, in view of all this, of abruptly putting a stop to the negotiation which he found on foot, as it had began by his immediate predeces sor, upon a negotiation for a compromise. Well might he feel lhat the nation was com mitted to a compromise. Wei! might he dread that, for him to put his personal opinion upon the strength of out paper title, however "clear and unquestionable," against all these solemn acts of the Government, and against this con currentaction and acquiscence of all our Presi dents from Jefferson inclusive, and of all our Statesmen, and of all our Senators, (except be sacrificing the faith, censisiency, sincerity and honor of this country, to preserve the per sonal consistency of himself a single man! . A mere politician might have halted, but a statesman could not. He lifted himself above ! - If . I II. 11 L. lllA mmscir. ana snoweo now wen hc imch o office his country has appointed him to 611. And wht " commits" a nation but its hon or 1 Honor! National honor ! But its ob ligations must be felt, end are not a topic for argument and debate in an American Senate. I have imperfectly grouped the tacts from our . own history. Senators must determine for themselves. Appealing to their hearts at monitors, 1 ak whether I was not justified in asserting that the President did right in offer i ing the line of 49 as a compromise, because the nation was thus committed to it by the past ? But the Senator from Illinois (Mr. Breese) has said the question was " a new one, so far as it concerned the President," because he ' had a clear opinion that our title was good. and gave that opinion before hi nomination ; . . - l I ! 1 A. A. A l O 1 S and he seems to think that the Baltimore Convention of the Democratic party had re solved this matter out of the general rule, and made it a new one to this administration. Stranre nronosition ! Passing strange ! Of WW W 'W Question. All that haa just noining at aij 10 .., do with it. If ihe character ana sincerity. . W - A and faith, and honor of the nation were com mitted to a compromise befoie Mr. Polk was elected, they remained so notwithstanding his election, and notwttbstand! his '-P:jlicn f any body's opinion upen onr iiue. . The hWtt who become Presents of the Kepb- ! archways char$irjg-7 : rrrtn aed cr A r fag l - V