k -it V""1 '""-if- - -"WfSiK- vat -' ... . 3jn I S THE CONSTITUTION AND THE UNION OF THE STATES...... THEY. "MUST BE PRESERVED. vol. iv:..i.ivo. i83r r Three JPoUartJcrmSixnttm, Editor and Proprietor. RALEIGH, N. C. WEDNESDAY, MAY29 1838. ( La JIMP- I vTi n-JSVTft n i T Toil J. Mi frS". TERMS. THE NORTH CAROLINA STANDARD is published weekly, at three dollars per annum payable half-yearly in advance; but it will be necessary for those living at a distance, or out of the State, to pay an entire year in advance. A subscriber failing to give notice of hi3 desire to dis coJtinue at the expiration of the period for which he may have paid, will be considered a3 having subscribed anew, and the paper continued, at the option of the Editor, until ordered to be stopped; but no paper will be discontinued, until all arrear ages are paid. . " AD VERTISEMENTS, not exceeding four teen lines, will be inserted one time for one dollar and, twenty-five cents for each subsequent inser tion ; those of greater length in proportion, . If the number of insertions be not marked on them, they will be continued until ordered out. Court Advertisements and Sheriff's Sales, will be charged ttcenty-fice per cent, higher than the usual rates. A deduction of 33 per cent, will be' made to those who advertise by the year. Letters to the Editor must come free of postage, or they may not be attended to. OF Mr. Strange, of Nortli Carolina, In reply to Mr. Biddle's Letter to John Quincy Adams. TO THE EDITOR OF THE GLOBE. Sir . The president of the Bank of the United States of Pennsylvania, has addressed a letter to the Hon. John Q. Adams of the House of Rep resentatives, setting forth his views upon the question, whether or not the banks should re sume specie payments in May next. This letter was evidently not designed for the private infor mation of the gentleman to whom it is addressed, but intended for publication, and, to operate a3 far as possible upon the widely spread, Ameri can public. Whether "the position" of the au thor of the letter "justified, if it did not require," its publication, is a question which I should never have made the subject of public discussion, had the letter itself contained no personal allusion to me. It is a deplorable truth, that no man in ei ther House of Congress has been at liberty for years past to advocate the measures of the Ad ministration, without being charged with a slav ish devotion to the Executive the result of cor ruption or stupidity. While these imputations are made through anonymous squibs, or the edi torial columns of hireling papers, though they cannot fail to excite a glow of honest indignation, it would be nothing less than Quixotic madness to manifest any consciousness that they had been observed. But when one occupying the posi tion ot the president of the Bank of the United States at Philadelphia singles out a member of Congress as the particular subject of unkind re mark, even where ehe terms used partake of the delicacy of the source from whence they come, contempt can no longer be either felt or feigned, and some mode of self-defence is imperiously de manded. Interested, as my position requires that I should be, in every thing connected with the politics of the country, I naturally availed myself of the first opportunity of glancing my eye over "the president's" letter, which required no? thing more to give it celebrity than that the source should be known from whence it came. Had a serpent sprung from the folds of the pa per which contained the letter, and fastened it self upon my person, I could not have been more surprised than I was, in finding myself the sub ject of peculiar animadversion. My first feel ings were a sense of personal outrage, and an J impulse of resentment. But when I reflected that was not even personally known to the dis tinguished author of the letter, I became con vinced that it was against the Senator against the member of a political party, towards which he had long since ceased to disguise his hate and not against the humble individual, that the shaft was leveled. In this view of the subject, so far as I am personally concerned, I am recon ciled to the outrage of propriety in the act, from the effect it has produced ; an effect entirely un designed by the actor that of placing me more conspicuously before my country as the advocate of principles .with which its best interests' are identified. To a man of less pretension than the presi dent of the Bank of the United States, it would not be thought offensive to say that this is not one of a few instances in which his purposes and his ends have not precisely coincided,' for, what ever may be the effect of the attack referred to, no one will believe it was meant in kindness. But, whatever motive may have nerved the arm of him who threw the dart, I feel that it has fal len harmlessly at my feet, and I trust that I am able to burl it back again better pointed and with more effect. In assigning my reason for coming forward in person before the public, I have been forced into an egotism not at all to my taste ; but in what I have further to say, I speak not for my self, but in behalf of my country. In doing so, I shall bothcarrv the war into Africa, and defend that portion of the territory at home which the adversary has thought proper to invade. I submit, in the first place, to the American public, the propriety of the particular act which has thrown upon me the necessity, or at least ex cited within me the disposition, to publish this letter. A Senator in the Congress of the U. States, in the discharge of his constitutional functions, utteis opinions upon a subject under discussion in that body. How, I would ask, have the A merican public, and especially that portion of it which he represents, a right to expect those o pinions to be received and treated? The ques tion is not whether these opinions are sound or unsound, but in what manner their unsoundness should be exposed by those in whose judgment it exists. Ought it to be by fair, candid, and res pectful argument, which only men of sense are able to offer, or by sneering and denunciations, in the use of which the wise man and the fool stand upon a footing? Neither am I disposed to make it a question what rights members of Congress possess, under the Constitution, to ir responsibility in every form, out of the halls of yongress, lor what may have been uttered with in them. Nor do I put forward, either for Se nators or members of the House of Representor t!v.es- anY claims for respect from, those who t u Proper 10 withhld it. But I do hold, and I think I shall be borne out by the American people ( in so holding, that every man owes to himself duties, and that to the violation of any of Uui.co pcuuu auacti, which the moral sense of the community will rigidly exact. One of those duties is a scrupulous observance of the courtesies of life, and the penalty for their breach is (however arrogant may be the man's preten sions) to have his good sense or his principles questioned by all who witness it. In the words of the poet, "the want of decency is want of sense; ana me one want is the only apology which can be given for the other. But for the intelligent and highly gifted, nothing remains but to be cast upon the other horn of the dilem ma. Experience has shown, to a proverb, that it is only the worst of the other sex who "un pack their hearts with oaths:" and it is among the most depraved of our own that we seek for those who are liberal in using the language of abuse and vituperation. What the public may ihink of the decency and propriety of the presi dent of the Bank of the United States not a corrupt and ignorant demagogue, or stump ora tor: not a professional pander to political passion and prejudice saying of the president of the U. States, in a deliberate, well considered produc tion, intended for the press, that "he seeks to maintain his power by exciting popular passions against the credit system, and that the whole in fluence of the Government is employed to infuse into the minds of the people distrust and hatred of the banks," is for its own decision. How consistent with the same standard to describe as "insane ravings" sentiments uttered by one rep resenting, in part, a sovereign State of this Union upon the floor of Congress, I refer to the decis ion of the same tribunal. But, whether decent and proper, or not, it can hardly escape the im putation of an arrogance which could neither be found nor tolerated save in a man whose vanity and weakness were naturally great, or in one whom circumstances had rendered a spoiled and petted child of fortune. No attempt has been made to show that the sentiments characterized as "insane ravings," deserve that epithet. But they were not uttered without consideration, and argument is not want ing to show their soundness. If my task were to convince the president of the Bank of the U. States of their soundness, I should abandon it in despair. But I will not undertake to say that, because he is not accessible to such conviction, he is either raving or insane. The man who pronounces every one mad who believes what he dues not, or who does not believe what he receives as unquestionable truth, is very far re moved from a philosopher. I did state, in the Senate of the United States, that "a man loses all by any circumstance, that, but for that cir cumstance, he would have made. Although England is a paper country, yet, if we were ex clusively a metallic country, we should make more out of our intercourse with her. And why should we, because she chooses to maim her self by hei paper system, follow her example?" JNow, all this may be very erroneous, and I claim not the right to force my dogmas upon any man ; but I believed it true when I uttered it, and I still believe it; and ail I ask is, to be con vinced of my error in the only mode proper for a free and rational being and that neither I, nor those who may have some respect for my opin ion, should be expected to abandon it, either as slaves or brutes, in blind submission to one who arrogates authority. The text opens a very wide field lor argument upon one of those subjects, on which more contrarieties of opinion have been uttered than upon most others, and this consid eration alone, if there were no other, should have restrained the distinguished man of whom I have been speaking from a rash condemnation of what another had said. I feel that it is impossible to do the subject justice in the short compass of a letter, and especially one in which other topics must necessarily be treated. The first portion of the quotation is not, I suppose, objected to, to wit: that "a man loses all by any circumstance, which, but for that circumstance, he would have made." This seems to me so very like a self evident proposition, that I will not undertake to make it plainer. I he absurdity, if any, lies in the assertion that, "although England is a piper country, yet if we were exclusively a metallic country we should make more out of our inter course with'her," and this 1 am to show is obvi ously true, or at least not deserving the imputa tion of "insane raving." I flatter myself that the review of the whole paragraph, of which it is a part, will go very far to prevent the startling ef fect which, upon many minds, the single propo sition is calculated to produce, and I according ly beg leave to submit it. "But another great evil of the paper system is, that it causes the producers of the country to sell at specie prices, and buy at paper prices, or in other words to buy at prices regulated by an in flated currency, and sell at those which are re gulated by a stable currency. Gentlemen affect not to see the force of this argument, and ask whether the planters do sell their produce in one country, and buy their articles of consumption in another? I answer yes. The price of every article produced in this country, and which usu ally goes to a foreign market, is here regulated by the price in the foreign market. The paper currency of a country does not form a portion of that great ocean to which I had reference in a former part of my remarks ; but is, as it were, an isolated lake, which has no outlet by which it may mingle itself with those vast waters. You may pour into it until it will overflow and inundate the country in which it is situated, and thus involve it in ruin; but it leaves the great ocean without, unaffected by its swell. It rais es prices t home but affects them not in oth er markets. However abundant, therefore, mo ney, -so called, may be at home, the exporter can afford to give the farmers no more than the price in the foreign market will warrant, leaving him his reasonable expenses and pro fit besides. But it is not so with the articles he imports: when he gets them here they at once feel the influence of the swollen circula tion, and bring correspondent prices, and at those prices the consumer must purchase. But it will be said that England, the principal country with" whom we trade, is a paper country, and therefore we lose nothing by our paper sys tem in our intercourse with her. Sir, a man loses all by any citcumslance, thai, but for that circumstance, he wOuld have made. Al though England is a paper country, yet, if we 6 exclusively a metallic country, we should make more by out intercourse with her. And why should we, because she chooses to maim h. rself by her paper system, follow her example? The whole business of life is a struggle between nations and individuals for their respective portions of the goods of for tune; and why should any wise man, who is embarking in any strife, disable himself be cause his adversary has had the folly to do so I am certain, sir, that to do justice to this ar gument it should be more elaborate, but I must leave it with the few hints I have thrown out, which I trust will be ; understood by any in telligent mind." v In addition to this, I would remark that the expression as used, make more out of, is equiva lent to make more wealth out of it. -Now, those whose dealings are altogether with money, in the abused signification of that term! are apt to sup pose that wealth has no other meaning than- ricnes, whereas its best sense, when applied na tionally, is nearly synonymous with prosperity, The plain meaning, therefore, of the condemned sentence, and that certainly intended by its au thor, is, that if we were an exclusively metallic country, we should make more prosperity out of our intercourse witn otner nations, e. g. n,ngiana. The truth of this proposition depends upon the fact that paper money does not pass internation ally as it does between individuals of the same country. As a nation, our paper money consti tutes no part of our national riches. Riches con sist in the possession of that which the common sense of all mankind has made the standard of value, or of those things which can be converted into such standard; and the nation or person who possesses the most of these is the richest nation or person. JNow it is plain, as paper money consists of mere promises to pay, it is only valu able upon the ground that the paper money itself 1 ! . 1 1.1 1 J can oe immediately anuinuaiea ana convertea into something which is valuable. ' As a nation, these promises to pay are between one citizen, or set of citizens, and another, and do not stand for any thing which may be drawn into the coun try and added to its stock of wealth. If I have 820,000 in property, and my neighbor has $10, 000, I am prima facie the richest man ; but if my neighbor holds my notes to the amount of $10, 000, the thing is precisely reversed & in place of being doubly as rich as he, I am only half as rich. But if my said neighbor and I are in partnership. the $10,000 between us add nothing to the wealth of the firm : and, although my notes, to the a mount of 810,000 being added to the $20,000 of Eroperty held by me, and the $10,000 held by im, make $40,000, the firm is in fact worth but $30,000. But if the $10,000 was due from some other solvent man, it would properly be added to the other property of the concern, and make the aggregate amount of $49,000. In the me way, 1 . .1 - - wnat is aue irom citizen 10 citizen in a nation, adds nothing to the national wealth; it is as tho' a man had so many of his own note3 in his own pocket. There they are altogether worthless. It is only in the hands of another that they have value. Our own paper currency, therefore, adds nothing to our comparative riches with other na tions. Let us see, then, if it does not render us less able to avail ourselves of our share of the real riches of the world. No nation, i: must be confessed, surpasses us in the production of those things which will command whatever we choose to have in exchinge for them from other nations. It is very clear that, like the individual spend thrift, we may scatter these productions as soon as they are produced upon the thankless waves. or we may drive with them a very unprofitable traffic, and in the language of our own Franklin "pay too dear for the whistle," or we may, by judicious management, get back our own with usury. Now, it is plain that, with a nation, as with an individual, the more it consumes of its products, or of those things which it receives in exchange for its products, the less it progresses in amassing substantial riches. What, then, is the comparative effect upon the consumption of the nation of a paper and a hard money medium. Does not every one seethe effect at a glance? It is of the character of paper money, which is not restricted in its supply by the parsimonious a . III Y.a w a nana 01 nature, to swell inordinately. 1 he is suer is tempted by his profits to extend his issues, and the receiver, by the desire which inhabits every human bosom, to possess that which will fiass as money, is induced to take them upon oan, or any other terras by which they may be obtained, and for a long time there is no coun teracting third party or principle. In this way issues are made, . with but little stint, until the swell becomes so great as to excite apprehension. In proportion as the circulating medium is abun dant in a nation, so will the tendency to con sumption in that nation increase, so will the pro pensity be excited to invest money in articles of luxury having no intrinsic value. Of these facts our own experience has furnished woful and un deniable evidence. In proportion us luxurious investment & consumption increase, so also will the demand for the appropriate articles. If these articles are of domestic growth or manufacture, la bor is drawn off from the production of substantial values to their production, and thus the produc tion of the exchangeable values of the country is diminished. But if, as is most likely, they are of foreign growth & production, they are brought home from those countries whither our produce goes in exchange for it, instead of the precious metals or commodities, of permanent value. To the merchants, as a class, this is a decided ad vantage, for they are enabled thereby to make money at both ends of the voyage. In the first Dlace. they have purchased the produce at home. graduated by the price in the foreign market, leaving them a fair prospectfor clearing expen ses and a handsome profit, and at the other by purchasing the articles of luxury abroad, and profiting by the eager demand and the swollen circulation at home. Individually they are en" riched, for they make money out of the foreign er at one end of the voyage, and at the other, out of their own countrymen; but it is only at the foreign end that they add any thing to the aggre gate wealth of their country. And this, by the way, seems to explain, in part, that the prosperi ty of the country is often really greatest while a mong the mercantile classes there' is an outcry of distress and ruin. Another thing to be con sidered is that in a swollen circulation, while pro duction continues, labor rises; while at the same time, in a productive country, the necessaries of life being in excess oyer the home consumption, are still regulated in price by the foreign mark- et. . The laboring man 13 tnus enabled to moke more in other callings than he can do by the cultivation of his farm, which he therefore aban dons; and as the mass of mankind are prone to let each day provide for itself, receiving fqr a time more wages in one day than he can consume in two or three, he accordingly relaxes from labori ous habits, and gradually becomes idle. In the mean time, population continuingto increase more rapidly than the cultivators ot tne sou, m conse quence of this diversion, the production bears a less, proportion to 'consumption, and provisions rise; and thus two circumstances are brough into action adverse to national wealth. These constituent members of society are rendered un aPPyt a"d the exports of the country are dimin ished. In this way my proposition has. I think at least, the show of reason, although perhaps to men more highly gifted its folly may be apparent. Having thus endeavored briefly to defend my own ground, 1 feel myself justified in pursuing tne enemy, and endeavoring to convince even himself that it is not the part of a wise sreneral. to invade a peaceful neighboring territory, while his own position is weak and defenceless. The Bank of the United States of Pennsylvania, is before the public in a very peculiar position, and to its distinguished president, is awarded, on all hands, the praise of what is jight, and the odium of what is wrong in that position. In May last, this institution refused to redeem its notes in specie, and thus induced,' compelled or furnished a pretext to the other banks in the Union to make a like refusal. That institution still continues its refusal, and through its pre sident, avows its purpose to persevete, until certain events pointed out shall take place, This it does not, as its president professes, with re ference to its own peculiar interest or condition, but to make common cause with the other banks: and all this he not only justifies, but speaks of h in mat-tone 01 iriumpn ana daring which marks the hero of some great achievement. He is not contented with giving to the other banks, the compulsion, the inducement, or the pretext. which uis example naiurauy anoras, out mis L'L 1 11 rr . . . letter is written especially to encourage them by his voice, and to hold forth to them the battle cry of his party, N "Once more unto the breach, dear friends." The tone and tenor of the president's letter is calculated to fill the bosom of every patriot with indignation, and cause the crimson blush of shame for his country to mantle on- his cheek 13 ui mis is noi an. 11 nis connuence uiu noi stand firm in the "bone and sinew" of the land. who are always, and in all situations, its ulti mate reliance, he must exclaim, with despairing Apneas nec spes opis ulla dabalur. VV hen one takes up this tissue of arrogance & recklessness of every thing that man is wont to treat with re spect and veneration, he is overwhelmed with astonishment, and is utterly at a loss upon what point to fix as the most deserving of rebuke and disapprobation. But, as I have resolved to find a beginning to this tangled skein, that I may wind on at least some portion of it, and expose to the public its true texture, I will take, in the first place, the assertion that the resumption, by the banks, of specie payments, if it took place at all, would be altogether voluntary. It may be that my notions of law and morality are as obscure and incorrect, in the estimation of the distin guished bank president, as those on political e conomy; but I thank Providence that we are not the mutual triers of each other, but are both obliged to throw ourselves upon God and our country, and to abide the decision of the one in this .world, and the other in the next. I should be glad to know what would be thought of the morality of the man who should proclaim to the world, "It is true, I am justly indebted to many of my fellow-citizens in several large sums. It is true, lam well able to pay them ; but as they rannot, under existing circumstances, force me to pay; and as it is a perfectly voluntary matter with me to pay or not, as I choose: and as I think it not exactly to my interest and that of some of ray friends, who are also in debt, to make payment at present, 1 am therefore resolv ed to postpone it until it shall better comport with my notions of expediency. It is true, the laws of the country require me to pay:' it is true, my solemn written promise requires me to pay; it is true, inexorable justice requires me to pay. uut tne man who pays without force, notwithstanding all these claims, is a mere vo lunteer; & whv should I regard them, while no force or compulsion can be applied to me.'" This seems to me to be, in substance, what is proclaim ed by the bank president. It is among the vagaries of my fancy, that there was a tune when the de mands of law and justice and plighted faith were obligatory, and when he who obeyed them could lay no claim to voluntary action, and I have even indulged the dream that such was still the opinion among men of honor and honesty. But 1 am roused from this agreeable delusion by the president of the Bank of the Uuited States, and have learned to my surprise that the only ques tion in the fulfilment of a contract is expediency, and that nothing is obligatory but irresistible force; and we are taught, ex cathedra, another most important truth, that it may be exceeding- y praiseworthy to violate all these obligations, provided one be strong enough to defy punish ment for so doing. "The great prerogative cf strength," saith be, "is nut to be afraid of doing right. A simple man might suppose it was equally the prerogative of honest weakness; but in this it seems he would be mistaken, for it is asserted to be the prerogative of strength; and with great truth may it be asserted where right consists in violating and trampling under foot both public and private faith, and setting at nought the laws of society. Nay, so much are some of us behind the march of modern improve ment in ethics, that we did not discover until we bund it intimated from high authority, that an effort to pay one's debts may be justly called "a rash and hazirdous enterpnze. Our surprise at these opinions is perhaps not quite so excu? sable as it at first might seem, for we should have remembered that they are from the same persons who, at the head of an institution which held, as assignee in trust,' the effects of another whose charter had expired, unscrupulously re-issued its redeemed notes," . One might have supposed that some scruples of conscience would nave accompaniea mis net, ana uouois 01 us pro priety have visited the mind of the actor. But this, it seems, was very far from the case. For, when censured for the act,, he boldly defends himself upon the ground that his bank had done no more than others in issuing the notes of the defunct institution, as if there was no difference between an executor or other trustee re-issuing the redeemed notes' of his cestui que trust, and their circulation inter alias by those who held them. Did the president reajly perceive no dif ference? If he did, and asserted that he did not, what becomes of his veracity 1 And if he did not perceive it, the question remains to be settled between him and the rest of the world as to the correctness of his moral sense. These ew specimens of the moral views of the presi dent of the United States Bank ought to be borne in mind as we go along, that we may with more safety decide upon his right to our conadence in his opinions upon other subjects. After some other preliminary remarks of a like character to those before mentioned, he pro ceeds first to assign the causes of the suspension which he makes to be three in number, to wit: "The Specie Circular, the mismanagement o the deposities, and the clamor raised by the Ex ecutive against bank notes, which alarmed the people for their safety, and caused a run upon the banks for specie." Now this specification is contradicted by other declarations of the writer himself, by those of others among the most ex perienced financiers - in the country, and by the observation and sound sense of all who have at tended to the circumstances of the times. In another part of the letter now under considera tion, the writer says: "The disease of the coun try was an overstrained & distempered energy. What does he mean by that expression ? No one would find any difficulty in comprehending it. if that difficulty was not created by bis forbear ing to mention it among the causes of suspen sion in his enumeration of those causes. It would at once strike every mind that he meant nothing more nor less than that a spirit of exces sive trading and speculation had existed: and this is confirmed by the remedy he indicates for the disease. " The remedy," says he, "was re pose ;" or, in other words, a suspension of that "overstrained and distempered energy," and a forbearance to enforce rigidly a fulfilment of ex isting contracts ; among which, and doubtless not the least important, yere the notes issued by the banks. Of other financiers who have assigned causes for the present pecuniary difficulties, I will con tent myself with an extract from Mr. Gallatin's report. "The immediate causes which thus compelled the banks of the city of New York to suspend specie payments, on the 1 0th of May last, are well known. The simultaneous withdrawing of the large public deposits, and of excessive foreign credit?, combined with the great and unexpected fall in the price of the principal ai tide of our exports, with an import of corn and bread stuffs, such as had never before 'occurred, and with the consequent inability of the country. particularly of the southwestern States, to make the usual and expected remittances, did, at one and the same time, fall principally and neces sarily, on the greatest commercial emporium of the Union. After a long and most arduous struggle, during which the banks, though not altogether unsuccessfully, resisting the nnpera live foreign demand for the precious metals, were gradually deprived of a great portion of their specie ; some unfortunate incidents of a local nature, operating m Concert with other previous exciting causes, produced distrust and panic. and finally one of those general runs, which, 1 continued, no banks that issue paper money payable on demand, can ever resist: and which soon put it out of the power of those of this city to sustain specie payments. The example was followed by the hanks throughout the whole country, with as much rapidity as the news of the suspension in New .York reached them, without waiting for an actual run, and princi pally, if not exclusively, on the alleged grounds of the effects to be apprehended from that sus pension. I hus, whilst the Ne v York city banks were almost drained of their specie, those in other places preserved the amount which they neia before the hnal catastrophe. "If the share of blame, which may justly be imputed to the banks, be analyzed, it will be found to consist in their not having, at an early period, duly appreciated the magnitude of the impending danger, and taken, in time, the mea sures necessary to guard against it: in their want of firmness when the danger was more ap parent and alarming ; in yielding to the demands for increased, or continued bank facilities, in stead of resolutely curtailing their loans, and les seniug their liabilities." - But I may also appeal to the experience and observation of men m general, whether those as signed by the writer of the letter were the effi cient causes of the pecuniary embarrassments, & whether over-trading wosnot much more opera tive, and especially whether the run upon the banks: for specie, so far as it existed, was not mainly the result of the high rate of exchange on England, and the demand for remittances to that country ? - ' But, allowing these causes to have been as efficient as the bank president insists, were they. by his own showing, the compulsory causes 01 suspension? Did he not assure us, at the time of suspension, that he was not driven fo it by his own necessities, but was influenced entirely by a regard to the general welfare, and a desire to be the first in stoppage, that he might be the first in resumption? "If," said he, "the bank had consulted its own strength, it would have con tinued its payments without reserve." If then be might have continued to fulfil his contracts, was it not his duty to have done so ? Does any thing but the want of ability justify a man, .ac cording to any sound system of ethics, in refus ing to fulfil a lawful contract ? And yet this gentleman refuses the fulfilment of his, while he is yet able, and urges all others in similar cir cumstances to do likewise, upon some conside rations of expediency, But these causes, erroneously assigned, as I think I have, shown, as a justification for the suspension, it is insisted are in full operation, and indeed, that they . have - acquired ten-fold orce. It, then, one-tenth of their present force was sufficient to produce the stoppage of all the banks in the Union, what must be the effect up on them, now that those causes have attained their entire vigor ? But is it true that their ef- ect is increased at all f And first, as to the Spe cie Circular. Is fc true that its provisions have been extended? Is it by force of the Specie Cir cular, or any other Executive circular, that bank notes are not receivable in Diyment for the cus toms? Is it not by the operation oftheactof 1789, requiring all the debts of the Government to be collected in cash ? The operation of that act, it is true, was modified by the resolution of 1816, so as to allow the reception of the notes of specie- paying banks. And is them now any act of the Executive, or of Congress, which prohibits ttbe reception, of the notes of specie paying 'banks; except at the land offices ? s it not the fact that the non-payment by the banks of specie is the only circumstance, at present, excluding their notes from reception inll dues to the Govern ment save those at the land offices ? And does not this circumstance, so far from extending the provisions of the Specie Circular, render it, in fact a dead letter,. and leave nothing in existence upon which it can operate?- Is it dealing fairly, then,, with the people of the United States, f6r a man whose voice is so potential with so man'; to assert that the Specie Circular has been ex tended? " - '; ; '- Upon the next topic the sweeping interro gatory, "Now has anyone of. these cause ceas ed ? On the contrary, have they not acquired ten-fold force 1" is qualified, if not absolutely' negatived,-a few sentences afterwards, by the admission that "the distribution of the surplus is over," (coupled with what looks very much like a taunt,) "because there is no longer any surplus to distribute." But as a substitute for this cause '. distress to the banks, he brings forward ano ther: "But," says he, "the great disbursements' on the Southern and Western frontiers operate as injuriously, by requiring the transfer of so much revenue from the points wnere itis collect ed." What a startling idea is here presented to the mind! .And what a conclusive argu ment against connecting the fiscal affairs of the Government with the banking institutions of the country ? ." It is gravely brought forward by the most distinguished of our financiers, as a reason why the banks should not attempt specie payments, that Congress has made appropriations to be expended in this or that portion of the U nion. And is it come to this; that when an appropriation is required in a particular portion oftbe country, ana every mingejse inaicatesine propriety of the appropriation, it must be with held, because it will interfere with the plans ana interests of the banking institutions? Is not this precisely one of the arguments which we have relied upon in favor of a disconnection, that as long as the connection exists, the measures of the Government must he controlled by the banks, or the country agitated by their cries of distress , at every movement ? And can the American people, 1 ask, shamefully submit to nave tneir public will thus thwarted and controlled ? Every noble principle in the American ' character in dignantly forbids it, "t "Listly and mainly," says the letter, "the alarm about bank notes propagated by the Gov ernment has been deeply spread throughout the country, till what was at first a passing outcry has settled into , an implacable hostility: JNo man, I think, can doubt for a moment that, the Executive of the United States seeks to maintain his power by exciting popular passions against the credit system, & that the whole influence of ; the Government is employed to infuse into the minds of the people distrust and hatred of all banks." By the Executive is evidently meant the President. Now, I will venture. to assert that men quite as honest and intelligent as the president of the Bank of the United Slates not only doubt what is thus asserted, but believe it to be an utterly groundless and gratuitous charge. It is entirely without proof, and is not . believed by any. one whose mind is not biased ,' by interest or passion, misled by political pre judice, or deceived by misrepresentation. - The President, in his Message, expressly denies his right, or that of Congress, to . interfere with the banks, and recommends nothing in relation to -them but their discontinuance as the fiscal agents of the Government. How, then, is this Execu tive power exerted? From what immediately follows, the inference is plain that the writer of the letter has in view, as one at least of the modes. y the procuring of speeches to be delivered in, and ,: perhaps out, of Congress having that tendency. "For this purpose," he says, "the most ' insane t ravings are addressed to the cup;dity of the ignorant, who are taught that gold and silver are. the only true riches." - By whom are these insane ravings addressed i iJy the iresident ? This surely was not meant. By whom, then, have they been addressed? I will venture to. say that no man in the public councils of .this nation, whether he be, in the estimation of the bank president, sane or insane, has ever assert- ' cd that gold and silver are the only true riches. Who has ever doubted the value of cattle, horses, houses, lands, the clothing which comforts and adorns our persons, and the bread which sus tains our existence? I am the more justified in taking direct isaue upon the truth of this asser tionbecause the language referred to is indi rectly, if not directly, imputed to myself: for the writer goes on to say, "and above all. that hese shrewd metals would enable us to outwit the paper dullness of England ;" and, as if in proof that he was right in these assertions, he then quotes the portion of a paragraph from my peech heretofore mentioned. I bat quotation is already before you; and if any man can find in it the assertion that gold and silver are the only true riches, or that they would enable us io out wit England "He must have optics sharp, I ween,' .. . But how is the quotation itself introduced? Said one of these politicians in the Seriate of 'the United States." What politicians? This is the first time, I believe, that the word politician oc curs in the letter, and if any class is previously - described, I am unable to find the description. , The truth is, the political party which refuses to yield to the dictation of the bank president, is as constantly present to, his mind as was the Jew Mordecai to that of the princely Haman, fretting his pride, thwarting bis ambition, and destroying 11s relish even for the dainties of his table, and the gorgeous splender of his palace.and under n vl very natural illusion be fancies that it is just as present to the mind of every one else, & of course no discourse about it can ever be' abrupt or un expected, of require the ordinary forms of intro duction. But, granting their truth so far as the various ' portions of the letter can be reconciled with each other, to wit: that the Specie Circular, the mis management of the deposites, or its equivalent ubstituteand the Executive hostility, backed bv he insane ravings of bis partisans in or out of . the Senate, are in full operation, and indeed have acquired tenfold force, and that the United States Hank, with all these weighty powers warnnrr against her, is yet able to iueet fier engagements, , the question is to.be settled whether, even in the most latuuainarian scnooi 01 morality, me sus pension or us continuance are justifiable or ex cusable, , Air Will admit that, however censura-' ble it may be for a man to have entered into ait engagement without a reasonable prospect oi ful- filling it, yet having done so, utter inability would excuse the performance. But this ground of de- ' fence or excase is rejected by the Bank of the U. States with indignation. - . y mi . v- i: it' ii H ' , 1 i ;i -"1 1 1 1