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Through (he the influence of circuinstances, the 8uperioriiy of nnturnl talents, or the vigorous
exercisc of ordinary powers, sonie persons are enaoled vety Inrgely to benefit or to injure their
fellow-men. The well being of thuusands. and someiimesof millions. is permanently afleeted bv tho
chaiacter of a single individual. The consciousness of possessing this extensivo and eommanding
infiuence over others, is usually pleasing to ts possessor. independently of the manncr in whicli it
may be exerciscd. The boy délighta in the perlect obedience of hts horse or ol his dog, and the man
rejoices that he can cotninand armies, or legislate for etates or empires. When superior powers are
con secrated to tho service of virtue, and the adv.inceiuent of human happiness, tln-y tend Inrgely
to augment the highest rewafd which God lias bestowed on the virtuous man- the memory of ihe good
which he lias done, and that he has endeavored to do. He who lives asman should live. h permitied to
look back on a continued series ot" acts designed for the benefit of his race. and where his aclion
could not reach their c.-ise, on unceasing wishes for their welfare; while the hope of nccomplishing
still rnorc for degtnded and Eliip■vrecked humanity urges him to renewed excrtions. to be ever
aucceed by the saine reward the recolleciion of generóos deeds accomplislicd or attomptcd.the love
of the vininus, and the smiles ol approving Heaven.But f the remembnnee of good occomplished or
intended for the vicious or ihe sufiering be iliu8cheering to the human lieart, whnt must be kis
refiections, who through his long ufe, has ] steadily uscd his superior influence and talents for '
augmeming the siun if humnn misery. for ' tend:ng ignorance, ;ind vice. and crime, and at ' the same
time throwing every obstacle in the way ; f that philanthropliy and patriotism which scuks ;o
enhghten. elévate and improve. What must be j his rcflections.whose unhallowed nmbition has led him
to Tasten even upon future generations. in addition to t!)eir other illa, the sorest curse wlnch has
afflictcd human na tür e, remcililcss and ] 'lopehss bon-lage? h n,ay be thought thnt if
individuals óf this chároctér have appeared in the gïiüe of humonitvyhey have been sl.unned by
the virtuous and pure-minded w th the same abhorrence which they would manifest to a representa ivo
of ihe infernal regions, who had been sent for'.h firom the great prison-housc of wor that he might
fit men for a residence there, by blightiñg in their initiatory state on earth, wliatever gemis of
lovt-linessor excellence might not be m unisón with the wretched condition and malignan t feelings
of fallen epirits. But experience teaches us a difl'eient lesson. Such individuils, usnnlly receive
the reverence, we might nlso say the adoration o( the mnss of men. includinga very large proportion
of the thinking and the good. - Regardless of the inferna! yract'ces they advocate, the fact that
they aie utterly recreant to the noblost principies of virtue is forgotien amidst excited feelings,
angry controversy, and splcndid exhibitions of inteHoctual power. These reflections have occurred to
us from reading nn account of the course of Mr. Clay in reference to the admission of Missouri into
the Union. A brief, and we suppose a correct ' marv of his ngency in thnt transaction mny be found
in the pllowing extract from the Albany Patriot."In the winter of 1818-19 this question was first
agitited in Consrress. Ilere is the provisión in the anide of adinission. which caused the
srrentest commotion, and which jmssed the H mse. wns rrjec;ed by the Scnate, adhered to by thé
House, and finnlly compromised nwny fhy one of those irirks of fiaucl hy which Mr.'Clny has since
sisnalized iiis nnme, more than once; ' ' A 1 1 children of slaves horn in sai 1 State, after the
ndmission there-if into the Union, sliall he (ree. biu may be held io sevice un'il the age nf
twenty-ñve eais: and the funhcr introduetion of slavery or involuntar.y tervitudé is prohihited,
exceptfor the punsliment of crimes whereof the party phall hnve been duly convicierl." Snch was the
proposition which Mr.Clay Iobóred .i long and so ardently to overeóme. He claims the honor, the
giory of tlcfeating jt; nnd no onc at all familiar wih tfte historv of those times can now believe
that Missouri could have ever hoen ndmitterl into the Union as a siave State, exrept throushhis
inte'rventfon. Savshis biographer. Geo. Prentice - "So prrat wns his exci temen t,se intense ihe
interrst he feit. and so q.rrernitting hs hodilv exenion. thnt he hnibecn freqn-ntlv healrd to sny,
thnt his henlth, nnd in all pro!;.b; hty his jre wb'uld have been liiít. had th" ndmission of
Missouri been dcferred a forinicht loncur." He labored hard. and he won the Efoal. Let his be all
the infamy! This restriciion was compromised away, and ihe North nareed to adtnit another slavc
State into the Union." Any one can see. froni this statement, tu.nl had it rot been for Mr Clay's
exertions. Missouri loould han e been admitted as a Frcc Stale; and conseqnèntly, all the evils of
Slavery which have resul ted in thnt State, and which may accrue ilironuh all coming time, are as
justlv ch.nrgeable to Mr. Clay. rs they would have been had he alone establishcd slavery theif, vri
thout the conci'rrence of others. He desira.' its estabüsment - he lafiored for it - he achi vzil
it: and on him resis the nrs?oxstniLiTY of the resulis, Let us consider, for a moment, what are some
of these rcsults.1. Missouri embrnces a fenile terrilcry ofCO,. 000 square miles, eqml to eight
Smtes as Inrge as Massachnsetts, and wher. ;is denscly settled. it will contain rmorc than five
millions of inhnhi. mn:s. Our first charge is. iliat through all this large domain, jMr. Clny h.is
extended the hlighting rurse of Perjt'ual Sljivcryl 2. The number of Slaves in Missouri in 1840 was
48.491, they having incrensed 23.8G0 in the preceding ten yenrs. Had it not heen (or Mr. Clny's
cxetlions. there would hnvo been at this time scarcely a slavo in the State. Through liis Tgency
somc fifty thousand slaves are now on the soil of Missouri. 3. Through this '"undnmríntal principie
of the State Consiitution. adupted through Mr. Clay's asrency, niany thousands of innocent children
have been seized in helpless inlancy, nnd made lites for Ufe. Evo1 y man whohosajust sensc rf thc
vaiue of liberty. woull prefcr to seo his posierity consigned to ihc crave, radiar ihan to
interminable 6lavery. 'Liberty or Death' is the patriot's choice; and it rnay wcll be questioned
whether it bo the grcater crime to depnve n free man of Liberty or of Lifo. For eighteen huntlred
ycars, the mcmory of 5Ierod, King of Judea, has becn reprobalcd by unnumbercd millions of every
tribe, nnd pcople, and nation who have rond the Gospel of Matthew, because heslew two hundred
children ofBethfohem inthcyears olfantile nnocency, merely to eratify his inordinate mnbition, How
much leas nfamy should nttacli to Ais memory, who from no higher motive, has reduced to hopeless
scrvitude thousands ofheples9 children. thereby degrading their condiiion, augnienting their nntura!
portion of sorrowand misery.and darkoning their prospects for lime nnd eternity? And must there not
be a great obtuseness cf moral feeling in his bosom, who cancalmly reflcct upon suchan nct, nnd
rejoice nnd even boastthat he has npplied himself to this infernal task with an energy and zenl
which had well nigh cost him his life? That he displnyed, in this aflTair cansummnte addres?.
industry and talent, we shall notnow question; bu: we affirm that it was taler.t and industry.
bestowed to accomplish a result calculated to thwnri the best interesis of man, a result reprobuted
by cvery philanthrophic heart, a rcsuh exprcsslyforbidden by the direct inspirntion of God, and the
tcachings of Chrisiianity, and one ihat as appears to us. none could fully understand and approbate,
unless his feelings were akin to thoseof the beins who have forover renounced all fcllowship with
that which is lovely and good. Yet the biographers of Mr. Clay would represent this nefarious
transaction as onet!iat eminently displays his patriotism, and ihey would cali upon the American
Poople to make him President over a Union which theyalleged thai he preserved by thus insidiously
defeating the resolute efïbrts of" tho iriends of Liberty for its wider extensión.