IT' >-^oM\^ N^ S ,>. P^IBRARY OF CONGRESS. I set Shelf— -(^------t/> ., i'7 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.^ -^;*l ■SS- ■•-'•■' .„i;:fi:*: ^S c/Jill ili ) Id 11' MEMORIAL ADDRESSES ON THE Life and Character^ OF RUSH Clark, (A REPRESENTATIVE FROM IOWA,) DELIVERED IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND IN THE SENATE, M, S. FORTY-SIXTH CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION. -!^^^ PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF CONGRESS. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. I 88 I . OHhj Z- JOINT RESOLUTION for printing the eulogies delivered in the Senate and House of Rep- resentatives upon Ilonorable Rush Clark, deceased. Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled. That nine thousand copies of the eulogies delivered in the two Houses of Congress upon the late Rush Clark be printed, six thousand copies for the use of the House of Representatives and three thousand copies for the use of the Senate, and the Secretary of the Treasury have printed the portrait of Mr. Clark to accompany the same ; and for the defraying the expense of pro- curing the said portrdt the sum of five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be, and is heroljy, appropriated out of any money in the Treas- ury not otherwise appropriated. Approved, February 25, iSSck .G 5 VIJ 1- ADDRESSES ON THE Death of Rush Clark PROCEEDINGS IN THE HOUSE. April 29, 1879. Mr. Price. It becomes my mournful and painful duty, Mr. Speaker, to announce this morning to the House of Representatives the death of my colleague, Hon. Ru.sh Clark, which occurred at his rooms at the National Hotel in this city yesterday afternoon, after a brief illness of only a few hours. At some future time I may ask the indulgence of the House to submit some extended remarks in reference to the life and character of my colleague. I think it proper to say at this time that after full consultation with the delegation from the State of Iowa and with the friends of the family, and in view of the time when the train will start, also in view of the fact that when the remains shall arrive at his old home his neighbors, acquaintances, and friends will hold funeral ceremonies, we have concluded to dispense with any funeral ceremonies in this Hall. It is due to the House and it is due to the friends that this explanation should be made. I now offer the resolutions which I send to the Clerk's desk. The Clerk read as follows: Resolved, That the House has iieard with sincere regret the an- nouncement of the death of Hon. Rush Cl..\rk, late a Representa- tive from the State of Iowa. Resolved by the House of Representatives [the Senate concurring), That a special joint committee of seven members and three Senators be appointed to take order for superintending the funeral and escort 3 PROCEEDINGS IN THE HOUSE. the remains of the deceased to his late residence hi Iowa ; and the necessary expenses attending the execution of this order shall be paid out of the contingent fund of the House. Resolved, That the Clerk communicate the foregoing resolutions to the Senate. Resolved, That as a mark of respect to the memory of the deceased this House now adjourn. The Speaker. The House has heard the resolutions read by the Clerk. The question is upon the adoption of the resolutions. The resolutions were then adopted. The Speaker, in obedience to the second resolution, announced as the committee on the part of the House the following : Mr. Price, of Iowa; Mr. Reagan, of Texas; Mr. Hatch, of Missouri; Mr. Neal, of Ohio; Mr. Henderson, of Illinois; Mr. Cook, of Georgia, and Mr. Bennett, of Dakota. And then, in accordance with the foregoing resolution, the House adjourned. April 30, 1879. A message from the Senate, by Mr. Burch, its Secretary, announced that the Senate had concurred in the resolution of the House provid- ing for tlie appointment of a joint committee to take order for super- intending the funeral and to escort the remains of Hon. Rush Clark, late a member of the House of Representatives from the State of Iowa, to his late residence; and that the President pro tempore had appointed Mr. Kirkwood, Mr. Platt, and Mr. Hereford as the committee on the part of the Senate. The Speaker. The Chair desires, in this connection, to announce that the funeral services of Hon. Rush Clark will take place at half past six o'clock this evening, at the National Hotel, and the remains will be removed to the cars at seven o'clock. Members of this House PROCEEDINGS IN THE HOUSE. are respectfully invited to attend and to accompany the remains to the depot. January 14, 1880. Mr. Price, by unanimous consent, submitted the following reso- lution; which was read, considered, and agreed to: Resolved, That the special order for Saturday, the 31st day of Jan- uary, 1880, at two o'clock p. m., shall be the presentation of suitable resolutions in reference to the death of Hon. Rush Clark, late a member of this House, and the e.xpression by members of the esteem in which he was held by his associates on this floor. January 31, 1880. Mr. Price. Mr. Speaker, I arise for the purpose of submitting res- olutions of respect to the memory of Hon. Rush Clark, late one of my colleagues in this House, and I ask that the resolution introduced by me on the 14th day of this month be read by the Clerk. The Clerk read as follows: Resolved, That the special order for Saturday, the 31st day of Jan- uary, 1880, at two o'clock p. m., shall be the presentation of suitable resolutions in reference to the death of Hon. Rush Clark, late a member of this House, and the expression by members of the esteem in which he was held by his associates on this floor. ^DDRESS OF yVlR. PrICE, OF JcWA. Mr. Speaker: For an hour we stop the wheels of legislation, and turn our backs upon questions which cause diversity of opinion and clash of conflicting interests, to give attention to the consideration of a subject and an event which no legislation can affect and no statute can change. ADDRESS OF MR. PRICE ON THE Death, it is well understood, is no respecter of persons. He strikes alike in cabin, cottage, or palace. Place, position, or power makes no change in his purpose. On this floor lie has repeatedly asserted his prerogative as a privileged member. No resolution or statute de- vised by human ingenuity or enforced by human power controls in any degree his movements. When he demands the previous ques- tion it is always seconded, always sustained. No motion to post- pone, commit, or amend is in order. The grim monster never lacks a quorum, and can always command a majority, for "all that tread this earth are but a handful compared to those that slumber in its bosom." My late colleague, Hon. Rush Clark, commenced his career in this House at the opening of the Forty-fifth Congress with apparently as good a prospect of long life as most of us, and because of his fewer years much better than some of us. But, sir, in the meridian of his manhood, with hopes and aspirations reaching onward into the future, and upward toward the achievement of deeds which might make the world glad that he had lived, he was in an unexpected moment, and almost without notice, arrested by the summons which sooner or later will be served upon all of us, and compelled to ex- hibit his accounts and his character where forever the debits and credits of the former must remain as he placed them, and the latter know no change except in degree. Mr. Clark was born in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, October II, 1834; graduated at Jefferson College in that State in 1853, and removed to Iowa City the same year, where he resided until his death. He was a member of the General Assembly of the State of Iowa from 1S60 to 1864, and for two years of that time speaker of the house; he was also a member of the board of trustees of the Iowa State University; in all of which positions he discharged the duties devolving upon him in such a manner as to command the re- spect and confidence of all classes of people. LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. 7 My acquaintance with Mr. Clark was of a general and not of an intimate character until I met him as a member on this floor. I shall therefore leave others to speak more particularly of his character as a man and a citizen. I may be permitted, however, to say that as a man Mr. Clark was social, unassuming, and kind in his deportment. As a legislator, either State or national, his constituents could rely implicitly on his energy, industry, and honesty in attending promptly to all the business which belonged to his position; and the members of this House \vho served with him in the Forty-fifth Congress, and in the first or special session of the Forty-sixth Congress, until his death, will bear witness to the fact that few members were more con- stantly in their seats during the session of the House than he. Mr. Clark was apparently in as good health as usual on the even- ing of one day, and on the evening of the next he had no place among the living. The going down of the sun on the evening of the 27th of April, 1879, found him busy with the cares and activities of this life. The setting of the sun on the evening of the ne.xt day found him a dweller in the spirit land. This sad event, Mr. Speaker, forces the conviction upon all of us who still occupy positions on the time side of the river of death — That when the angel of shadow Rests his feet on wave and shore And our eyes grow dim witli watching. And our hearts faint at the o.ar, Happy is he who heareth The signal of his release In the bells of the Holy City, The chimes of eternal peace. But, sir, no eulogy that I can pronounce, no tribute that 1 can bring to the memory of my late colleague, can equal that which was accorded him by the people of his own city, his neighbors and ac- quaintances who had known him intimately for more than a quarter of a century, and who turned out en tnasse to his funeral. His mon- ument is in the hearts of those who knew him longest and best. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Clark is no longer of this earth. He will answer never again to the roll-call in this Chamber. He has been called to visit that "undiscovered country, from whose bourn no traveler re- turns." And may I not add, sir, that these sudden and solemn calls so frequently made upon members of this House during the last two years should admonish us who remain to So live, that when the summons comes to join The innumerable caravan which moves To that mysterious realm, where each shall take His chamber in the silent halls of death. We go not, like the quarry slave at night. Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed By an unfaltering trust, approach the grave Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams. I submit the following resolutions : * The Clerk read as follows: Resolved, That this House has heard with deep regret of the death of Hon. Rush Clark, late a member of this House from the State of Iowa. Resolved, That as a testimony of respect to his memory the officers and members of this body will wear the usual badge of mourning for the space of thirty days. Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be transmitted by the Clerk to the family of the deceased. Resolved, That the Clerk be directed to communicate a copy of these proceedings to the Senate, and that as a further mark of respect to the memory of the deceased this House do now adjourn. LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. Address of JAh. Coffroth, of f ennsylvania. Mr. Speaker: Rush Clark, our deceased brother, was born in the district that I have the honor to represent in this Congress. There- fore, it is fitting in me to rise to second the resolutions presented to this body in respect to him and to bring my tribute to his worth and my praise to his many ennobUng quahties. Rush Clark was born in the beautiful village of Schellsburgh, Bedford County, Penn- sylvania, on the nth day of October, 1834. His father, John Clark, was of Scotch-Irish family and was born in Cumberland County, Penn- sylvania. His mother was born near the line between the States of Pennsylvania and Maryland, opposite Hancock. His parents were among the early settlers of the lovely valley in which Rush was born, and they were universally respected and beloved far and near by all who knew them for their hospitality and their upright Christian walk. Rush Clark was the sixth son of John and Mary Clark. His deep and fervent love for his father and mother made him linger long around the threshold of his childhood's home. During the period when he was at home basking in parental affection I first made his acquaintance. How well I now remember his happy home, the warm brotherly and sisterly love that ever greeted him ! He was generous and kind, intellectually bright, and full of life, energy, and untiring zeal. He did not doubt when he met obstacles or reverses in his pathway ; he moved on with renewed courage until he over- came every difficulty and accomplished his aim. His boyhood days were pleasant and happy. He imbibed and ingrafted into his being the loveliness of the country in which he lived. There the morning sun kissed into life and beauty the many flowers that grew up around his home; there the evening shadows of 2 r c ADDRESS OF MR. COFFROTH ON THE the mighty Alleghany rested upon the earth he trod. He was sur- rounded by relatives and friends who encouraged him to deeds of kindness and honor. A relative who loved him and knew him well writes me, " If I were called upon to pass a eulogium ever so brief, it would be that Rush Clark loved his mother and lived for the good he fiiight do others." What more need be said in praise of our de- ceased brother? He will live in the memory of all those who knew him. The great good he did for others surpasses in grandeur the greatest intellectual and political achievements of his wonderfully suc- cessful life. Ecclesiastes taught that " a good name is better than precious ointment." Lord Bacon said, " Death has this also, that it opens the gate to good fame and extinguisheth envy." Thus it will be with the memory of our deceased brother. His good name, his kind disposition, his benevolence, his pleasing manners, his great ability, and his social qualities will be remembered long after his body molders to " mother dust." He was liberally educated. He attended the schools at Schells- burgh; then went to the Ligonier Academy in Westmoreland County, a place of learning of high reputation, under the charge of an elder brother; from there he entered Jefferson College and graduated with the highest honors. He then went West to carve for himself a name and fame in a new country far from his relatives and the friends of his youth. He located in Iowa City, then the capital of the State, read law, and was admitted to the bar. He gallantly and manfully strug- gled in his profession to attain eminence, and soon made for himself a reputation that secured him a good practice. In i860, at the age of twenty-six, he was elected a member of the General Assembly of Iowa, and was continued in the position until the close of the session of 1864, and was speaker of the house in 1863 and 1864. He also held a number of positions of trust and honor in the State ; and was elected in 1876 to the Forty-fifth Congress, and in 1878 re-elected to the Forty-sixth Congress. LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. Mr. Speaker, we separated in the days of his boyhood, and only met again here at the extra session I did not then imagine that in a few days we would separate to meet no more until the great waters of the deep, the mountains, and the valleys give up their dead. The last time I saw him alive was the night before his death; when we parted he said, " We will meet in the House to-morrow." We did not meet. Death during the night laid its icy grasp upon him, and when the hour arrived when we should have met at the House, his spirit was taking its flight from " the shore touched by the mysteri- ous sea that never yet has borne on any wave the image of a home- ward sail." How sudden was his death! He was in the prime of life. Many years of distinction and honor were apparently before him. He was beloved, because he was frank, candid, and sincere, and looked with the eye of charity upon the failings and mistakes of men. " He be- lieved in the power of kindness, and spanned with divine sympathy the gulf that separates the fallen from the pure." We are called upon to mourn the loss of one who in a brief time accomplished much, but promising more and more if he had not been cut off so early in life. Ne'er gathered the reaper fruit more fair, Never the shadows of darli despair Fell on a deeper woe. Gone from his task half complete, Gone from caresses kind and sweet, Into Death's arms of snow. ' Mr. Speaker, I have no language to describe my feelings when I viewed his form encased in the casket of the dead. Handsome in death as he was pure in life, I remembered that Shakespeare liad defined death to be " the blind cave of eternal night," and I trem- bled at the thought, but I quickly drew sweet and enduring consola- tion from the divine promise of the Saviour of mankind when he de- clared: "In my Father's house are many mansions; if it were not ADDRESS OF MR. SAPP ON THE SO I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you." Bulwer has feelingly expressed : There is no death ! The stars go down To rise upon some fairer shore, And bright in Heaven's jeweled crown They shine forevermore. His remains are interred in his adopted State. The people of Iowa will cherish his memory for his devotion to their interests, and the statutes and public records of that State will be a lasting monument to his intellect and legal ability. His friends in Pennsylvania will forever mourn his loss, and the country at large will regret the early and sudden demise of an able Representative in Congress. Gone from his country's august claim, Where he, from the lofty dome of fame, Hung like a bright polar star; Swift as a sunbeam snatched away By a sudden cloud when April day , Broods in the heavens afar. ^DDRESS OF /Wr. SaPP, OF foWA. Mr. Speaker: Death, always an unwelcome messenger, is espe- cially so when he claims as his victim one with whom we have been closely associated. This thought is impressed upon my mind on this occasion, set apart in commemoration of the death of my late col- league, Hon. Rush Clark. In sorrow for the necessity which ex- ists, I, too, sir, second the motion to adopt the resolutions before us. There are times when obituaries become an imperative duty, and a conviction of this is the motive that governs me to-day. Our rela- tions for many years were such that it makes this duty a painful one; but I cannot allow this occasion to pass without paying a brief trib- ute to his memory. I have not the gift of eulogy, and will not at- LIFE ANT) CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. I3 tempt to make one ; but I would, while these solemn rites are passing, lay a few garlands of regard and affection on his grave. Mr. Clark died at his hotel in this city on the 28th day of April last, suddenly and unexpectedly. No intelligence of his sickness and approaching dissolution had reached his constituents, neighbors, and friends at his home until after Death, the conqueror of all, had done his work. I parted with him in the afternoon of the day preceding his death to visit my home in the West. He was then buoyant and hopeful, saying to me as I left him that he never felt better in his life. On the following morning but one I was startled by the shocking intelli- gence that he was dead. And in the same hour, by the electric spark, the sad announcement that " Hon. Rush Clark, of Iowa, is dead" sped away to his far-off home, to his friends and trusting con- stituents. Mr. Clark \vas a native of Pennsylvania, having been born at Schellsburgh, Bedford County, in that State, on the nth day of October, 1834. His education was begun in the public schools, after which he re- ceived an academic training preparatory to entering Jefferson Col- lege, at which institution he graduated with honors in 1853. Shortly after this, filled with that spirit of enterprise which has led to the wonderful growth and development of the great West, he emigrated to Iowa, selecting as his home Iowa City. He first commenced the study of medicine, but in a short time, finding this profession uncon- genial to his tastes and wishes, he turned his attention to the study of law, and, when prepared, was admitted to practice in the several courts of that State. From that time until his death he kept an ofiice and practiced this profession with success. Mr. Clark was repeatedly called upon by his fellow-citizens to fill places of honor and trust. He was elected by the people of Johnson County to represent them in the General Assembly in i860, and was 14 ADDRESS OF MR. SAPP ON THE re-elected to that office in 1862, serving during this term as speaker of the house of representatives. He was elected to and held the honorable and responsible position of trustee of the Iowa State Uni- versity from 1862 until 1866. He was again elected a representative to the State Legislature, which position he resigned upon being nom- inated by the party to which he belonged as their candidate for Rep- resentative to the Forty-fifth Congress, and to which he was elected. He served with fidelity and ability, as all of us know who served with him in that Congress. So faithfully and well had he served the people who elected him that he was renominated without opposition and was again elected by a very large majority to this Congress. I shall not attempt to give even a general statement of the way he performed the arduous and responsible duties of Representative here, but this much may with propriety be said, that in the discharge of his public duties the great leading and controlling question with him was : What is right ? And when he had settled that question he firmly adhered to his convictions, never permitting considerations of policy or expediency to divert him from the right. He was unremitting in his attention to the business, interests, and wants of his constituents, ever devoting himself to the discharge of his whole duty to them and to the country. He was prompt, regular, and constant in his attendance upon the sessions of the House and the meetings of his committees Mr. Clark possessed a quick, active mind, enabling him at a glance to comprehend a subject requiring thought and study with many others. As a man he was always, under all circumstances, urbane, kind, courteous, and genial. His generosity knew no bounds. Ever thoughtful of the happiness and well-being of others, he was of necessity a marked favorite in the community in which he lived. Possessing these noble qualities in a high degree, he endeared him- self to all with whom he was intimately associated. But there are none, sir, who know so well the full measure of his LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. 15 noble generosity, of his kind and sympathizing heart, as do the grief- stricken wife and children who were the recipients of all that is good and noble in a husband and father. Yet we should pause here and draw the veil over a sorrow so sacred. It is not for us to intrude tlierein. It has been said that a merciful Providence confers on man a most gracious boon when He conceals from him the " time that he shall cease to be." Spared the weary hours of pain, the wan specter of anxiety and anguish, the relentless warnings of the pale messen- ger, he receives unheralded the final stroke. To those who so believe there may be comfort in the death of our friend whose early sum- mons we all so much deplore. His call was so sudden, so unex- pected, that it is difficult to believe that the seal of death has really been placed upon him, that he has crossed the cold river to the spirit land, and that all there was of earth to him has forever passed away. Truly " in the midst of life we are in death." ^DDF^ss OF yVlR. /Wanning, of Mississippi. Mr. Speaker : The inexorable voice of moitahty is again heard in these halls of legislation for the sixth time in the recent past, and pursuant to an immemorial custom, we have ceased our daily routine of labors that we may pay fitting tribute to the memory of our de- parted associate, Rush Clark. I ask but a brief space in wJiich to contribute a modest chaplet on the same hallowed shrine, in addition to the highly graceful tributes which have been presented by those who were longer and more inti- mately acquainted with our deceased friend than myself We were all greatly shocked by the suddenness with which he was stricken down while at his post of duty in this city, on the 28th day of April last, and while in the midst of a public career honorable to himself and his people. l6 ADDRESS OF MR. MANNING ON THE The simple story of his hfe is a far better eulogy than the plaudits of admiring friends. He was born in Schellsburgh, Pennsylvania, on the ist of October, 1834, and was therefore called to enter the great beyond in the forty-fifth year of his age. His alma mater was Jeffer- son College of the same State; and immediately after graduating at that college in 1853 he removed to Iowa City, Iowa, where he con- tinued to reside, and in a short time thereafter entered upon the prac- tice of the law. As a lawyer he soon enjoyed that distinction to which he was entitled by his marked ability, energy, and integrity. In i860, when the war clouds were lowering upon the country, in the hope of serving his State at this critical juncture, he was elected to the Legislature and at once took front rank among the leaders of the party to which he belonged. In 1 86 1, when the tocsin of war first sounded in the land and the whole population was springing to arms, he accepted service upon the staff of Iowa's governor with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and was at once active and efficient in sending forward to the war armed men for the maintenance of the Union of States. In 1862 he was re-elected to the Legislature, and was elevated to the position of speaker, the delicate and responsible duties of which place he discharged with dignity, ability, and fairness, although at that time he was only about twenty-eight years of age. Soon after the restoration of peace he resumed the practice of his profession, forming a copartnership with Judge W. J. Haddock, which continued until dissolved by his untimely death. He re-entered the halls of his State Legislature in 1876, although to do so involved a sacrifice of his personal and business interests. At the ensuing Con- gressional election he was rewarded by his party for the eminent and patriotic service he had rendered his State and country by electing him to the Forty-fifth Congress, and again in 1878 by returning him to the Forty-sixth Congress. Those who knew him upon this floor know how faithfully and LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. 1 7 promptly he responded to every duty that devolved upon him, and it is not strange that his generous impulses, strong mental faculties, pure private and public character, and love of country's honor and welfare, secured for him a warm place in the hearts of his constituency, whose interests he ever guarded and protected with so much zeal and effi- ciency. An exalted public spirit ever animated his breast ; and every movement, whether originated in legislative halls or elsewhere, which in his judgment tended to benefit the country in large or small degree, and bring peace and fraternal relations to the whole people, received his utmost aid. Now that his life is finished the testimony is cheerfully borne by all who knew him, without regard to party affiliations, that he left to his family, friends, and country a name without a stain. The following resolutions adopted by the citizens and professional associates of his distant home attest the esteem and affection of those in whose midst his life has been spent : As citizens of Iowa City, desiring to express our sorrow in view of the death of our friend and neighbor, lion. Rush Ci.ark, we resolve: 1. That we cherish a grateful remembrance of his many public and private vir- tues, his genial disposition and courteous bearing, and his ready and able advocacy of all that tended to promote the material, social, and educational prosperity of our city. 2. That we rejoice in the merited distinction which he attained in his profession and in the legislat.ve councils of the State and nation, and we deeply mourn that his life should so suddenly close in the midst of so much promise of usefulness and honor. 3. That our sympathy is hereby tendered to the family and relatives of our de- parted friend, knowing as we do tliat this bereavement robs them of one whose domestic virtues rendered him peculiarly diar to them. Truly, it can be said of him, " He was the noblest work of God — an honest man." He was too brief a time a Representative in the Congress of this Government to afford him either time or opportunity to adequately impress upon the country the many sterling qualities of head and heart which so much adorned his character, and which would have 3 RC 1 8 ADDRESS OF MR. MANNING ON THE resulted in benefiting so greatly all who were so fortunate as to come within the reach of their influence. In all the range of his social and political relations his bearing was marked by such loftiness and purity of purpose that the profoundest respect was paid him by his adver- saries, and the sincerest affection by those with whom he co-operated. Be it known, Mr. Speaker, to the credit of our humanity, that while we pause in our labors to observe the time-honored custom of laying our tributes upon the tomb of a departed colleague, party distinc- tions are unknown, as is beautifully illustrated by the intermingling at this hour of the voices of his political friends and adversaries. His mind had received the training and discipline of a quarter of a century of active mental labor, and the invigoration of countless collisions in intellectual gladiatorship, both in temples of justice and upon the hustings — ever wielding the cimeter of argument with manliness and dignity. As a statesman he was conservative in all his views, appealing always to the pure and elevated judgment, and not to the passions or prejudices of the people. On the page of Rush Clark's history it can be truthfully written that he " was of the most artless, candid, open, and benevolent disposition, disinterested in the extreme; of a temper mild and placable even to a fault, with- out one drop of gall in his whole constitution." But he is gone forever from the earth, and only his deeds can live after him, which, let us believe, will improve and elevate those who remain. The gladsome songs, the voice of loved ones, the beauties of nature are no more for him. Rest and sleep, sleep and rest ! There are many who mourn you — eyes that are dimmed with tears as they remember with grateful hearts your many generous acts of kindness. There are those who feel that your place can never be filled. "The best portion of a good man's life are the little, nameless, unremembered acts of tender- ness and love," with which your life was made redolent and glorious. From these events of Providence we should receive not alone the LIFE AND CHARACTER OF RUSH CLARK. 19 impression that in the midst of life we are in death, but also that as death ends life is filled up with duties. Our brother has fallen asleep. May he sleep on in peace until the last grand reveille of recorded time shall awake him again and sum- mon him from on high to mount the radiant heights of glory on the dread morning of the resurrection. Death is not the end : It but breedeth an infinite beginning; Limits are for time, and death killed time; Eternity's beginning is forever. ^DDRESS OF yVlR. J^EAL, OF pHIO. Mr. Speaker: The Great Reaper has been in our midst. He who considers neither age, nor sex, nor condition of man, who inexorably and impartially cuts down the young, the middle-aged, and the old, has laid his icy hand upon one of our number in the prime of life, in the full enjoyment of every intellectual faculty, and in the mid-career of manly activity and usefulness. Rush Clark, of Iowa, has "swept through the gates," and he will come in and go out with us no more forever. His accustomed seat in this Hall is now filled by another. His life in this world is ended; his mission accomplished, and he has gone to join the innumerable caravan in that undiscovered country from which there is no return. Well and truly, has it been said by one of earth's wisest sages, man's life is but a hand breadth ; a solemn truth, of which, in the hurry of business, in the toil and turmoil of life, and in the pursuit of the phantoms of our hopes, aspirations, and desires we too often lose sight, until rudely brought to our recollection by such a death as that of our late associate. We determine upon our plans, we lay out our work, we arrange our programme for the long vista of years which, panorama-like, unfolds itself before us, when suddenly, may- hap without warning, our lives are required of us, and the bright ADDRESS OF MR. NEAL ON THE and brilliant future fades away into the black nothingness of death. And this is all we are certain of in this world. Why even now — Our hearts, Like muffled drums, are beating Funeral marches to the grave. Mr. Speaker, it was not my good fortune to have known Mr. Clark previously to the assembling of the Forty-sixth Congress in this Hall in the month of October, 1877. We met here and then for the first time, strangers to each other as we were to most of those who were to be our associates during the life of that Congress. An acquaintance early formed soon ripened into a friendship which con- tinued without a jar until he yielded up this life, on the 28th day of April last, to the resistless demand of that master of the human race, Death ! I early discovered that he was a man of high sense of honor, of irreproachable integrity, of fair abilities, fine literary and professional acquirements, and sterling patriotism ; that he possessed a heart of as tender susceptibilities as a woman, without pretension and with- out sham. He fully appreciated the responsibilities of life, and met them in a right manly way. To him — Life was real, life was earnest, And the grave was not its goal. There was nothing sordid nor mean about him ; nothing low, base, nor groveling. His aspirations were ever upward and onward, "«