4 April 1841
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Religion
298 Washington Sunday 4. April 1841. Palm Sunday

4. V. Sunday.

Mrs Brooks of Medford

At 30 minutes past midnight this morning of Palm-Sunday the 4th. of April 1841. died William Henry Harrison, precisely one calendar month as President of the United States, after his inauguration— The first impression of this event, here where it occurred is of the frailty of all human enjoyments, and the awful vicissitudes woven into the lot of mortal man— He had reached but one short month since the pinnacle of honour and power in his own country— He lies a lifeless corpse in the Palace provided by his Country for his abode. He was amiable and benevolent. Sympathy for his sufferings and his fate, is the prevailing sentiment of his fellow-citizens— The bereavement and distress of his family, is felt intensely, albeit they are strangers here, and known to scarcely any one— His wife had not yet even left his residence at North-bend, Ohio, to join him here. An express was sent for her two or three days since, but the tidings of death must meet her before she can reach this city. The influence of this event upon the condition and history of the Country, can scarcely be foreseen— It make the Vice-President of the United States, John Tyler of Virginia, acting President of the Union, for four years, less one Month— Tyler is a political sectarian of the Slave-driving, Virginian Jeffersonian school— Principled against all improvement— With all the interests and passions, and vices of Slavery rooted in his moral and political constitution—with talents not above mediocrity, and a spirit incapable of expansion to the dimensions of the station upon which he has been cast by the hand of Providence unseen through the apparent agency of chance— To that benign and healing hand of Providence I trust in humble hope of the good, which it always brings forth out of evil— In upwards of half a century, this is the first instance of a Vice-President’s being called to act as President of the United-States, and brings to the test that provision of the Constitution which places in the Executive Chair a man never thought of for it by any body.— This day was in every sense gloomy— Rain the whole day. I attended public worship first at the Presbyterian Church where there were less than 30 persons, and a stranger gave out two hymns, and made a short prayer. Mr Wood was to have reached home last Evening but did not— The Cars from Philadelphia having failed to arrive at Baltimore in time for the passengers to come on in those from Baltimore to this place last Evening. The Stranger said that he himself came from Philadelphia the day before yesterday, and from Baltimore last evening— That he was too unwell to preach this morning but that he would preach at half past 3 this afternoon. The Congregation was then dismissed and I went to St. John’s Church where Mr Hawley was reading the morning prayer for the Sunday before Easter. He preached from Psalm 39.5—“Veryly, every man at his best state is altogether vanity.” He said he had witnessed the death of the chief magistrate, after prayers at his bed-side at 9 last Evening.— Mrs Brooks widow of the late Governor Brooks’s son dined with us.

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