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LETTER VI. MR. DOWNING DESCRIBES A SAD MISHAP THAT BEFELL THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
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Page 67

6. LETTER VI.
MR. DOWNING DESCRIBES A SAD MISHAP THAT BEFELL THE HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES.[1]

Dear Cousin Ephraim:—I have jest time to write you a short
postscript to a letter that I shall send you in a day or two.
We have had a dreadful time here to-day. You know the
wheels of Government have been stopt here for three or four
weeks, and they all clapt their shoulders under to-day and
give 'em a lift; and they started so hard, that as true as
you're alive they split both Legislaters right in tu. Some say
they are split so bad they can't mend 'em again, but I hope
they can though; I shall tell you all about how 'twas done, in
a day or two. I've been expecting a letter from you, or some
of the folks, sometime. Your hearty cousin,

JACK DOWNING.
 
[1]

Editorial Note.—After a stormy debate in the House in relation to forming
a Convention of the two branches to fill the vacancies in the Senate, the
National Republicans finally carried the day; whereupon the Democratic
Republicans, having remonstrated to the last, took their hats and marched
out of the House in a body, about sixty in number, headed by Mr. Smith, of
Nobleborough. The National Republicans of the two branches, however, held
the Convention, and filled the vacancies in the Senate, and the next day the
Democratic Republicans returned to their seats.