Page:Life of Henry Clay (Schurz; v. 2).djvu/290

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HENRY CLAY.

the President felt himself “embarrassed by the acts of his predecessors,” and offered once more the forty-ninth parallel as a compromise. When the British Minister again declined, Buchanan withdrew the offer, and announced that the President would now insist on “the whole of Oregon.” Polk, in his annual message of December, 1845, confirmed this, and recommended that one year's notice be given to Great Britain of the termination of the joint occupancy, and that provision be made for the protection of American settlers in Oregon. He declared himself convinced that no acceptable compromise could be effected, and threw the responsibility on England. This foreboded war. The business community became alarmed; stocks fell in Wall Street. On December 9 Cass moved in the Senate an inquiry into the condition of the army and navy. The “notice” to be served on Great Britain became the subject of exciting debates. The British Minister once more proposed arbitration, which Polk again declined, affirming that he would not accept anything less than the whole territory, “unless the Senate should otherwise determine.” The administration, having its eye on Mexico, desired no war with England, but tried to shift the responsibility for a compromise on the Senate.

The extremists, the “fifty-four forties,” clamored for immediate “notice.” They would not leave the matter to the Senate, quoting Clay's utterance in the debate on the Florida Treaty in