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is not altogether free from the imputation of vanity, I should say, from the number of times he looks at the galleries while speaking, with an air of "How do you like it? --Wouldn't my opponent be better off if he hadn't said anything ?" Mr. Bayard--Mr. Bayard is about twenty years older than his colleague, a very pretty figure, rather inclined to corpulency. His hair is quite gray, and what little there is of it is parted in the middle. Time has furrowed his face quite deeply.--He speaMr. Bayard is about twenty years older than his colleague, a very pretty figure, rather inclined to corpulency. His hair is quite gray, and what little there is of it is parted in the middle. Time has furrowed his face quite deeply.--He speaks with very little animation, and at times there is considerable of a whine in his utterance. He was recently re-elected to the Senate, and it now devolves upon him to take the oath, or be expelled from that body. He will take the oath, though not with much relish. Mr. Sumner.--Mr Sumner's personal appearance has been so often described that I will not make one of my poor attempts to convey to the reader an idea of how this eminent statesman and scholar looks on the floor of the Senate.