: : : : ilfc 18 liMll fill . Jit i! BY CHARLOTTE, N. C, JULY 25 1865. Terms, Volume 13 Number G76 &zsm wutx yam yam 4M.mi im: ; &t 7 jJ J 4 $1 per J'J J. t CUBIOU3 FASJ Of AU- Saint amidst the " - l!,is-met corny J ry'w -lia 'yjua u-j j.oec5. yiiUyASctoiQ V:7yrrfu - his' great he liitiucnce rr tne noiy spirit, i;re coal from the altar; Chrysostom meditated and .'Ijrjied Adiilecontemplatinga painting of St Paul. lhicm knelt down before composing his great ,.rk,an l prayed lor light from heaven. Pope -ever coui.l eomposa well without first declaim ;Vr some time at the top of his voice, and thus -ouqnz his nervous system to its fullest activity. Uentham composed after playing a prelude a the orgno, or while taking his "ante jentacu .md "nost prandial" walks in his garden :il - - - I r . ihe same by way, that Milton occupied. imard comoosed his meditation's wools he delighted in nothing so much as the v-jWviae of the dense forest, finding there, he .u. I, something more profound and suggestive rfian anything he could find in books. The ,jf,f3j would sometimes fall upon him there, without for a moment interrupting his raedita tlm. Camoens composed his verses with the roar of battle in his ears; fur the Portuguese poet wa a soldier and a brave one, though a pcet. He composed others of his beautiful vtvses, at the time when his Indian slave was beting a subsistence for him in the streets. Tusso wrote his finest pieces in the lucid inter vals of madness. Kossenu wrote his works early in the morning; he Sage at mid-day; Byron at midnight liar- iloiiui rose at four till late at nir!:t. t in the morning, arm wrote Aristotle was a tremendeou3 worker; he took little sleep, and was constantly retrenching it. He had a contrivance by which he woke early, and to wake was with him tj commence work. Demosthenese passed three winths in a c.vtrn by the sea-side, in laboring :o overcome the delects of his voice There he rtau, studied and declaimed. Luther, when studing, always had his dog ly o" :it his feet, a do-r which had b?en brought frotii Wartbnrg, and cf which he was very fond. An ivory crucifix stood on the table before him, ;nd the wal's d his study ,were stuck round with caricatures of the Pone. lie worked at his desk f.-.r days together without going out; but 'when brain, he would take his flute or his guitar with him into the porch, and their execute some musical fantasy (for he was a skillful musician,) when the ideas would flow upon him again as fresh as flowers after a summer's rain. Music was his invariable solace at such times. Indeed Luther did not hesitate to say, that after theol ogy, music was the first of arts. "Music," said he, "is the art i' prophets; it is the only other art, which, like theology, can calm the agitation of the soul, and put the devil to flight." Next to music, if not before it, Luther loved children and flowers. That great gnarled man had a heart as tender as a woman. Calvin studied in his bed. Every morning at ve or six o'clock, he had books, manuscripts, and papers carried to him there, and he worked "!i for hours together. If he had occasion to go ut, on his return he undressed and went to bed uain to continue his studies. In his last years lie dictated his writings to secretaries. The --cnences issued complete from his mouth. If he felt his faculty of composition leaving him, he forthwith quitted his bed, giving up writing and composing, and went about his out door duties for days, weeks and months together.- Hut so soon as he felt the inspiration fall upoa him he went back to his bed, and his secretary set to woik forthwith. Mr McCormick, who lives about two miles of Newberg, New York, was born August 6, 1751, and is now in tolerably good health. His voice is very strong, hearing good, but his eyesight is very poor. His hair is not gray yet. He was married at forty-five, and had fourteen children. He has been very temperate in his life, and has never felt the want of drink as others do. lie generally salted his food to such a degree that no one but himself could eat it, and strange to say, he very seldom felt the want of drink. He did not commence 10 smoke until he was sixty five years old; nev?r drank tea or coffee, milk he greatly dislike 1. He always worked hard, went to bed early, and got up early. His an swer to the question what he thought, more than anything else, caused him to live so long, was temperance, exercise, plain food, regular meals, regular hours in going to bed and getting up. Any one, to see him, would take him to be a man of about seventy. He sleeps well, and eems to enjoy good health, and may live some ten years more. THE MARCH OF THE PLAGUE. Our last advices from Europe indicate that the fears of the visitation of the Cholera during the year are rife throughout the Continent. The greatest sanirary precautions have been taken to preclude the entrance of the plague in- to Europe through vessels arriving from Ales- ! andria, in Egypt. Tidings from the East repre sent that the Conqueror-Worm is extending the fields of his ravages westwardly. Central Asia, " Southern Russia, the jungles of India, the long weary route of the Faithful Mecca all, in turn, have been swept over by the desolating scourge, aad the perishing victims are counted by thou sands. Pilgrims who have come from afar to kiss the sacred Kaaba, and to renew their vows at the tombs of the Prophet, have been smitten on their route, and have died in their tracks, or have retraced their steps at the news of the dreadful ravages of the disease in the sections of country betipejjn them and the holy shrine. In many cases those so returning Sheiks with their trains had died upon the roadside, crowd- el in tents and houses whereiu they had sought refuge. In Egypt the deaths are on a scale of the most fearful magnitude. While towns and vil lages have been depopulated, and the Destroyer is still busy among his victims. The English Government has taken the precaution to remove the mail bags from the postal routes between Great "Britain and Egypt, and has substituted, therefor, boxes in whish outgoing and incoming mails are transported. This precaution is taken in order to guard against infection being carried out of Egypt during the transportation of the mails through the country. A quarantine has been established at Mar seilles ever since two passengers, in a dying.con dition were landed from the Alexandria steam er; and in all the French and Italian ports the strictest quarantine regulations prevail. The dispatch of the American Consul at Port Mahon, in the Mediterranean, announcing the facts cf the encroachments of the plague, and warning Government of the danger to be apprehended from it, and the action of Government, thereup on, have been published. Although some doubt iscxpressed in Europe as to whether the disease that is playing such havo? tbroughou1:, Asia . and Africa ?., vndetvl, the Asiatic cholera, enough is known of its ravages to warrant the most extraordinary pre caution; and we hope the authorities, 'both State and Federal, as well as those of Gur city, will not fail in the adoption of, and rigid adherence to such sanitary regulations as the possible threat ening emergency would seem to call for. All vessels coming from an infected port, or a port in an infected country, should be subjected to a quarantine of twenty, thirty or forty days. The result at issue is too grave a one to be trifled with; and whilst we can see no reason for alarm, as yet, either in his country or in Europe, the plain duty of authority is to guard, by all known sanitary means, against the possible introduction among our people of the fell malady whose pro gress the civilized world is at present watching with such anxious interest. Commercial Bul If a man is given to liquor, let no liquor be given to him. A Government Inspector and his "Partner." A Government Inspector, visit ing a kinatic asylum, saw the medical superin tendent, and said, "I dou't wish to go over the asylum in the usual way, butta mingle with the patietits as if I were an officer, a surgeon, or even one of themselves. 13y so doing I shall be better enabled to judge of their intellectual state, aud of their progress in the direction of sanity." With pleasure," said the doctor; "it is Saturday, and we usually have a dance on Saturday night. If you go into the ball-room, as we call it, you will see them dancing and talking without reserve." "Would it be objec tionable if I danced with them?" asked the offi cial. "Not at all," was the reply." The official walked iuto the ball-room, and, selecting the prettiest girl he saw for a partner, was soon keeping up a very animated conversation with her. In the course of the evening he said to the doctor, 'Do you kuow, that girl in the white dress with blue spots is a very curious case! I've been talking to her, and I cannot, for the life and soul of me, discover in what direc tion her mental malady lies. Of course, I saw at once she was mad saw it in the odd look of her eyes. She kept looking at me so oddly. I asked her if she did not think she was the Queen of England, or whether she had not been robbed of a large fortune by the volunteer move meat, or jilted by the Prince of Wales, and tried to fiud out the cause of her lunacy; but I couldn't, she was too artful." "Very-, like," answered the doctor; "jou sec, she Li not a pa tient, she is one of the housemaids, and as sane ( as you are. .Meantime, iue prenj oousemaiu went to ail her fellow-servants, and said, "Have you seen the new patient? He's been dancing with me. A fine tall man, and beautiful whis kers! but as mad as a March hare. He asked me if I wasn't the Queen of England; if.a vol unteer hadn't robbed me of a larpe fortune; and whether the Prince of Wales didn't want to marry me? He is mad. Isn't it a pitty? such a fine young mini" Illustrated Times. AN INTERVIEW WITH GENERAL FORREST. Jus Vernon of the Fort Pillow Massacre. A correspondent of the New Orleans True Delta describes an interview with Gen. Forrest, at. Meridian, Mississippi. Forrest he says is a man of fine appearance, about six feet in height; dark, piercing, hazel eyes; carefully trimmed moustache and chin whiskers dark as niaht: finely cut features and iron grey hair. His form is lithe, plainly indicating great physical power and activity. The writer asks, after some pre liminary questions : "Now that you have time, General, do you think you will ever put upon paper the true ac count of the Fort Pillow affair?" "Well," said he, "the Yankees ought to know; they sent down their best men to investigate the affair." "lut are we to believe their report, General?" "Yes, if we are to believe anything a nigger says. When I went into the war, 1 meant to fight. Fighting means killing. I have lost twerhr-.nine horses in .t'hewar, and have killed a ma a each time. The ot her day 1 was a horse ahead hut at Selma they surrounded me and I killed two jumped my horse over a one-horse wati'Wvund got away." I began to think I had sotnv idea of the man at last, lie continued : 4M-y "Provost Marshal's book will show that I hawc taken thirty-one thousand prisoners during the v;hr. "At Fort Pillow I sent in a flag of truce, and demanded an unconditional surrender, or X woul'd not an wer for my men. This they refused. Ient them another note giving the.n one hour to, determine. This they refused. I could see on the river boats loaded with troops. Tiny senrbac'v asking for an hour more. I give the: twenty minutes. I sat on my horse during iL.ffvhoIeniaie; "The fort was filled with negroes and deserters from our army men who lived side by side with my men. I waited five minutes after the time, and .then blew my bugle for the charge. In twenty minutes my men were over the works, and the firing had ceased. " "The citizens and Yankee3 had broken in the heads of whisky and lager beer barrels, and were ail drunk. They kept- up firing all the time aa they went down the hill. Hundreds of them rushed to the river and tried to swim to the gunboats, and my men shot them down. The Mississippi lliver was red with their hlod for three hundred yards During all this, their flag was still flying, and I rushed over the works and cut the halliards, and stopped the fight. Many of the Yankees were in tents in front, and they were in their way, as they concealed my men, and some of them set them on fire. If they were burned to death, it was in these tents. "They have a living witness in Capt. Yroung, their Quartermaster, and I will leave it to any prisoner I have ever taken if I have not treated them well." Good Advice.- The Cultivator gives some excellent advice to our young men in the follow ing, which it would be well for them to rrofit by : Go to Work! Young man ! jubilant in the prideof your strength! pull off that coat and go to work! If you wait for something to turn up' you will die of that "hope deferred" .which "rnaketh the heart sick!" Take hold resolutelv' yourself, and turn up something ! Lands, every where, in the South, can be had almost for noth ing; and no soil is so poor but that some crop may bo successfully and profitably grown upon it. The merchants and mechanics ef our towns and cities ueed all the supplies we can furnish, at highly remunerating prices; and you have the additional reward and pride of feeling that you are producing and really doing some good in the world. Do not be lured by the miserable "clap-trap" and bug-bear of superior respecta bility" into any of the already over, crowded "professions." A good, steady, industrious, in telligent farmer or gardener is practically worth a dozen "jackleg" doctors or pettifogging" law yers! The people need food and clothing, not "law" or "physio" so we again earnestly ex hort all our "stout and brare" young men to go to work, at once, on the farm, in the workshop, or wherever else real earnest work is needed. ARTEMUS WARD IN RICHMOND, KlCIIMOND, ya , May 2$ 65. OLONZO WARD. Afore I com rue nts this letter from the la te rebil capitol I desire- to cimply . say that I have seen a low and skurrilous noat in the 'papers from a certain pnrsun who signs hisself OIodzo Ward, & sez he is my berruther. I did once have a berruther by that name, but 1 do not recognize him. To me he is wuss than dead ! I took him from college some 1G years ago and gave him a-, good situation, as the Bearded Woman, in my show. How did he repay ine for this kindness ? He basely undertook (one day while in a lackna!ian mood and rum, and right in sight of the audience in tent) to stand upon his heal, whereby he betrayed his sex on account of frs boots & his Beard fallin' off his face, rooinin' my prospects in that town, & like wise incurrjii' the scris displeasure of the Press, which sed b!dly 1 was triflin' with feelin's cf intelligent (public. I know4 no such man a' Olonzo Ward. I do not ever wish his name breathed in my presents. I do not recognize him. I perfectly disgust him. - RICHMOND. The old man finds hisself once more in a Sunny clin;b. f cum here a few days arter the cattcrpillertulashum. Mr naburs seemed surprised & astonisht at this dariti' bravery into the part of a rain at my time of 1 if"1, but our family was never knowed to quale in danger's stormy hour. Mi father was a sutler in the Itevolution War. MI father once had a iatarvoo with Gin'ral La Fayette. lie ashed La Fayette to lend him five dollar", premising pay him in the Fall; but Lsffy said he "couM'nt see it in those. lamps." Laffy was French, -nd his knowledge of our langwidgo was a li;:lc shaky. Immfjutly on my 'rival here I proceeded to the Spltswood House, and calliV to my a sistonis a young man from our town who writes a goo(d runnin' hand, I put my ortograph on the Itegistor, and handin my umbrella to a bald headed rr.an behind the counter, who I s'posed was Mr. Spottswood, 1 said, "Spotsy, how does she rue"'"' . - ilea"lil'i a culled parson and'said: "$';ov the gen'lmau to the cow yard, and give him fart No. 1." "TVt General Grant here?" I said. "Per h.ips I'lysis wouldn't mind my turnin in with hiia." 'M'o you know the Gin'ral?" inquired Mr. Spo?'swood. j'all, no, not 'zictly, but he'll remember me. His broth?-iidaw's aunt bought her rye meal ofj !:iy uncle Levi all one winter. My uncle Levi's rvo meal was" i"'Pooh, pooh I" said Spotsy, "don't bother rric,'' and he shuv'd my umbrella onto the floor. Obsarvin to him not to be too keerless with that woin, 1 accompanied the African to my lodgins. V ,;My brother." I said, "are you aware that you have been 'mancipated? Do you realize how glorious it is to be free? Toil me, my dear brother, does it not seem like some dreams, or ,b you realize the great fact in, all its livin' and lijly magnitood?" He said take some jin. I was show'd the cowyard, and laid down nnder a one mule cart. The hotel was orful crowded, and I was sorry I hadn't gone to Lib by Prison. Tho' I should have slept comforta ble enuffef the bed cloths haden't been pulled off me during the night by a scoundrel who cum and hitched a mule to the cart and druv ii ofi I thns lost my covering and my throat feels a little husky this morning. General Halleck offered me thb hospitality of the city, givin' me my choice of hospitals. He has also placed at my disposal a saiall-pcx amboolence. - , ' Robert Lee is regarded as a noble feller. lie was opposed to the war at the fust, and draw'd his sword very reluctant. In faet he wouldn't have drawn his sword at all, only he had a large stock of military clothes on hand, which he didn't want to waste. He sez the colored man is right, and he will go at once to New York and open a Sabbath School for negro minstrels. The silk-worm feeds upon the mulberry leaf, and spins his silk. The poet feasts: upon the world of nature, and spiDs his beautiful thoughts and fancies. "I bad rather have nothing to wear than be out of fashion" said a youag lady. "You-may be in fashion with the new style of bonnet and still be nearly in that undesirable nude, condor tion," was the reply.