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NEW SBRIES-VOIi: NO1. 23.1 ' -w-WADESBORbllGHj G,;
: '22;!18627'-';,ai "7
KO. !8l.
nil it !' I ! L ill I I I lf i-nln .11 I I I .J Vvlll III ..III. III. I
iii .----hi j i-r - w y p. I-
1 1 ill in i hi ir ti ' iii j r "
I II I III . 'Ill III III .III 1 w III
.... IBS
WHOLE
. 1 Wight to )oV 7 othr f- T,
i'fi ;'iMI.
,17' fi! J
A I,
Wfccn In raf cridl Irlair ' : -I
. r Or tt,hr JotitfJC breitt , x
r, d enLlv buhJ mr cpvlnr.
And rckM her btXt to rest.''' J " '
".tfbrn ibrtMnR bis 1!'d tat, k"u r
' To ber I tolJ 05 grief f ' ' V?V "
-Her fond lot Mm Wld at, -'i
;ln taiag tone relief. '
' "Wbt eight i that which,, near me, -t? ?
rrr.Mikw komi a bappx plw"T"'ru"
And ksi itch power t cheer ttet-,.; .
It. Is tnj motber'a face. .
t tk.1 .'nnlt ta'lliftl hiH- MM ,1 J I.
." ,Mk?a ay jfbutg heart rejoice , ; ,t .. .
With toure that tire me oeTer? (
' ' It Ujr motber'e Tolct. 1 " 1
irbfn be ( 111, to trad ber ' 7 . ' ?
' . ' . XJy wSilf eare aball be j . c f e (i , . - , v
SocUbclp a I can-render ,
' " T " Win alt bij'v tone. "
Tboegb I wn ne'er repaj ber i - ( ,
-y vr-rr Wot U bfr.tenJfr care, T. i , ;
I'll honor and otj her, ' ; .
' ' Wklle Uod oar live ehell epere. . ; t
7 AND 7 . .
tiThi; cwe'irtldey rit' withitmr toemits
with'1 bttrte??!. 1 tbeyTiuSt "owed"of "ferislf.
iTh fndt tkbaeif to tr bdesirodthetnselfte.
If ' thty t?to'nh ' baht rbptc'j srsrev them jn
JtbTace; (lUisfoni ih tiielf ortrtbki ire'ioeTi
uble," ind their t)vernifacTJt -will fall to p'Ucei
'under tbe 'weight of its wn oorrpUon.r' ? The
know .that the are W doomed people if thej are
defeated;' llence their madneiaji iThey tuvut
haVe oar propertj 16 Save thom from ioaotrbney.
The must ahotr that tho Unioii 'cannot be
dusbNed, Bare themi frotBiiura.. tecet-
aidns. i: The) pnrtie8j'' therefore,1 ia ? thil con
flict can make aoeomproraiaes. . Ilia a matter of
life-' lnd death' with hoth- etruggle ia which
their "nit iff ib Vol red. - ,fur .
Bat the cooseqaenccfl of success on -eur part
will bo very different from the' consequences of
sucdess on'tbe part of (he North If thry prerail,
tlie whole character of thOoTernment wifl be
cljabgedTlodnorcdYfderirTpuMI
their Bttblimetrpat,, Thil beautiful land .; we must I J'iog eoerooa or : oolle tbemaelvef Jiko . the-.
never oner;ioiKot0uia uapaa pt tranp? j Djena,ean dij bock too wooa oi- toe iioa'xk
Oar fields, OT)r(hpmef, our fireside and aepulcbres,
oqr cities and ttopiples, our witfa and aaughterf,
y must protect.at .eyety bptyT&. The grious
iritaoee7wMch our, fathers, left ,usj we r roust
uevst bBtny'Tbtr hopes with; which;they:,aed,
and which, buoye4 their 'spirits in the las. cop-
icf, of. Doakio, their, pouutry- a blessing to the
ought to be a reproach fo any man, that he ia
Krowios ricti fwhile hU country, ia ITeidingr"' a v
every pore. It we bad aTbemistociea among nj,v
e:irould find what, would t'niw'er ;hii' oountry'a .
needs- maeh more effectually This, apttil mwt
be rebuted every man mast forget himself aad -'
iQinK ouiy oi ine puonc gooa.
KEV. J., II. TIIOILNWLL, "d: D.
com mon -igent7 of sovereign jmd 'independent
States,-we shall -have a-central despotism with
tho notion of States forever abolished, deriving
its powers from the will and-sha'ptng its policy
according to the wishes, of a numerical msjority
of the people j wo shall have, in other words, a
supreme, irresponsible democracy. The will of the
North will stand for law77 The Covernuaent does
not now recognize itself u an erdioaboe of , God,
and when all the ebeckaepdbalanceaof tbCon
ititntioa are gone, we may eaailjj figure to own
TTfie ravaai onialVnoTlieleautirul tfef ef tbe ner and tho'destiaT of tbia godleaa
v.ueva oi tne . a&ioe, aiwut ine cieet.-ot tbe monaterpf demeoraue absolutum.r The progrws
" sove-ileenUi.ceWury, m.y bo tsken aa a sped- of reguiated liberty on this continent will be ar.
: men of tho arrllioK' desolation which is likely reated, anarchy will soon succeed, and tie end
to overspread the Confevlerate biatea. af the wiil be a milltarv dcspotUm, which jreaerveor
-Northern army should succeed in iu schemes of Lier ty the .acriiioe of the last vestige f liberty.
a tt.W ' I -
. suojugation and oi piunaer. ; ,.urope was tneo We are fullj pursuaded that the triumph of the
outraged by atrocities inflicted by Christians pon Xorth in thepresent conflict wUl be as disas-
Ubnstians, more fierce ana cruel. Isaajjen iia- tnn9 t0 u,e hope9 of bankiod as te cur own for.
hotnetaoa could have had the heart to perpetr-te. t11ttes, Tbey re aow Bs.htlD thofcattle of desi
Private dwelliopi were rased, to the ground, fields LoUsmThey have pot their Constitution under
a a . ' t . i s a t-- I - ..... , ...i .
iaiawMie(ciueaottrntfcuurCueauemouea,aoa ,heir feet . they have aunulled its monMacred
the fiuiti of industry wantonly , and ruthlessly
,.Jestrojel. .' ;7 ; 7' , : . . . . ,4'
But three daya of grace were 'allowed to the
wretched inhabitants io flee ticir country, and in
a short time, the historian tells us, u the roads
and fields which lay deep in enow, were blaokaned
7 by innumerable multitudee off moo,, t. omen, Vod.
children, flyiog from their homes. Many died yf
cold and hunger, but enough, survived to fill the
streets of all the cities of K a rope wuh lean and
squalid beggars, who had once been thriving far
mere end shopkeepers." And what, have wo to
ifocjt If our enemies prevail X Opr homes, too,
axe to be pillaged our cities sacked and lieiuyj.
ished, oar property confiscated, our truo men
hanged, and those who escape the.gibbet, , to be
--d ri vea aav vagabonds and waoderers : in foreign
-climes, j This beautiful country is ta pass out of
ur hands. Th d boundaries which mark our
States are', in aome iostanucs, to bo effiiced, nt
the State that remain are to be j converged iuto
j i i I.U i 7 v-,-. - : 8tlrvtt'Mal'ffditi;v3eirupholdM
;r,d.bji Northern. laws.. Our property is to-be .; . , - ... J . . P.
v -T-rT - . r: ,..;... pnnciplee which our fathers bebueithcoT us, and
1 ruthlessly lowed and turned over to mercenary f. . . . A - . . . :.
provisions ; and in defiance of its solemn guaran
ties, they are now engaged, in U halls of Con.
gres, in discussing and rx aturing bill which
make Northern notions of necessity the paramount
laws of tbo (and. 7
The avowed end of tbe present war is to make
the ttevernment of force. It is, to settle the
principle, that wbatectjnaybeJts torruptiont
and almsev however unjust and tyrannical ita
legtslafipn,' there is no' redress, .except in vain
ictiuoner empty remonstraece. It was a protest
against this principle, which sweeps away the
last security for liberty, that Virginia, North
Carolina, Tennessee and Missouri seceded, and
the Go vernroent should be 'reestablished, it
must be reestablished with this feature of remorse
less7 despotism' (irmly and indelibly fixed. the
future fortunes of oar children 'and of this
TOhttnebt,wjould then' be determined by a tran.
by which has no parallel In nistory; f 7 ;
On the other haad, we are struggling for cob-
ra
world, we, must (npt permit to tyo unrealized. ( We The spirit'of faction is even more to be dread
must eeixe be torch foai their hands, and trans- ed than the spirit of 'aTarieelandr pfendfef1,'- 'li'.il!
mil it with increasing brightness to generationr. equally selfish, ,and is, besides, dUlractiag. and .
TL3 word failure must not be pronounced among divisive, . The man 'who now labors to wcaten
0, It is not a thing ..tol.be,. drvamed, of.- We the hands of ,.be Government, that he may eeiaer.
must settle it that we mutt, succeed. ' We mast the reins of authority, or cavils at public nieasores '
not sit down to count chances. Thero.is too and policy, that he may rise to distinction and
much at stake to think of. discossiog probabili- ofiice, has, all the selfishness of a miser, 'and all
ties we must make success a certainty, and that, the baseness of a traitor. Wo must not be,divided(
by the blessing of God, wo can do.' If we are and distracted among ourselves. Our rulers hare
prepared to do pur duty, we have nothing to fear, great responsibilities j they need the support of
bit what is our-duty ? This is a-qucstion which the whole country ;-and uotbiog short of a patriT
we must gravely consider!1. Ve shall briefly at- otUm which buries all private ditferences, whlcn '
tempt to answer it. ' 7 ' ' ig ready. for eomprombes and concessions, ijrhicb
' :lmhefirst place, we must shakToffalilpatny canmake chariUble
and become fully a'ife to the magnitude of the opinion, and even for errors pf judgment, can'save
crisis. We:must Jook the danger in the face. ns rom consequences of party arid factum. '
and comprehended the real grandeur of the issue. We icust be united. If oar views are not car-
W e bhall Dot exert ourselves until we are sensible ried out, let us sacrifice pn rate opinion to public
ofthe need of efifortifAs iong:as we cherish a fety.. "In the great conflict with Persia, Athena
ague hope that help may come from abroad, or yielded to Sparta, and .acquiessed in 'plans she
that there is something in our past; history, or could not approve, for the sake of the publie good.
the genius of our institutions, to protect us from Nothing could be more dangerous now than .
everthrow, we are bugging a fatal delusion to our IcramblesTlfoOfBce -collisidmp
bosoms. This upatby Was the raia ef Greece among the different departments of :ne'Goyern- ;
atfthe time .of t he AlacedoMaji.inMieii. 'r .Tbia ent We must present a united front. .
waa the speH which Domoetheoea. labored eo It further important that tTfjr should
earnestly) ireakj The Athenian waa aa devo- be ready to work.,jli tftimttoftij. the gen-,
ted as eterto hU uativreity-and the freeinstitu- tlema B-iroa)ejOTTdipU
tiois he iuherited from tis fathers; but somehow not wire, in the field but all can 'do something,
or Lher he could net believe that his country to help forward the common cause. The young
coold'be conquered.'- He tead-itaWety-iir its a the aetive, the atoui
ancient elory. He felt that it had a prescriptive prepared at. a moment'g warning for the rants.
right to live. The great orator saw aiid lamented The disposition should be one of eagerness to be
the error ; he t poured, forth hk eloquence o dis- employed; there should be no holding back, no
solve the charm; but the fatal 7 hour had come, counting the cost The-roan -who stands lback
and the spirit of Greece could aot bo roused. I from the ranks in these, perilous times, because
There was bo more real patriotism at the time of a 13 unwilling to serve his. country as a private
the second Persian invasion than in the age of soldier, who loves his ease more than liberty, his
Philip! but then there was no apathy, every luxuries more than his lonof, that man is a dead"
man appreciated the danger: be saw the crash fly in out precious ointment. In seasons of great
that was coming, adprepared himself to resist calamity the ancient pagans were accustomed to
the blow. He knew that there was no safety I appease the anger of their gods by human-sacn-
eicept in courage "and ia a desperate effort, fices; and if they had gone upon tha principle of
iSverv man, too, felt identified with toe State: selecting tnose wnose moral insignmcance ren-
a part of ita weight rested on bis shoulders. It dered them alike offensive to heaven and useless
was this sense pf personal interest and personal to earth, they would always have selected hese"
responsibility the profound conviction that every drones, and loafers, and exquisites. ACbrutfan
one had something to do, and ihatGreeco expeo- nation cannot offer them in sacrifice, but publie
ted him to do it this was the public spirit which ejntempFshould whip -them from, theft lufiioe
tutned back the countless hordes of Xerxes, and holes, and compel them to share the common
Baved Oreecerto lihertjhandrmanThis-is the dangejvTheommumty that will cherish sirea v
spirit which we must have, if we, too, would men without rebuke, bring? down wrath upon it.
succeed. We must be brought to see that all They must he forced to be useful, to avert the
under God.' depends on ourselves and looking iudements of God from the patrons of coWardice
. ; ... v , ..7-. 7 7 7,. 7 , 0 1
awav from all forelcu alliances, we must make un and meanness.
........ . ..... o 1.. .- s...t i.. .: 1 r
art.fAM . a a . , frt tB tr tho AnArmona riKr t . . . ' ' '
, . . . : 1 . w t " the dominant nation of this continent, we shall
LwJbieJi oiirbiugatwO"iooat - Our wivea;aod - , .A , ,., i
1 i!7 - i l .1.- e t. , 11 7 perpetuate and diffuse the very liberty for which
daughter afe to bocome the prey of brutal lust. . - , , , , ,
tr, f . 5, .11 i.i ' ; j WashinRton bled, and which the heroes f the
l no BiaTe,too, win bigwijt aea aa me rcu . , . . , .
" main " diI Aefpre- lim bndef the protection" of
Nortbera phUanth
now like the garden of Eder in beauty and fer-
Revolution achieved. V We are not revofotionists
we are resisting revolution.1 ' Wo are phold
in the ttue -doctrines or. the Federal Gonstitu-
! ! -xvt.-J-u s .. ..7.7 :7v.
Hilhty Wilt fl'st be a blackened and smoking de : k-.f ,t - 2.v , v. .. . ,,. ,
: " , . t. ..." triumDh of all that has been considered establishes
rthnr ib the way of de
weltnay absdib'but we ean neVer intade for eon- but until this point - reached, if is"
i , - r Ml: 1 .a 7--
tfz questfany neighboring State..The peace-of thef ,ul9 .coup.n.sqcccss.. H, , ,y ,
llsnTpueoln7ffeplnrwBIcrrlnerlmesae.
WT)rJaOecurfdtrou We shall
"and avtxtoe. Our histdrv will U worse than that
' of Poland and Hungary. ' There is not a single
edeominUra-in-thiclarftjDtJuinwW
'W.' .i-KV ti&'lt 'M'f WnMiiv ti hrJJaJBeci
- be conquedr Mt Is. nlgnt of thick ?d.vkness hVe a ernment that acknowledges God. that
: that; wiir.ettlepmr.: Even sympathy, the eren6es tight, and thai makes lawpreme.;
:Iast iolacnre ifflurtwiltle dcnUd to us. lhe fi?htmgot for ourselves. lone,
The HwUillloot H en "m4?,x
if" ,7 the ail vat 10a of this whole continent, utis a
even jeet ui with the taunt mat we iiaye aesci- ' v' 1 ', . .
vT ofspeculation, would, if very shamed ot
- rtatethts
. ! ! C 7H' -"JTO v"w though it may now'seemt(rteUDderacloud,,i4is tuVal bent of his heart, gp Upon the field of bai
7J-ieduloualj , rropagat4 .byourcM -.ti rZii::i:JL rrl tK?.i UUaU .1,: Kr.fi-
our minds to fight desperately and fight long, if we
would ave the country from ruin, and ourseives
from bondage, Every man should feel that he has
an interest in the State, and. that the State, in a
Generous PATRioxiSM.-In this day pf trial
and peril, it is refreshing to hear of instances of
gerreroos and disinterested patriotibm' like the
measure Jeans upon aim; and he should rouse him- : , . , -.4 w
,-,:' 7 -V 1 , L rc'Tin of-ihe Tresrva few dayainceAndJblndedbim
selrto efforts as bold and heroic as if all depend-, - . 7. .
j ' , A v , . , a bag of cold, as a donation to the Government, .
ed on his single right arm. Uur courage should rise " - b . , . .
' - a - . .. . , ll. ....... .nitJlllnn ht liM mm. hnnli-1
iiroertb.au tbe danger, and whatever may be the , t , . .. Tr
W anunu tVU uw vug isun mo unicuuji vfvu
odds against us, we must solemnly resolve, by God's
blessing, that we will not be conquered. When,
with a full knowledge! of the danger, Wo are
mand, that all private interests are. sacrificed to
the public good. The State becomes everything,
ana tne individual notning. it is no-time to be
casting about for expedients to enrich ourselves.
The man who is now intent upon money, who
turns public necessity and danger into, means
counting the gold, it was found to amount to one
thousand dollars.-f ficAwoW Enquire 1
. ZX hi Savid.-CoUR
informrathe 1f e
pertainin&toland titles in Tennessee weri brought
from nashville before its occupation by theenemy.
A different impression prevailed.
Giw. Shields. This man,, who 5 is bow in
command of a brigade in Xincoln's army, said'in
1860,1" If the political contest degenerates into
a sectional struggle, my part will be taken with
the South. What refianee ciu be plaeed upon .
the pledges of politicans ? r ' -
A Sir. Thomas, of Augusta, Ga., has succeed
ed in getting Ahe stereotype pIateS.of thil New
Testament from Nashville. He made a narrow
' ' , Z-- , ' t m, p 1 r- m nmm 1 f - , " ...t M f - 1 o- r T 1 h" V w n n f rry r r f f t fy a To w i T f hr