Vol. XE. TT ae LITE RA TURE. THE ( NRETURNING A touch of the old joy ™Y steal late our hearts, ith sweet appeal Atthough we may Bot Cru The deur white! em we loves Nor in the nny walk once wore He hold the much iV ed face . i of yore, which took Nor hear the maiden s voice, The sfenee Wane a murmuring | rook When all the land i still Nor hear the sound of the little feet With mese in HM, wondrous sweet, The ¢umest sense to fill } } : shall mise them all, and sigh to feel nee steal We 4% many a heart sud sil For the ¥ aeturn Be more With the snewdrep and the lily leuf, Hie dreary winter long ot brief, Whee Uhre wild dark days are « ome back with song and sm And winning grace and pretiy Ww For oh! what mortal hand Bball seize the gowing glass of Time Aud turn—revewing sWeet prime— The duwaward-running suc er le Ne more « <, e aur ;* the Yet maurn we pet tide of veare— That dark and wearisome appears, Doth ewer heat and swell Oe summer ishes of perfect calm, Axd shores all glorious with the palm, Where happy spirits dwell They come wet back (a whieh the abips of earth de ride, Ebvhe newer, never there The silem ferrvacan of Death Without life, or light, or breath, Steers for a haven fair. the awful tide, A aill smal! veice we then shal! hear,— Thea welcomes from all voices dear As we do make the Jand And faces fondly loved « Bball greet us—we eball fee! the wort! Ct many a clasp I © then to fel eur pimios 4pur vooves Weth new wusic tind heawe our throbbing breast Where all Light, and Leve, and Peace ; “The wicked from their troub And the weary are at Test m earta whae he Cease , OF THE UNSEEN. foft, low murmurs, echoing faintly, Thrill chroughout this dreary hall ; And the shadows, flickering quaintly, Waver up and down tl ! the wail How the spectral fire-light dances On the gleaming window -pane— Which in tame a moment clances, Then to shadow turns aguin! rel Viewless forms are with me biding, Liding with me to n And | feel an inward chidu When my spirit turns to them Ah! indeed full oft I meet t! Day and gight they falter not Pride alas! can ne'r defeat them Grief cen neyer be for Memory holde few joyous traces Which past pleasures may have n But if pala perchance embraces, Wbeu eball ics grim token fade! + uule ; Neter, never! Dark and fearfu! Back ward comes the stern reply ; Aud I bow we sa! and tearful But with tears that dim no eve. With a grief that knows no sighing, Wiha pen that none car sce dae tulsoring, faiuting, dying Spirit of suleumity Hark! 2 sol- wu whisper stealing, Pleats throeshout this shadewy room ; * Mertale, wherefore shrink frou fee his Sorrow resteth in the tomb? . ‘= True, fet all at last be finished, Hegre and fear and jow und pain: Lat the spark of ‘ife diminished Part, and nought but cluy reusda Then, indeed, there is an ending Of the sullering we have borne, With the dust a final blending Of the heart that hath been torn. —_—__—_~-Sao—__-— (From Blackscood’s Magazine fer December. } AMONTH WITH “THE REBELS.” Concluded from our bast. At Charleston we had aa opportunits of visiting ove of those societies which are organised threugh- est the whole South for eupplying the army with dothen §=The evntral depot ix situated im the Biddle of the town. Ia the basement door we fund large packages marked for different tegi-' ments then at the seatet war. Lp stairs several | ladies were engaged im arranging im “lotsa” diffe- | reat kinds of uniform, and measuring out cloth. | taaoel, fimen, cuttan to be made up by the bands | of the fairest in the land. i We learnt from those who bave the superinten- | éuee of this vast establishment, that about a| Gousand ladies are daily employed at their sewing | wtehines making different articles of military | ative. The work of the week which had then | Det elapsed consisted of 200 coats, 300 pairs of | Ceasers, JOO shirts, besides worsted gloves for the | {taller than the A Weeklu Hournal of 4 olitics, Literature, and Alews. “This is ¢ruc Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak ftree.”’---Euripides. Paper money is, therefore, almost the only medium of exchange; and the inferior quality ef which it consists has led to much inconvenience, for it xeon gets destroyed and useless in the pockets of the bearers. Here, again, vigour and energy have met the difficulty, for we found that -nachinery had been imperted inte many districis tor the purpose of making good strong wotes, instead of the villaineus scraps hitherto in common Uke, designated by the inelegunt name of “ Shin Plas- ters.” Ihe Gevernment have net prohibited the ex- port of cetton, except to the Nertheru States; but self-constituted authorities have, in more than one instanee that we knew of, made it impossible for ships to load which had run the blockade, and whose owners were desirous of doing se again The popular feeling which dictated these vielent acts is caused, first, by the desire that the North should be made te sutler tor entercing the blockade, and the Apprehension that ian) cotton were to be allowed to leave the country, Massachusetts would manage to ebtain it; and, secondly, by the im- pression that in iayiwg on # general embargo thes would ineiine European governments to recoguise the Confederacy latter metive wae always repudiated; but there ean be no doubt that the prevalent conviction throughout the South is that England caunot do | without the “ king ;” that all cotton except Ameri ean. 8 either too short or tee long; and that the | medium is the only staple which Manchester cares to have. In vain we would tell them that our and adapt it to the necessities of the times; that /our Gevernment was making great exertious to | precure cotton trom Ladia and Africa ; that it was | eur interest to foster our own colonies, and to | produce it there if possible; and that the longer! we were deprived of America a8 & market, the mere strenuous would our efforts be to render But it Was no uRe; } ent of it a can com ‘ distan } ' , OUPREIVeS Laude pend ineradically impressed with the con- tliat 5 the nx ul and that the ce from England at re placed must always give the j they were viction t they nand irket pany Gane; i which its rivals oO! | ° | Confederacy a great advantage | The possibility of the North succeeding in ob- | tainmg any lnpertant success by “ opening & port j ridic li they were toe sue- ‘ leeed in making a descent Florida or South v Was Universa ad lieu ou | Carolina, an event which appeared to be earnestiy | | hoped for, we were told that no material result ; would ensue; the produce ef the country would tbe removed to the interior, where it would lie j safely in the bosom of trackless torests ; and svoner | than allow it to fall into the enemy's hands, the people would burn or destroy every pound No } such extre is, however, appeared to be anticipated, for the crop of this year bemg still on the piantauions, noe great quantity is accu- | mulated in any one locality. | Being now desirous of pushing on to the army, | we spent but a short time in Georgia and North | Carolina, and were bappy te tiad, ou our arrival } at Richmond, that President Davis was none t | worse for tl Iden, | and vatural which had lately overtaken him, ac- leording to the various Tribunes, Times, Heralds of the North. His popularity throughout Joabtes! Is une me measures as Th the 1¢ numerous deaths, vielent, su and i ; | the count: ; and althe some ardent spirits te be found, who freely eriti- ‘ ugh there are | cise the caution bitherte displayed in the strate ot the Seuth, and are jor twaarching “et once on | Washington and finishing the war “ right away,” the heart of the peuple is veverthelesa entirely j his, and all acknowledge the masteranind that directs the great plan of the campaign, and hapertant aifuir of th .fereign and domestk | Having been kindly provided with a pass to the | headquarters of ove of the generals near Manassas, e every tot e atate about a hendred and twenty miles from Richmond, we were allowed to go up in a soldiers’ train. | All along the line we found flags waving from the houses, and crowds assembled at the statious t to bid God--peed to those whe wert family, and profession ier the reugh reautics ol tive Wartare leaving heme, ae ; +) the Tl |} General Johnston, “chief” of the arn \in Virginia, isa man whe appears te be about ithe age ot forty-five or In atature he is i middle size, and posseskes a powerful upright | form, a quick, intelligent eye, while his manner }@ indicative of that resolute determination for | which he bas always been distinguished. (General Beauregard, the second in command, looks two or three years younger, bears in his face (strong marks of French origin; while his features | are taose whieh generally characterise the gentle- | man of Louisiana, his native State. | ‘ fifty. and and wiry, be struck us as a man capable of doing much bari! work and enduring great fatigue. j General Gustavus Smith ‘ate Street Comnussieper ,at New Yerk, the schoolieliow and intimate friend fef Generali M*Clellan, is third in rank. He is other two, broad-shouldered, slightly inclined to flesh, with a# honest and straightfurward a countenance as is possible to isee. AJ) three were distinguished at West Point | Academy, and served afterwards with credit in | the Mexican war. attainments, unimpeached integrity, kind disposi- tion, aud kéty patriotism, are qualities which the army believe their three great commanders to be endowed with. This conviction, added to the sur- prising success that has hitherto crowned the Southeru cause, inspires in the ranks a confi- dence seldom to be found in newly-raised bat- talions. We must, of course, speak with reserve just now of our visit to the great force which is de- fending the northcast of the Confederacy, and take care that we do not abuse the coufidence with which, as guesj* of a distinguished officer, we | Witter, steckings, old linen, and many fancy ar-| were favoured. tees which were sold fur the beuefit of the} wriety's tuuda. } These establishments save the Government | The country for many miles around Manassas is hill and dale, covered naturally with dense hard- wood of various kinds, which is cleared away from Amongst the enlightened this | Small, active, | ; army, fell into the hands of the Confederates, Undoubted bravery, scientific otkeeus sums of money, and appear to be m-/ time to time, leaving patches of open ground, Geamag in numbers and efficiency every day. | varying in size from two to a hundred aerex; but Phe army, being composed in a great measure | few of these spaces are greater in exteut thap the | # vaiumteers, the hearty «ympathy and | Green Park in Londov, whilst some of Leems are tection of the whole population: and as most | much less. Altogether the character of the dis- Auilies have more then onr of its members at the | trict would not be unlike that of the neighberboud ur, the comfort of the suldier is vot ouly univer-| of Bromley in Kent, if the latter were more ex- aly considered a subject of patriotic interest, but | tensively wooded, and less generally cultivated. thy one which excites the anxiety and stimulates | Through the valleys run numerous streams, the = wens of every household. When we met) largest being Bull’s Run, a winding but somewhat hee ) spoke with evident pride of the number | sluggish river, about forty feet wide, varying in tats, trousers, shirts, stockings, which they had | depth from two to eight feet, with rocky banks on |, We could not help hoping that this use-| each side, which in some places are quite perpen Xe that the war had given them would} dicular. The different camps are scattered about mae jer times be thrown away, and that, through this great wooded tract in strong positions, tag i peadent of tailors, dressmakers, and | but ao little seen are thev, that frequently, when era, they would be able to avoid many | galloping down « uarrow ‘pathway, we would find © Bowe mesdane difficulties whieh usually beset | ourselves in the midst of tents and suldicrs almost @arriages™ and tuterrupt “the course of: before we could pul up our horses. “welove” = We may, perbaps, have alsoex pressed | cumvietion that ue ~ Mother of Seven’ south | the country was the respect which is everywhere ae Ohio would ever have rrascu to ~ lament,” | shown fur the rights of property. Gentlemen's ee daughters of the South, having emit | villas lie aloug ruads over which many thousand virtues aud Spartan fortitude of Pene-| soldiers daily pass, and we never saw a piece of Would each be rewarded with as many | paling hurt or a garden intruded upon; and in the Mier and ax brave a husband. | villages the poultry aad pigs are running about as ming our tour we had many opportunities | in times of profound peace dineuaainig & question which is generally con- The appearance which a regiment presente ou to be the rock ahead of the Confederates | parade is remarkable to the eye of a European. ee the means of providing the “ainews” | Many are composed of companies who have uui- Satryiag ou the war. forms of different colours; but in these cases there The Gevernment loan sitnsply consists in a pro-| is always some distinctive badge by which their wae on the part of the lenders to subseribe specie, | particular corps can be easily told. This detect, cvrewlating medium, military stores, raw pro-| consequent upon the compauies being raised in » #f Manufactured articles, for whieh the | different neighborhoods,is being quickly remedied, intgaen te i. return treasury bonds bearing | and we saw uumerous r ‘iments w hich had Jately Yeutly. and ag per ceut per annum, pay able half | arrived, whose dress was all that the Horse the be. f the wltimate redemption of whieb | Guards could desire. : t aad wealth of the uation are pledged.) The personne/ of the army is very varied. For ae eee of produce have already | instance, in the Louisiaua regiments are seen the » Sad the most complete contidevce | bronzed and fiery«yed Freuch creoles mingled the qailiceany et the minds of a!! investors as to with many Irish aud native Americaus from New termination tp the security. — The general de | Orleans. The seman, Fe of their galiant iemse involved aud the importance ot the 4th, their fiving artillery, and other regiments,may “¢, 8 of course the main foundation be known by their stroug frames, gay manners feeling. ian y= trong nes, Cay Mayers, Te is distinguished senator from | and devil-may-eare air. The Svuth Carolinians, + 18 Cxpressing his owy opinion of these treg ry bonds sallow in completion, tall in stature, seldom need what we men awe to ws pretty correctly | the Palmetto to tell the stranger the State from » be the genera! opinion through- which they come; but in all regiments it is easy me ary. He «aid, “ There is byt one to perceive differences in manner and bea: ww, Currence of a can be thought of, upon the oc- indicative of the various classes of which the army ot may fe these bouds may not be paid, is composed. w inaar o marketable value. That cou Numbersof wealthy planters serve as privates eed eleat in the pending struggle for side by side with the professional men, the shop- ©; iG whieh eveyt every mau must keeper, the clerk, the labourer; and all go through We shall all be irrevocably ruined, ' the ordiuary fatigue duties incident to camp-lite. s “tripped of freedom, property, and | We saw a poor negro servant actually shedding Pewuit of this ee 3 What may be the ultimate | tears because his master, on being told off to dig Prediet ; but pa al policy it is impossible toa treneh round a battery, would not allow him those most in’ could perceive jn the minds of “to lend a hand.” v a a bo malstrust in ite soundness.| “Iwill nebber do, massa,” he said; “I go wents. a thie he Gouree, specie pay- ‘tarnal mad wid dem darn'd Yankees.” State } ate supported by the different) One day we heard a lad boasting to one of a different regiment of the number of gentlemen iu ? authorities, who natural] j ant should come in uateien ea an bodies od securities. In some States solvent aho command. The latter replied, “ Oh, of course been allowed to issue notes they Sight; but we bare some in ours who bave : ' fell. The first thing that struck ua in riding through his company who had thousands of dollars at their Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, January not got a cent!” The Washington artillery, com- prising many batteries, is composed of the bent | blood in New Orleans. ‘The gunuers, dressed in light-blue uniforms, are all men of independent means. General Beauregard’s son, for instance, | left his father’s staff, and entered as a private. Phe drivers are regularly enlisted into the army, and paid by the regiment; so here is a toree which does not cost the country a single farthing. Their | efficiency is undoubted, and the execution which | they did at Bull’s Run has led to their material augmentation, aud the formation ef others on similar principles. From the same city comes a) very different regiment, called the New Orleans “Zouaves,” dressed in red caps, blue braided } jackets, and trousers striped with light grey and | struggling for independence; nor can we think | red. ‘These men look like pirates—bearded.tierce- | that the condition of the negre in the Southern | | States will remain long what it now is, but that, looking tellows— “ Theirs to believe no prey, no plan amis,’ Apparently at least; for as they marched past the | General with a long swinging step, singing a wild martial air, we thought they were as formidable a | body of men as we should care to see. ‘The drill of the army is the same as the French, | ao the step even quicker than the Zouaves, and a} good deal longer than that of the English infantry. | Movements are exeeuted with considerable pre- cision, and us rapidly as in English light-nfantry battalions. From the reports we had heard in the North, we expected to find ragged and half-clad regiments ; linstead of which we tailed, during many rides | manufacturers would soon change their machinery | |} was net clad in serviceable attire. It was ex- | Seward's confidential agents, we have come; may still further abuse it. You may pros- | through the various camps, to see one man whe | pected that winter clothing would be served out | before the Ist ot November, and that dress would | then become more uniform. But the point to which the chief attention of | officers aud men is directed is the arms. Besides | the Enfield rifle, most of the privates in the army | carry at least one revolver and a bewie-kuife : | these are iavariably kept bright and in good con- dition; and the early training which all Southern- ers undergo in shooting *quirrels as soon as they are able te handle a gun, gives them a fucility of | using their weapons and « correctness of aun that reuders their tire unusually formidable. The commissariat seemed to be most efficiently | administered. A large depot of bread-stuffs is placed in con- venient positios, whence the different corps are supplied in waggous drawn by four horses, ove of Which a negro generally rides. ‘Lhe resources of the country produce the fresh meat necessary for | the enormous daily consumption; and we fre- quently saw scores of cattle and sheep driven ulong the roads, from the condition of which it was evident that their journey had not been long. Indeed, a country gentienmn informed us that there were aninals enough in two counties of Virginia adjacent to the seat of war to last the ‘army tor two years. We were vaturally anxious to inspect the ground | upon which waa fought the great battle, called in England “ Bull’s Run,” but in “ Secessia” that of “Manassas Plaius;” the former name being in} America applied te the engagement which took | place on the Ith of July, three days previous to the great “* stamp de.” ‘The open space w hich formed the battle-field is | scarcely a mile in length, and considerably less in | breadth. Undulating ground declines to the centre of this cleariug,through which runs the Warrenton | high-road. Upon these slopes the great struggle | tooh mace. | Th» object of the Federal general was to cross | the valley and fall upon the flank and rear of the | Contederates, who were drawn up in line of | battle along Bull's Run, at lit angles to the | ad ' General Johnston bad therefore to change his | front when he found that a powerful attack was | being made upon his lett, and that the whole force | of the enemy had already overlapped it, and was i deseending the hill to the Warrenton road. } General M‘ Dowell ski'fully avoided the defences | of the Confederates, and with great ability suc- | ceeded in conducting his troops to a point fron which auecess seemed inevitable. He reached the ruad without much opposition, and began aseend- ing the broken greand im freut. There the battle really began. Again and again the Southern bri- gades, as they Came up in suecession,were thrown luto contusion by overpowerng numbers, and | forced to retreat into the woods at the summit of the hill. Generals Johnston and Beauregard caine | te the front at this erisis, rallied the wavering | troops, and turned the tide in favour of the South. | General Kirby Sinith, whe happened to be passing along the railway with treops tor Manassas, hear- ing the engagement going on, stopped the train and brought at this seasonable moment four regi- ments inte action. In another hour all was over, | and then took place that remarkable * tall walk” | so graphically aud truthfully described by Mr. Russell. More than four thousand small-arms and twenty- eight field-pieces, belonging to the United States hh ri } ripe | i The Southern official account has net yet been | published, but when it is, we think the publie will read with surprise the list of articles actually | “ carried over” to General Jobnston’s stores after | the Zist of July. It will be seen that the cele- brated masked batteries must have been altogether a myth, the battle having taken place at least two miles from where the nearest Confederate gun | | was situate on the morning, and at right angles } to the position at which the attack was antici- | pated. Several wounded soldiers were walking about | the ground the day we visited it, who took great | pleasure in showing us the places where the hottest | parts ef the contest took place. One of them, an | Irishman, belonged to that gallant band nf 300 who | bere the whole brunt of the enemy's left for the | first two hours in the morning. He told us that | this furce consisted of two companies from New | Orleans, called respectively “ Tigers’ and “ Wild | Cats,” the 4th Alabama, and some companies of | the 6th and 7th Georgian regiments. He said he | ‘himself was “bate up wid foitin,” and when | “ Gineral Bewregard kem up wid rayinforcements | in the afternoon and tould the ‘Wild Cats’ they ' |had done enough—Bedad, they wint to the rear | and got a few glasses of whiskey, and kem back | to the ‘ foit’ as fresh as the flowers of May!” On| our remarking that we had heard that the 69th | Irish New York Regiments had fought very bravely | on the side of the North, he replied, * Indeed they | did, sir; divil a better. Troth, the Irish did) the best part of the foitina both sides, and no! mistake"*!! A small pillar, in all respects like a milestone, | has been erected on the spot where Gen. Bartow | His last words are engraved upon it—| “They've killed me, boys; but don’t give up the | fight.” This is the only monument as yet erected ; but numbers of graves are to be seen around the brow of the bili where the fival struggle took piace. We have heard it frequently remarked that the volunteer system was tried and found wanting at the battle ot - Manassas ;”” but surely the best re- ply that can be given to such a statement is that the whole of the Southero army is composed of volunteers; and we saw mavy regiments whieh arrived in Virginia only four days -betore the action. The time which we bad allowed ourselver for our Ainerican tour being now nearly spent, we re- turned to New York, where we found most persons altogether in ignerance of the feelings and juten- ous of the South ; and so strong is the contidence geverally reposed in the uumerieal etrength of their vast army, the alleged efficiency of the navy, and the great wealth of the New England States, that few persons are to be met with w ho think gluomily of the future. The hundreds of con- tractors, who are making large fortunes by the war, form no ineonsiderable part of the public. The taxation consequent upon the Ntate spending nearly £300,000 a-day has not yet fallen upon the peuple, while their worst passions are excited by an unscrupulous and one-sided press, Better mea, and far mere true to the Constitution, thaa the Government, would then be heard. Genius,virtue, jutegrity, now languishing in Fort Lafayette, it too late to save the Union, will then at least be exerted to bind together what remains. but, alas! a raging democracy now supports a Minis- try which bears no reproof, and will endure no criticism ; and signs pregnant with those conse- quences eloquently predicted by Sir Bulwer atten are rising in the political horizon. General Fremout has been removed from the command of! an army over which he possessed undoubted in- fluence, and although no success has hitherto at-| tended its efforts, the supporters of the Union in the West are ardent admirers of its late chief. Whether he is destined to become the bead of an Abolition Cabinet at Washington, or the dictator of a North-Western Republic, we cannot attempt ? ul to foretell; but we mistake the cbaracter of the | ‘his removal will not affect Southern politics. iter or responsibility ; that during the first evenin | tally ment is idje. Freedom of speech, freedom o thought, every right pertaining to the citizen ‘nan if he be coutented long to remain in a subor- One thing is, however, certain; By this measure, of course, Mr. Lincoln wishes to im- press upon the seceded States that it is his inten- tion now te preserve the “institution” in all its integrity; but such a policy is too late. The South cannot beliewe in men who, merely catching at a straw, repudiate in the hour of peril the doctrines which they have hitherto held, and to which aloue they owe their advancement. In thése islands, of course, we all pray for uni- versal emancipation. We have made enormous sacrifices in the cause ourselves; but we cannot help sympathixing with ten millions of people dinate position. if European intercourse be established with the | Confederacy, and she be adinitted into the family | an then gradually but surely effect far more which the most sincere} but a little while since you were quite as) of nations, commerce, always favourable to tree- dom, will humane Besults than those Abolitionists can ever attain. MISCELLANEOUS. [From the Richmond Whig, Dee, 23.) WASHINGTON. Through the instrumentality of one of | in possession of the following letter, address- | ed by a brave and noble woman, to Lincoln's | vizior. We are given to uuderstand that the perusal of it was not without visible effect upon that impersonation of all human villainy. ‘The twitchings of the muscles, and ‘his agitated manner betrayed, not perhaps, | any compunction, bat sense of personal in- security at the hands of the avenging Neme- | #is. The letter is the most granhic sketch yet given to the world of the eruel and dastardly i tyranny which the Yankee Government has established at Washington. Russell, in one of his letters to the London 7%nex, mentions the expedient of ‘arrest by tclegraph,”’ which has been introduced by Seward, as somethiag new and appalling, and outstripp- ing all the ingenious cyntrivarces of all the | despotisms thatever existed. But the incar- | cernation and torture of helpless women, and | the outrages heaped upon them, as detailed in this letter, will more shéck manly natures, | and stamp she Lincoln dynasty everywhere | with undying infamy. | ‘The letter tells its own tale, and may be relied on as the true ory of the original, | in the hands of William H. Seward :— Wasnixetons Nov. 17,1861. | To the Hon. W. H. Seward, Secretary of, State: i Sir—For nearly three months I have been | contined a close prisoner, shat out from air and exeteise, and denied all communion with family qd friends. } Patietce is suid to be .great virtue, and, [ have practised it to my wtmost capacity of endurance. Lam told, sir, that upon youripse dizit the fate of citizens depends, and that the sign manual of the ministers of Louis the Four- teen thadpd lt iiteon te wastmotamore potential in their day than that of the Secretary of State in 1861. I therefore most respectfully submit that on Friday, August 24, without warrant or other show of authority, i was arrested by the deteetive police, and my house taken im charge by them; that all wy private let- tersand papers of a lifetime were read and examined by them ; that every law of decen- cy was violated in the search of my house und person, und by the surveillance over me. | We read in history, that poor Marie Antoinette had a paper to:n from ber bosom by lawless hands, and that even « change ot linen had to be effected in sight of her brutal captors. Itis my sud experience to record, even more revolting outrages than that, for during the first duys of my imprisonment, whenever necessity forced me to seek my chamber, a detective stood sentinel at the | open door. And thus for a period of seven jdays 1, with my little child, was placed ab- solutely at the mercy of men without charac- a portion ef these men became bru- | runk, aud boasted in my hearing of the ** nice times’’ they expected to have with | the female prisoners ; and that rude violence was used towards 4 coloured servant girl during that evening, the extent of which || have not been able to learn. For any show) of decorum afterwards practised towards me, | [ was indebted to the detective culled Cap- | tain Dennis. In the careful analysis of my payers I deny the existenve of a line L had not a perfect right to have written, or to have received. Freedom of speech and opinion is the birth- right of Americans, guaranteed to us by our charter of Liberty—the constitution of the) United States. -I bave exercised my prero- | gative, amd have openly avowed my senti- | ments. During the political straggie, I op- posed your republican party with every in- | stinct of self-preservation. I believed your! success a virtual naliification of the eonstitu- | tion, and that it would entail upon us all the direful consequences which have ensued. | These sentiments have doubtless been found recorded among my papers, and I hold them, as rather a proud reeord of my sagacity. I mast be permitted to quote from a letter | of yours, in regard to Ruasell, of the London | Times, which you conclude with these admr- | rable wotde: “* Individual errors of opinion | ‘may be qwleréted, eo long as good sense is left to combat them.”’ By way of illustrat- ing theory and pees am I, a priso- ner in sight of the Executive mansion, in. sight of the Capitol, where the proud states- men of our land have sung their peeans to the blessings of our free institutions. Com. f has been suspended by what, | suppose the Presedent calls a ** military necessity.”” A blow has been struck by this totul disregard of all civil rights, against the present system of Government, far greater in its effects than the seyerance of the Southern States. Our people have been taught to contemn the su- premacy of the law, to which all have hither- tw bowed, and to look to the military power fur prsteetion against ite decrees. A mili- tary spirit has been developed, which will only be subordinate to a military dictator- ship. Read history, and you will find that the causes which bring about a revolution rarely predominate at ite close, and no peo- ple have ever returned to the point from which they started. Eyen should the Sou- thern States be subdued and forced back into the Cuion (which 1 regard as impossible, with a full knowledge of the resources) a different fourm of Government will be found needful to meet the new developements of na- tional character. ‘There is no class of society, no branch of iodustry, which this change has not reached, and the dull, plodding, me- thodieal habits of the peor can never be re- sumed. You have held me, sir, to a man's account- ability, and I therefore claim the right to speak on subjeets usually considered beyond woman's ken, and which you may class as errors of opinion.”’ I offer no exeuse for this long digression, as a three months’ im- prisonment, without formula of law, gives me authority for oecupying even the precious the I ‘moments of a Secretary of State. My object is to cal] your attention to fact that during this long imprisonment, ‘but it cannot crush out, the spirit of resist- FINANCIAL CRI 27, ISG2 am yet ignorant of the cause of my arrest; Relay House, southwest of us—the largest importance second to no other. that my house has been seized and convert- and strongest of all—and tell you that the in the elements of power 1% ed into a prison by the Government; that peace and quiet and peaceful industry that, butedin the several New Series.---No, 3 aatte distri- and sdd, the valuable furniture it contained has been you see all through the city depend on these.’’ | besides, many that have bel to no other abused and destroyed; that during some | period of my imprisonment | have suffered |greatly for want of proper and suffieient food. Also, | have to complain that, more , recently, a woman of bad character, recog- ‘nized as having been seen on the streets of. Chicago as such by several on guard, calling | | herself Mrs. Onderdonk, was placed here in | | my house, in a room adjoining mine. In making this exposition, | have no object | of appeal to yoursympathies. If the justice | of my complaint, and a decent regard for the | | world’s opinion do not move you I should ut waste time to claim your attention on) other secure. may, however, recall to your mind, that much proseribed by public sentiment here | for the opinions and principles you held, as} I am now for mine. 1 could easily have escaped arrest, having | had timely warning. I thought it possible | that your statesmanship wight present such | : : cS oe ee | @ proclamation of weakness to the world, as, } THE COWARDLY DES POTISM AT | even the fragment of a once great government | turning its arms against the breasts of women | and children. You have the power, sir, und} trate my physical strength, by confinement | in close rooms, and insufficient food—you | may ‘subject me to harsher, ruder treatment | than 1 have already received, but you cannot | imprisun the soul. Every cause worthy of! success has had its martyrs. ‘The words of | the heroine Corday are applieable here: ‘© O’est le crime qui fait la ionte et non pas lechafaude.’’ My sufferings will afford a significant lesson to the women of the South, that sex or condition is no bulwark against the surging billows of the ”* irrespressible | confliet.”’ The ** iron hee] of power”? may keep down, ance of a people armed for the defence cf! their rights; and { tell you now, sir, that | you are standing over a crater whose smo- | thered fires ina moment may burst forth. | It is your boast that thirty-three bristling | fortifications of Paris did not prutect Louis | Phillippe when his hour had come. { In conclusion, | respectfully ask your at-, tention to this my protest, and have the! honor to be, &e., &e., &e., i tose O. N. Greenuow. or Sls IN THE STATES. } i | ~~ | Sap Fare or Deserrers From 4 Wiracer. | —The ship Daniel Webster of and from New| Bedford, bound whaling off Greenland, caine | to anchor in Cumberland Straits, July 6, | 1860, where there were several other vessels, | and among them the ship Ansel Gibbs. A| boat's crew, composed of John Giles, boat- steerer, John Martin, Hiram J. Jarvis, Wil- lard Hawkins, Thos. Colwell, Joseph Fisher and Samuel J. Fisher,deserted from the Ansel Gibbs, and took from the Danl, Webster Jobn F. Sullivan, « landsman, of Hadley | Falls, Mass., and Warren Dutton. The Otero | boats thus manned stood across the Straits, | —The after the crew C#ted to the French and finally reacned the snore, suffered great hardships. On ‘he 3d of August, Hawkins and Davis ran sway from) their companions, and took everything with | them of any consequence, leaving the others entirely destitute of the means of subsistence. Shortly afterward Warren Dutton died of starvation, his suipmates cooked and eat his| body and made soup of his bones. When) this food was exhausted they tried to kill! Sullivan, who, in defending himself, killed Sami. Fisher. Sullivan's life was spared, and those who had conspired to murder him | dressed his wounds, and thea eat the body | of Fisher. When that was consumed they eat their sheath-knive belts, bouts, some bear and seal skins. Nearly famished with hunger, they were rescued from this deplo- rable condition by a boat's crew of Esqui- waux, who took them to Ukoke, a missionary station, where they were kindly treated | ‘ deserted them, and he reported that his Com- | panion Hawkins had died. Thus three of | the foolish men lost their lives in an insane | attempt to desert from good ships, for, Sullivan who wrote the narrative from which , we have condensed this, suid that he hud not been badly treated: und we believe if the | truth were known, the sume was true of the. usage on board the Ansel Gibbs. Sullivan | and three of his companions went to Indian harbor,and furnished Capt. Norman, a trader, | with along amd very clear account of the) sufferings endured by the deserters. We hope their sad fate will be 4 warning to seamen not to desert their ships. oe: { Tus Prowpritups or THe Cunarp Trans-| “PORTS BoUND FOR Canava.—The urgent de-| taken in at nine cents. mand for expedition in the despatch of truops | | brance of all who pray,” mudam ; walk in and calling. He who knows the and of the press need desire no the editorial. In that silent realm of which proceed the actions of men events of history, the Editor is the Leades. Votes cannot raise thin him hi > peu lo meee SRR UPIIM, Prafmandiy pressed with auch s to honor God in the iene of we the sympathy of good men, and the remem- power | , IR Grxerat Scott on THE Tart’ Ovrnsos. Scvtt, in which he in the report that the Cabinet of Washi as ordered the seizure of the ommissiouers, even if under the protection of a neutral - He is quite oer of the decision of his Government, but he says it is necessury to preserve the between America and « I hope,”” continues General Scott, ** that and Mr. Seward will agree on a the question whether the one who were arrested on board the Trent were gomtraband of war or not. If they were a of the rebels, it will be difficult to com even impartial minds that they were less ir band of war than rebel soldiers or eannons."’ expresses ¥ In conclusion General Seott ‘conviction that a war between America England cannot take place without more ‘serious prevocations than those at present There they found Hiram J. Davis, who had | &'V¢9- -_———<—o Stroiling througt our Ax Auction ScBNE.— city we chanced intu ao auctivm room to see what bargains wecould make. The aaction- neer was upon the stand with a pieee of ealiee, * Eight cents a yard—who suys ten 7’ ‘I'll give you tenf! Cine Your’s, ‘I didn’t,bid on it,” exclaimed the old lady, vancing. ‘We'll thank persons not to bid if don’t want an article, * Going, then at eight!—who says more than eight ?’ * Nine cents,’ said ag old gentleman oppo- site us. Going ‘ Nine!—Nine!—who says ten? at nine !—going ?—gone? Yours, sir. ee | ‘1 didn’t bid,’ said the olf It is now very evident that the Northern | for Canada has been such as to tax to some don t want it—woulda’t give you five sents States are on the brink of ruin, and unless | | Speedy steps are taken to find mean«**tocarry | |on the war,’ the war itself will be brought | to a very speedy termination. It is now | within the lasttendays. On Thursday week | ¥, get inte trouble,’ throwi afirmed by the best authorities, that the ex- | a telegram was received froin Government by the -piece,.of osiiahe * Give | penditure of the Government is three millions | the Cunard Company, inqairing as to whe] ise , Ah! ie of dollars daily, and that there isno means ther they could get the Persia and Aus-! ¥; dis , of meeting this immense sum for any time. | tralusian, two of their steamers, ready for} qo | | Leading journals unite in calling upoa Gon- gress to do something, or else *‘ the Lreasury | so, how soun they could be made ready for|« Twelve and a half,’ says another. extent the resources possessed by our mercan- tile steam marine. llow euch emergencies can be met in Liverpool has been demynstrated | / the conveyance of troops to Canada, and if | for the whole piece. Auctioneer getting mad.) * If pile again they will have —— the article ag down x utlemen, here ie a fine por. What can I get for that? vear ?—anything you please. + I'll start it at five.” * Ten 4 will become insolvent, the publie faith be} sea, The respouse was that both the ships | teen,’ cries an old lady—fourteen! fifteen dishonored, and the national credit ruined.’’ |eould be placed at the service of Government, | geyeral voices. The New York World, advising a *+ good) and be made ready within ten days. Lhe, +P sfusen, 1am offered "stiff war tax,”” says: *« All those politicians who suggest or help to fasten upon the country any form of ir- redeemable debt currency, in the shape of | able direction and superintendence of Messrs. | yarjous } demand notes or otherwise, will ruin them- selves irrevocably in the estimation of the of the Cunard Company, both slips were | up ’ The system has been thoroughly | put under preparation, and in eight days’ wa}k up. people. tested here, in Europe, and South America, and prod uces invariably the same results, | nawely: depreciation in the currency and advances in the price of commodities, while of troop accommodation for 1300 men in ect | that article?" said she income from bonds and mortgages, salaries, | of the vessels, together with stores and every | jy. and the wages of the labouring classes, re- main stationary or decrease, thereby entail- ing much privation to the millions, and | riches to the few. What the country wants is direct tax-, ation on property, and real and personal and | domestic manufactures, in addition to the) tariff on foreign imports, to produce st least 200,000,000 per annum, and the issue of Treasury 3 65 notes in denomination of five dollars and upward, for all payments after, the passage of the bill; in other words, the well-tried English exchequer bill system.’’ The Boston Courier, remarking on the gloomy aspect of affuirs, says :— “a ‘+ Senator Fessenden remarked, a few days lery, along with six guns; and with these she! dog ap ago, that the war mustsoon come to a speedy | sailed on Saturday evening for Halifax. The | barked Company was at once taken at its word, an instructions were forwarded to have the ships ready with all possible despatch. Under the ; James Currie. ‘Thompson, Black, and Ogston. | 4 o} from the commencement of operations they | were completely fitted and ready for embark- | ing the troops. ‘This included the fitting up | The Aus-! requisite fur a munth’s voyage. tralasian embarked her complement of sol- diers on Thursday and sailedon Friday. On Sunday the Persia was inspected and pro- nounced ready for use. The Australasian and Persia both started with full steam, and | both are to try if possible to get up the St. | Lawrence, which their Commanders expect | to be able to effect. IAInaddition to the two ships already named, the Niagara was on Tuesday last ordered to be fitted for the con- veyance of troops. On Friday she was in- spected and declared ready for sea, and on Saturday she took on board 27 officers and 320 men. forming a complete battery of artil- | down, and was about when a person righ —going '— go-i-ng'— gone! Yours, sir,— Step up, whoever bid. Noone came up. All eyes starting in parts of the room. ‘Gone, then, at fourteen. Yours, walk But the bidder could pot be made to ‘ Thirteen, then, madame; you can have think I want of lady, indignant- * Here, I'll take it thirteen,’ exclaimed a voice at the other endo{ theroom. All were turned in that direction, but no ‘it at your bid.” * 1] didn’t bid; whatdo ant came forward. * Who says they'll take it at thirteen ?* farmer ‘ I do,’ says an old , ‘ Well, sir, walk up and take it.’ ‘I'm afraid it’s stolen ! says the mad, t behind him eried a strike him! If was I who said you The auctioneer turned round, whena parently Fight at isl la With » most furi bidder. The auctioneer, now * Don't stole it!" and sudden end, unless more economy were Niagara took out General Kumiey, Colone! “spring upon his counter, he ordered the ; practised in our expenses. The remark is| Kennedy, and three officers of the Commis- | to Jeave. An useful mow; though it would have been sariat Department, and Dr. Muir, Inipector | longer able to contain himself, burst i a more timely, and of better effect, if rigorousiy | General of Hospitals, and four surgeons.— | joud laugh, ss a genteel eto ween | put to @ practical application many mouths ago. The demands on the Treasury amount, | it 1s said, to the enormous sum of Three Mil- | lions daily. That itis not all honest, we may see irom the way in which the publie haying set out on a journey, the gentleman | have witnessed millions wasted in one quarter, | carelessly entrusted to improper or incow- petent bands in another, and in which the, services of family conneetions of this or that) Liverpool Globe. —~—Po— A Fussy Epiror.—The editor of the Ken- tueky Whig, published at Mount Sterling, | ' left in charge of the office thus announced to | the readers of the journal his temporary in- vestiture of the robes editorial :— We are happy to announce that the editor from any distance. at our elbew, no at the door, whom he told us was s yentrilo- quist. ~ A Goop Dos Srorzr.—A \ had a splendid Newfou dog mu of conversation. After isi of bis favourite very highly, the panion that no aa. upon return and fetch any article To the Cabinet officer have been paid for at ten times | the respousible editor—the fighting editor the ordinary rate. These are hareh things, —has goue away to be gone three weeks. | to say ; but itis useful to put them a-ide,| He has not, however, left his paper in the | instead of looking at them, and endeayouring | condition of a western exchange, which comes to devise means for their correction? Some- to us headed, ‘the editor gone—the devil at ling was first shown to a large 9q) gentlemen then rode for received the #i shilling he 4 | turned back, the gentlemen rode on, home ; but, te their ‘thing ought certainly to be done, to meet and | the helm’—but has left US in charge. Per- to avert the crisis apprehended by Mr. Fessenden ; and surely some proper expedient | can also be reached, more likely to alleviate, at least, the financial crisis to whieh the, Government is tending, than the plan of the Secretary of the Treasury. We know well: how the people are discouraged at the waste- fulness exhibited, which is a poor return for the cheerful patriotism with which they at first came forward to take the Government oan. Nor would the difficulty in the way of meeting the public exigency have proved half | so trying as it is, and perhaps nothing avall, but for the recklessness with which the hard earned money of individuals, furnished for the public need, has been wo often thrown away.” It is stated that the enormous demands of the Federal Government for specie obliged the Banks to euspend all payments in cvin. | Wouat waxes Battoxore Loyat.—Notwith- standing the Union victories at the ballot box in Baltimore and Maryland last fall, a correspondent of the Daily Wisconsin says that city is secession to the core :-— The proof of this factis to be found every morning in a walk throagh Baltimore street. Let the papers contain accounts of 4 Union victory iu any part of the country, and nine men out of every ten you meet look mad and cross, but let the news be that Billy Wilson’s Zouaves have been licked, or thata dozen Zouaves at Newport News lost their axes and a wretched pair of horses, or that the jron-clad steamer Turtle had sunk a United States steamer at New Orleans, and the nine will wear faces radiant with joy, ‘and little parties will meet and hobnob over brandy smashes in honor of the news, and even the ladies will clench their little hands and say they are so glad! No wonder the ‘Union men here take you out to Federal | Hill and show you the great fort there cover- ing four squares of ground, with its wallson two sides rising forty, fifty, perhaps sixty feet above the street, with its black buildings poking their long noses out of the embra- sures and opening their yawning jaws eleven inches wide, and then point you to Fort Me- Henry to the southeust, with its cannon pointed @ little t our right; to the three ‘other forts recently thrown up to the north and east of the city, and to the fort as the faithful messenger did not uare stone by ree FSF from seen put haps you don’t know us. Sorry for you. is feeupalp a abet hohed wo at ig » of under whi ¢ shilling Ww But bring a box of cigars and a bottle of old pee ww . plared, at Bourbon along, and we will allow you the!) honor of our acquaintance! We don"t say |; ‘us’ in the usuai editorial sense, We are!! not exactly, as Mrs Malaprop says, ‘three | * in one,’ but there are twootus. The editor, | knewing our Breckinridge propensities, bas coupled us with @ Douglass man, ‘Seta thief to catch a thief.’ We commend his ¢ .owling at the place till sack, hearing the noise made by ook at him, when one of he stone, arid seeing te ioe rocket, not at the time thinking it to be the hamber, and hid h I of the dog's search. The horses for twenty miles, remai q Peom where they . followed the into the bed. imself under one of the beds. breeches wisdom ! ‘he possessor of the shilling b his supen He has left us to fulfil all his duties, We anual by che bedite | but wen the travellers were shall, therefore, drink all the editorial whis- and leaping oat of the window, which was . key, smoke all the editorial cigars, and visit |< the editorial sweetheart at least three times a week. ‘Che public will perecive that we |} ‘labor under no doubt as to our ability to!; perform properly ail the editorial functions. | wystery was explained, tc the if any enthusiastic admirer of the editur | =tes— wants to present him with a@ suit of clothes, ; we would suggest that now would be an ap-, propriate time. Ii anybody owes him, by | Setting now, be may be assured of a correct | *bulauce’ on the books,and ‘sub rosa,’ a small | discount, as we are out of change, and the editor exhausted all his credit for ‘fluid’ refreshments. Any boquets or pound cakes prepared for ' master at four o'clock in in the pocket cf which were found, cas te ition, inelnding yun which have been constructed \ S yn acconnt of the heat, in ,& Wateh and , which ee were returned to the eae ae paper. oo Accounts from the West give some ides of the nts, for the wervice. The used is 2, of mortar boats or bomb and of tugs and combs San ae The gunboats are ae = proot, buving been proved to be so by actual experi- inewt—and all will carry a very heavy other tin 8 the editor by the fair and gentle Bex, and and the mortar-boste aunee i they which would be likely to spoil before his can be used for bridges, besides carrying, | one return, may be sent to us, with our positive of —_ a a in —— r assurance that the editor shall—never know 80° Deng ~pboled for , =s : : that no defence anything about them. Shoald we hear of hat oP rebels cau etand agains Use any that are mot sent, we shall not fail to a dy animadvert severely upon the circumstance ip our next. Finally, if any young ladies are in the habit of receiving calls from the editor, they | will, by leaving their names at this office, be properly attended to during his absence. | P. S.—We don’t know who keeps the best hats in town, but we should know if we) should find a new seven and a quarter lying | on our table some day. | Tue Eprrortat Provessiov.—Rev. Henry | Ward Beecher was last week elevated to the chair editorial of the New York Independent, ; ‘taking the position heretofore occupied by | the Rey. Drs Bacon, Storrs, and Thompson. ; In his announcement to the public, Mr. B. ‘says: The ** editorial profession, gress of populer intelligence, has sssuwed ; with the pro-- _ Drrsicert Question ANSWERED. tell me why, When Eve was made out of ribs, @ hioed aie? eS) not made at the wait upon her fe can, easy! never tote whining tw Eve’ with siocking to be darned, a button to bes glove to be mended t wway, quick cause he never read newspaper got down bebind the palm-tree, and imself, yawning out, “ Amt my dear!” Not be, He oid woe saiahen, 08 lied Pe milked the look ihe half dozen anythisg in He never : meeting, bu and ne scolding and erying inside rather cowardly about : then that doesn't ear b about the gurden. never i & i 5 - k nity . B e F q i i : k : E [ i ¢* : i é i E : ik : d F 3 F ‘ 7 & 2 r i Kates. yed fi f F gE A i Unies ul a ~