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Our iricce for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc re increased. ilobt. HUNTINGDON, PA. Graphic Detoil.ed Account of Lee'a Surrender, Epeeist' De,patch to the Pittsburg Commercial. 'WASHINGTON, April. 14 Your special correspondent sends :the lollowing account of the surrender of Lee'aarmy, under date of APPOMAATOX COURT HousE, April 10. History will close the remarkable campaign which has - ended with the surrender of the army of Northern Virginia, as one of the most brilliant in the annals of modern warfare. ' In oss than two weeks a formidable ar my, commanded by the ablest and bravest men of the South, has been beaten in a position fortified by months of labor; has been followed through a :.most difficult country, brought to bay ;'and captured with comparatively in significant loss to the attacking forces, a series of manceuvers singularly bold in conception, and executed with that dash and precision which ;alone can seal with the stamp of success the most profound of min. itary combinations. Owing to the rapidity of movements and the extent :_ofground traversed more than an im- Terfect sketch of the operations of the army since it left Petersburg, has been .!impossible. A mere outline is all that can be given. To give a full resume of the short campaign: The bisected rebel army fled up the banks of the Ap pomattox—Longstreet with portions, at least, of the corps of AnderSon on the :•outh bank; Leo with the remainder, keeping the north side. Sheridan all the while was pounding away at the tail of General Longstreet's flying column, followed by Grant's whole . army, moving swiftly upon the Cox road upon Burk - sville. Lee hurriedly crossing the Appomattox, joined the iother fragment of his force, and made last effurt to escape by striking across the angle formed by two rail roads, whose junction would fall into .our hands by reason of our moving on the shortest line, in the hope of reach: Jug the road to Lynchburg, in- the di. 'nation 'of Farrnville, leaving our army in his rear and then striking south =ward to Danville. But the übiquit ous Sheridan was over in his path, harrassing and retarding his march, until our whole infantry force envel oped him, and capitulation was inevi table. - - - The closing scone in the history of the world•celobrated army of North ern Virginia, was an occasion of ab orhing interests. At the close of the , onference on the afternoon of the • ninth with Gen. Grant, Gen.. Leo mounted" his horse and rode slowly -back. Gen. Meade by a special ar rangemOnt, had suspended hostilities until 8. p. m. The Second and Sixth Corps were ready, prompt at th e hour, to open upon the enemy's columns, but were nulfied that it would be dis pensed wirra. They continued to move forward until nightfall, however, when the enemy was completely sur- F rounded from flank and rear, and ould not have broken faith, had he i.premeditated it. The reason of the suspension of the ttack was known at once by the troops, and shouts and cheers resoun .. ed along the entire line, and the regi mental and headquarter bands made . he spring air resonant with triumph al airs. Early in the afternoon heavy can nonading was beard in the direction of the second corps front, but upon inquiry it was ascertained to ho. a • salute, this time not with spotted guns, in honor of success. The position t this time was as follows:—Sheridan, with the sth and 24th Bergs /ay direct ly in the enemy's front at Appomat• tox court House, and the 2d corps !irectly in his rear ; being five or six miles apart by a bee line, but three or four times that distance. by the course round our rear. General Grant solicited and ob- Wined permission to send his dis 'patches to corps commanders by the shortest line, passing through the reb el encampments. Tho day had been pleasant, but at nightfall a slow driz zly rain - set in and tho morning was `damp and foggy. The parties empow. ered to carry out the terms of surren der had been appointed during the night. - At, ten o'eloek a. m., Generals Grant and Lee held a conference on the brow of the hill, a short distance north of the Court notion. Gon. Grant and bis staff bad been waiting but a ow ,inont, whoa General Lao, accornpan `led by an orderly, cantered up and rode to the side of the Lieutenant, ":General. General Grant's staff, Gen erals Ord, Griffin, Gibbon and Sheri dan, their respective staffs, were 12 CO . 1 OO WILLIAN LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL, XX, presont, grouped . in a semicircle about the central figures. Tho coun try to the north was opon and culti vated. The Court House is situated on a ridge of small hills, running east and west, and Lee's army was on a par allel range, with a small ravine and stream between, nearly duo north of our forces. At the head of his col umn were his trains and artillery, and his infantry and cavalry were in the rear, so that but a small portion of the rebel army could be soon flora the Court House. As General Lee gallopedup, Gener al Grant rode out two or three rods to meet him. Gen. Leo rode squarely up, and saluted military fashion and wheeled to the side of Grant. They conversed earnestly 'for nearly two hours, until the officers appointed on both sides to carry out the stipula tions of the surrender had reported for duty. In the course of the dis cussion Gen. Leo expressed the opin ion that if- Gen. Grant had accepted his proposition for an interview in person several weeks since, peace would probably have resulted. Tho . greater part of the conversation which passed between two of the greatest military men in the world upon this occasion, was of course pri vate and unheard by any but the speakers, but we gathered enough to know that Leo gives up to the idea of Southern independence as hopeless, and considers that aria• further resist ance on their part would be uselees and wanton effusion of blood. ,The rebel officers in conversation almost unanimously expressed the opinion that Johnston will also surrender the forces under his command when ho hears of Lee's surrender. - A little before cloven the interview elosed,by Gen. Lee saluting and riding slowly down the slope, across the rav ine and on into his camp, upon the little hill beyond. Gen. Grant then rode toward the Court House, follow ed by his staff and a large concourse. of General officers. In a short time, the officers designa ted by Gen. Leo to carry the stipula tions into effect arrived, accompanied by. a largo number of distinguished rebel officers. The verandah and yard in front worn soon filled with groups of Federal and rebel officers in conver sation. Every regular of a few years standing found old West Point ac quaintances in the hostile ranks, and their greetings wore both . numerous and hearty. The most frequent ques tion scorned to bo with the officers in grey, "What is to be done with us?" They seemed to think that the Presi dent's proclamation shut them out from hopes of amnesty, and were pleased to hear the belief of our offi cers, that tho offers of amnesty would be extended and made almost univer. sal. [We publish the bllowing to give the friends of the members of Captain A. W. Decker's company an idea of who commands the brigade to which the boys belong. Gon. Albrigbt's deeds of valor and patriotism have made him a capable and popular commander :] Brevet Brig. Gen, Charles Albright. To the Editor of the _Evening Bulletin : The many promotions lately made• in the army have doubtless prevented your noticing at length that of Col. Al bright of the 202 d Regiment Pa. Vols. While many promotions have been made without any sufficient cause, few have been more deserved than this. General Albright is one of Pennsylva nia's most loyal and patriotic sons. With him, country is all and no sacri fice too groat. lie is from Mauch Chunk, Pa.; a man of means; a leading lawyer in his section of Pennsylvania; largely engaged as a manufacturer, and President of the Second National Bank of Mauch Chunk. His money and influence have been liberally used for his country's cause.. As a soldier, his career dates back to April, 1861. He came to the National Capital to see that the Presidentwas inaugurated, and became a member of the Clay Bat talion. Ho was subsequently appoint. ed Major of the 132 d Regiment Penn sylvania Volunteers. At the battle of Antietam his Colonel was killed and be waspromoted to theLiout. Colonel. cy. The January following ho was. I made Colonel of his regiment, and soon allot.. took command of the 3d brigade, 3d division, 2d corps, and commanded that brigade during the Chancellor villa campaign with distingaished abil ity and bravery. In the battle of Fredericksburg he lost nearly half of 'his command in killed and wounded, In June, 1863, ho took command of Camp Muhlenberg, Reading, Pa., and was appointed. Colonel of the 34th Pennsylvania Militia, and sent to Philadelphia to preserve order there during the draft. Ho was stfaioped in the Nineteenth Ward, where the principal difficulty was apprehended, and through his . prudence and firmness no trouble whatever occurred. Soon afterwards the troubles in the coal regions arose among the miners and others, in opposition to the draft. Gen. Couch. 'selected Col. Albright to assist in ferreting out the ringleaders; and through his services the unconsti tutional organizations existing there were broken up, many of the guilty tried, nd now expiate the punishnient duo their crimes at Fort Mifflin. In August last ho organized tho 202 d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, and was assigned to duty under Gen. Couch at Chambersburg, Pa. The Gen eral, knowing his man, sent hint to Columbia county Pa., to again break up a nest of Northern conspirators. Her succeeded in exposing the secrets of the Knights of the Golden Circle and frustrating theirdiabolioal designs. In autumn ho was sent up the Ma. nassaa Gap Rallroad,whore he operated against Mosby; and after that road was abandoned ho was stationed at Fairfax Station; Va., at which place ho has been during the winter, build ing stockade forts and guarding the railroad against guerillas. General Albright was an early pion eer to Kansas. He went with Gover nor Reeder in 1864, and participated in the early struggles of that territo ry to become a State.. General Al bright is a young man, yet of largo experience, great energy of purpose, heightened and moral in character—in short a fighting, praying patriot. In the bands of such men the country is safe. F. A. Philadelphia, April 25th, 1865. What Shall BeDone With the Lead ers of the Rebellion. When a man embarks on the stor my sea of rebellion or revolution, ho takes his life in his band. At the out sot he counts the cost. If ho succeeds he is a hero, the leader and ruler of a now State. "Let us hang together," said one of our fathers of the Revol ution. "Yes," replied. another, "or wo shall hang separate." That is the fate of those who disturb existing government. In all ages and climes it is an understood, self-evident fact that an attempt to overturn the exist ing government, is tho highest crime that man can commit, and is therefore to be punished by the highest penalty known to its laws. It is no justification of rebellion that a man or body of men suppose they have a right to sot up a new government, and cast off their allegi ance to the one in existence. Their supposing themselves to be right does not make them right. "Order is heaven's first law." Any government is better than no government. Rebel lion and revolution are to be justified only under circumstances so well do. fined, that the groat law of love comes in to sanction the terrible evils of war by the compensating good that is to follow. And even then the failure of the rebellion exposes the participant to the well-defined penalties of the greatest of all social crimes. It was in view of those possible and fearful results, that wo addressed ourselves so early as in the autumn of 1360 to the work of setting before the coun try the imminent danger of resisting the constituted authorities of the Union. At that time Are had access r to the minds of many leading men, in Church and State, in thoSe parts of the country where resistance was fear ed. We foresaw what has since been the historical experience of our peo ple. We raised a voice of warning, alasl a voice in vain. In the New York Observer of Nev. 15, 1860, that being the first paper issued after we announced the election of Mr. Lincoln to the Presidency, we said editorially: "The election having been conduct ed in harmony with the constitution and laws of the country, the result is to be accepted as the voice of the country, and every man who expects to be con side 'red a patriotic citizen of the Uni• ted States, and not a rebel against the government of his own choice, will calmly acquiesce." In the same paper wo said editori ally; • "Mind governors now, and men who talk treason aro in great danger of tempting others and being tempted to act treason, and so to incur the penalty due to traitors." No sooner did the paper containing those words reach the South, than loading men united in ordering us to send no more to their address, as they would not allow in- their houses a newspaper that taught such senti ments to the people. The first man from whom this order came to us was afterwards a general in the rebel ar my, and was killed on the battle-field at Fredericksburg. The postmaster at HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 8, 1865, • -PERSEVERE.- Selma, Alabama, refused to deliver the New York Observer to its subscribers, because it taught the duty of obedi ence to the government, and the sin of rebellion. We were obliged to obtain an order from the Postmaster General to perform his duty. &nd Selma has just been destroyed in consequence of its rebellion. We go back to these first principles and first acts in the bloody drama now closing, to bring distinctly into view the fact that frorntho , _o4tegtthe con sequences worn fully understood by all parties. It has boon our purpose, in each successive issue of our paper for the last four years, to teach the duty of the Government to preserve itself, and the duty of the insurgent people to 'submit to that government. And now that the ability of the Gov ernment to maintain its life and pow er, and to crush rebellion under its heel, has been fully demonstrated, the question comes upon us, with intense solemnity, IIT/i4 shall be done with the men who plunged the country into this awful war ? By the laws of God and the laws of man, they may be justly put to death. Believing as we do in the duty of civil government to inflict capital punishment for capital crimes, we hold that the leaders of this rebel lion deserve to be executed. . If considerations of public policy justify tho communication of the death-penalty into ono loss bloody, but not less demonstrative of the sense of abhorrence in which the civilization and christianity of the age hold the sin of rebellion, we.. would still have such punishment meted out, to the leaders, as will forever mark, by a grand historical precedent and protest, tho determination of this country to be always one; and never to give place for an instant, to the idea of se cession or separation. Such a protest would be the execution of the loaders, if they fall into the hands of justice. But if they escape justice, what then Will you send apardon .to Da vie and Stephens, and Floyd, and Thompson, and their associates, and tell _them to come back to Congress and the Cabinet and.renew their trea son,while they enjoy the protection of the Government they seek to over throw 7 No, a thousand times No. We would by a public decree, an act of Congress, if necessary, but 'by a solemn sentence of proscription, ban ishment, and expatriation, forever debar from the rights of citizenship and protection in the United States the men who save taught the people to sin !!! While the largest liberality ought to be extended to the masses of the people, an act of almost tiniVersal amnesty being proclaimed, in the spirit of the terms : on, which Gen.. Grant received the surrender of Gen. Lee, we would. make such a judicial and distinct declaration of the right eons abhorrence of the nation toward the crime itself, in"the person of the mon engaged, that future ages should know, when they read the history of these times, • that rebellion against this free and popular government is an unpardonable sin. In giving expression to this opinion, wo design to indicate the sentiment of the mon whom we meet, and whose views' we are accustomed to find in harmony with our own. They desire the close of the war and the restora tion of the Union •to bo signalized a solemn judicial condemnation of the wrong that 'has filled this land for four years with tears and blood, and the bitter fruits of which wrong we are to oat as long as we livo. The judgment we would pronounce does not require that we should take Davis or his cabinet or his aids. Set upon them the mark which ho bore who first lifted up his hand against his brother. Unto him , God said "the voice of thy-brother's blood crieth out unto thou from the ground." Unto , them we say "The voice of half a mil lion of your sons and brothers cries unto you from'the ground; blood that you caused to flow ; crime that man can never forgive or forget; go into some other land and there in solitude And exile seek from God that pardon which it is his prerogative to bestow. You can never share with us the seats of counsel, the high places of trust and responsibility you once filled. You have deceived us once, c- and we .shall never be able to repose confidence in you again. You have renounced and defied the government, and we cannot share it with you any more." Such a course . would be a lasting demonstration of the power and resol ution of the Government, and its ef fect would be felt to the end of time York Observer. Rte" Never join with your friend when he abuses his horse or his wife; unless the ore is about to to sold, and the other to be buried. - •' • , ,? ,- A1 • ....:, - 1 11, • , 7,•:, . - Ir. k -..., . ;....-, :-.- t w ic, 1 ,- ' ,- - \., ....,?, , 4i ,. • Our Policy Towards Traitors. Speech by the President to a Delega tion of Loyal Southerners. The Spirit that will Animate our Tteat meet of the Rebels. Mercy Without Justice a Crime.---Stern Justice to the Leaders in Treason— Amnesty, Clemency to the _gasses, their Followers. Special Despatch to the Prose.] WAsnmerroN, D. C., April 24.—This morning, at eleven o'clock, a large del egation of loyal citizens of disloyal districts called upon the President. Judge Underwood, on behalf of the delegation, road the following address: Mr. President : The gentlemen who come with me to pay their respects to the Chief Magistfate of the nation are, for the most part, exiles from the South—exiles for their devotion to the Union and the Constitution in defiance of threats and persecution of the slave holding aristocracy. Your recent utterances have stirred our spirits like the sound of a trumpet, and encouraged the hope that we may ere long in safety visit our desolated farms and rebuild our homes in the sunny South. We have no feelings but those of kindness for the common people of our section, oven for those who by physical or moral compulsion, or by gross deception, have boon or eyed in arms against the Govern ment. We would not say with Joshua of old, "every one who rebels shall be put to death," but woe to the wicked leaders, who, though bafiled, are neith er humbled nor subdued; whose arro gance and treason are as dangerous to us and to the country as over. We, thank you for declaring that these groat criminals must be punished. The Great Author of Nature and Prov idence decrees that thoso who sow the wind shall reap the whirlwind. We know that we cannot go home in safe ty while traitors whose hands aro still dripping with the warm blood of our martyred brothers remain defiant and unpunished. It is folly to give sugar plums to tigers and hyenas. It is more than folly to talk of clemency and mercy to these worse than Catilines; for clemency and mercy to them are cruelty and murder to the innocent and unborn. If General Jackson had punished the treason of Calhoun we would not have witnessed this rebel lion. If the guilty leaders of this re bellion shall be properly punished, our children's children will not be com pelled to look upon another like it for generations. By the blood of our martyred Pres ident, by the agonies of our starved and mutilated prisoners, by the tens of thousands slain in battle, and the desolations of home and country and all the waste of life and treasure for the last four years, with no feeling of revenge, but in sincerest of sorrow, wo pray that your Administration may be both a terror to evil-doors and a protection to all who pursue the paths of peace. And while We rtioUrn and lam ent our great and good murdered Chief— too kind and too indulgent, we fear, for these stormy times—we thank God for the belief that, knowing the char acter of the leaders of the rebellion as you do, you will so deal with thorn that our whole country shall be an asylum for the oppressed of every creed and every clime, the home of peace, free dom, industry, education, and religion; a light and an example to the nations of the whole earth, down a long, bright, and beneficent future. President Johnson replied: It is hardly necessary for mo on this occasion to say that my sympathies and impulses in connection with thisno furious rebellion beat in unison with yours. Those who have passed through this bitter ordeal, and who participated in it to a great extent, are more compe tent, as I think, to judge and doter mine the true policy which should be pursued. [Applause] I have but lit tle to say on this question in response to what has been said. It enunciates arid expressos my own feelings to the fullest extent, and in Much better lan guage than I can at the present mo ment summon to my aid. The most that P can say is, that en tering upon the duties that have de volved upon me, under circumstances that are perilous and responsible, and ,being thrown into the position I now occupy unexpectedly, in consequence of the sad event,--the heinous assassi nation which has taken place--in view, of all that is before the, and the cir cumstances that surround me, I cannot but feel that your encouragement and kindness aro peculiarly acceptable and appropriate I do not think you, who have been familiar with my Course, you who aro from tho South deem it necessary for me to make any profes sions as to the future on this occasion, TERNS, - $2,00 a year in advance. I nor to express What my course will be upon questions that may arise: If my past life is no indication of what my future • will be, my professions were both worthlesi and empty; and in re turning you .my sincere thanks for this encouragement and sympathy, I really can only reiterate what ' .I have said before, and in, part what has just been road. As far as clemency and mercy are concerned, and the proper exercise of the pardoning power, I think I under stand the nature and character of the latter. In the exercise of clemency and mercy, the pardoning power should be exercised with caution. I do not give utterance to my opinion on this point in any spirit of revenge, or unkind feelings. Mercy and clemency have been pretty largo ingredients in my-compound. Having been the Ex ecutive of a State, and thereby placed in a position in which it was necessary to exorcise clemency and mercy, I have been charged with going too far —being too lenient—and I have be come satisfied that mercy without jus tice is a crime, and when mercy and clemency are exercised by the. Execu tive it should always be done in view of justice, and in that manner alone is properly exercised that great preroga tive. The time has come, as you who have had to drink this bitter cup, are fully awar,3,whenthe American people should be made to understand the true nature of crime. Of crime gonerally,our people have a high understanding, as well as of the necessity of its punishment; but in the catalogue of crimes there is one, and that thu highest known to the law and the Constitution—of which, since the days of Jefferson and Aaron Burr, they have become oblivious—that is, Treason. Indeed, one who has become distinguished in treason and in this re bellion, said that "When traitors be come numerous enough, treason be- comes respectable," and to become a traitor was to constitute a portion of the aristocracy of the country. God protect the people against suck an aristocracy ! Yes, the time has come when the people should be taught to understand the length and breadth,•the depth and height of treason. An individual oc cupying the highest position among us was lifted to • that position by the free offering of the American people—the highest position on the habitable globe —this man we have seen, revered, and loved; ono who, if he erred at all, er red ever on the side of clemency and mercy—that man we have seen treason strike, through a fitting instrument, and we have beheld him fall like a ' bright star falling from its sphere: Now there is none but would say, if' the question came up, what stintlitihii' done with the individual who assassi nated the,Chief Magistrate of a nation? He is but a man, one man after all; hut if asked what should be done with the assassin, what should be the pen alty, the forfeit exacted, I know what response dwells in every bosom. It is that he should pay the forfeit with his ' life; and hence we see that there are times when mercy and clemency with out justice becomes a crime: The one should- temper the other, and bring about that proper moan. And if we would say this when the ease was the simple murder of one man by his fel low-man, what should we say when asked what shall be done with him or them who have raised impious hands to take away the life of a nation com posed of thirty millions of people? What would be the reply to that ques tion ? But while in mercy we remem ber justice, in the language that has been uttered I say justice towards the leaders, the conscious leaders; but 1 also say amnesty, conciliation, clem ency, and mercy to the thousands of our countrymen whom you and I know have been deceived or driven, into this infernal rebellion. And so I return to whore I started from, and again repeat that it, is time our people were taught to know that treason is's crime, not a more'political difference—not a mere otintest between two parties, in which one succeeded and the other simply failed. They must know it is treason, for if they bad succeeded the life of the nation would have been tuft front it—the Union would have been destroyed. • Surely the Constitution sufficiently defininr treason. It consists in' levying war against the 'United States, and in giv ing their encinles aid and comfort. With, this definition, it requires the exercise of no great acumen to ascer tain who are traitors. It requires no great preeeption •to tell us who - have levied war against them, nor does , it require any great strength of reason ing to ascertain who has' tiVen aid to the enemies of OM United SC.4te.s. And when the Government of the United States does ascertain who arc the con- _ riM M l--- tlOll PItiNTING OFFI.CE. . THE of JOB, - „OFFICE.7, ie the most complete of any tn. the, Conntry,.and testier; the meet ample facilities' for promptly ettoontlag, tho bort style, every variety of Job PrIo!INI, each !T. RILLS , • ' • •; WARDS, CIRCULARS ; BALL TICKETS. LABELS, &0., NO. 45. CALI. AND Exastrn IrCLUS.NA os *AY', AT LEWIS' 13001c:STATIONfiltY MUSIC STORY scious and intelligent traitors, the pen: alty and the forfeit should ko r icitow how to appteciato ttiOvcondittip of being &Wen frcim can sympathize with hitii whose Ail ha: been taken from him; with him who has been denied the- place, that gft , M his children birth; but let us, withal, in the restoration of the Government' proceed temperately and • dispassion. ately, and hope and pray that the tim. will come, as I believe, when we all can return and remain' at our homes; and treason and traitors be. drive from, our lath; when again law, and order shall reign, and the banner'o our country be unfurled over every inch of territory within the areaotth: United States. , • ' In conclusion, let me thank: you most profoundly for this encourage'. ment and manifestation of your regard and respect, and assure you that, I.can give no greater assurance regarclin.: the settlement of, this question t ha. that I intend to discharge: my dfit and in that way which shall; in earliest -possible hour, bring back peace to our distracted country, -an hope the time is not far, distant whon our people can all return to their home: and firesides, and resume their variou avocations. A Poem Recited by MT. To the Zdttve of tho Newyork Evening ner:— I have been urged by several friend: to send you the enclosed poem, wri ten down by myeelfftom Mr. Lincoln', lips, and although it may not be _new to all of your readers, the events of th last week give it now a peculiar inter est. The circumstanced under which th'- copy was written are these:—l wa: with tbo President alone one evening in his room, daring the time I wa painting my large picture at the White House, last year. 113 : presently threw aside his pen and papers, and began t talk to me of Shakespeare. lie: little "Tad," Lis son,-to the library tt bring a copy of the plays, and read to me several of the favorite pas sages, showing genuine appreciation of the great poet. Relapsing into sadder strain; he laid the bo6k aside and leaning back in his chair, said "There is a poem which - hai been a great favorite • with me for years which was first shown to me when . . young man by a friend, and which I afterwards saw and eut from a news paper and learned . by heart. .1 would' he continued, "give a great deal t. know who wrote it, but I have neve been able to ascertain!' Then half closing his eyes,. he re peated to me the lines which I enclose to yon. Greatly pleased a ' h e, if ever an opportunity oeettrred, to write them down from hiS He said he would some time try to give them to me. A few days afterwards be asked me to accompany him to the temporary studio of Mr. Swayne, - the sculptor, who was making a btist of bim at th Treasury Department. While he was sitting for the bust I was suddenly re minded of the poem, and 'said to him that then would be a good time to di tate to me. Ho eomplied, and sitting upon some bdelis at his feet as nearly as I cab reraember, I wrote the lines dowo, ono by one, from his lips. With great regard. very truly yours, F. B. CARPENTER. "I 7" sn q l ?Y! 7 4 3 /irg4 ty:atoß!rex, Ili P5OOOl 0/4 why ihoottihe eplrlt of mortal be proud? Like a min, fleeting meteor, 6 fast4lylng A flash of tbo Itgbtolog, p 'break at the wove; - Hopi:teeth from life to his rest in the grave. ' ' The leaves of the oak and the willitweitall fade, Beitgaitwad afogs?a•44 t*her, And the' outifg and 'INO'old; and tho low and the WA, shall moulder to dust 'and together eball Ile. , • The lbfani a innate: attended and loved; The mother that Infant's ifteetlen Nebo proved•, Thellueband thatmothet and infant irho blessed, &sob, all, areaway to thole dwellings of Best. The biind of the king that theneeitre bath borne The . brew the prefek . that the mitre bath worn The o.yeo of the eakee'end the 'heart of the brain, Are hidden and last in the depth of the grave. . . Tho peasant; whose hit was to sow and to reap; The berdszdetr, who ollnibett with his goats sip the'eteep Tho beggar who wandered la saaroll of lots broad, Hai° faded away like the gran that we tread. So the multitude goon, like the flower or the weed That svithara away to let other! succeed So the Multllude'coinee, area there we behold, To reptat iire4 tale that has often beau told. Per we are the elme that our retkirs bare been; We scv:tboupue - alkhte tit our taibers liaTe ften— We drink the rude itreord and alert the came eett—' Aglj• . . ruti the oui ratherilbve iam The thoughts we are thinking our fathers wonid think; From the death tea are shrinking ant fatbereyroold shriek To the life we are . elingincthey also crania c'lleg: But it speeds for us all; like a biriron the wing. • They loired, but the story we cannot unfold; They scorned, but the heart of the haughty Is Old) They grieved, but no *mil from theirldamber icilt come; Theneyed, but the tongue of their gladness is dumb. 'The/ tiled, 41131 they plea tbatBre , aow, That widc Cif the turf abet p4over theltbr,;w,- An 4 Uiaku tinliteir d*elliiiget a iraiteteilt abodiN" :AP:pi:the thins thattlem. niet thair rya • . 'MA I . hero trod despon.loncy, ploi uro 0;4 :We mloglo topthar fp ennehlue and rani; And the smile and the tear, theson,nead the ,yr.ge. Still follov end, other, like surge upon ein•ge. !Ma the wink of no eye, 'as the draft of it breath; Trout the hiorsom of health, to the patenets of death, From the glided saloon to the bier and tbe ehrmld— Oh, why ehcruttl the epleit of mortal ho'proutil Ei N 15 =EI PROCTAMMTiS, ; •,; ; , `BLANKS, POSTEIip, BILL HEADS, II ri 11l S