t e t ; rust TUESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1865 Atir-We can take no notice of anonymous commit. Citations. We do,not eotnni rejected menus criPlg• Air 'Voluntary correspondence is solicited from all ,parts of the world, and especially from our different :military anditaval departments. When used, it will ,Pe paid for. A PLEA POE, IMP PRESIDENT. - The only public personage in this coup -try who never gets a week's holiday—who is constantly beset by office-seekers, por tion-prayers, pro motion -hunters, eager poli tiCians, suggestive statesmen, unwearied ravor-askers, and unabashed expectants—is its honored and honorable President. Other men, public or private, sometimes make or lake time for a recess, for a change "from labor to refreshment "—the President has none. Day by day--even hour by hour-- with the slightest possible regard for his own personal convenience, the President is literally besieged by crowds who mainly have their own interest at heart ; or,'at all events, the interest of friends or clients. 'They beset him in tens, in twenties, and in hundreds and each man expects that the 4etails of his particular case, or claim, or solicitation 7 shall be attended to. If Mr. Join - sox had the' voice, hearing, sight, and mind of a dozen men, he could not face half the trouble which encompasses him from this perpetual source of trouble. Details which,in other countries, are submitted to the patient consideration of secretaries and in telligent chief clerks, (who report thereon to their respective principals,) here are &aged heavily in, before the President - himself, and the wonder is that, in their multiplicity and variety, his mind is not in s constant state of confusion. The fact is, the President is looked upon as public pro perty, and every one thinks he may have a pull at him. This was very much the case with Mr. Imecoiat t but much more so as regards his successor. A man must have the physique. of Hercules and the unwearied mental strength of BROUGILLII to get through the daily work to which custom, and his own good nature, have subjected President jonsesote. It is notorious tha his lamented predecessor nearly broke down under it, and something should be done to mitigate the evil in his case. The only relaxation which President .Tonissolt has afforded himself, and that in frequently, is a small trip in a steamboat clown the Potomac. If his audience-seek ing persecutors only Imew the exact time when he is " eabined, cribbed, confined" on board of a steamboat, on the Potomac, no doubt they Would pursue him thither, and probably shout their wants, demands, requests, requirements, through speaking trumpets—as brazen as themselves. He is compelled to live, in a not handsome man sion, nearly on the level of the river, and otherwise insalubriously situated for sum mer occupants, but were he to pass for change of scene and purer air, and a little relaxation from business, to Cape May or Newport, Sharon or Bedford Springs, Saratoga or the White Mountains, he must not expect the slightest privacy. In each and every one of these healthrenewing places, just as at Washington, he would be followed, be sieged, and persecuted by the old legion of Office-seekers and favor-askers. Most pro bably, his occasional trips on the water are result of a conviction that he may he undis turbed there, but there is no such happy chance on dry . laud. How differently, and how much better, these things are managed in Europe. There, the elijef ruler of a country is not bored and botheredly crowds of supplicant's for office or for other favori. Each application is re ferred to the bead of some particular depart ment, under which its subject naturally places it, and the chief magistrate, (for, whatever the title, it comes to that, after all,) is notified of the result, and his final adjudication upon them is easy and prompt. If an European ruler wishes to spend a week or a month at anyplace, in his own domin ions or in those of a neighbor, and it is inti mated that he desires not to be teased by the manifestation of an ostentatious reception, his desire is respected. He is allowed to live, to act and speak, precisely like a pri vate gentleman, and it would be considered inexcusable bad taste to have him followed by persons who have favors to ask or mere curiosity to gratify. There is a present example of this. The Emperor Narorzole is now at Plombieres, in the northeast of Prance, where the mineral waters have proved highly bene ficial to his health. There, without a single soldier to guard his door, this Man of Destiny lives the quietest life, going in and out just as he pleases—strolling in his garden, or in the village, or in the fields, or on the public highways, having a few friends as his guests, and no greater num ber of servants in his household than any gentleman of respectable income would em plby. Nobody minds him in his retreat, People do not rush from all parts of the country to beset him with applications. Sometimes he mingles freely among the townsfolk and the visitors, but it is under stood that he wants to be let alone ; that he has come for rest and health, and his wish is respected. Oddly enough, when one thinks of the general impression here that Narormsx holds his own in France only by the bayonet-occupation of Paris, it happens that there is scarcely a high oMeial in that city during his absence. The Em press was at Fontainebleau at the begin ning of August ; two ministers of State in Switzerland, and the rest severally at Carlsbad, Aisne, Caen, Vichy, Dieppe, Normandy, and Plombieres. The only ministers at their posts were those of War, Public Instruction, and the Imperial House hold. It Le the same way in England. During the six months in each year between the ,close of one session and the commencement of another, there is rarely more than a single!Cabinet Minister in London. The business of each Department goes on like clock-work under the respective chief clerks. Out of fifteen Heads of Departments, only one remains on duty. Lord PALMERSTON, -who, as Premier, has a power not much diffetent from or inferior to that exercised by our President, is 'never beset, during the -six months' holidays, with people who seek , office or ask favors. It is the same with the other Ministers, who are not subject to per sonal solicitations from any one, except in very particular cases. Lord Pmaransrort would never have readied the age of 81, after having held public office for half a century, if he had been subjected, even for two consecutive years out of the fifty, to the personal pressure which is likely to s - hatter President JonNsow's health. And there really is no occasion why Mr. Joux- DyN, or any succeeding President, shall submit to such a pressure. ' But ofElO - with their patrons and fiiends, have not the reputation of being so unsel fish as to consider the comfort, health, or well-being of any but themselves. Ev - EN the most prejudiced of the English journals are beginning to understand and to confess that the people of the North have a legitimate cause of complaint against the rebel leaders, and especially against JEF • PERSON DAVIS I for the inhuman and bar barous treatment of the Union prisoners during the war. This fearful stain can never be eradicated and justice demandS that, in some shape or form, atonement should be made for the most fearful crime ever perpetrated. The Northern people are much more ready to tbrgive the people .of the South than the latter are to forgive :the former. The old principle of human nature, that "it is impossible to forgive those whom we have injured," apparently prompts many of them to treat our proffers •of friendship sullenly, and to nourish their ,old resentments. They find it difficult to pardon us for defending effectually the Union they endeavored to destroy. As - soon es they learn to subdue their bitter nesa, and to " bury the hatchet 17 as deeply' is the. North is willbig to bury it, one of Thef' greatest obstacles to a e.omplete re- Prganization will be overcome. DEATIE'OF TESWIta We regret deeply to announce the sad intelligence of the death of offices, and all the other busy scenes of active life, to lay aside their cares and conventionalities, and here, in cabins of their own rearing, surrounded by their flocks and herds, to seek the quiet of secluded lives and pastoral pursuits. Here, with their dogs and traps, their rifles and fishing-rods, and the few books that they best love, these men, usually full of brilliancy and talent, soon come to love the new home better than the old, and to wonder that they toiled and trilled so long among the troubles and follies of society. Perhaps I cannot better give you the modus operandi of sheep-growing than by drawing upon my own experience. If a stranger goes to Texas with the preformed determination to make sheep-raising his business, he shoold go directly to Austin, and then crossing