TERMS OF FILIC ATION. TILE FRANKLIN RDSITORY is published every Wednesday morning ; "TILE REPOSITORY ASSOC/AT/ON," at $2 50: annum, IN ADVANuI; or $3 if not paid within the ar. - AU subscription nc. Counts If1:81 be settled 47 1 / l Ua. 'No paper will be sent oat of the State unless paid Pia adrancr, and all each subscriptions will invariably bliscontinned at the expi• ration of the time for which Owe paid. ADVERTISEMENTS are i3rted at FIFTEEN CENTS per line for first insertion, and T [Torts per line for sub. sequent insertions. A liberal daunt is made to persons advertising by the quarter, half-ar or year. Special no tices charged one•balf more tharegular advertisements. All resolutions of Assoeintions; mmunications of limited or individual interestond notice! Marriages and Deaths exceeding live lines, are chargeefteen cents per line. ' All Legal Notices Of eeetkind, and all Orphans' Court and other Judicial Sales, e required by kw to be advertised in th!BElVlTOUT—itteing the LARGEST CIE: CULATION of_any pcip , ; . published ithe county of Fran klin JOB PRINTLNG of every kinds Plain and Fancy col. era, done with neatness and dispute Blanks,l Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every slaty andetyle, Printed at the shOrtest notice. The ItErCeolty OFFICE has just been re-fitted with littera Power Id three Presses, and eveny thing in the Printing line e. be executed In the most artistic manlier and at the lowdrates. TERMS IN VARIABLY CASH. „ nr Mr. 'John K., Shryock is orauthorized Agent (d receive Snbseriptions and Advertiseents, and receipt ter the same. All letters should be ad Lased to M'CLURE S. STNES, Publishers. Coal, Lumbri &r. CARPENTERS AND EU ILDER Si A T - TENTrOV: V The undersigned have now on and, at their , *. PLANING AND FLOORPG MILL, Marge supply of Sash, Shutters, Doorand Mill fur sale, or made to order. Mouldings of all descriptions, from hif inch to a inches, on band. Plain iind - Ornamental Scroll Saiifigiently executed. Also—Wood Turning is all its broncos. Newel Posts; Banisters, Bed Posts, &A. On hand. A large supply of Dressed Flooring 3r sailer, Also—Window and Door Frames on band tor made at short notice. HAZELET, VEISOV S. CO.. fel,' If Harrison avenue, Clunbeisburg, Pa. NOTICE TO F*ARXERS WO TONS OP-TIMOTHY HAY Wanted by GEO. A. Darz. 200 WALNUT LOGE warned by GEO. A. GETZ. 100 ASH LOGS Wanted by GEO. A. GEM 100 LARGE CHERRY LOGS Wanted by GEO. A. GEM. WHEAT, RYE, CORN, O.t.'TS, an 4 all kinds of Product, bought by,,Ott. A. DRITZ, at btu Wtiiehouse above the RztiVrat Depot STOVE AND LIME COAL for s eale cheap, by the ton or lull ton, OAK AND HICKORY WOOD "—by the cord or half cord. OAK AND HICKORY WOOD, sawed and split ibrAave wit, by the cord or half cord. WINDOW AND DOOR SILLS, of Oak, Wahtut and Pine, always on hand. WINDOW AND DOOR•FRAME STUFF, and all kinds a - LUMBER, SUCir BS Oak and Pine Plank; .Oak, Walnut, Plan and Hemlock Boards; Floating Boards, Joists, Scantling, Shingles, Paling,, Laths, &c. BEST OF ROOFINO SLAVS always on band, and roofs put on by the best Slaters, who have drawn medals for their superior workmanship. CALL AT DEITZ'3 )9AREIIOUSE, above the Railroad Depot, and buy cheap. pee2l LEONARD EBERT & SON, COAL AND LUMBER- MERCHANTS. We have on band all kinds of Coal and Luthber, and are prepared to furnish Bill Lumber to order at shnrt no ; tics, all at the most reasonable terms. (Inc stock of Lum ber consists of - White Pine 2 inch Plank, " if " select Plank. " 1.1 " Plank. I select and Culling Boards, " Boards, " fe Siding. (6 inch.) " River Shingles, " Worked Flaring, Siding, Joist and &totaling. all sizes, Hemlock Joist and Scantling, - Boards, • Yelloterme Boards, Joist and Scantling, Palling and Plastering Laths. We have also always on band a od supply of all kinds of Coal for stoves and lime - burn ing. Also a supe rior article of Broadtop Coal for blacksmiths. The pub lic are invited to give us a call, no we will endeavor to give satisfaction to all that call, ,Cool and Lainber furnished on the ears to any station on the Franklin Railroad. - tarOtßee on Second St., in the rear of the Jail Yard, Cbambersburg, Pa. LEO. EBERT & SON. july27•ll. CM SSIAL - L, BENDER & CO., York and Goldehorough, L UMBER DEALERS -AND BLVICL'FACTIMERS OF SASH, DOORS, SHUTTERS, BLINDS, DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMES, 4c., Keep constantly on hand a well selected stock of seas onable Lumber, viz:--Joist and Scantling, Weatbsrboard- Inedressed Flooring, Siding, Laths, Shingles, Paling/3 and Fencing. far White Pine and Oak Bills, sawed to order at the shortest notice. All communications should be addressed to YORK. PA. (sep2.9-1y STEAM SAW ,MILL.—The undersign ed have erected enkin operation a Steam Saw Mill at the South Mountains ; near Gratfenbuig Springs, and aro prepared to saw to order Bills, of WHITE 'OAK, PLNE, HEI4LOCK or • any kind of timber desired, at the short est notice and at low rates. One of the firm will be at the . Hotel 61Stmel Greenawalt, in Chambersburg, on Satur day the 24th inst, and on each alternate Saturday thereaf ter for the purpose of contracting for the delivery of lum ber. LUMBER DELIVERED at any point at the Low- EST RATER. All letters should be addressed to them at 3 Gmffenburg P. a, ,Adartuteo `Pa. decll4l _ MILTS. BERGER & BRADY. 1Y . 8 , 6 I LDIN G L MBER.—The; under signed is prepared to sa' all kinds of Building Lum ber at the lowest market price. R. A. RENFREW, . GREENWOOD MILLS, Fayetteville P. O. dee22-llm Motets. VASTERN.INN.—The undersigned ha ving lately purchased the large and commodious Brick Building of Rev. S. R. Fisher, in connection With his Lresent place of-business, on the corner of Main street and udwig 's Alley, is prepared to aceammodase BOARD ERS by the day, week or month. He is amply provided with STABLING to accommodate the traveling public. Having a large LIVERY STABLE connected with the lintel, guests and the public generally can bethrnished with Horse* and Carriages at any moment. Penions Chambersbarg with their families will find this the most comfortable Hotel in the county, as it has been re fitted with entire new Furniture, and the rooms are large and well ventilated. The TABLE is amply supplied with all the luxuries of the season, and the.BAR, which is de tached from the Brick Building, will always be furnished with choice and pure liquors. - Every attention paid to the comfort of guests. [oetl2( S. F. GREENA WALT. IgitROWN,'S HOTEL.—This Hotel, situ- JJ on Hie corner of Queen and Second Streets op potato the Bank, Court Room, and County Offices, and In the immediate neighborhood of Stores, Shops, and other pbsees of business, is conceniently - sitnated for country people having business in Chmabersburg. The Banding has been greatly enlarged and refitted for the aconninoda thin of Guests. THE TABLE will bltiays be furnished with the "beak the Market can produce. THE BAR will be supplied with pure find choice Li quors. THE STABLE is large and attended with n good and careful Ostler. Every attention will be rendered to make Onelts cam fortable Irbtle soJourning,at chit, Hotel. febl JACOB S. lIRONtN. , Proprietor. TTNION HOTEL.—This old and well lJ establhated hotel is now open for the acconitoodation of Guests , The Proprietor having leased the three•story block of buil dings on Queen Street. in the rear-of his former stand, is prepared to furnish GOOD ROOMS for the traveling and Prannient enstorn. HIS TABLE will sustain its former reputation of being BEIPPnAd with the best the market can produce. HIS BAR, detached from the nude building, will al ways have choice and pore Liquors. Good warm STABLING for fifty _horses,, with careful It! Every attention will be made to reader guests (=fort able while solourniag at this Hotel. janlB .T . NO. FISHER, Proprietor. .1 - IAVID H. HUTCHISON 1," has become the Proprietor of the UNITED STATES HOTEL; near the Railroad Depot at HARRISBURG, PA. This popular and Commodious Hotel has been newly refitted and furnished throughout its parlors and chambers, and is now ready for the reception of guests. 'The traveling publha will find the United States -Hotel the most convenient, in all pal-tie - niers, of any Hotel in the State Capital, on account of its access to the railroad, being immediately between the two grent s derts in this city. (Harrisburg, June 17, 63-tf. STATES UNION,HOTEL, OPPOSITE the Lebanon Valley altd Pennsylvania Railroad De p_ots, Harrisburg Cityl - Par :This convenient and pleasant Hotel krnow kept -by the Undersigned, late of the Indian Queen in Chambersburg, and he Invites the patronage of his old friends antilhe public generally. Terms moderate.' octii-tf • JOHN W. TAYLOR. wF. EYSTER BRO STEAM AND GAS-FITTERS, And Dealers in all kinds of • PAIIMING IMPLEMENTS, mare4lin] East Queen St, Charobersburg, Pa. BOARDING.—Eight or ten Boarders can be accommo da ted by applying to GEORGE OAKS, residing on East Catharine street. aprill9.3t, ;4t-, _ -- falitgilii- _-Vii(''-.0-L:-4i-Ottl BY 31 1 CLITRE I STONER. tualliiiii 'ffiglqitcrt, ADDRESS BY REV. IR.IIARBAUGH The citizens of Mercersburg and vicinity had appropriate ceremonies on the 19th ult., the day of the funeral of President Lincoln, and the fol lowing eloquent and, touching address was deliv ered on the occasion by Rev. Dr. H. Harbaugh, Professor (of Theology in Mercersburg ; - It is *at difficult, on this solemn occasion, for one to sieak for another, in the way of - leading or interpreting his thoughtefor him. This is one of those overwhelming events which make one's' thoughts standstill ; and when we feel the truth of the sacred declaration, that the heartknoweth its own bitterness, and a stranger doth not inter meddle with it. For days past, throughout the 'land, friend las met friend with, the - feelingthat, in the presence of so great a sorrow, silence is the' most eloquent word. Even when one ventured a word of remark or inquiry, it was with the vain hope that the one addressed might be able to ex press and interpret for him his own deep feeling. When the telegraph first dropped this fearful news into the thousand cities, Mims and Villages all over the land, men were shinned and paralyzed with'amazement. His implements dropped ¶rom the hands of the laborer; the student cast away his pen and kooks ; the Merchant closed his store; the buzzing of factories ceased ; busy streets were changed into scenes of Sabbatic quiet, and over all this expressive silence rolled the solemn sound of tolling bells. The laid mourned its fallen chief, as it had not mourned from the -first hour of the Republic till now. We have sometimes heard of the coming to gether of a marriage and a burial—where sorrow tread so closely on the heel of joy that the joyful bride, on the very day of her happy marriage, was laid out as a corpse in her wedding robes! k like manner has, during these last few days, the nation's joy been suddenly changed into mourn ing. Scarcely had the bells ceased tolling out their jubilations in honor of victory, and the pros pect of 'peace, with the restor&ion Of the supremacy of law and order throughout the land, when they began to toll- in sad harmony with a nation's sorrow. And though days have passed since this-fearful tragedy was enacted, the na 7 tionaLinind still labors under the subduing burden of its momentous grief—still stunned-and silent! What is this allf-pervaAing - and steadily contin ued feeling, but the mute utterance of the people's -seuirof the awfulness of the crime which has been committed: The mind cannot f:;thom the turpitude of this crime of regicide, or the killing of the ruler of the land. But the existing unut terably fisling furnishes proof that God, by the very constitution of our being, has underlaid our deepest life withu sense of its enormity; our na ture thus spontaneously bearing w ittless to what 'has been the sense of all civilized—yea, even bar barian and semi-barbarian—as well us Christian ages and nations, that the higlu:st possible crime is regicide; • This crime is not mere murder. We need only grade the higher crimes to enable us to see where this enormity stands on the scale of criminal de pravity. The first and lowest grade is common Murder or homicide, as when one , man' kills an other. Next above this we may place suicide, wherein man assumes the disposal of his own life. Then_fratricille. wherein man destroys the tile of hie own brother or sister, and thus in a sense be comes the murderer of his own flesh and blood. Theminfanticide, where the helplessness of infan cy ihmentsthe crime. Then patricide, wherein man takes the life of the father that begat him, the earthly source of his own life. Because the mother bears that " softer and tenderer name," name,"- and her life belongs to the inner circle of conse crated love, we would place next in the dreadful scale the crime of matricide. After this only do we reach that fearful apex of crime—regicide ! So much as the State% above the family. So high above the murder of father and mother is the murder of the Rffler of the land—the head of the nation— the father, for the time being, of the national family. This is the dreadful crime which has startled and stunned the nation, and caused -the bells throu! .e laud this day to dole out to respons muffled tones of sorrow. To u • his crime of regicide, we must re was not merely the man Abraha se life the assassin has ta ken awe. e life of the President of this Republic w.,! .estroyed. As a man he was only as one of us, but as God's-ordained organ for the administration of the gove,niment he was vastly more: He was "thej'iifinister of God," (Rom. Xlll)—the organ of "the powers that be which are ordained of God." These powers, are '•bigher imwers"- 7 that is, they are, powers that come from Acme, not from men. Even though, as in our 4rn land, the Ruler, as organ of these s powers, - May be designated by men, his investiture is from God alone. In his•office the ruling Read of the nation is God's minister.. He places him there even though it be through the will and vote of the people, to be fur tlre nation Hie own organ and administration of the big* powers. When the assassin assailed this Head of the nation, and this right hand- of God's rule on the earth, he was making direct assault, upon God's own au- - thority in the highglace of Ills power! On this throne of earthly power he struck_ down whom God had set up. He fe'ared not the attempt; thus to w rest the government of a nation from the divine hand itself, and by his own daring act first to arrest, then annul, and finally to change the ruling Head of Ihe nation in the face of God's in vestiture, and the will of millions of num ! • . Moreover the aet of the regicide is, as far as it goes; a stroke for A. deadly thrust at the head paralyzes or the time the wholtibOy of the nation, and abrogates government, Eo that if the whole nation were m a state adapted lor.the result, universal anarchy would ensue. It4s - only the virtue and loyalty of the nation that prevents the legitimate effeks of the assassin's will and in .tention. Thanks to God for that true, vigorous, adjusting virtue of the nation which enables it to rise from so fi•arful ailitick, and to move with such prompt firmness, harmony and power in the path of its great and solemn tnission!, But this does not abate the turpitude of the awful crime; on the other hand it sets its enormity only into stronger relict, as 'showing the high character of the government he sought to annul, and the gen. erous loyalty of the millions against whose vigor -01113 patriotism the orime has been perpetrated: Such being the character of the crime which has caused our present grief, and such the horror with which this crime of regicide shows itself tp be regarded by the whole nation, in harmony with the deepest sense of all civilized, and espe. chilly christianized, nations and ages, the sorrow inginillions may well this day lift their hands to heaven, and ask, How, is such an- awful crime. possible? Where is an adequate begetting find sustaining element nedlitsis for such a crime to be found? Certainly it has been in no other way possible for it to appear except as the nurseling and legitimate ripe fruit of that tspirit of enor mous treason, which has, during" the last four dreadful and bloody years, labored iv consummate substantially the same-crime by aiming its deadly da'ggerat the very heart of the Republic itself. Whether formally, and by organized conspiracy or not, still essentially and really treason and re bellion is the legitimate mother of regicide. The assaSsin of tjmPresident and head of the nation, whether thereunto appointed or not, is the organ of that treason which embodiment in the great Rebellion. It was the concentrated life of that great treason which nerved his arm and gui ded the fearful • weapon of death. The truth of_ this fact beats to-day with powerful, harmonious, self-attesting assurance in tlie patriotic and loyal instincts of, millions of sad and sorrowing hearts. How better can we improve this sad occasion than to possess our souls more fully with a deeper sense of the enormous crime of treason ; a crime which, according to the wisdom of all christian nations, can only be adequately atoned for by the penalty of death. We speak our own deep eon victions, and we hope the convictions of all pres ent, when we say that no sign of the times por tentls-greatedanger to the nation at present thari that morbid and unchristian spirit which is in some quarters beginning its endeavors to avert the penalty due to treason. We dread this spirit more than all else that is before us as a nation. Such men as Beecher and Greeley, who are en deavoring to lead Off in this miserable effort to degrade and ignore the eternal sanctions of divine and human law, and - to convert honest but unre fleeting people to their , -crugade against the true idea and end of law and justice; are now emphat ically the enemies of the Republic. This mawkish sentimentalltyis called'quagnanimity." What a misnomer! Its true name is iufidelitylo the ma jesty of • law. It offers a premium for treason ; and, if successful, will be the greatest unfaithful ness and cruelty to posterity of which the rulers of ofir eventful age can lie guilty. ,It will be in. truth the laying up of wrath, anarchy and rebel lion for our children. It will be a comforting precedent for treason in all coming ages of the Republic. It will show that treason and rebellion_ deserve and shall receive nothing but magnanim ity, in a degraded sense of that word. It will ever show that treason, so enormous in its sweep as to people-4r hundred battle field grave-yards with the bodies of brave and loyal men, hasearned for it self only the right of what is - falsely called magna nunous treatment. -In pestiferous sentiments like these, be assured, lies deadly poison, which if al lowed to work its way into the heart Afar rulers and our people, will sooner'or later take the na tion's life as effectually as the Rebellion itself, had it succeeded, would have done, and as R has ac tually intended to do by. bayonets, cannon, and starvation of thousands of loyal and brave men, and which it has now again attempted to do as by desperation, in the person of the assassin of the President. Such sentiments never come from earnest this, tian scholars or statesmen; they are born in the hot-bed of socialism, naturalism and humanism. They are not deep convictions, but merely shal low, irre,ponsible sensation utterances. They are fiainded on no venerable wisdom; they rest in no true christiau princiPles—they are underlaid by .no correct sense of the nature and necessary forie: and majesty of law. Men who utter them may beible effectually to harangue an unreflecting but when they attempt, to lay experimen tal hinds to the guidance of, the high and solemn inteliests of - States, every earnest and thinking exclaim: Procul, 0! procul cste profs ni!—ht‘nce, far hence ye profane. To a..k that the majesty of law be allowed to have its free course against crime Is no spirit of revenge. is no want of magnanimity—betrays no absence of mercy and charity. It so God him:• self would fall under blame ! Justice and judg meat are the habitation of His throne. Human governments are a parable and reflection of His own.. Llaw is a reflection of His will. Hum _ justice is after the . pattern of His justice. To abrogate the sanctions and penalties of His law, is to annul cue of His own attributes. In the suffering of the penalty of human guilt in the person'of His own Son, he has demonstrated to the worldthat His mercy does not abrogate His justice. Vain is therattempt of man to propose a sickly sentimentalism as a substitute that shall outdo and set aside God's iminutablp law against crime. Man may be tender, but la*. and justice are inflexible. We have heard of judges who pro nounced the sentence of . ..death on murderers with ttars—but pronounced it in firm faithfulness nev ertheless. The judge who thus discharges his soleirni , dutY to the law and society is twice great in the act: great because he shows that he has all the feelings of the man, and great again be cause he has all the firmness of thejudge.. Above all his merely humane feelings rises the solemn conviction that the execution of the law is abso lutely necessary for the safety of society. He feels for the criminal, but he does not suffer his feelings to carry hint into a Current of washy sen timentalism. He pities the .criminal, but he pit ies society more. It is said that Washington signed the death-warrant of Andre, the spy, with tears! This is proof that lie would have spared even him had not a higher obligation to honor the law rested on him. Let our rulers study this example, that the majesty of taw be not changed into a mere niaWkisli feeling. Mliy not, hi this view, this sad calamity be ov erruled in !nervy by an all-wise though myste rious Providepce, for the future health and safety of the Republic? Whilst we hope that all mani festations of revenge may be checked, we hope at the_same time that the minds of our people and rulers may be more deeply awakened to a sense of the absolute necessity of vindicating the law against treason. Vain is that policy which seeks to be ,iliser than God and norm hmnatai 'than lIe! Should it appear that " the minister of God" dues " hear ,the Sword in vain," we tremble lire the Mime of the nation. All the moral efli•et of all, thelimerifices of the war will in that case be.vrrtuallyj lost. Was this dreadful tragedy—well may we ask—thiasaerifice oT the nation's beloved Chief and head yet necessary to counterket this vain and sickly sentimentality ? Should it send to effect this high and solemn end, the hacrifice„dreadful as it is, %.‘ ill not have been in May God, in His infinite mercy, preserve in the heart of the nation a proper sense of the maj esty of law, awaken among us right views of the awful crime of • treason—which is the cause and essence of regicide—and deliver us from morbid sympathy for that e which strikes at the root of all divine and a go rnment, and which the solemn sanction of sl, and the ripest wis dom of all the past, have adjudged to be worthy of death. I attempt no eulogy of our departed President. Ills earnestness, moderation, kind-heartedness, prOverbial honesty and unswerving loyalty and patriotism are all well known. Only whim gen erations shall have passed away, and all the seeds of the mighty present of the nation shall come to. their full fruits in the future, will his name and his fame 'stand Out in full relief on .the historic page. What it it should appear, to those who shall study the events of hie administration in the light of the future, that he was the leader of a high and holy patriotic purpose, which has deliv ered the Republic front a bondage as heavy and galling as that froni Which we were delivered by Washington at the first? What if our children should experience the fact that the names of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln may be sounded together with perfect accord ? CHANBERSBURG, PA,, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3,.1865 SPEECH OF A. H. IFCLERE. Delivered in the House of Representatireson Thurs day evening, March 16, 1865, on the bill Pro viding for the Adjudication of Border Military Claims. MIL SPEAKER:—The evening is far spent, and the House must be more than weary of thii.de bate. lam moat anxious that a vote shall be reached to-night, and for that reason until now refrained froni participation iu the discussion. The mearpre has now been very fully considered. More than four hours of debate, mainly from the foes of the bill, has presented every possible ,ob jection that ambition, timidity and personal dis appointment could hurl against it; and I rise brief ly to answer the main objections urged, in justice to the people I have the _honor to represent. It -has been a favorite argument, or rather pre text for opposition, with those who desire the de feat of the pending bill, to characterize it as a swindle; as a deliberate attempt to deceive, de fraud, and mislead the members of this Rouge; and it has been boldly urged that it was a spite madc attempt to ruin the credit of the Common wealth. It has been assaulted by every avenue that mingled ingenuity and malice could invent. In answer to all this, sir, I appeal to the bill it self. Hero it is. Read it; scan every section, every line. Its language is plain; its sentences free from all ambiguity. It means precisely what it says-.that the despoiled? people of the border shall have sonic tangible evidence preserved of_ the losses they have sustained by the tread of ar mies in this war. so that the government may,lin the fulness of time, requite them for their sacrifi ces. We hare not sought- to mislead any one. We bare not asked that these claims be adjudi cated merely as n garland to weave in the chaplet of our_National sacrifices. It would be well, I confess, to do it for that reason alone if there were no better arguments in favor of it; but we ask adjudication so that there may be ultimak restitution without wrong to either government or citizen. • Let me not be misunderstood. I stated in a former speech on this question, and I repeat it now, that restitution to these sufferers is a duty the government cannot, dare not disregard. Ev ery reason urged against it to-night is but an argu ment for it. If the claims are so large that they would oppress the people of the State to pay them, it proves that the losses of the few on.the border are so crushing that every dictate of justice de mands relief. If too much' for the State, with over three millions of people, and untold milliOns of Wealth, how must it fall upon a few thousand. whoire your brethren, the brethren of your con ,' stitnents, and have joined with you and yours to sustain our boasted Commonwealth fur mutual protection to person, to faith, to property If the]many cannot share this burden, how are the few to.bear it I .The gentleman from Philadelphia, (Mr. End diman) who has just closed, cautioned his fellow members that the passage of this bill would lead convulsions throughout the State ; that it would_ lead to disasters which even he seemed unequal to"the painful task of depicting; that men must pause upon the threshhold of its passage, and learn from him the direful consequences which must follow. I beg mp ardent friend from Philadel phia to quiet his sad apprehensions. Let him not commit the too common error of supposing that because he has poured out the touching 'strains of the Sophomore, and convulsed himself 'with his own eloquence, the great Comtuonw ealth will be rocked in painful, agonizing fears for her fame and credit. Ijis chaste and exquisite rhet oric and impassioned, poetical sentences, do cred it to his head; but because one heart has been moved thereby to inconsolable grief at the possi bility of the success of the bill, he must not as sume that the State will tremble frOm centre to circumference. This name bill has passed two legislaiires of this State; has twick been approved the Executive; has been carried into-practical operation for two years,—all before the gentle matt from Philadelphia was part of the law-ma king power of the State. There was scarcely a division of sentiment on the subject in either branch. It met the approbation of all, and there was no constituency that censured its representa tives therefor. There was no convulsion of the Commonwealth. The sun still rose and shone with its accustomed splendor, and gilded the western skies as it faded into night. The stars still twinkled merrily and pierced the curtains of darkness. .The birds sang just as sweetly ; the flowers bloomed as beautifully. and spread broad cast their rich fragrance as before. The seasons went and came ; green spring -time, requiting har vest, golden autumn and bleak winter, all brought their blessings and their sorrows as in other dap. The spheres stood firmly in their appointed work, unconscious that the time for convulsion was at hand. The body politic moved on in fulfillment of its beneficent mission to a free people, and is as yet a stranger to the grief the burning words of the gentleman have portrayed for its portion. There was no convulsion in nature or in govern ment. Even the gentleman-himself forgot to be come convulsed; or if he did, history has not re corded it. His play, therefore, comes when its plot has already miscarried. It is Hamlet with Hamlet omitted. It is a palpable abortion as tragedy, and too stupidly grave flur.farce. It is simply a painful lesson that others have lived and and legislated before the gentleman from Phila• delphia, and ho has forgotten it. Previous legislatures not only cordially and with remarkable unanimity sanctioned this meas ure; but the legislature of this State has, almost without division of opinion, declared that these claim should be paid. In 1862, both branches passed a bill not only providing for adjudicating theseclaims,*but also providing for -their pay ment out of the treasury of the Commonwealth. Upon inquiry however it was found that the ordinary resources of the treasury would not meet these demands, and the bill made 710 pro vision for raising additional revenue. It was therefore re-called. At that time the credit of the State was in peril. We had just accepted war as an inexorable necessity. We were strip gem to its arts and sacrifices, and were appalled at the fraternal struggle with which we were overwhelmed by causeless, cruel treason. Three millions of a loan had been put on the market and I know how the authorities vibrated between hope and fear, and by, common consent these Claims were postponed—not rejected—until a better day should ,dawn. All admitted that our mins were first due to the common cause of our threatened Nationality, and the bill was modified to provide for adjudication, just as the bill be fore the House now, and it passed without objec tion. There was then no prophetic voice ta t tell of terrible convulsions as the legitimate fruits of such legislation, and what may seem stranger still to the gentleman from Philadelphia, there was no section or party that perm ti t fto he convulsed thereby. The faith of this Commonwealth was pledged' to every citizen that its honor, its dignity and its protecting power should be faithfully maintained, and all sections of the State confessed its justice and shared in its vindication. At that time the measure was not mainly for those whom I now in part represent. The - invader had not Bulb pOl - our soil. It was for the benefit of Phila delphia, of Chester, of Dauphin, of Allegheny, and of Erie, that the first hill was passed ; and had no foe reached our border to spread desolation in a few counties, the counties I have named would have ardent advocates of the principle of this bill iu their representatives now on the floor. Had any member then rose and advanced the argu ments in opposition to the bill which have been given to-night, they would not have been listened to with common respect. But men have since learned to counsel with their fears. The cor rupt have marked- this measure as their prey They have grappled with it relentlessly because it gives no promise of plunder, and the petty waves of ambition have dashed against it with ceaseless fury. The great vital principle on which it rests seems to have been forgotten or rejected. Why, sir, are we at war to-day with the com mon enemy of this government 1 Is it simply be cause the North and the Sduth differ in sonic ab stractions 1_ Hive we slai thousands of those who were once our broth n and dotted our fair fields with untimely ayes, for such a cause I By no means. We are at war for a `higher and holier purpose. IWe have given of our bliied and treasure unsparingly to preserve our government. Its blessings we regard as priceless. Not merely its glory and its honor; but its protectingpower, endear it to all. It must be maintained in all its integral parts, or it is worthless. It must exer cise all its prerogatives—niust vindicate its might and supremacy, and give its just compensation lbr the tribute and fealty it exacts. It cannot de mand remorselessly and withhold its protecting arm. It must have the power tiNeld, the will to be just, and treat a wrong toits humblest sup porter as a wrong to the Stattfr This is the. rule of justice, and it would be a laltfitering stain upon the now unblotted escutcheon of our Common wealth, dint turn a deaf ear to those upon whom the devastation of war has fallen for the protec tion of all. :_Thi;geutleman from Philadelphia is . cinite too sweeping in his denunciation of the pnneiple of this bill. He denounces itas "a shame," as "mon strous," and yet if he were to turn from the leg islature of the State and announce to the people of his district that the duty of protection and resti tution do not forin the basis of our syitem of government, his constituents would bid him learn his own laws and learn to respect and obeythem If in his own city his home should be destroyed by a revolt, he would be prompt to demand restitu tion to the uttermost farthing, and it would be promptly given.. It is the accepted law, not only of Philadelphia, hut of every municipality of the Commonwealth. At his home he rests in peace and safety. Ho yields tribute as his government demands for the common good, and receives in return the guarantee of protection or compen sation in case of failure to protect. New York city is now paying two millions of dollars to those, her government failed to-protect from the rioters of 1863. She failed' in her compact with her people, and the duty of restitution is confessed by all. She is paying more than one-hull of all . the losses.of the border in 6bedience to, the settled law, based on eternal justice, thaLpfoteetion - is' one of the first duties of government. Let the gentleman frcim Philadelphia return to his own city and tell his people. that they have erred until now—that government, inunicipal,Sthte and gen eral, should merely exact and not remunerate when remiss in proti.ction, and there are few who would accept his new teachings and applaud his wisdom. Let hid stand on the hustings and pro claim there the same doctrine he proclaims here, and his people will look for truer and jester if not wiser men to enact their laws. Such is the settled law of every city and town in the land, and wherein does the municipal gov ernment of a State differ? We have already au thorized sir millions of dollars to be expended to defend Pennsylvania. Not a - voice was raised against it in these halls. Not a murmur comes up from the people in any part of the State. The e, duty to defend is confessed—it has been ques tMned, and will not be until e' new Daniel shall come to judgment on the issue like the gen tleman from Philadelphia. 0 common treasure is given with a lavi. land defend the, homes and property o -bo ; but defence ever came when danger was . at hand. Confessing the duty to defend, and failing therein, %%hat must follow by emery rule of logic and principle of justice? Restitution is inevitable The only question should be as to the ability of the govern ment. If it is able to redeem its faith, it can have no alternative without positive dishonor hnd per fidy to its people. The gentleman from Philadelphia tells us of his 'valor in riwhing to the detiume of the border tb protect us. Ile tells us he was there in per son; shared the perils of the camp and - enjoyed the II nits of the field. I remember well, sir, when he was there.' rhe militia came in 1662 and their bloodless track remains. We have it in the mournful trace of desolation. We have monu ments of their presence, but nut of their dead. But silent as history may be us to their sangui nary fields, the records of this war. will preserve to posterity the evidence of their' organization and service. Their payrolls will perpetuate their achievements. • (Laughter). They were not un mindful that the State should exact no unjust sac rifice front any portion of ler people. . With one accord they deinanded their pay. If the gentle manfrom Philadedvida ri:as enrolled, he too doubtless was mindful that " the laborer iswor thy of bib hire." MR. RUDDIMAN—I gave no such intimation. I was not there in a military capacity. I was there hi °Tees of kindness and humanity. I deny both the remark and the implication of the gen tleman from Franklin `. _ - MR. Arettne—Will the gentlemen fromyhil tadelphia inform me what offices of humanity were to perform there I—whmice came the wounded and suffering of, that army ?. What fields were crimsoned with its blood? MR. Rtmont,NlAN—ln the hasty call to the de fence of the gentleman's homestead, numbers rushed from my own city to take up arms,*td.to be the guardians of the homes which the citizens were neither sufficient nor willing to be the pro tectors. Among them were friends ,of my own who left behind them everything—their business interests and all that belonged to them. These men who went away thus unprovided for were subjects of solicitude to Others and to myself. To attend upon them—to supply their wants—to tire them what they had gone without the fundament 'of—l left my home and my business in order that they might not sutler while they were doing good service for the gentleman from Franklin and his constituents.' _ ' MR. MCLURE-1, remember the occasion' ell, and I would not dettact from the mission of' hu manity the gentlemsh was there to perform. He was not alone in his',enterprise. Few of his con stituento in the rank* were without their like min isters. They had more need for the gentleman from Philadelphia as Poet Laureate than as sur geon or nurse. In common, with others I wel comed them as a necessity'all that I had was at their disposal to add to their comfort. They were, as a rule, of the best men of the State, but the had no thought of striking the foe, " They were wanting in organization, in officers, in equip ments, in their commissary and quartermaster's departments, and studied gedgraphy about the State line With more earnestness thamthe evolu tions of battalions. They were unprepared for war—could be nothing else because of the haste with which they were thrown together. They had sense enough to know it and they determined to avoid it. Imperfectly provided for, they sub sisted largely upon the inhabitants. They claim ed freely and as a rule received generously. Un disciplined, and Commanded Mainly by politicians and political candidates, they would have been powerless before a disciplined foe. They them fore came and went, subsisted and foraged, and the last condition of our people was worse than the first. (Laughter.) I state a fact known to all who were charged with any responsibility in that memorable campaign,. that whatever may have been the feelings of pride and relief atiheir march - to the border, thby were vastly enhanct , d when the militia were got safely from the border to their bonnet; again. But while some marched and others refused to. march vt , hen ordered to approach the enemy, there was unanimity 4on one point throughout that vast army. All agreed that they must be paid. Then was the State convulsed from end to end. The militia had earned thirteen dollars per man ; an election was at hand, and the Stale, and National Government were; required to ob serve faith with the militia even if there should be a pause in the war-for the preservation of, the mt.' , I was then' in an official position . with the military department of this ind politicians crowded the departmentg coded that all things should be set aside le troops who had marched to the bordei, is dune. Delegation utter delegation w NI to Washington, and there was no t might until tbemien to whom the gentle- Philadelphia ministered humanity were • wages. True the border people told time; bad, as a rule given more service, by the total suspension of business and gee of ten thousand raw and unprovided troops; but they were unthought of then, as they seem to be forgotten now. The constituents of the gentleman train Philadelphia were called to the border, at the expense of the government , to Wire our. dangers for but a fortnight. They did all that could have been expected, of them. and were en titled to compensation, but I submit that it becomes not men to boast of their own services, or theservi ces of their constituents, as an argument against restitution to the plundered people of the border. We of the border, and not the enemy, were the sufferers—were necessarily so. We helped to pay them, and complain not of it. It was due to them. They were sent in ouedienee to the duty of the government to defend; .and their wages. their subsistence and theirdainages sustained and inflicted, with equal justice should be paid. Again in led 3 the foe invaded our- State, and the mili tia were called omit. They again .visitedthe bor der, and again made their chief record in their pay rolls. They were again_ with us to share for a VOL. 72,. WHOLE NO. 31704, few weeks the common perils of the border. So• much was due to the brethem of a Commonwealth. In addition to the personal dangers shared with ns-by the militia, we periled everything be sides. Again the question of remuneration ab sorbedthe dignitaries and prominent men of the State. Delay could not be tolerated, and the Executive had to pledge the - faith of the State without law to compensate them. Ido not com plain of it. They had just claim against the State for it, but was their exposure or sacrifice even 11 tithe of that sustained by the border peo ple ? If one was so clearly just as to override the law, what is the measure of justice. in the claims of those who have been bankrupted and rendered homeless by the ravages of friend and foe? I recognize in this Hall some of the heroes whose offices of humanity - made them ceaseles in their efforts to pay the militia, law or no law, and Pregret to say that some of them seem now to have no higher ambitiop than to defame the patient, faithful, despoiled people I have the honor in part to represent. Ido not wish to, be, misunderstood. I do not mean to assail the patriotism or valor of our mi litia. Any other ten -thousand men from this or any, other State would have done just as they did. Their history''s but the history of undisciplined troops everywhere, and their devastation, how ever causeless and wide-spread, is the common penalty of such defenders. I have refered to them in answer to the gentleman from Philadel phia to show that What he boasts of as an evi dence of the fraternal kindness of the people to the border, was but the work of death to us. Two-thirds of the losses sustained in Franklin county, excepting the burning of Chambersburg, were- inflicted by our own troops. The insur gents were in an enemy's country with veteran troops when they were with us, and discipline and order were essential to their safety, while our own men were among there friends. I would not defame them;, but I cannot be silent when their heroism - is boastingly contrasted with my constituents, and their brief and bloodless servi ces made a pretext for , withholding justice from the people they despoiled. The gentleman from Warren (Mr. Brown) and the gentleman from Philadelphia (Mr. Ruddirean) join in demanding that if losses of property on the border shall be compensated, those who have given their sons and husbands as sacrifices to save our Nationality in other sections should be repaid as far as it is in the power of government to make restitution. Sir, the people whose cause I de fend to-night have been second to 'none in their sad sacrifices of sons, and husbands, and fathers to destroy the murderous .power of treason.— There, is not an untimely grave in the districts of the gentlemen that has not its counterpart in the beautiful valley of the Cumberland. We too have mothers stricken by the angel of death, whose eons ..have fallen as martyrs for our liberties. We bso have widows mourning with their fatherless chil dren the sad exactions that civil war has made. We have vacant chairs and broken circles thick as the City of Brotherly Love or the sons of the North. We have broken hearts to solace; the keenest sorrows to heal; bereavement with its ter rible pall shadowing almost every home. In-this our sacrifices are but the common sacrifices of loyal men in all sections, and we complain not. For this there can be uo restitution. It is not in in the power of mortals to restore the martyred dead ; but hundreds of those who are hue be reared to-day turn from their blackened walls and withered waste to the graves of their holy of ferings for the life of the Republic. They are homeless, made so-by the barbarous foe whore brutal fury they brayed for your protection, but they hove still sacred shrines around which their shadowed affections gather. Without habitations among the living, they have holy altars with the dead, and these alone remain to mingle the sad consolation of patriotism and love-with their con suming sorrovr. We boast not of these sacrifices • —we complain not of them. We have givon of all we possessed with unsparing heads lo our common cause—our goods ; our golden harvests ; our substance; and our Bons and fathers have not beau withheld. Sir, I am not insensible as to the probable fate of the bill in this House. I cannot be mistaken in the manifestations of sentituent already made. It does not meet with the favor of a majority of my associates, and the vote soon to be takerfwill consign it to deii,th. lam prepared for the fore shadowed result. I have spared no efforts, have been instant in season and Out of season to dissi pate the groundless prejudices and calm the strange fears which have confronted it from the beginning. _When the vote about to be taken shall have I;een recorded, the subjeA will not again agitate this House—will not ag"dh convulse the timid and arouse the malice of those who seem to hate the people who have suffered all things to preserve our government. I-shall return to my disappointed constitu ents and present the record that has been made by this House, and theywill not question the fidelity and earnestness with which their representatives have labored in be half of the right. How deeply they will feel hu miliated by the defeat of this bill, after every pos sible misinterpretation of their motives and wan ton defamation bad been employedagainst them, I need net here attemptto portray. I know how keenly it will strike those, already thrice smitten ty the foe. They cannot but believe that their State is unmindful of them; that while it sends the tax-gatherer and demands its full measure of tribute, it forgets its solemn obligations to them. They have been taught that their flag is the syin bol of power, of protection from lawlessnesi with in and foes without, and they will belieie so still. They will not falter in theirduty because the pop ular branch of the legislative has been faithless to them and to the fame of their. ,Commonwealth. _ They will bow to the lecree of this House to night, well assured that more liberal and morej ust men' will yet control its actions. They will riot complain of their government, nor will they des pair of its fulfillment of its highest preogatives. They will, as best they can, rear their homes again, plant anew their trodden fields, and make beautiful again their withered flovvers. They ran if need be, afford to be forgotten, even to be spurned with wantoh insult by this House. They can survive it; but the Commonwealth cannot. Theirs would be but the history of the wrongs of individuals ; but the blot upon the escutcheon-of the State would be ineffaceable. It wonldimpair its power; teach distrust to its people, and spread dishonor over its name and fame. NoState, with our exhaustless wealth, our heroic people, our just pride and untarnished justice, can thus afford to disregard its accepted duties to any class of its citizens. He who can declare himself a citizen of Pennsylvania, should feel undoubted confidence that his boast is not an empty fraud. Rome struggled for more than a century as to whether -partriman or plebian should rule; but it was the highest pride of each to declare himself a Roman citizen. It was nip signal for respect, for justice, for protection within the boundaries of civiliza tion. And so it should be ; it must be here. It may not be so ilpw; but it will be the policy of Pennsylvania, and when it becomes accepted and established the trembling apprehensions and petty hatreds of to-night will be disowned by their au thorn, ' Sir, I have been pained, deeply pained, at the recklessness with which disloyalitY has been charged upon my immediate - constituents. There may be among those I represent, some who hate •their country and its cause, and it is possible that a few May have done themselves the dishonor to exact exorbitantly from those who came to de fend the State. If there are such they dare not avow, it. The could not live in my county and declare by word or deed, their • sympathy , with the.enernies of the Government. For three con secutive years the enemy hits invaded our territo ry, and the authorities were untiring in their ef forts to ascertain who, if any, gave aid and coun sel to our foes.- To but one was -this terrible crime traced—a citizen of York, and he lives to. day by the clemency of the President, who took from, his head the decree of death. Earnestly as the people of Franklin'have differed in their po litical faith, and firmly as a portion of them dis pute the policy of the war, I affirm it with con fidence that, as a people, all stood shoulder to shoulder and man to man to bring discomfiture -Upon the enemy when be polluted our soil. They have been faithful in the past, and they will be 'faithful still., There is no duty an endangered government can impose upon them that they will not perform—no sacrifice can be demanded that they will not cheerfully yield. They know the value of government, and they will preserve it. If new graves, new bereavements are neces sary to our national life, they will be given.— They will give their remaining bottles and green fields to the destroyer' if need be to preserve to you and to them and to posterity the measure less blessings of free government. They will not reproach you because' they have to , bear the sur ges of the ruthless vandal while you can dwell in peace and plenty m your homes. 'They will not mariner that theirseed-titre and harvest come and go with nought but desolation; while yours sequiteßie busbaudruan and lititiOlentytoyoui People. Air the icy clings to their Mouldering. Piles amidst the, appalling devastation 'in.!' has wrought and as the green moss lives in perpetual freshness on the dully marble that marks the resting_ places of their martyred dead, so will they follow with unfaltering devottim the cause of the Republic of our fathers. No, studied wrong here —no perfidy elsewhere, can make them aught else than faithful, though the. mournful track of war should come to every hearth-stone.' They will do so because it iatbeir duty, and they.sbrink not from it However this Rouse Iraq Imifest indifference to their sufferings and to the'dignity and fame of the. Commonwealth, they will accept the wrongs inflicted unop them by war as wrongs to this State, and so wigin due time, outlegisla tion declare. In sincerest sorrow I am compelled to . advert to the singular position assumed on this question. by those who claim to be the peculiar supporters of government and law—my own politicalassoci rites. With few exceptions they have resisted this bill with an earnestness and energy that illy becomes the advocates of the supremacy of goy-. ernment in all its might and prerogatives. I fear, sir, that they have done us wanton wrong—that they have doomed us to cruel embarrassments or it may be hopeless discomfiture, where our strug gles have been fiercest - for success. 'They should bear in mind that_ the mutations of politics deny . perpetual power to any organization. In two consecutive years .I. served in this House in a mi nority of one-third and in a majority of two-thirds; and I fear that the action of this House to-night will but hasten the diowhen the men who shall stand where I address you, wilt speak for the minority: MEL BROWN—I will ask the gentleman from Franklin if he means to say that he will be on the Democratic side of the House? Ma. M'Ctuaa—Sir, the member from Frank, lin is one of those who has borne the burden and heat of the day to give success to the Union party, He has been— ._._ MR. BRows—Will the gentleman answer my question, whether he. ill vote with the other side of this House if this bill does not pass? MR. M'CLURE.—There must be few to whgurt any answer to the question is necessary. I have been constant in season and out of season to de fend the doctrines and policy of the party with which the gentleman from Warren (Mr. Brown) and myself act. Sir, lam incapable, as he must know, and as I have ever shown on this floor, of being influenced in roy'political opinions or actions by any derision this House may give on this or any other question. I cannot be changed in my purposes, or efforts, no matter what may be the fide of this bilL No man has shown on this floor amore earnest devotion to the doctrines of the Union party and to the interests of the govern ment, than the humble member who now addres ses you. I have spoken of that which I fear the future must produce by the illiberal and unwise action of the House on this question. Ma. Baoww—l will put the direct question= whether if this bill is not passed he will glover to the Democratic party ? MR. M'CLurtE—l can give the gentleman from - Warren (air. Brown) facts, but cannot give him comprehension. (Laughter.) I have answered distinctly that no action of this legislature on this or any other question can make me change my political associations or convictions in any degree. Ma Buoww—That is all right. Mn.: M'CLurtE.—No man knew better than the gentleman from Warren (Mr- Brown) that it was all right before. I would remind members of the House, as a fact with which we must deal, that it has become the accepted policy of the minority of this House to mainta. the faith of the Commonwealth un sullied on his question. It matters not why, or for what reason. Men may impugn their pur poses and declare it but an effort for power ; but they have been consistent from the first, and their record is unbroken in behalf of the honor of the State. They have shown it on every test on this question. "fhey .have not counseled with their tears. They voted for it last year, and they found no convulsion, no complaint nt home. leak men who seek the supremacy of right in politics not to turn blindly away, from these facts. This ,ittes lion will be carried to every household in the land. In spite of the selfishness that the mousing poli tician would arouse, the people of Pennsylvania love justice. Their appreciation of it is mightier tluifi-the sophistries that ingenuity or malice can weaft around this issue. And when the revulsion - comes. can the rejected and long-suffering greet the day with else than joy because justice and the honor of the State.have triumphed I Look well to the lease of political power. It is at best but transitory. The wisest councils and most saga • cious leaders have even failed to make it perpe tual, and let the Union party not surrender' its supremacy because it was forgetful of justice. Sir, I must close. My earnestness in behalf of a people Who, ever faithful in evil and. good re port, have been taught that it is theirs to wait and .suffer, may excuse the length and ardor with which I have spoken. I have now in my feeble way fulfilled my trust, and the issue is with you. If your record shall not be in vindication of our common brotherhood as citizens of a great Com monwealth, I shall wait hopefully, confidently for the better day when the despoiled people of the border will learn that our boasted government recognizes all its obligations, and reaches out its strong arm to prevent unequal burdens from fall ing upon any portion of its citizens. They with me will hope and wait, and the day will come hen equal and exact justice to all will be indeli- Ay inscribed in our history by ample restitution Ito those upon whom has fallen the brullil fury the.foe. MR. LENEOLN'S FAVORITE POEM. Mr. F. B. Carpenter, the - well-known painter, has written a note in reference to a poem much admired by Mr. Lincoln. He says: "I have been urged by iseveral friends to send you the en (doted poem, written down by myself, from Mr. Lidcoln's lips, and although it may not be new to all of your readers, the events of the last week give it now a peculiar interest. The circumstan -ces under,which this copy was written down are these: I was with the President alone one eve ning in his room, during the time I" was painting my large pictures at the White House, last year. He presently threw aside his pen and papera ' and began to talk to me of Siakspeart. He sent lit tle "Thad," his son, to the library to bring a copy of the plays, and then read to IDO several of his favorite passages, showing genuine appreciation of the great poet Relapsing into a sadder strain, he laid the book aside, and leaning back in his chair, said: There is a poem which has Wen a great favorite with me fur years, which was first shown to me when a young man by a friend, and which I afterwards saw and'eut trim a newspa per, and learned by heart. I would,' be -contin ued, 'give a gfeat deal to know who wrote it, but I have never been able to ascertain.", Then, half closing his eyes, he repeated to me the lines which I enclose to you." OW WHY SHOULD TELE SPIRY? OF MORTAL RE PROUD Oh, why should - the spirit of mortal be proud? Like a swift, fleeting meteor, a fast-flying eland, A flash of the lightnh3g,,a break of the wave, - Ile pastels from life to his rest in the grave. The leaves of the oak and the willow shall fade, Be scattered around and together be laid; And the young and the old, and the low and the high, Shall moulder to dust, and together shall lie. The infant and mother, attended and loved; The mother that Infant's affection who Proved : The husband Rust mother and infant who blessed, Reach, all, are away to their dwellings of Red. The band of the king that the sceptre bath borne ; The brow of the priest that the mitre hath worn ; The eye ht the sage and the heart of the brave, Are hidden and lest la the depths of the grave. The peasant, whose lot was to sow awl to reap ; The herdsman, who climbed with his goats up the steep The beggar, who wandered in search of his bread, Rave fadid away like &e grass that we tread. So the multitude goes, like the flower or the weed That withers away to let others succeed; - So the multitude Come* even thou, we behtdd, To repeat every tale hat than often been told. Ear we are the same our fathers have been; We see't,he same eights our fathers have seen; We drink the'same stream and view the samesun, And run 920,,same course our tatheis have run. The thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think; From the death we are shrinking our fathers would ihrink To the life we are clinging they-also would ellng; But it speeds for us till, like a bird on tlie wing. They loved, but the story we cannot tarfold; 174. y scorned, but the heart of the haughty is 47;01di, - They gr i ev ed, butte wail from their slumber cone; They joyed, but the tongue of their ea &minis dumb. They died,nye they died: we things that are now, Tht - Tfwalk on the turf that lies over their brow, And mike in their dwellings a transient abode, Meet the_ things that, they met on their pilgrimage road. Feat hope and despondency*, pleasure and pain, We mingle together in sunshine and rain; And the smile and the tear, the Bong and the dirge, follotietich other, like surge upon surge. Tie thrf , wink of an eye, , tie the draught. of a breath, :risme the blosaom of health to thepidele/T of death, From the gilded saloon to the bier and the ehrcld, !)h, why shOrdd the spirit of meal he,trcmdi "' •