VOLUME 4. <9ri]>inal s)oetrtt. For tho Citizen LINES Suggested by seeing young men outside theCh«reh dur tog ierrice. At we to-day In the Church did meet, We marked, oh many a vacant seat— And sadly thought of the painful truth— That the companion* of our youth,— The pride of man v a parent's heart, Could thus with the scoflor bear a part, And letting the precious momeats glide Bo thoughtlessly, thus remain outeTde. We saw with pride that a few there were Whoee brews were not marked by age or care, Who waited to hear the word today, Nor did with the thonghtlen* members «tay. And we felt their lives would lengthened be, And happier far their eternity, Than theirs, though the doors be open wide, Who still will choose to remain outside. But oh, young men, when your youth hat fled, And its firlKhteHt hopes ar») withored and dead, Wh*n *ge has diawn ita lines on vol|r brow, And your limbs are no longer art ire as now 1 Will the thought of the hours now idled away Brighton the hours of declining day 112 And will you recall with pleasant pride, The hours when you chose to reniaiu outside? And when death has stilled your n-w beating heart And from all you luve on earth jou nius part. And yon, at .the Bar of the Joat, must appear, To render an account for tho yeari spent here 1 And when you gaze on tbe land ot blest. Ami *ee them enter into tho place of rent, An-I see the pearly gat es tut they open wider- Will you then be cont «nt to reui-ia outsido ? II. .'Jttißcellancous. ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS. What he thinks of the Rebellion. "Mack" prints in tbe Cincinnati Com-! mercial an entertaining account of a visit to the home of Alexander 11. Stephens, the principal part of which we give below : " Returning from the farm, Mr. Stephens talked freely ot the late war. The South, be believed, made two fearful mistakes: First, ingoing to war at all. and secondly, in the object for which they went to war. It was a groat absurdity to think that there ] could be such a thing as permanent separa tion of the two sections, lie was opposed to secession in the first place; but when he could not resist that—when Georgia went out, and be, as a State's rights man, felt bound togo with Georgia, then he wanted to fight only on terms "of reconstruction, such as would cement tbe country on a bet ter basis than it ever stood. Jeff. Davis and the fire eaters fought for Southern in dependence, and ruined tbe South in doing so. I called his attention to reports in •Southern newspapers during the war, that be, Stephens, had declared his opposition to reconstruction upon any terms. They were all false, he said, and he was sorry to see in Pollard's Lost Cause, which he consider ed a wretchodly bad history of the war, what pretended to be an extract from a speeoh made by him at Charlotte, North Carolina, after bis unsuccessful attempt to confer with Lincoln at Fortress Monroe (before tbe Hampton Roads conference,) in which be is represented as saying that under no circumstances would he co n sent to recon- Htruction. He never said nny such thing, lie was a reconstructionUt, he said, from tho first day of the war till the last. Re ferring to politics in the North during the war, ho expressed his regret that the peace party had not been successful in 1804. lie thought tbe Democrats made a mistake in nominating a war man. If a straight-out ■peace man had been nominated he might have been elected, and the reconstruc structionists of the South would then have made terms of peace and reunion with them. "But," said I, "'in the North the people could not be persuaded that the peace party was not a secession party." " There's where you made a great mistake," said Mr. Stephens. "Jeff. Davis wanted Lincoln elected ; he told me so. The reconetruc tionists of the South wan tody or of the North to elect a peaco man, and we would then have overthrown tho Davis war party of the | South, and made terms of reunion without nny difficulty." I replied that I thought if the people of tbe North bad bad any assur ance that the election of a Peaco Democrat would have restored the Union on honorable terms they would have elected one. But the Democratic party of tbe North had made itself obnoxious as a secession party ; its leaders bad been to a great degree instru mental in bringing the war about by assur ing the Southern fire eaters of a fire in the rear party, and while they might prefer Union to secession they certainly preferred secession to war—while the Republican par- 1 ty preferred Union to any thing else, and were willing to kee pup tbe war ten years to secure it. Besides, if there were so many re constructionists in the South, why did they not make their influence felt—why not make overtures to the Republican party of the North T" Mr. Stephens replied, ''there were a great many of us, but we could'nt get tbe helm. One man at the helm of a ship has more power than five hundred amidsbip. But, if the first desire fur peace bad come from the North we would have been strengthened so that we could have broken down tho permanent separation par ty. All we wanted was for you of tbeJNorth to show that you wantA peace and reunion; and then we could have responded. Take the State of Geurgia, for instanoe. While there was an immense majority in favor of keeping up the war as long as the Federal army was in the field against us, there was a great majority in favor of reconstruction, but they wanted tbe first indications to come from the North," Speaking of the]conduot of the war on the part of the South, Mr. Stephens criticised it as extremely unwise. It ought never to have been an offensive war, and if the re sources of the South had been properly economised, instead of being wasted in ftg- AMERICAN CITIZEN. gressive battles, the North would certainly have been worried into giving up tbe con test. Then in a few years the South would have gone back to the Union without a doubt, for the dream of a separate nation ality would soon hare been dispelled. Tbe great error of the North, he thought, was in adopting tbe policy of coercion. If South Carolina had been permitted togo, and a few other States with her, secession would soon have been at an end. The Bouth was getting very sick of it when the call for 75,000 troops came out. A tariff of twenty per cent, on every thing produced in the country had been levied by the Montgomery Congress, and it had caused a rise in prices and great discontent. One thing after an other had occurred to persuade the people that secession was a foolish undertaking, hut when troops were called for to invade the South the tide immediately tinned the other way, and the separntionists triumphed every where. lie regarded Jeff. Davis as a man of kind heart, who meant well in what I he did, but was not fitted fot the bead of a I nation in a time like that of the late war. I He would listen to no advice, and heed no warning. Because he wanted to succeed, he thought therefore he must, and be had no idea of giving up the contest until Lee tel egraphed him that his lines were broken, and that he must evacuato Richmond. The capture of Jeff. Davis, Mr. Stephens thought agreat faux pas for the North ; better a good deal have let him go wherever he wanted to go I asked where Davis was going when he was captured. Mr. Stephens said he did'nt know—tie doubted if Davis knew himself. He seemed to hiin to be running about like a gad-fly in a stuble, after tbe boys had tn*en bis eyes out—bobbing up and down, running against everything and bitting everything, utterly unconscious of what he was doing or where he was going He believed the government would release Davis without any trial. The Supreme Court decision in the injunction cases would have an, important bearing on tbe trial. If the injunction was not granted, he could not see how Davis could be tried for treason— for the refusal would convey with it the as sertion that the Southorn States were not States of the Union, and therefore their cit izens could not have been guilty of treason in rebel).ng. This seemed to him to be the light in which Charles O'Connor, who was counsel in both cases, viewed it. I remained at Mr. Stephens' residence that evoning and during tho following day until train time, lie expressed great won der when I told him of my intended depart ute, and logged me " stay a week and see the country, 'or, in any event, to "come back this way,'' and call to see him again. I spent Friday evening in conversation with him, and found him the mostdelightful and inexhaustible talker I had ever listened to. Many ol the events connected with the war, with which I was already familiar, he rela ted to me with such an interesting and at tractive manner that I forgot I had ever known anything of them, and listened to them as to something entirely new and startling. lie spoke of the Hampton Roads confer ence as having been consented to by Jeff. Davis only to thwart another proposition looking to peace and re-union. Tho Con federate Congress was about to pass a joint resolution in favor of a cessation of hostili ties, for the purpose of calling a national convention to scttb all existing differences, Davis wanted to defeat this, by making the Sou tlietn people believe that the North would accept no terms but an unconditional sur render, and this he thought the Hampton Roads conference would accomplish. Mr Stephenson his return from Hampton Roads felt convinced that the Southern cause was lost, and told Jeff Davis so, but Davis would not believe it. He soon after returned to his home in Crawfordsville, where he re mained until arrested by Wilson's cavalry, and taken to Fort Warren. He is now en; gaged in colleoting and arranging the ma terials for a book to be styled " Tbe War, Its Causes, Conduct and Results." It will be in two volumes, the first to appear about the close of the present year. He told me he would s»y very little about battles, or battle-fields, for he has an utter loathing for them. 110 holds that war degrades any people that engage in it, and retards in stead of advances civilization. Hie book will be on the war in its relation to citil i liberty and republican government in this j country and throughout the world. Respecting the present civil contest in the South he desires no public expression of his views. As one who is disfranchised and a paroled prisoner he feels it prudent for him to keep quiet aud take no part iu public af fairs. 1 shall therefore say nothing in this letter touchinghis position on reconstruction under the Military Law. 110 converses freely on the subject, and has no lesitation in giv ing lys opinion when asked in hisown house. He does so, however, with the injunction that no public nse shall be made of what Se says on the subject—and he has a right to demund this much. No man in thecouritry loves the American Union more than be does or more sinuerely desires its preservation ; no one is more ardently devoted to consti tutional liberty than be; no one is less of a monarchist or an aristocrat, or more of a re publican, He takes little iuterest in parlies, except as they tend to promote the cause to which be is so warmly attached, aud views all questions as a philosopher rather than as a politician. IIENBY JENKINS, whose arrest in New York for embetzlement, last year, caused eo much excitement, died at a city hospital to whioh be was removed from the jail a short time since. "Let us have Faith that Right makes Might; and in that Faith let us, to the end,dare to do our duty as we understand it"-- A LINCOLN. BUTLER, BUTLER COUNTY, PENN'A, WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 18G7. ERROR IN RECONSTRUCTION. The lata argument* in the Supreme court show some of the mistakes which the coun try has made upon the question of recon struction. Yet they are natural errors, an J ore such as reveal the prudent and wise habit of the popular mind whioh deolines to act until it perceives the reason of action. The problems with which the fall of the re bellion confronted the country were wholly new and of the most vital importance. There was a technical, summary ,superfical solution of them, very easy to understand, and also very cure to make the war ridiculous. This solution was merely the policy of treating the rebellion as a riot. Certain citizens have resisted the authority of the Govern ment, it was urged ; they would not disperse upon reading the riot act, and it was neces sary to call out the military force. That has succeeded in quelling the di-turbanco, and now everything will resume its ordinary course. This was a view which was very plausible in 1861. It had become sheer folly in the year 1805. The rebellion wus a death struggle be tween the two principles which disputed the mastery of the Government. The dispute was maintained under the form of interpret tation of the constitution. The principle known as the South claimed that the con stitution was a treaty between sovereign States, which might be annulled in its own case by the will of any one of the States.— This was the claim The object was the perpetuity of human slavery as the corner stone of a Southern Empire, The principle known as the North held that the constitu tion was a national bond under which the Union had become a nation, and that seces sion was national dissolution, which was consequently opposed by every patriotio in stinct. This was the theory. The convic tion was that by the laws of society and hu man nature slavery would be peacefully end ed and a groat, free, and happy republic es tablished. The controversy became at la rend* of the rebel General Johns-n. The complaint was made by .1. \V. Thomas and others. Tie parties have had a bearing, the etidence forwarded to General Biekh>-, and the accused will remain in custody of tho military until the General is heard from. JI DCE KIM.) thepeopleof New Orleans on Saturday c\caing, 11th instant, on the politi.tal status of the South. Ilia audience was the largest mas- uecting of citizens known in that .city ior some time. Resolutions of a strong Hi-publican charac ter were adopted after the meeting. The remarks of the Judge were frequently ap plauded. *ar lorace Greeley is attempting to jaa* ii fy himself in the eye* of the public for be coming Jeff. Davis' hondaiaan