VOLUME 4. |Joetru. IN MEMORIAM. BT L. wist. Fiercely I>IPW the rhllHng blaat. Th« giant trees, their barren lioibs Tossed to and fro. as if to catch The mantle of the uiotning wind : Boreas howled, as on his car he went, Fast sending over hill and plain : Green herbage, by the cruel frost was cropped ; And in the hollow or the vale, The seal and auburn leaves wpre heaped, Like windi<»w« In the hPivest fleld. December, stern, sat on his throne, And untiled to see the antics, V\hirb the wind-g'td played Amongst the things of earth. 'Twa* oo that bleaV December day, We parted with our brothers: I'arted,—yes, for to the wars Our brothers needs must^o. That war,—oh. how 1 (hudder yet To think of all the Ills It wrought, Of broken vows, of bloody lipids, Of mangled limbs, of cities sacked, Of dying braves, of lieroef dead, Of hearthstone® lone, of brok. n hearts, Of widow's sighi, of orphxn'- tear«, Of dungnon btrs, of prison pens, Of hunger, cold and storm. Atti ui »i an J death. Yes we parfd,— jlnd our hearts, with deepest sorrow, Swelled to overflowing: We felt like giving words of cheer, JBut erief had sunk them in our breasts, Too deep almost fur utterance fiudness bro<.dcd o'er our minds ; We felt us though the cypress crown. That decks the brow of death, had fell Athwart our very thrcshhold • Though thus »ad and sonow-Htricken, "Though we mournful were, and solemn; Vet a gleam ef pride came ni*hlng From Its chamber In our heart*; And it swelled up like a fountain, Sparkling o'er its eiher brim : Ye*.—with pride we viewed our brothers, 7fa merged lor the deadly strife. Proud of them * how oould we help It; A thousand other heart* beat high, W hen brave and n..b10 brothers left then,— Left them for the fluid of .Mars Oh, the glorious fleld ot M .rs' \Vhere beath reigns Lord and King, Where glory stands within the grasp, And passion riot rnns, bete crimson streams from brawny limbs Purl richlv out, t«. soak tue ground, To aggrnndi/e th«- fleld. Oiorious >iar«! the Music of the roaring storm, bile t«'*«ing Oceana mountain high, Whose broad, wit sheets, nil fiercely slap Against the rock hound shore, fcinks into lutigufflcnnce, Compared with thine. The ciintions loud tom.-ndons roar. The crashing shot the screaming shell, The charging squadrons thunde.ing trauip, The fierce inset, the mad recoil. The flying host, th« hot pursuit, The death shots filling thick and fast. The Oloody corpse, the mangb-d limb. The Silent prayer, the dying groitn, The bitter cone, the loud hurrah. tYriApire to make thv glorious fleld VA, l>eo Helium Mar,.' We glorie-l in the self denial of our brothers, — «llorTed in their braver v. ami Gloried in their zeal. The /.eal that led them forth to battle With the powers of treaty n ; W ho with malice stern m«l fierce. |lad taken up the buttle brand Against our lighteou* government, Kight man.nlly our brothers bore The patriotic steel : With loyal hearts, anil steady tramp, Thev marched ; with them we nunt elieve onr brothers fultered •VrTthe-tace »>f any foe 'Thu» we thought and often reasoned ; And full S4H»n that imputation. Was tike dew drops, brushed away ; rbeolrwe heard, that like a whirlwind Cauie the rebels thousands atr ng,— Came like a |.*-.m ef destruction, .f*w«eping down •« Carey's baud ; TDoft-u on Casey's weak divhtioe, Down upon his raw recruit*, Wh«*r«.*nt by yrsot M'Clellan. 4>n that awful bloody day; All unsup,,„rt<-.1. unprotected. To begin (hat direful fray. 'Twaa then we k«»*a that blundering braggart, thk.t gunboat hero, FAMOI'M Jfor his boasti ng 112 M-,t that niesi-age, Though he knew not why he sent it,— Bent it forth So *ell creuti. n, That iha men of vet'ran Casey, Uad diareputaLdy fled. Thua it |R and alway* will be, A'hnn commanders lurk behind ; What roport to send, they know not, jKnoiriitg not, they go it blind. la the swamp and by the morass, Camped our aoldiers night and day *Thure inhaling dire malaria, Scores to fever fall a prey ; was one fund brother stricken, W'Jiio was hale and stout and brave, £arried almost in Jm descent, To the portals of the grave. Carried round by aome gotd fortune, Juat aa olouda bear round the rain, though why, nor be, nor 1 could tell you. Reached his childhood's home again ; fie was ganut and weak and weary, But he got our eufteet bed. fihn we tended like an infant, Uini we like an infant fed. AMERICAN CITIZEN. When strong again lie grew, he started For the battlefield agai.i, Aud if hard was the first parting, Patting atill was harder then : But he was so brave and manly, That no other csi -ie on earth Could have led him to diahonor This fair land which gave hits birth. Soon the wild s