iLlllIttllf lt1ffclf r . cjwww jwm W(PwP FIRMNESS IN THE RIGHT AS GOD GIVES U3 TO SEE THE IlIGHT. Lincoln. 1 awHg fapct-grwtd to golittcs, fitrature, lomgn, omc anil UlioccUiinccus tciv$, k fa. VOL. X WAYNESBURG. PA., WEDNESDAY, MABCII 20, 1867. NO. 41. IS V hill' WKDMISDAY MOKMNU, JAS. E. 8AYER3. OrFlCK IN 8 AY Hits' llCIUUNO, KA8T OF TUB COURT llOIISIi. TKKMS OK SlIiStltll'TlOX. Two dollars a jour, payublu invariably in advance One dollar fur six mouths, payable, Invariably in advance Advkutiskmknts inserted at ijil fid per square forthroo insertions, and iioots. a square fur each additional Insertion; (ton liues or less counted a square.; Local advertising and Si'Kcial Notices, in cents per line lor oNKinseruon, wnu (3-A liberal deduction niado to yearly ad vcrtisers. Ailvnrttumnnnta nnt. miirked with Mm n'Ull ber of insertions desired, charged fur until ordered out. (3-Obituary notices and tributes of respect Inserted as advertisements. They must bo paid for in advance FIRST MT10ML UNI, ok D. Bonkr, Frcs't. J. C. Fi.knsikkn, Cashier. DISCOUNT DAY TUESDAYS. May 1C, 'G0.-ly. W. E. GAP EN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, WAYNESBURG, PA. CSrOiTicE In N. Clark's building, fnbnriiiitf . R A. M'fiOSHBLL. J. J. HOFFMAN. M'CQMNELL & HUFFMAN . Attorneys and loanscllors at law Wntjmsburq, Fenn'a. (3-Ofi'iOK n the " Wright House," East doore. CoUeuliws, &c, will receive prompt attention. Wnyneslmrg Auiust 20, 18(12. If. LEWIS DD-ATST, DEALER IN Brinks, Sdttioncry, Wall Pnpcr, Window Paper, tn. Sunday School Books of all kinds constantly on hand, Way ncsburif, Pa., opposite Post Olllco. May !, "(iG.-ly MERCHANT TAILOR, ROOM IN lll.AOIH.KY'S lltm.DISU, WAYNrSIU'liO. WORK made to order, in finest and best style, Cutting and Fitting done prompt ly, and' according to latest fashion plates. Stock ou 'mnd and for sale. May 2, tf WATCHES AND JEWELRY. main 8-rttRKT, oitositb cou t iioi;se. KEEPS ON HANDS ALWAYS A clioico nnd select assortment of watches and jowelry. Repairing dono at the lowest rates, apl, iy "SHiftiaAN HOUSE," JUST OPENED HY TH03. Bradloy POSITIVELY the most complete Hotel in our town. Everything combined to fur nish the host accommodation ever yet ollered to the public. Meals furnished nt nil hours, table provid ed with the best of the season. Also, a fine icecream tmlooii lilted up mul attached to tho bouse, nnd a hah unrivalled for tho variety and quality of its contents. Choice wines and brandies, good whiskey, nlo, lino cigars, &c, form a few among tho prominent items. Travellers and those desirous of refreshment Will do well to call, "Tom" still retains ins old reputation of an accommodating gentleman, and hospitable landlord. House, the one for merly occupied bv tho "Messenger" Olllce. May 0, 'UG.-ly. ( PEOPLE'S. LINE' STEAM Ell "CHIEF TAIN," R. 11. Ahiiams, Commander, Capt It. C. Mason, Clerk; leaves Brownsville daily at 7 a, m., for Pittsburgh, and leavo that citvat S r. m., daily, STEAMER "ELECTOR," Roiiert Phil lips, Commander ; R. G. Taylor, Cleric j leaves Greensboro, for Pittsburgh Mondays, Wednesday and Friday, and return on Tues day, Thursday and Saturday, leaving Pitts burgh at 2 p. h. May lG,'UG.-6m. GEORGE S. JEFFERY. TVoalcr In Books nnd Stationery, Magazines, l) Dally Papors Fancy Articles, &c, Way csburg, Pa. apl.'CO-ly S. B. HOLLAND, Sa.rox'oft cfis Co. Importers an Jobbors of Staplo and Fancy Dry Goods. Cloths. Cassimers, Blankets, Linens, White Goods, &c,, &c, Uos. 405 & 407 MAnicisT Street, Above Fourth, North Side, PHILADELPHIA, PA. ETMr. Holland takes occasion to advise tho retail merchants ot Greene, Washington and Adjoining counties that he will cull upon them nd solicit their custom for the above named bouse. Those wishing to address him can do eo at Beallsvllle, Pa full 18 '7-tf. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE- LETTERS TESTAMENTARY on tho estate of A. WILSON, Sr. late of Marion township, Greene county, dee'd., having beon 'granted to tho undersigned, notice Is heroby given to all persons Indebted to said estato to make Immediate payment and those hav ing claims to present them immediately, prop perly authenticated for settlement. . ' W. T. E. WEBB, ANDREW WILSON, . of Marlon township Ad Jiiuislrators. fob.l8,'7-6w ,i GOING HOME. j Where are you going so fast, old man ? Where are yon going so fast ? There's a valley to cross and a river to ford There's a jchisp o' tho hand uud a parting word. And a tremulous sigh for the past, old man; lho bcuutitul, vanished past. The road has been rugged and rough, old man ; To your feet it's rugged and rough j But you see a dour being with gentlo eyes Has shared your labor and sacrifice, Ah ! that has been sunshine enough, old man j For you and me, sunshine enough. How long since you passed o'er the hill, old man, Or life? o'er the top of tho bill ? Were there beautiful vail cs on tho ct'icr side 1 Were thero flowers and tret3, with their branches wide, To shut oH the heat of tho suu, old nir.n i The heat of the fervid sun ? And how did you cross tho waves, old man; Of sorrow; the fearful waves ? Did you lay your dear treasures by, oho by ono, With nn aching heart and "God'? will be done," Undcr the wayside dust, old man ; In the grave 'neatli tho waysido dust ? f There is sorrovhnd labor for all, old man ; Alas I thero is sorrow for all ; And you, pera lvonture, have had your share, For eighty loug winters have whitened your hair, And they've whitened your heart as well, old mau ; Thank God, your heart as well. I You're now at tho foot of the hill, old man; I At last at tho foot ofthe hill. The sun lias gone down in golden glow, And tho Heavenly City lies just below. Go in through the pearly gate, old man Tho beautiful pcarly.'gato. AI10UT PRINTERS. I wish I was a printer, I really do, indeed ; It seem to nu tlut printers Get every thing they need (EX'iept money.) Tlioy get tho largest and Hie best Of every tiling that grows, Aad get free into circmses And other kind of shows (B paying au equivalent.) Thoblsgcst bug will speak to thorn, No matter how they dress ; A shabby coat is nothing ' , If they own a printing pres. (Policy.) At ladies' fairs they're almost htlgiio 1 By pretty girls who know That they will praise up every thing Tho ladies have to show. (That's so.) And thus they get a blow out free At every party feed, And the icas.m is because they write, And other people read. (That's what's the matter.) A11RAHAJI LINCOLN. A talk wiiii thkLatis I'husidkst'b Law PaI.TNKR. Correspondence of tho New York Tribune. Si'itiNQi'iur.D, 111., Jan 25, 18G7. When history ruckes up its mind to commemorate a place, no special cor respoiuluiico can keep pace with it After Mr. Lincoln' nomination to the Presidency tho most Republican of all coujis d'elal the littlo city of Springfield ascended at a bound from tho comnion placo to tho memorable. Caravans ot patriots from all tho other States wended across the prairies to visit it. From a market town, whea eggs were duly ex changed for calico, and tho father of tho family reported himself twico a year to get stone drunk, it rose to bo tho homo of a President, and scut him across the continent to usefulness and martyrdom. His body lies near by it ashrine which any city might covet and bis prim framo residence practical and mud color ed. I have walked around these two nights to find my curioi'ity shared by halt a dozen couples, looking upon it as if the tall ghost ot the owner might pos sibly appear. I came here to lecture. Two days leisure spared me, I have passed one half of each in conversation with a man who knew the great oitizea of Springs field for twenty years anterior to his Chief Magistracy better and closes than any human being. Until very lately you might have read upon a bare stair way, opposite tho State House Square, tho sign ot Lincoln & Herndon. A year ago it gave place to tho names Herndon & Zane. Ascending the stairs ou flight, you see two doors oponing to your right hand. That in the rear leads to what wai for on generation the law ofliee ot tho President. Within it is adis mantled room, strewn with faded briofs and leaves of law-books; no desks nor chairs remaining; its single bracket of gas darkened in tho centre: by whose flaine ho whom our children's children shall reverently naino, prepared, per haps, his gentle, sturdy utterances, aiid out of its window you get a sweep of stablu-roofs and dingy back yards, where he must have looked a thousand tinico, pondering Freedom and Empire with his cyo upon ash-heaps and crowing cocks and young Americans sludging or bullplaying. As simple an ofiice, even for a country lawyer, as ever I saw in my life, it is now in the transition condition of being prepared tor another tenant. In the middle of the r-iom tho future President Bat at a tab'.o side, and in the adjoining front room this table and all the funituro of the place is still retained, while in its back corner, look ing meditatively at the cylinder stove, you see Mr. Herndon, t ho partner and authority I bavo referred to. He has given mo permission to write what I please ot himself and his dead friend, and among all tho men I havo ever met, ho is the readiest to under stand a question and to give even and direct answers. Ho resembles Mr. Lincoln so much, and in bis present quarters, garb, and worldly condition, is so neaily a reproduction of A. Lin coln, lawyer, as ho lived before Fame drove a chariot thnngli this second btory, that we may as well take a turn around Ihe surviving man and the room Liuculn was the taller and older, and senior puilner. lie had boon in two or thi ee associations with lawyers; one of his early partners, by fraud or misman agement, got him into debt and he car ried the burden of it about ten years His latest partner, excepting Herndon, was anxious to bo a candidate for the legislature, and as Mr. Lincoln desired the same honor at the same lime, a dis solution was inevitable, and then to Heindoii's g''e.Tt surprise, tor he was very young nnd obscure, Lincoln said: 'Hilly lot us go into business together.' Herndon accepted tho proposition thank, fully,' Mr, Lincoln arranged the terms of partnership, ami the new 'shingle' went up directly, never to be removed till the bullet ol lJjoth had done us er rand. How young Ilemdnn rnig'it hive looked tWtMity-tive years ago wo can scarcely infer Irom tho sailYon-t iued. blue-black haired man before us, bearded bushily at the throat, disposed to shut ono eye for accuracy in conversation, his teeth discolored by tobaoeo, and over his angular features, which suggests, Mr. Lincoln's in ampleuess and shape, the same halt' tender inulanelioly, the result in both cases, perhaps, of hard frontier work, poor pay, thoughtful ab straction, and a disposition to share the sorrows of mankind. O, why should the spirit of mortal bo proud is tho sentiment ot Herndou's face, as it wos of Mr. Lincoln's a gravity that befits greatness well, when it comes, and iu the dress ot tho firm of Lin coln and Herndon you see this sentiment practicalissud. 'Mr. Ltnooln,' said Mr. II e r n d o n, 'cared so little about clothoB that sometimes he did not put all ot them on. He was brought up barefoot.' Mr. Herndon my parallel wears to. day a bright yel low pair ot breeches, turned up twice at the bottoms, and looks to bo a wind hardened farmer, rather than ono of the best lawyers iu tho State, and as a pub lic man, is charged with delivering the best stump speeches in Illinois, on the Republican side, during the last election. His address is homely in form, com-. meneing with, 'Friend 1 I'll answer you;' and this ho does without equivocation, with his long foroBngor extonded; and with such fund of new information upon the revered memory in question that although the Lincoln biogrnphors, from Holland down, have talked with him, ho seems to be brimful ot now reminiscen ces. With extraordinary momory,' great facility of inference, and a sturdy origi nality of opinion, he had the effect upon mo to stagger all my notisns ot the dead President's character. Ho has been a wonderfully desultory reader, and in his law library you may see tho anomalous companions for a Prairio attorney of Bailey's Fesuu, Suhlegel's Critiques, Coiute's Philosophy, Louis Blane and many ofthe disobedient essayists. He ban one ot the best private librarios in the West, and in this respeot is unlike Mr. Lincoln, who seldom bought a new book, and seldom read ono. Mr. Lin coin's education was almost entirely a newspaper ono. He was ono of tho most thorough ncwapaper readers in America, and for filteon years before bis election to tho Presidonoy subscribed regularly to the Uichmwd Enquirer and the Charleston Mercury. He grew slowly, thoreforo, as publio opinion grew, and as an unti-slavory man a gradual con vert, whereas Herndon, years before, embraced at a leap all tho oooiul reforms, read all tho agitators, and talked human liberty to Mr. Lincoln, gravely listening till a fraternity ot sentiment developed, and about tho year 1811 tho coming emancipator declared himself an enemy of sliveholding. It is worth whilo to stop and ponder that while Rhett and Wise, with Slavery in full feather, wroto every day the in. violatcnoss of Secession and the divinity of bondage, theso two Illinois lawyers, iu thoir littlo 8iua:'o ollico road evorv d word; paid to read it, and educated themselves out of UiPir mutual indignations the one to a grand agency, the other to as grand an abhor rence. Mr, Lincoln haJ seme-six or seven places of residence during his life; ho was of full ago before ho left his family never to return, and tho p'ea-a'itiBt of his remenisences wero of his mo.hor, ti whom ho imputed tho best and the brightest qualities ho had inherited. Ho broke out oncn to Mr, Herndon, as they were returning from court in another county; Billy.all I am or can be I o ire to my an gel mother. As a boy Lincoln mado a fronlier mau's living by hard work.poling a flat boat, getting out cedar and chestnut rails even sawing wood. The scene of his early struggles was lu Indiana, and t'leio he developed into a sort of amatuoi' publio clerk', writing letters tor folks to whom a steel pen was a mys lory, giving miscellaneous advice on law and busiuoss, and excelling particularly iu the ingenuities of amo loto and illut-fration- The story telling reputation ho retains was no fib ilous qualifij ition.nor was it an idle and gossipy recreation, but a iii,':ins ot in iking intelligence plain io rude uii.nl i A' this stage of his life he wore ni icoa-.iiis and a hnn'.inj shirt, an 1 tvi- iu great request by thick head, ed people, because of his clearness and skill in narration. The jury always gut from him a fair Htatoinout ot any ease in hand, and years later it was remarked y tho Chief Justice of Illinois that when Lincoln spoke ho argued both sides of ihe case so woll that a speech in responso was always superfluous. Tho habit ho had of enforcing a fact with an anecdote eo far survived his inoeaaHin days that it seems to havo beon constitutional in a sense. No man ever told so many sturies, and ho was seldom known either to repeat ono twico, or to tell ono that was hackneyed. His long, variable and altentivo cxporienco with common, native people, mado him acquainted with n thousand oddities, and ho Iud a familiar way of relating thorn that was as piquant aa his application of them It is also truo that some ot theso stories were more cogont thau delicate, yet in no sing'e enso was ho ever remembered to have told on exceptional anoodoto for the sake of that in it which was excep tional. Mr. Hurndon remembers a person' who so far mistook Mr. Lincoln once as to toll a coarse story without purpose. During its recital Mr. Lin colu's face woiked impatiently. Wren tho man had gone he said i '1 had nearly put that" fellow out of tho office, lie disgusls me.' Finally ho settled at Springfield. Mr. Lincoln found tho law jealous and nig gard. He was always able to keep a horse, and was very loud of riding; but ho made a poor income, though ono not inoommousurnto with tho gonoral smalluess of his colleagues at tho Illinois bar. Now and then ho was pinched to distress, and went to bed with no notion how ho should meet tho morrow's claims. For nearly a titth part of , his whole lito he owed money that ho could not pay, and although of easy disposition, tho debt gallud him and hastened his wrinkles. Ho cleared himself linnlly on his return from Washington City.whero ho sat as a representative in Congress. When he quitted Springfield for the v nn.0 uouso ue was worm just asao,- 000. nevor moody nor petulant, ho yet loved solitudo and self communion, and has beon known to sit Bix hours lu one placet to lie on his back, for exiunpU on tho floor of his house, looking absently at tho veiling, or to inn - himself silting upon a f'eiico or in a hay-mow all the day, passing tho proooisei of plan through his miud, or forming some poli tical liuigmeiu. The leiiderness of his nature was not always manifest, yet ho had his romance in early manhood, and ot this Mr. Ileru At last ho camo to his office tor the last tunc. 'Billy.' ho said, 'wo must say good' bye." Until of thera cried speechlessly. .V-.. ..I. ..It !....' - -xou snaii Keep up mo linn namo, Billy, if it will be of any use to vou.' They shook hands upon it with tears in ineir eyes. 'I love tho people here, Billy, and owe don had spoken in publio, I asked pnr- ucuiany auoui it. At Sangamon, Illinois, a pretty and high spirited girl, without fortune, made havoo in many hearts, and Mr Lincoln constituted oneot three earnest suitors, who wanted her in marriage. She preferred the address of a young mer chant of tho town, and gave tho other two thoir conic Her afliauecd soon uUorwards went East to buy goods, but as he returned was taken with brain fever in somo waysido town, nud lay raving for three mouths, unknown by name or residence to Ins entertainers. A rumor started that ho lial run away to avoid marrying his lady, and. wait ing some timu in vain to hear from hi.n. shu received anew tho attentions of Mr. Lincoln. About the time when they passed trom courtesy to tenderness, and maniago between them was more than hinted at, the sick man returmd like a ghost, guaged the condition of afliair.", and upbiaidod the lady with fickleness. Sho had a delicate sense ct honor, and felt keenly the shame ot having seemed a triflei with two gen. llenien at once ; this preyed upon her mind till her body, not very strong, sill fered by i-yinpulhy, and Mr Herndon has oral and written testimony that tho girl died out i f regret nt tho equivocal position she had tiiiwillinj;ly assumed The names ofal! tho parties ho bus giv en me, but I i!o not care to print them. On tho dead woman's gravo Mr. Lincoln promised himself never to mar ry, 1 Ins vow ho kept very long. His marriage was iu every respeot advan tageous to him. It whetted his ambi lion, did not nurse- too much n pen chant for homo iudolenco that ho had, and taught him particularly that thero was something called society, which observed one's boots as well as his iirin uipies. uo was always a loyal ana rev erent husband, a gentle but not positive ..!.!.- IT .1 , , , latner, nun his wiiu saw the 1'residency i.:... i,. (,.- 1 1. .i i.. .1..- . , 1UI llliu UU1VIC UIU IMUUJUI Ul I llOUU1 led him. Ho built tho frame house in Sprinc i I, i. . . . uoiu wnicn is now so oi tetiraied, at a comparatively recent peri d. I went oyer it yesterday with amusement at its utter practicality. It stands upon a prosaic corner, in an interior quarter ot tne town, and was tlio design ot a car penter, not an architect. A narrow yard and palings shut it from tho street; the door is in tho middle, nnd is ap proached by four or five wooden steps ; on tho abut i: cut beside theso lie xtood after his nomination, in the blaze of pine torches, the thunder ot huzzas breaking around ins nead, tho only solemn man in Springfield. Ho might havo telt that all these grntulations wero such as the Aztecs spent upon the beautiful captivo who was to be taorafieed in tho leoiutUis. Asa lawytr, ho was a closo student ot those cases that interested him. Slow to take them into his mind, passing in their consideration from stage to stage, and if he found beneath an embodied principle his heart grew into tho work of developing it. Ho frequently sat up nil night preparing somo favorite argu ment, and never tailed to present it so petspiiuinusly that dull intellects grow appreciative and shrewd ones absorb ed. Some of his legal arguments nre di soribed ns having been classical. Yet, boneath all tho drudgery of his orntt, ho was nt soul a politician rather than an attorney. Every legal study carried linn beyond itself to the mysteries of publio infirmity. 'Ho sat,' says' Ileriidon, 'looking through a brief to the construction d' society nnd tho moral Government' of God.' Now nnd then ho shut liim'elf up nil night, and lay on his ofliee floor in his careless garments, revolving some problem set by a vil lage client, that had expanded to n great human principle. At these times lie seemed to bo a dreamer reasoning Again, hu drove miles over tho prairies with his lips close shut, wrinkling, soft ly humming, and returned again at night strangely white and exhausted. Before his great publio call came he had passed tho world through his hileut thought, as if it hud been a legal case td be stated and argued. 'Did ho over quarrel, Mr. Ilorndon V Seldom, friend 1 but sometimes, Onco I saw him incensed at a Judgo for giving an unfair decision. It was a terrible spectaelo. As he was grand in his good nature, so ho was grand in his rage. At another time I saw two men come to blows in his presence i je picked them up separately and tossed them apart like a onuplu of kittens, He vas the strongest man I ever knew, and has been known to lift a man oi hie own weight and throw In in over a worm fence. Oneo, in Springfield, tho Irish voters meditated taking possession ot tho polls. News oamo down the itreot that they would permit nobody to vote but those of their own party. Mr. Lincoln seized an nxo handle from a hard-waro store and wont alone to open a way to the ballot-box. Hisap. pearanco intimidated them, and wo had noither threats nor collisions all that day. He was never sick during the whole of our long acquaintance, but being a man of slow circulation, and ot most regu lar habits, cajiable ot subtiialing nnori a morsel, ho was wiry and indurnte'd be yond the best ot our Wiatern men, and even with Booth's bullet in hirbrain ho lived ten hours. IJU life, in general, was sinoth and unruflled. He had no prejudices against any class, preferring uio uernians to any oi tho toreign ele ment, yet tolerating as I (Herndon) never coum even llie irisn-' 'Did he ever drink V 'Or.ly in Indiana, whr.n ho took whisk- ey as ague medicine. After his nomi nation for the Presidency it was sug gested to him that tho Visiting Coin initteo would require somo hospitality. 'Very well, lie said, 'any' food that is proper I have authorized to be purelns ed 'But thei'c gentlemen will expect somo liquors. 'I can't permit to strangers what I do not do myself. 2o liquors, Billv 1 there's the taeru.' Of miscellaneous books, Mr. Lin coln's favorites were Shakespearo and I ope. lie uever read Byron and ot cotemporary American poets preferred by lhc patriotic selections chiefly, Milt on he knew by heart, and was a good literary reader ot the Bible. His friends were selected with regard to their sin cerity, chiefly; he loved not cliques, and those who knew him best were young, er than he. Ho was cautious in friend ships, no hero-worshipper, and tor Mr. Douglas, his most prominent antagonist, had much less a 'miration than repul sioii. Douglas was uneasily arrogant in Lincoln's presence, tho latter never sensitive nor flurried, so grew by his impertubility, that hen ho reached the White House, Mr. Douglas was less surprised than anybody else, The groat Senatorial campaign, in which thev figured together, is remembered by every Springfielder. Douglas, with his powerful voice and facile energy, went into it under full steam. Lincoln beaan lucid'y and cautiously. When they came out ot it, Douglas was worn down with rage and hoarseness, and Lincoln was fi caller than ever. Ho prepared all the spo 'dies ot tins campaign by si lent meditation, silting or lying alone, studying tho flies on tho ceiling. The bet evidence ot bis superiority in this debate, is the fact that tho Republicans circulated both sols of speeches as a campaign document iu 1800, nud Mr. Douglas' friends reins, d to do so. The most remarkable episodo ol Ileru don's couvi rsation w bio I am repealing by memory, only relates to Mr. Lin coin's Presidential aspirations. In com mon with most pooplo, I had concluded that this great honor camo to Mr. Lin coin without paving, as unexpected as it was unsolicited, nnd to mm a stag gering piece ot luck, like a lottery prize. Thin estimate is a charming one, but it is not a truo cno. When tho Douglas and Lincoln contest was ended, the de feated man said to bis partner i 'Billy, I knew I should miss tho place when I competed fir it. Th's defeat will make mo President:' Ho refused, in the interim, any pro position looking to his acceptance of a lesser ofliee, and this with the concur rence of his friends and family. At tho Rarno time ho took no immcdiato means to precipitate his opportunity, rather, like a man destined, sat nioro closely to study and vigilance, read all the issues as they developed, and waited for his call. It camo at last, in a special invitation to visit New York and speak in Ihe Cooper institute. lie felt intuitively that this was the Hubicon, and, with a human thrill, paused and hesitated. It is possible that at this moment, had any closo friend whispered 'stay,' the Republic might uo dead and Abraham Lincoln living. 'Go, Mr. Lincoln,' said Herndon, 'make your best effort. Speak with your usual lucidity nnd thoroughness,' Homo said 'Go,' also. lie appeared in New York, as all ot you remember, nnd his success thero drew tho attention of tho country to his name. The West can originnte men, the East must pass them, and the firm ot Lincoln and Herndon did, in reality, when the convention met at Chicago. He had by this lime reached tho high est usefulness in his State, of which his nature was capable. Tho best lawyer in it, tho hero of a debate equivalent to a Senator, hip, with a mind too broad and grave tor a mere gubernatorial place, and already by four yoars destiny nnd preparation President of tho United States, he went up to to tho post with dignity and ensothut made men stare, because they had not seen th steps hoy took upon tho road. them all that I am. If God spares my lito to the end, I shall como bnck among you and spend the remnant oi my ilnvs.' lie never returned to Springfiold till trlorv brought him home under her nlunios. a completed life, and tho prairie, like a neighbor, opened its door and took him in. When Mr. Herndon saw him. again at Washington City, he was furrowed and trotted with State cares. They talked awhile ot tho clients, and the town, and then tho war rolled between them once more. 1 One sentence Mr. Ilorndon recolleots of the President before his departure for Washington that is memorable as low ing his purposo. 'Billy,' be said, 'I hope there will bo ' no trouble but I will mako the South a ' grave-yard rather than see a Slavery gospel triumph, or successful secession, lose this government to the cause of the people ami representative institutions.' To this Mr. Herndon . added : 'Mn.' Lincoln was merciless in the abstract. Buttles never moved him unless he trod , among thoir corpses. Ho would have carried on tho war forover.or as long as the people intrusted him its manage ment, rather than give up. Speaking among tho associations of his working lito, tho years of Abraham Lincoln began to return in the vividuess ot their monotony, bleak and unrcniu ncrated, hard and practical, full ot pati- ent walk down a road without turning, ' brightened by diittf'ulnoss alono.pointed, but not cheered by waysido anecdote, and successful, not so much bocauso ho was sanguine of himself, as because he rated not eminence nnd honor too high . or too difiiuiilt. When ho found him self competing for tho Senatorship, with . tho quickest, tho least scrupulous, and the most flattered orator in tho Union, ho saw nothing odd or dramatio about it. His Presidential opportunity sur prised everbody but himself not that he had self-conceit, but that ho thought tho office possible. He was none ot your Bichelieus, meditating aside the frreat uses to which Providence had put him. He never mado n bid for the fa vor or forgiveness of history, but ruled , the nation as if it were practicing law and practiced law as if it were rul.ng' the nation, This real greatness ot mind, oblivi ousness of circumstances, ascending from a practice of three thousand dollars a year to twenty five thousand, as it thcra wero no ontrsst between thorn, giving 'Billy' permission to uso ihe firm style as beforo, without a corsious poctio trait; yet ever in absent moments look-. ing very long away pondering the dis- , tanco of rowardj, promises, vindications, with a longing that was poetry, these composo some of the character ot one whose tamo differs vastly from bis life, and tuu.-t do so by the anomaly of the man. Tho strongest of his loves and faiths was the People. Ho had more rever-. onco for them in bulk than tor thoir highest publio exemplars. Religiously ho was a reverent man without crcp.d, believing in a beneficent Gcd no more. No denomination has a special claim to him ; he was not a regular church goer; tho lew clergymen whom he liked recommended themselves ou personal grounds ; he refused to arguo oil religU ous matters, but inclined toward Con gregational independence. His mother' and sisters were fond of camp meetings, nnd a rather humorous lettor held by Mr. Ilorndon, says that a portion ot their family was regularly converted every year, and baokslid in the Winter, , I know of no belter illustra'.ion ot diN forence betweon the real life and the re nown ot Mr. Lincoln than you can get. by visiting his grave. A horse railroad , two niilCjp long, leads to it in the ceme teiy of Oak liidge. Behind you, is his real life. Springfield a Western market town, set upon the monotonous prairie, half the year noisy with the chatter of politicians, plethoric with lawyers, tor all ot whom thero is less than enough to do, and savoring much ofthe frost and frontier ; a pretty prairie city, but capitalized so that what the State has not dono tor the town, and what the people expect to do, make it ' an unfinished desultorincss. All at onco ' as you approach tho Sangamon river, tho sceno changes, Stalwart young oaks of natural growth become plenti ful. The landscape is plowed with leafy ravines. Bold knolls start, up. A orooit goes splashing around tho abrupt hills. . Shadow, murmur, nnd surprises succeed tho levil ot life in tho city. And among ; all theso mysteries, ilBelf tho great mys- tery of our ago.the vault of the President caps a hill, a temporary edifice of brick, ' and the great edilioe of ono of tho hand. s miest cemeteries in the Union, winding brook beneath it, 'Tho last, As 'twere the cape of a long ridge of hills.' and all the white tombs martial about; it: button wood, maple and ash trees cluster at its base. Hero is to bo his monument. About 75,000 havo been collected for it up to this time, and it is. supposed tho biale will vote onotigh to mako $200,000 in all. It would be blasphemy to mar the dead mail's grave with any mere prettyness ot marble or . smartness of brouzo. Let tho fiery, un tamed Western genius be of timid chisel , hero. 'Abraham Lincoln is a good epitaph if plainly lettered. And, after'. all, will any monument ue nice tne man, tor no such one was ever tho sculptor's theme before. Cauova could got no notion ot Mr. Lincoln An allegory would be unlike him, a shaft too formal, a statue too inexpressive If the Pacific Hatlroad could be called by his name, that would be better than' e ther; bat this man will trouble any attist in that he wis so unlike any' model. mi "