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loyal State government, though its authority has surrectionary States. The General Government been practically extended over only a small part of does not undertake to give them the right of sufthe State. This government is recognized as be- frage, leaving that to the decision of the several ing, and having been, the real government of Vir- States. Their personal status is defined by an orginia, not including the new State of West Vir- der issued at Richmond on the 23d of June by Genginia; Francis H. Pierpont is Governor. In Ten- eral Terry, the commander of that department. nessee, a loyal government, William G. Brownlow The order says that the laws of the State of Virbeing Governor, has for some time been in opera-ginia and the ordinances of the different municition, superseding the military organization estab-palities made to restrain the personal liberty of lished by President Lincoln, in which Andrew John- free colored persons were essentially a part of the son, now President of the United States, was Gov- slave code, and have become obsolete with that ernor. The authority of this government is un- code; "people of color will henceforth enjoy the questioned. In Louisiana and Arkansas loyal same personal liberty that other inhabitants and State governments have been established in a some- citizens enjoy; they will be subject to the same what irregular manner; but it seems certain that restraints and to the same punishments for crime their authority will not be called in question. that are imposed upon whites, and to no others;" James M. Wells is the Governor of Louisiana, and vagrancy will not, however, be permitted, and neiJohn Murphy of Arkansas. ther whites nor blacks will be permitted to desert their families and roam in idleness about the country; but neither whites nor blacks will be restrained from seeking employment, nor from traveling from place to place on proper and legitimate busi

There remain the seven States, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Texas, in which the State authority is to be for the time invested in Provisional Governors appointed by the President. Such a Gov-ness; and "until the civil tribunals are re-estabernor has been appointed in each of these States except Florida, as follows: North Carolina, WILL IAM W. HOLDEN, May 29; Mississippi, WILLIAM L. SHARKEY, June 13; Georgia, JAMES JOHNSON, June 17; Texas, ANDREW J. HAMILTON, June 17; Alabama, LEWIS E. PARSONS, June 21; South Carolina, BENJAMIN F. PERRY, July 1. The proclamations appointing all these Governors are identical in terms with that for North Carolina, of which the important features were given in our Record for July.

lished the administration of civil justice must of necessity be by military courts, and before such courts the evidence of colored persons will be received in all cases."-Colonel Brown, Assistant Commissioner in the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, for Virginia, has issued an address to the freedmen, in which he says that the difference between their present and former condition is that formerly their labor was directed and the proceeds taken by their masters, who also cared for them; now they were to direct On the 7th of June the Attorney-General of the their own labor, receive the proceeds, and care for United States issued a circular notifying all persons themselves. They are exhorted to be industrious belonging to the classes specially exempted from and frugal, since they had no masters to provide the general amnesty proclaimed by the President, for them in sickness and old age. "You are not that their applications for special pardon must be to suppose that your former masters have become presented in writing, and that before these could your enemies because you have become free. All be considered they must have taken the oath pre- good men among them will recognize your new rescribed in the proclamation. A large number of lations to them as free laborers. If others fail to such applications, from men who have borne a recognize your right to equal freedom with white prominent part in the rebellion, has been present-persons you will find the Government, through this ed; but action has as yet been had upon only a few of these applications.

The various restrictions upon travel and traffic rendered necessary by the exigencies of the war have been one after another revoked. That requiring passports from travelers entering the United States was rescinded by an order from the Secretary of State; but a proviso was added that nothing in the order should relieve from due accountability any enemies of the United States or offenders against their peace and dignity who may hereafter seek to enter the country, and be at any time found within its legal jurisdiction.-By an order of the President, issued June 23, the blockade of the Southern ports was rescinded, and all the ports of the country were declared open to foreign commerce after the 1st of July.-By a proclamation of the 24th of June all restrictions upon internal and coastwise commerce between the States lying east and west of the Mississippi are removed, except those relating to property heretofore purchased by the agents or captured by United States forces, and the transportation on private account of arms and ammunition, of gray uniforms and the gray cloth of which they are made.

Bureau, as ready to secure to you as to them liberty and justice." They are informed that schools will be established for them under the protection of Government; but that the special care which the Government now exercises over them will soon be withdrawn, and they will be left to work and provide for themselves. If they are in a location where work is to be had they are advised to remain where they are; they are reminded that, owing to the unsettled state of the country, work is scarce, and the chances are against finding constant employment at high wages. The address concludes thus: "Be quiet, peaceable, and law-abiding citizens. Be industrious, be frugal, and the glory of passing successfully from slavery to freedom will, by the blessing of God, be yours."

There is every indication that the great body of the Southern population of every class are disposed to accept as among the issues decided by the late war the absolute supremacy of the Union and the entire abolition of slavery. Many of the prominent military, civil, and religious leaders have issued addresses urging upon the people to submit peaceably to the new order of things; to remain quietly at their homes, fulfill all the duties of citiThe political status of the freedmen of the South zens, and endeavor by industry to repair the rayis for the present defined by the proclamations ap- ages to which their section of the country has been pointing Provisional Governors in the several in-subjected. Not a few of them take the open ground

that the abolition of slavery will, in the long-run, | in which the clergy of the country, unfortunately, be of great advantage to the South.

The number of Confederate prisoners discharged under the general order given in our last Record amounted, as far as reports had been received up to July 3, to 42,796; of these 1106 were captains, 3382 lieutenants, 5582 non-commissioned officers, 32,726 privates.

John C. Breckinridge, once Vice-President of the United States, and late Confederate Secretary of War, has escaped. After separating from Davis he made his way, with two or three companions, to the Florida Coast, where they procured a small open boat, in which they reached Cardenas, in Cuba, and thence proceeded to Havana, where they arrived on the 17th of June.

The decision of the Military Court for the trial of the conspirators, having been approved by the President, was announced on the 6th of July. Payne, Harold, Atzerott, and Mrs. Surratt were sentenced to be hung on the 7th; Mudd, Arnold, and O'Laughlin to be imprisoned for life; Spangler to be confined at hard labor in the Penitentiary for six years.

SOUTHERN AMERICA.

In Mexico the Republican Government of Juarez has for months kept up a desultory contest with the Imperial Government of Maximilian. Notwithstanding partial and isolated successes, and the hopes entertained of assistance, either direct or indirect, from the United States, there can be little doubt that the Imperialists have retained the decided advantage, backed up, as they undoubtedly are, by the assurances of support from the Emperor of France. The speedy capture of Juarez or his flight from the country is now confidently expected. The Emperor Maximilian has issued an important notice to his Minister of Public Instruction. "Religion," he says, "is a matter of conscience for each individual, and the less the State meddles with religious questions the more faithful is it to its mission. We have emancipated the Church and conscience, and I desire to secure to the former the full enjoyment of her legitimate rights, and at the same time entire liberty in the education of her priests, according to her own rules, without any state interference; but she has likewise duties which she must perform-such as religious instruction, a duty

have taken little or no part hitherto. Consequently, in your projects and proposals you will adhere to the principle, that religious instruction in the primary and secondary schools shall be given by the priest of the parish, using the books selected by the Government."

In Hayti an attempt at revolution was made during the month of May, but at the latest dates it had been nearly suppressed.-The Spanish troops have abandoned the Dominican Republic, on the southern part of the island, which was some time since formally "reannexed" to Spain.

The civil war which has been raging in the Republic of Salvador has come to an end by the defeat of General Cabanas.

A treaty has been confirmed between Honduras and the United States; the main provision relates to the interoceanic railway from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Honduras agrees that the right of transit shall be open for all lawful purposes to the Government and citizens of the United States; and the United States guarantee to protect the same from interruption, seizure, and confiscation from any quarter.

War has been declared between Paraguay and the Argentine Republic. Brazil is also in a state of war with Paraguay.

EUROPE.

The Governments of France, England, Spain, Italy, and the Netherlands have formally withdrawn the recognition of belligerent rights accorded to the Southern Confederacy, and with them the restrictions upon our men-of-war in their ports.-The English and French statesmen and press urge that leniency, if not actual pardon, should be extended to Jefferson Davis and other Southern leaders.-A renewed attempt to lay a telegraphic cable across the Atlantic is about to be made. The cable is now on board the Great Eastern, which will be escorted by two British war-steamers. The day of sailing is fixed for the 10th of July.-From France the most important items are the announcement that the Emperor will uphold Maximilian in Mexico; and a quarrel between the Emperor and Prince Napoleon, growing out of a declaration made by the latter in favor of the "Monroe doctrine."

Literary Notices.

Thoughts on the Future Civil Policy of America. | effects of immigration from Europe and Asia and By JOHN WILLIAM DRAPER, M.D., LL.D. The between the States are considered, in the light of cardinal idea in Professor Draper's philosophy is history and philosophy. Chapter III. is devoted that the universe is governed by fixed and immu- to the consideration of the political force of ideas; table Law. Nations, like every thing else, are the impelling power being illustrated in the case subject to law; they, like all other forms of life, of Mohammedanism, the resisting power by that are transitory. The great physical law governing of the Jews; the conclusion being drawn that Man all organized life, whether vegetable, animal, or may comprehend Nature and subjugate physical human, is that of climate. In the opening chapter forces. The ecclesiastical causes of European opof this work the influence of climate upon the char-position to science are explained, and the duty of acter of the people of America, and by consequence America to develop and protect free thought is enupon its political institutions and national life, is forced. The concluding chapter sets forth the natconsidered; and the conclusion is drawn that per-ural course of national development, which is shown sonal locomotion-the inter-emigration of the peo- to involve a continual tendency to the concentration ple of different sections counteracting in a meas- of power, and the conferring of control upon intelure the effects of climate-is especially necessary ligence. The European method of government to insure the stability of our political institutions. through morals, and the American mode through Passing on, in Chapter II., the social and political the intellect, are compared and illustrated by the

etc.

the war, the various questions of policy which have come up for discussion, the affairs of the general Government and of the separate States, and those of foreign countries, besides full accounts of the progress of Art, Science, and Discovery in all parts of the world. Many of the articles are full and exhaustive treatises upon the subjects to which they relate. The work is edited with great labor, and with commendable impartiality. It is indispensable as a work of reference. (D. Appleton and Company.)

The Story of the Great March, by Brevet-Major GEORGE WARD NICHOLS. The Great March is, of course, that of Sherman from the heart of Ten

history of England and that of the United States. This tendency toward concentration of power is shown to be the legitimate and unavoidable result of democratic institutions. These are a few of the salient points of this thoughtful and eloquent work, which forms a fitting complement to the author's masterly "History of the Intellectual Development of Europe." Science, History, and Philosophy are brought into requisition to elucidate and confirm the principles laid down. The style of the work is worthy of the thought which it embodies; truths in science, facts in history, speculations in philosophy, are set forth in sentences instinct with life and warm with poetic feeling. In another part of this Magazine will be found a small portion of the chap-nessee, through Georgia and South Carolina, to the ter upon the Influence of Climate upon National De- heart of North Carolina. The history of our war velopment. A score of other passages, interesting has many great raids, many great battles, many in themselves, and still more so as links in a great great campaigns; but this is emphatically the great chain of argument, might have been given. Among "march." Not only is it our great march, but it is these are those relating to the development of the the world's great march. No army ever passed civilization of Egypt and of Asia, the contrasted successfully so many miles through a hostile counhistory of Mohammedanism and of the Jews, the try. Napoleon's march from the Niemen to Mosrise and progress of the cultivation and manufac- cow and back was longer, but it ended at the Bereture of cotton, and sketches of scientific discoveries sina, with himself almost the sole survivor of his and useful inventions. (Harper and Brothers.) great army. Sherman's march ended at Raleigh History of the United States Cavalry. By ALBERT only because there was no enemy to call him furG. BRACKETT, Major First United States Cavalry, ther. Thence to Washington it was not a march, "The cavalry service of the United States,' but a triumphal progress. The story of this march, says the author, "has never been properly appre-written day by day in the diary of an aid-de-camp ciated." This was certainly true up to the beginning of the second year of the war. In December, 1861, when the organization of the Army of the Potomac was under consideration, the Committee on the Conduct of the War, considering this arm of the service a "very expensive one," asked the opinion of various Generals in regard to the cavalry force required for that army of more than 150,000 men, of whom less than 15,000 were cavalry. Richardson thought that a large number could not be used; the regular cavalry would have been quite sufficient; they were wanted merely as advanced guards, and to carry reports and messages. Heintzelman believed that one-half the number would have been quite sufficient. Franklin had in his division one regiment of cavalry, and would be glad to get rid of two-thirds of it; he thought 2000 would be quite enough for the whole army. M'Dowell thought six regiments would be enough for that army: and How greatly this feeling has changed is evinced by the fact that toward the close of the rebellion our mounted force had become greater than that of any other nation upon earth. Major Brackett has done a good service in preparing this comprehensive history of our cavalry from the formation of the Federal Government down to the present time. He shows that in every period of our military history this arm has done good service. One sentence, written before Sheridan's name had become a household word, reads now like fulfilled prophecy. "Our cavalry soldiers," he says, "are becoming better every year, and it is safe to say that the finishing blows to the rebellion will be dealt by them." Apart from other points of inter-ness, and heroism of the black men," writes Major est, this work has a special value as giving a connected account of the famous raids" which so severely crippled the Confederates by destroying their supplies and cutting off their communications. (Harper and Brothers.)

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The American Annual Cyclopedia, for 1864, is -like the three volumes which have preceded it— a valuable register of the important events of the year. It presents a full resumé of the progress of

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of the great commander, is wonderfully vivid. It is not a mere dry, technical detail of strategical operations, orders, and dispatches; but a living and moving picture of events, and of the men who made them; from the General in command down to the veriest "bummer" outside the ranks. On the other side, we have a few planters arrogant in defeat, their wives and daughters arrogant and bitter; the 'poor whites"-mostly women or old men, for all of this class who could carry arms had been dragged into the field-gazing in stupid dismay at the immense column piercing its unstayed way past their huts; and the inevitable negro, who hailed in it the saviour of himself and his children. "The poor whites," said one of that class, aren't allowed to live here in South Carolina; the rich folks allers charges us with sellin' things to the niggers; so they won't let us own land, but drives us about from place to place. I never owned a foot of land in all my life, and I was born and raised in this State. They hate the sight of us poor whites!" "And yet," replied the Major, "you are the class that are now furnishing the rank and file of their armies. How absurd that is." "It mought be so." answered the man, with a vacant, listless stare. The chance sketches which Major Nichols gives of the negroes are worthy the attention of those who are studying the great social and political problem of the day. They seemed to him far more alert, witty, and sensible than the lower class of the whites who were left behind on the abandoned lands. Of their loyalty and simple trust in their deliverers there can now be no doubt. "The faith. earnest

Nichols, "is one of the grandest developments of this war. When I think of the universal testimony of our escaped soldiers, who enter our lines every day, that in hundreds of miles which they traverse on their way they never ask the poor slave in vain for help; that the poorest negro hides and shelters them, and shares the last crumb with them-all this impresses me with a weight of obligation and a love for them that stir the very depth of my soul."

It is to be noted that among the children of the | BEEKMAN DOCHARTY, embodies in a compact form poor whites there seemed no special lack of intelli- the substance of the author's instructions as Progence. The hard life of the adults seems to have fessor of Mathematics in the New York Free Acadchecked their development. When the final results emy, where it has been adopted as a text-book. of the war come to be summed up, it will be found While it does not pretend to point out a royal road that not the least of them will be the practical en- through the mysteries of the high and abstruse franchisement of the "poor whites" of the South. sciences of which it treats, it aims with marked sucTaken all in all, we consider this the most valuable cess to render the path of the student as smooth and work of its class for which the war has furnished easy as the nature of the subjects will admit. (Haroccasion. (Harper and Brothers.) per and Brothers.)

The grand old hymn O Mother dear, Jerusalem! furnishes the theme for an admirable monograph by WILLIAM C. PRIME. It commences with an introduction setting forth the dim guessings respecting the future life which prevailed in the anteChristian world, then follow passages from the Latin Fathers and Hymnists, containing the ore from which a Scottish clergyman, David Dickson, more than two centuries ago, wrought out the hymn as it now stands. Foremost among these is the "Laus Patriæ Cœlestis" of Bernard de Clugny, being a portion of his long poem on the Contempt of the World. The similar hymn familiar under different versions, from its first line "Jerusalem my happy home," is traced back still further. The first known appearance of a part of it in print was in 1693; but Dr. Bonar discovered it in a MS. in the British Museum, written probably a century before, where it consists of twenty-six stanzas, and is entitled "A Song by F. B. P. to the Tune of Diana." Portions of this, consisting of six or eight stanzas, have for a century found a place in a great number of collections with more or less alteration, generally for the worse. To those who prize the hymn from these extracts, the whole of F. B. P.'s "Jerusalem my happy home," and the still finer "O Mother dear, Jerusalem," can not fail to be most welcome. (Published by A. D. F. Randolph.)

The Rebellion Record, edited by FRANK MOORE. In the seventh volume the Diary of Events is brought down to nearly the close of the year 1863. The collection of Documents includes a large proportion of the official reports and other accredited papers, which form the essential materials from which the History of the War must be written. This work, of great worth from the outset, increases in value as the documents which form its substantial part become more and more accessible. These are collected with great care and accurately printed, often with the revisal of the authors. The Index, indispensable to a work of this kind, is so full and well arranged that any document or report may be easily found. The work is in every way admirably executed. (Published by D. Van Nostrand.)

A Treatise on Astronomy, by ELIAS LOOMIS, Professor of Natural Philosophy and Astronomy in Yale College, is specially designed as a text-book for colleges and academies. It treats more at length than is usual in this class of books upon such subjects as the constitution of the sun, the condition of the moon's surface, the phenomena of eclipses, the law of tides, and the constitution of comets. A popular interest is thus given to it without at all impairing its strict scientific accuracy. The work will thus be found not only useful but interesting to those who, having gone through the forms of education in or out of college, wish to make themselves acquainted with the present state of the science of astronomy. (Harper and Brothers.)

MARTELL'S New York Central Park gives an excellent view of this pride of the metropolis as it would appear to the eye of a person who could survey its whole extent from a balloon. Its scale is so large that every road and avenue, every drive and walk is clearly recognizable; while it gives, what no mere map can even attempt, a fair idea of the natural scenery of the Park, and even of the bridges, viaducts, and other artificial structures which form its distinguishing ornaments. The picture will be acceptable not only to the citizen of the metropolis, but to all who wish to appreciate one of the most notable public works of any age or country.

Timby's Solar Time-piece is a successful endeavor to combine important geographical and astronomical uses with the function common to all clocks of pointing out the time of day at any particular spot for which it may be set. A map of the world drawn upon a flat projection necessarily gives a distorted idea of the actual configuration of our earth, of the relation of the different hemispheres, and of the relative size of the regions near the equator and the poles. This can only be shown by an artificial globe. In this time-piece an ordinary dial shows the hour of day or night; but joined to this is a six-inch globe, revolving from west to east once in twenty-four hours, precisely as the earth does. As on the earth it is noon at any place where the sun is directly overhead, so it is noon at every place As a contemporary history of the war, and of the on the globe which lies on a meridian directly uncountry in war times, Harper's Weekly deservedly der the index, and by counting the meridians from claims a high place. Its strictly editorial columns this, east and west, the precise time of any place furnish thoughtful essays upon the subjects which can be ascertained. This clock thus shows not only come up for discussion from week to week, and the the time, but also how time, as measured by the news columns give a connected summary of all trans- revolution of the earth, is made. It therefore comes actions of interest. Moreover, almost every scene fairly within the category of literary as well as of made memorable by great events is pictorially rep-mechanical works as a valuable adjunct to educaresented from photographs or drawings made on the tion. (L. E. Whiting.) spot. The collection of portraits, numbering many hundreds, represent a great proportion of the men whose deeds have made them a part of the history of the time. Each volume, as bound, contains the numbers for a year. These volumes, of which eight are completed, are rapidly finding their way, as permanent documents, into public schools and public and private libraries. (Harper and Brothers.) The Elements of Analytical Geometry and of the Differential and Integral Calculus, by GERARDUS

A Smaller History of Rome, by WILLIAM SMITH, LL.D. Within a very brief compass the leading events in Roman History, as developed by modern research, are clearly stated, and a fair idea is given of the manners, customs, and culture of the people. The work is especially designed as a text-book in schools, for which it is admirably adapted. The scholar who wishes to learn more, will need to unlearn nothing which he has been taught in this little History. (Harper and Brothers.)

HE Easy Chair recently learned from the gal- uncompromising hostility the sectional and revolt

and its companion, Harper's Weekly, made by its faithful friend the Brooklyn Times, that our quiet and venerable Maga had been vehemently attacked. The attack was reprinted in full, that the completeness of the rejoinder might be evident, and certainly more amusing light reading than the criticism in question the summer is not likely to produce.

The genial author remarks in a kindly strain that when the war began certain gentlemen changed their whole natures. They became "bitter, exasperating, and sectional beyond measure." There were, indeed, base people, he says, who said the gentlemen in question were selfish. But no, cries the generous critic, we do not believe a word of this selfishness. Far from it. I think, on the contrary, that they were merely "wild beasts for the time being," and that they employ and do now employ in a certain magazine which they publish gentlemen in whose skillful hands "facts even are so embellished and tortured and distorted that they are generally made to lie." He then proceeds to expostulate with these savage natures of which he has spoken, and to inform them what "humanity and common decency" demand; although why decency and humanity should be commended to wild beasts for the time being the judicious author does not suggest.

If the polite reader will turn over his bound volumes or loose numbers of this identical Magazine, now in his hands, would it occur to him that this is the bitter and exasperating and sectional publication which is the melancholy proof that civil war has turned its proprietors into wild beasts? But if the same polite reader were informed that the mild exhorter of wild beasts to humanity and common decency is the most unscrupulous defender of that "sum of human villainies," the late system of human slavery in this country, and that this denouncer of sectionalism was a scarcely-veiled apologist of the rebellion, and the most servile lackey and pander of the late slaveholding interest, he will probably share the amusement experienced by the Easy Chair upon reading these candid criticisms and religious exhortations.

It has happened that slavery has sometimes been mentioned in these pages with the indignation common to all generous minds in the world when contemplating its infamies. It has also chanced that the cruel tortures, transcending belief, to which helpless and unfortunate fellow-citizens of ours were subjected by ruthless rebels, have been alluded to between these covers without approbation. This is the offense which is "bitter, exasperating, and sectional beyond measure." This is "mean." This is what "humanity and common decency" require should be stopped. This "keeps up feuds." This is to be a "common nuisance." This shows those under whose auspices it is done to be, not "selfish," but "wild beasts for the time being." This proves that there ought to be "a great national Monthly, fair, just, equal, nationalizing, not sectionalizing." We trust, meanwhile, that our own Monthly will not be found entirely unworthy to be called National. If to go wherever in the country a mail goes to be read wherever in the country there are readers-if to consult, and as experience proves not altogether unskillfully, the various tastes of the great mass of the American people-if to respect all religious and political opinions, and to condemn with

and cruelty

springs from it-if to withstand, fairly and soberly, the spirit of caste every where in American society, and to appeal to the most purely national and patriotic instincts of all our fellow-countrymen-are some characteristics of a truly national magazine, we indulge the pleasing conviction that, although "wild beasts for the time being," we are not altogether destitute of "humanity and decency," and may fairly claim not to be injuriously "sectional."

Indeed the late technical significance of those words, "sectional" and "national," has passed away in this country forever. It is painful, but true, that obsequiousness to the leaders of the late rebellion-the only party which constantly threatened and finally attempted to destroy the Unionwas for many years called "national." To expose the national danger of slavery was by the same spirit decried as "sectional." It is hard for those who have long used that wretched shibboleth to learn a pure speech. But they need not despair. Even they will learn not to dread the crack of a driver's whip if in some brave moment they should venture to whisper that their souls are their own. Even they will learn that the masters of American destiny are not a special class in a certain section, but the American people every where in the land.

This Magazine is penetrating, as fast as the mails are restored, to its old haunts in the Southern part of the country. It brings with it a feeling of fraternity, not of sycophancy. It offers the right hand of fellowship, not of servility. Its primary object is to amuse and instruct, not to discuss. But it speaks without a muzzle, as friend to friend. It seats itself at the fireside and by the evening lamp. It tells its stores of remote travel and wide adventure-its tales of love and humor and sorrow. It offers its little essays upon manners and morals; its sketches of character; its rhymes, and its plain and pleasant scientific talks. It keeps faithfully its history of current events-the value of which is already proved. It discourses of the last new books as their merits seem to it to justify. It fills its Drawer with good things, and its Easy Chair gossips harmlessly of the times. And little suspecting, until its affable critic announced, that it was a wild beast for the time being, it goes forth upon its monthly journey through the country with the words of the poet in its heart:

"Therefore I hope, as no unwelcome guest,

At your warm fireside, when the lamps are lighted, To have my place reserved among the rest, Nor stand as one unsought and uninvited."

THE Fourth of July was celebrated as never before. It was a solemn and most joyful Thanksgiving. There was universal hilarity, and the eloquence was truer and nobler than for many a year, or, indeed, than ever in our history. In all our praise of our country and its institutions hitherto there has been a constraint and a condition. The orator may have forborne to say it, but every intelligent hearer understood it. Even when the congratulation has been unstinted it was received rather as a prophecy of a possibility, as a hope, as what ought to be, as what would be at some time and in some way, but when or how nobody was wise enough to be sure. The great experiment was trying-it was not yet complete. "I

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