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BY GEORGE ALFRED TOWNSEND.

We were informed that two members of the National Guards were married, just before being ordered to march, in the area adjacent to the fountain at the centre of the camp, in Franklin Square. A squad of soldiers remarked the ceremony, and a corps of drummers and fifers that were at hand struck up a certain goodly tune.-Reporter of Phila. Press, May 15.

I find it hard to credit the experience I have known: To be married in the twilight-in the darkness be alone;

To sit beside my window, when the clouds blot out the arch,

And think how long my heart must wait while he is

on the march.

We were wedded at the Fountain, beneath the open sky,

And, grouped amid the maple boughs, the regiment stood by;

Their bayonets flashed brightly, beneath a soft, pale moon,

And a file of handsome drummer lads struck up a pleasant tune.

He took my moist, hot hand in his, as he had done before,

And the parson's talk was low and sweet, like some dear voice of yore;

I seemed to be a girl again-the wedding was a spell

And hardly knew what words were said 'twas like a funeral.

How like a mockery it seemed the formulary part: They asked me would I love him-I looked into my

heart!

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Then, women who have husbands will tell of glorious And honor him that bravely fell beneath the Stripes and Stars;

And I shall hug my widow's weeds, while life shall ebb apace,

And mark upon no child of mine the hue of his dear

face.

But all my dreams still hear the drums that beat our wedding peal,

The tinkle of the falling spray, the clink of sabre steel,

The music of his sad farewell, the kiss before he went,

The flutter of the silken flag above the regiment.

No coward mark rests on him; his duty called him forth!

The eagle led him southward from her eyrie in the North.

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"What saw I?" Little. Clouds of dust;
Great squares of men, with standards thrust
Against their course; dense columns crowned
With billowing steel. Then, bound on bound,
The long black lines of cannon poured
Behind the horses, streaked and gored
With sweaty speed. Anon shot by,
Like a lone meteor of the sky,
A single horseman; and he shone
His bright face on me, and was gone.
All these, with rolling drums, with cheers,
With songs familiar to my ears,
Passed under the far-hanging cloud,
And vanished, and my heart was proud!

For mile on mile the line of war
Extended; and a steady roar,
As of some distant stormy sea,
On the south-wind came up to me.
And high in air, and over all,
Grew, like a fog, that murky pall,
Beneath whose gloom of dusty smoke
The cannon flamed, the bombshell broke,
And the sharp rattling volley rang,
And shrapnell roared, and bullets sang,
And fierce-eyed men, with panting breath,
Toiled onward at the work of death.
I could not see, but knew too well,
That underneath that cloud of hell,
Which still grew more by great degrees,
Man strove with man in deeds like these.

But when the sun had passed his stand
At noon, behold! on every hand
The dark brown vapor backward bore
And fainter came the dreadful roar
From the huge sea of striving men.
Thus spoke my rising spirit then:
"Take comfort from that dying sound,
Faint heart, the foe is giving ground!'
And one, who taxed his horse's powers,
Flung at me, Ho! the day is ours!"
And scoured along. So swift his pace,
I took no memory of his face.
VOL. II.-POETRY 7

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Then turned I once again to Heaven;
All things appeared so just and even;
So clearly from the highest Cause
Traced I the downward-working laws-
Those moral springs, made evident,
In the grand, triumph-crowned event.
So half I shouted, and half sang,
Like Jephtha's daughter, to the clang
Of my spread, cymbal-striking palms,
Some fragments of thanksgiving psalms.

Meanwhile a solemn stillness fell
Upon the land. O'er hill and dell
Failed every sound. My heart stood still,
Waiting before some coming ill.
The silence was more sad and dread,
Under that canopy of lead,

Than the wild tumult of the war
That raged a little while before.
All nature, in her work of death,
Paused for one last, despairing breath;
And, cowering to the earth, I drew
From her strong breast my strength anew.

When I arose, I wondering saw Another dusty vapor draw, From the far right, its sluggish way Towards the main cloud, that frowning lay Against the westward sloping sun; And all the war was re-begun, Ere this fresh marvel of my sense Caught from my mind significance. And then-why ask me? Oh! my God! Would I had lain beneath the sod, A patient clod, for many a day, And from my bones and mouldering clay The rank field grass and flowers had sprung, Ere the base sight, that struck and stung My very soul, confronted me, Shamed at my own humanity. O happy dead, who early fell, Ye have no wretched tale to tell Of causeless fear and coward flight, Of victory snatched beneath your sight, Of martial strength and honor lost, Of mere life bought at any cost, Of the deep, lingering mark of shame, Forever scorched on brow and name, That no new deeds, however bright, Shall banish from men's loathful sight! Ye perished in your conscious pride, Ere this vile scandal opened wide A wound that cannot close nor heal. Ye perished steel to levelled steel, Stern votaries of the god of war, Filled with his godhead to the core! Ye died to live, these lived to die, Beneath the scorn of every eye! How eloquent your voices sound From the low chambers under ground! How clear each separate title burns From your high set and laurelled urns! While these, who walk about the earth, Are blushing at their very birth! And, though they talk, and go, and come, Their moving lips are worse than dumb. Ye sleep beneath the valley's dew, And all the nation mourns for you; So sleep till God shall wake the lands! For angels, armed with fiery brands, Await to take you by the hands.

The right hand vapor broader grew;
It rose, and joined itself unto

The main cloud with a sudden dash.
Loud and more near the cannon's crash
Came towards me, and I heard a sound
As if all hell had broken bound-
A cry of agony and fear.

Still the dark vapor rolled more near
Till at my very feet it tossed,
The vanward fragments of our host.
Can man, Thy image, sink so low,
Thou, who hast bent Thy tinted bow
Across the storm and raging main;
Whose laws both loosen and restrain
The powers of earth, without whose will
No sparrow's little life is still?
Was fear of hell, or want of faith,
Or the brute's common dread of death
The passion that began a chase
Whose goal was ruin and disgrace?
What tongue the fearful sight may tell?
What horrid nightmare ever fell
Upon the restless sleep of crime-
What history of another time-
What dismal vision, darkly seen
By the stern-featured Florentine
Can give a hint to dimly draw
The likeness of the scene I saw ?
I saw, yet saw not.

In that sea,
That chaos of humanity,
No more the eye could catch and keep
A single point, than on the deep
The eye may mark a single wave
Where hurrying myriads leap and rave.
Men of all arms, and all costumes,
Bare-headed, decked with broken plumes;
Soldiers and officers, and those
Who wore but civil-suited clothes;
On foot or mounted-some bestrode
Steeds severed from their harnessed load;
Wild mobs of white-topped wagons, cars,
Of wounded, red with bleeding scars;
The whole grim panoply of war
Surged on me with a deafening roar !
All shades of fear, disfiguring man,
Glared through their faces' brazen tan.
Not one a moment paused, or stood
To see what enemy pursued.

With shrieks of fear, and yells of pain,
With every muscle on the strain,
Onward the struggling masses bore.
Oh! had the foemen lain before,
They'd trampled them to dust and gore,
And swept their lines and batteries
As autumn sweeps the windy trees!
Here one cast forth his wounded friend,
And with his sword or musket-end
Urged on the horses; there one trod
Upon the likeness of his God
As if 'twere dust; a coward here
Grew valiant with his very fear,
And struck his weaker comrade prone,
And struggled to the front alone.
All had one purpose, one sole aim,
That mocked the decency of shame,
To fly, by any means to fly;

They cared not how, they asked not why
I found a voice. My burning blood
Flamed up. Upon a mound I stood;
I could no more restrain my voice
Than could the prophet of God's choice.

"Back, animated dirt!" I cried,

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Back, on your wretched lives, and hide
Your shame beneath your native clay!
Or if the foe affrights you, slay

Your own base selves; and, dying, leave
Your children's tearful cheeks to grieve,
Not quail and blush, when you shall come,
Alive, to their degraded home!
Your wives will look askance with scorn;
Your boys, and infants yet unborn,
Will curse you to God's holy face!
Heaven holds no pardon in its grace
For cowards. Oh! are such as ye
The guardians of our liberty?
Back, if one trace of manhood still
May nerve your arm and brace your will!
You stain your country in the eyes
Of Europe, and her monarchies!
The despots laugh, the peoples groan;
Man's cause is lost and overthrown!

I curse you, by the sacred blood

That freely poured its purple flood

Down Bunker's heights, on Monmouth's plain,

From Georgia to the rocks of Maine!

I curse you, by the patriot band

Whose bones are crumbling in the land!

By those who saved what these had won!

In the high name of Washington!"
Then I remember little more.

As the tide's rising waves, that pour
Over some low and rounded rock,
The coming mass, with one great shock,
Flowed o'er the shelter of my mound,
And raised me helpless from the ground.
As the huge shouldering billows bear,
Half in the sea and half in air,
A swimmer on their foaming crest,
So the foul throng beneath me pressed,
Swept me along, with curse and blow,
And flung me-where, I ne'er shall know.

When I awoke, a steady rain
Made rivulets across the plain;
And it was dark-oh! very dark.
I was so stunned as scarce to mark
The ghostly figures of the trees,
Or hear the sobbing of the breeze
That flung the wet leaves to and fro.
Upon me lay a dismal woe,
A boundless, superhuman grief,
That drew no promise of relief
From any hope. Then I arose
As one who struggles up from blows
By unseen hands; and as I stood
Alone, I thought that God was good,
To hide, in clouds and driving rain,
Our low world from the angel train
Whose souls filled heroes when the earth
Was worthy of their noble birth.
By that dull instinct of the mind
Which leads aright the helpless blind,
I struggled onward, till the dawn
Across the eastern clouds had drawn
A narrow line of watery gray;
And full before my vision lay
The great dome's gaunt and naked bones
Beneath whose crown the nation thrones
Her queenly person. On I stole,
With hanging head and abject soul,
Across the high embattled ridge,
And o'er the arches of the bridge.

So freshly pricked my sharp disgrace,
I feared to meet the human face,
Skulking, as any woman might,
Who'd lost her virtue in the night,
And sees the dreadful glare of day
Prepare to light her homeward way,
Alone, heart-broken, shamed, undone,
I staggered into Washington!

Since then long sluggish days have passed,
And on the wings of every blast
Have come the distant nations' sneers
To tingle in our blushing ears.
In woe and ashes, as was meet,
We wore the penitential sheet.
But now I breathe a purer air,
And from the depths of my despair
Awaken to a cheering morn,

Just breaking through the night forlorn,

A morn of hopeful victory.

Awake, my countrymen, with me!
Redeem the honor which you lost,
With any blood, at any cost!

I ask not how the war began,

Nor how the quarrel branched and ran

To this dread height. The wrong or right
Stands clear before God's faultless sight.
I only feel the shameful blow,
I only see the scornful foe,

And vengeance burns in every vein
To die, or wipe away the stain.
The war-wise hero of the West,
Wearing his glories as a crest
Of trophies gathered in your sight,
Is arming for the coming fight.
Full well his wisdom apprehends
The duty and its mighty ends;
The great occasion of the hour,
That never lay in human power
Since over Yorktown's tented plain
The red cross fell, nor rose again.
My humble pledge of faith I lay,
Dear comrade of my school-boy day,
Before thee, in the nation's view;
And if thy prophet prove untrue,
And from our country's grasp be thrown
The sceptre and the starry crown,
And thou, and all thy marshalled host
Be baffled, and in ruin lost;
Oh! let me not outlive the blow
That seals my country's overthrow!
And, lest this woeful end come true,
Men of the North, I tunr to you.
Display your vaunted flag once more,
Southward your eager columns pour!
Sound trump, and fife, and rallying drum;
From every hill and valley come.
Old men, yield up your treasured gold!
Can liberty be priced and sold?
Fair matrons, maids, and tender brides,
Gird weapons to your lovers' sides;

And, though your hearts break at the deed,
Give them your blessing and God speed;
Then point them to the field of fame,
With words like those of Sparta's dame;
And, when the ranks are full and strong,
And the whole army moves along,
A vast result of care and skill,
Obedient to the master will;
And your young hero draws the sword,
And gives the last commanding word

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SONGS OF THE REBELS.

"OUR SOUTHERN LAND."

From the 35th Psalm. "Plead my cause, oh Lord, with them that strive with me." 3d. "Draw out also the spear, and stop the way against them that persecute me."

Bow down thine ear, and hear, oh God!
Draw out thy spear and stop the way,
Ere Southern cities flow in blood-
Drive Northern hordes, in sore dismay,

Back to their homes the traitorous band,
And save and shield our Southern land.

Without a cause they've laid their nets,
Without a cause have digged their pits;
(While judgment lives we'll love thy laws,
Into thy hands commit our cause)-

Ensnare the base and traitorous band
In their own nets, and save our land!

"They speak not peace; " false charges they
The foulest to our doors have lain ;
No blush of shame their checks betray,
That motives such as sordid gain,

Should lead them on, the coward band-
God shield and save our Southern land!

While nations live, nor truths forgot,
While genius, honor, worth we prize-
Will sink the name of Winfield Scott
Beneath the lowest craven spies,

That follow in his Yankee band,
God save Virginia's noble land!

While Jackson, on the scroll of fame,
Inscribed with tears, for patriot's blood,
Shall live forever! and will claim
Remembrance in the book of God-

Who nobly fell our flag to save!
Immortal fills a hero's grave!

Kentucky! where's thy ancient boast?
Thy valor's gone!-thy daughters bow
In shame before thine honor lost,
And charge thee with the treachery now!
Give traitors aid, lend them thy hand,
God still will shield our native land!

The time will come, and justice waits,
When, armed with rights, our hosts go forth,
The sons of these Confederate States,
Shall sweep the army of the North

From out our great, our Southern land.
God save Jeff. Davis and our band!

-Mobile Evening News, August 12.

There's the devil to pay in the whole d-d concern,
As from Cameron, Seward, and Chase, you will learn;
Yet, though every thing here of a burst-up gives
warning,

I'm certain you'll put it all right in the morning:
So to do as I tell you, be on the alert,
For the panic's fictitious, and nobody's hurt.

I have started no war of invasion, you know;
Let who will pretend to deny it-that's so;
But I saw from the White House an impudent rag,
Which they told me was known as Jeff. Davis' flag,
A-waving above Alexandria high,

Insulting my Government, flouting the sky;
Above my Alexandria, (isn't it, Bates?
Retrocession's a humbug; what rights have the
States?)

So I ordered young Ellsworth to take the rag down,
Mrs. Lincoln, she craved it, to make a new gown;
But young Ellsworth, he kinder got shot in the race,
And came back in a galvanized burial case;
But then Jackson, the scoundrel, he got his desert;
The panic's fictitious, and nobody's hurt.

It is true I sent steamers which tried for a week
To silence the rebels down there at the creek;
But they had at Game Point about fifty or more
Rifled cannon set up in a line on the shore,
And six thousand Confederates practised to fire 'em,
(Confound these Virginians, we never can tire 'em!)
Who made game of our shooting and crippled our
fleet,

So we prudently ordered a hasty retreat;
With decks full of passengers, deadheads, indeed,
For whom of fresh coffins there straightway was need,
And still later, at Gresham's, they killed Captain

Ward

In command of the Freeborn, 'twas devilish hard!
But in spite of all this, the rebellion's a spurt;
The panic's fictitious, and nobody's hurt.

Herewith I beg leave to submit the report
Of Butler, the General, concerning the sport
They had at Great Bethel, near Fortress Monroe,
With Hill and Magruder some four weeks ago;
And here let me say a more reckless intruder
I never have known than this Colonel Magruder:
He has taken the Comfort away from Old Point,
And thrown our peninsular plans out of joint;
While in matters of warfare to him Gen'l Butler
Would scarce be thought worthy to act as a sutler,
And the insolent rebels will call to our faces
The flight at Great Bethel the "New Market Races: "
Then supersede Butler at once with whoever
Can drive this Magruder clean into the river;
And I shall be confident still to assert
That the panic's fictitious, and nobody's hurt!

'Tis my province, perhaps, herein briefly to state The state of my provinces, surly of late, Missouri and Maryland-one has the paw

MESSAGE OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN Of my Lyon upon her; and one has the law

TO THE FEDERAL CONGRESS, 4TH JULY, 1861.

Once more, Representatives, Senators, all,
You come to my Capitol, swift at my call.
'Tis well; for you've something important to do
In this most disagreeable national stew;
For since I came hither to run the machine,
Disguised in Scotch cap and in full Lincoln green,

Called martial, proclaimed through her borders and cities;

Both are crushed, a Big Thing, I make bold to say, it is.

St. Louis is silent and Baltimore dumb,

They hear but the monotone roll of my drum.
In the latter vile sea-port I ordered Cadwallader
To manacle Freedom, and though the crowd followed

her,

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