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THE COLUMBIA PHON1X. m i f, j ? t ? pa 1 1 .1 ~~ ' " ..[Original . Shadow?-?. Th?y ?om? o'er wastes of ocean hin?, Through midnight's silent depths they cerne; Npt na of. old, in innocent bloom, ; With love lb look, t ?y rise to view; With iey Iii? snd^vmlcen. eyer" Sad-strean?in^ lib? mine-own with rears The meurnfuV-gboat* of happy years, They wave w?fdJiaade.and wander by. A pallid brow and mqurnfnl glanoe, Aa if ?aeh dread regret Ware doer?, .Seek rises from hie lonely .tomb, Aad walka as ia a wilderen tran?*. I ery. the words of better day? I speak in sob? each bl?js?d nam?, My heart achill, ray brain aflame, And madness ia my staring gase. I stretch fond arms to mah? arrest, Of each oaee laved aal cherished form; Forget the death, the grave, lb* wornt, And clasp a shadow-V*'my*reast. ? Aad feel the ?old with n*w dismay- .. The cold in ?ilene?, and that ?bill, That follows fast tba nameless thrill, That makes the past a present sway. Obi sorrow! lat? each bliss, andsnin?! - . Ohl shad?wv jai* snob bloom aad bright; I know thee stiU'-thraagh eil tb? blight* That Ulis of all that oac* was then. The subtle instinct, swift te f??l, ?till traipathe^f nef ?at ?nu and- ?ye. Opleoking, piercing through th* sky. With chaileng? ?ver to reveal. ' " By all th* joys I could not los?, Which yet arejost, forever lost, Thy sad attendance, mournful ghost, I would'not, if I could, refus*. Mo living bloom s* dear ?er, be, As that which ?till for memory gi ewe, And rather I triumph in th? woes. That bring thee ?till, in meet, te me Than cherish aught.of hep? te cheer, Th? burden of th? lonesome day; To rn? tkere cannot shine a ray, So blsneing a? this midnight tear. The grief to know that joy is gen?. Hath still no ho^ab/end, to find On* promise of a hhs* aoj^ind, To make th? Memory ??i?a aloa?. What though she drink? her'own bino rein, amlf-seerifieed her hope forsakes, Dying in ev?ry draught she, take?, And brought again to life by,pain;. Yet rather sh? craves the pain, abd prays, Th? shadowy sorrow to ber sid? ; Mere bless'e than if .a loving brid?, Ewe warm and wooing on her gas?. Egeria, the Mose of Counsel. IV. APOTHEGM^. The apothegm is tho most portable form of Truth. Though stern of law, invariable ?sWMrtion, and inflexible itt essentials, she if jet so flexible of form, that she accom? modates herself to any compass. She maj ba compared to that Afrite, among the oriental genii, sealed up by Solomon, who could be compressed into a quart bottle, yet, escaping, could expand into a column reaching to the skies. The apothegm strikes home to the conviction, when the argurasnt foils to reach the esr, the pro verb teaches when the sermon halts, as a well charged pistol will do more execution than a whole barrel of gunpowder ex? ploded idly in the air. V. APPLICATION OF THE PROPBK MORALS. You can only reach the proposed result by an adaptation of 'the proper moral to the special object. You apply to the sub? ject the only Argument which will reach him. Words to the deaf are impertinent; colors to the blind are a mock; and the odor of flowers to him who has lost bis olfactories might as well be sssafotida. Tho moral of th? steed lies is the spur of tb? rider; of th? slavs in the eye and will of his master; of the woman in the sense of her weakness sud dependence, to which all edscation should address itself. X?. COKSf RVATISaf. With the weak and vulgar mind. Con servatiam implies nothing more than to keep things aa they are, ao matter how wanting in propriety and susceptible of im? prorement-a condition agreeable only to the timid, and to those in power. But this sort of Conservatism is, in fact, destruc? tiveness-end has been probably the true but aeoret cause of the overthrow of eo ctetiea and commonwealths. The tm?' law of the race is progress and development. Whenever civilisation pauses in tb? march of conquest, it ts overthrown by the bar bsrian. The people that cease to advance, in th? notion that their mission is ended, and their development complete, from that moment begins to dedin?, ead must go ra pidly to dacey. The Conservatism which hopes to retard a legitimate progress, will inevitably be crushed in its march. All such efforts may ba likened to that of Ute feeble old man who attempts to arrest the speed of the locomotive, by thrusting his gold-headed crutch between its wheels. Trufj Conservatism is rather the bold spirit which leaps into the car of progress, and, teiziug upon th? reim, directs its move? incuts with a firm hand, and an eye that sees the proper goal fur which the race should aim. V|I. PATRIOTISM. He who labors for mankind without a care for himself, has already begun his im? mortality. He who begins his work with self-sacrifice, calls God's special sanction upon his life, sod- is the certain object of bia special csre. We gain from society only aa we give. To accumulate, without giving out, is to suffocate the human in our nature. Io this respect we are like the fountain, which, unless it ba drawn from freely, will choke . with its own- accumu? lations, and stagnate in its volume, though it may be .pure in its spring. Doing, alone, ts blessing, sad to do for a people, is a ser? vice directly rendered to God. For Sale or Bent. f "XQTTAGR HOUSE containing fi ve roora? W end necessary oat-buildings, with sixty airca .af latid attached, two milos and a half from the City, Ineuire at this effi??. .A*>rili? J For Beat, ?A LARGE and COMMODIOUS RESI? DENCE on Senat? street, between Sumter farica streets. The house eon'aius eight rooms; the serrants' house? are ample. Apply to A. R PHI ttl PS, April 18 fq? At Dr. Qeiger> ~ Headquarters, COLUMBIA, S. C., Aram 19, 18C5. NOTICE is hereby giren that no PASSES will be granted at these headquarter*, te any one, for tn? purpose of entering the ene? my's lines.' Passes tor saab purpose mast be obtained from Che Secretary of War. By order A. F. RUDLER. Col. Com'g. W. J. MBAtrso. A. A. A. G._April 'iO Headquarters, den. Johnston's Army. GENERAL ORDERS NO. 14. IT is announced to the army uial a suspension of arms has beau agreed upon, pending ne? gotiations between the two Governments. J>U ?ng ?ts continuance, the-two armies are to occu? py their-present positions, a -J Bf command General JOHNSTON- > Aacaaa ANPzosotf, Lient. CeL and A. A. ?K April aa _ Headquarters. - COLUMBIA, S. C., Aran, f, 18?*. CIRCULAR ALL Officers on Poet Duty,at thia place will malt ? a report to these Headquarters of aH mea attached to their respective departments, who are entitled to draw rations at this post. All provision returns moat be mad? cub at tb? departments and approved at these Headquar? ters. By order A. F. RUDLER, Gel. Com'dg. W. J. Mr, A use, A. A. A. Q. April lp Headquarters, NEAR SMITHFIELD, N. C, Amt, 7, IS??. SPECIAL ORDER N?. %%-MwiriM. ** ? . . VMAJ. GEN. MANSFIELD LOVELL is . assigned to cemmaad ia the State es" South Carolina. * * . * By command of Gen. J. E. JOHNSTON. KiKLooa FALCONER, A. A. G. ITEADQ'kS DIST. OF SOUTH CAROLINA; i Aram IS, IMS. ORDER NO. 1. In compliance with tho above order?, tb? undersigned hereby assumes command ha thia * State. Until the names of the staff ar? an? nounced, officiai ootnrmnicatioua to thea? heed tiuartere will ba addressed to Lieut. J. M. B. LOVELL, Acting A. A. G. at Columbia. April 14 M. LOVELL, Major General, ?te.g Headquarters; COLUMBIA 8. C., MABOU 31, lSSi-H SPBOIA L ORDER NO. -Copy. aBCsfe J?UK CARSTEN is h?reby appointed Aotiag Provost Marshal of this city nntil further orders. He will be obeyed aa'd respected ac? cord in gly. Bv order' A F. RUDLER, Col. Comm'dg. ; W. J. Ma.\l.t.\u. A. A. A; G. April 4 Headquarters HihjEviy. of the West, AUGUSTA, MAROK 4, 1865. SPECIAL FIELD ORDERS NO. If. I[Mriren4.J COt. A. F. RUDLER ia hereby amiga?? ? a? Commandant of th? Pott at Cohnabia S. O. * * . . ? ?'? By command Gea. BEAUREGARD. Official: Gao. V7. BBBMT, Ooh and A. A. Qt. HEADQUARTERS, OeuwBu.a 0" March 15, ISM. GENERAL ORDERS NO. 1. In orjodienee to th? above cr?er, I hereby assume oom ra and of this Poet. By order ?f A. F. RUDLER, T<*& _ Colonel Osesmeadbg. - W. J. Msataw, A, A, A. Sr. laaseh Si