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1865.]
At Andersonville.
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The brigantine is bringing
  Her cargo to the quay,
The sloop flits by like a butterfly,
  The schooner skims the sea.
O young heart's trust, beneath the crust
  Of a chilling world congealed!
O love, whose flow the winter of woe
  With its icy hand hath sealed!

Learn patience from the lesson!
  Though the night be drear and long,
To the darkest sorrow there comes a morrow,
  A right to every wrong.
And as, when, having run his low course, the red Sun
  Comes charging gayly up here,
The white shield of Winter shall shiver and splinter
  At the touch of his golden spear,—

Then rushing under the bridges,
  And crushing among the piles,
In gray mottled masses the drift-ice passes,
  Like seaward-floating isles;—
So Life shall return from its solstice, and burn
  In trappings of gold and blue,
The world shall pass like a shattered glass,
  And the heaven of Love shine through.


AT ANDERSONVILLE.

DRAKE TALCOTT, a Union prisoner, marched with other prisoners seventy-five miles to Danville, on thirteen crackers. They travelled from there to Andersonville, six days by rail, on four crackers a day, and, as a consequence of the rations, came in due course of time to a general sense of emptiness, and an incorrigible tendency to think of roast beef, boiled chicken, fried oysters, and other like dainties; and many of the prisoners, after battling awhile with the emptiness and the mental tendency, fell down exhausted, and were stowed away in the wagons following on in the rear of the train. But Talcott, though with youth and the brawn and muscle and lusty craving vitality of an athlete against him in the cracker point of view, possessed likewise a mighty will, and a stubborn, tenacious endurance, nowise weakened by the discipline of two years of camp and battle; and not only marched with courage and elasticity, but actually set himself, out of the abundance of his resources, to spur the flagging spirits of his comrades, as they huddled in disconsolate confusion about the little station at Andersonville.

"Boys," said our orator," the Rebels keep their best generals for their Home Guard. Guard. Lee and Early, and the rest of the crew, are lambs and sucking doves to Generals Starvation, Wear-'em-out, and Grumble,—especially that last-named fellow, who is the worst of the three, because he comes under our