Pass JT'^- S" } Book -K It) ?^ M o ]sr s .NATIONAL VICTORIES NATIONAL SORROW. PREACHED, APRIL 23cl, 1865, IN THK PLYMOUTH CHURCH. By the Pastor, E. P. POWELL. SMITH i I'O.STEH, PIUXTICKS, OPPOSITE LAWREXCK IIOTKL. N I SERM OI^S OK EECEKT NATIOx\AL VICTORIES, NATIONAL SORROW. PREACHED, APRIL 23D, 1865, IN THK pr^YMOUTH CHURCH, By the Pastor, E. P. POWELIi. r §tfltian, pich., SMITH A FOSTKU, PUINTEKS, OPPOSITE LAWRENCE IIOTKL. 1865. n ^ 1 SERMON, APPllOPEIATlS TO THE OBSEQUIES OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN. John 11, 50. — "Consider that it is expedient foi- us that one man should e()ple. while I'hillijis strove to drive them. Yet the 4 Sbkmon Appropkiate to thb Convention passed by Seward, in their choice for President. Old men who loved his greatness and gloried in his strength, frat down like children and wept. They looked to Attorney General Bates. In him some saw the model gentleman, who by a wise conservatism, reserved dignity, and soundness of judgment would be just the man to combine conflicting elements. He was to be the oil on the waters of threatened secession. But tliey passed by Bates. They looked, I am sorry to add, at Simon Cameron, the Simon Magus of American politics. All these were men of note, ability, and great personal and political strength. But it was as when Samuel was sent to the family of Jesse to anoint a King over Israel. Eliab passed be- fore him, and he said surely this is the Lords anointed. But the ].iord said look not on his countenance, for the Lord seeth not as man seeth ; for man looketh on the outward appearance ; but the Lord looketh on the heart. And nine other sons pass- ed by, but the Lord refused them all. But David the youngest was tending sheep, and when the prophet insisted on his being sent for, the Lord said This is he, anoint him. Thus our old leaders and Statesmen were passed by, and the people invited to give their suffrages to Abraham Lincoln. The name was somewhat familiar to the American people, as that of the only man on the prairies who could face Stephen A. Douglas. The clioice was simply a direction of Providence. Lincoln never would have been the choice of the majority of voters, had not a Convention first selected him. Seward, or Chase, or McLean were decidedly more in popular lavor. A man who never in his life received but one years school edu- cation ; a farm boy chopping a clearing in the forest at ten ; a hired hand on a river flat boat at nineteen ; at twenty-one » rail splitter, living in a log cabin of his own building; at twenty- two a boat builder, at twelve dollars a month ; at twenty-four a store keeper, and poor at that ; at twenty-five a Postmaster ; »t twenty-six a Surveyor ; at twenty-seven a member of the Legislature; at twenty-eight a Lawyer; at thirty-five Presiden. tial Elector; at thirty-seven a Representative in Congress; at fifty-one President of the the United States. He was not the first choice of the people ; but lie was t.h« Obsequies of Arraham Lincoln. 5 choice of God. A work was to be done, which we can see now, no man could or would have achieved, as lias Lincoln. A keener Statesman would have had his preconceived views, and endeavored to compel ev6nts to develop in a given chan- nel. The glory of this Administration is that it has not in- quired of precedents, but moved with the movements of Provi- dence. Lincoln taught us a new rule of statesmanship "The Logic of Events," and the most hopeful indication of the new Administration is, that President Johnson declares he shall be guided by the same rule. The man who should have striven to guide the past four years, by previous years, would have ruined us. Seward with that keenness of intellect that cleaves marble, had his party ties, his preconceived views, and would probably have run afoul of Providence. The work to be done was to watch the foul fiend of Slavery in its death struggle ; to hold the helm of State in a most terrible civil war; to proclaim liberty to the captive; to enshrine himself in the heaits of his people next to Washington ; and after a laborious, saddening Adininistration in the hour of victory, alas to die for his people and his coimtry. The character of our departed President was new ; it was a western American conglomerate, petrified by trial into a marble as hard and pure as that of Paros. He was a western Yankee. Losing the penuriousness of the Yankee who delves the rocks of Connecticut ; made generous by the fertility of the prairies, his mind widened out to a broader scope by the rich valleys of our great rivers, the western Yankee adds a quaint coat of mail to his character — a humor that protect* liim from the wear of business and care. Lincoln Avas a re- presentative man of the Great West. His humoi-, scorned by the sedater statesman, looked on at first distrustfully by the patriot, no doubt saved him from being crushed with anxiety and labor. We could not, and cannot appreciate how terrible a weight, we as the American people, j)laeed on his shoulders ; nor how providential was that minute trait of character that stood by him to lift the heavy helmet from his brain. When Kings used to rule, instead of having Ministers to rule for them they relieved themselves by retaining at Court a humorous; jester to stir them to laughter. The humor of Lim-oln was- Sermon Appropriate to tue the Kings fool of his character j but it bore him as important ;i part as liissedater judgment. Another prominent and even rcmarkaV)le cliaracteristic of the deceased was his kindliness of disposition. He seemed trvily horn to be the Father of a Nation. " Tyrant !" He was the last man in America to be styled tyrant. His soul was as gentle as Cowper's, or the Apostle John's. He Avas incapable of ill will. Only his oath and his duty ever made him the helmsman in a time of war. And it was just this grand royal benevolence of heart, that made his assassination the death of the Rebellion. We were just about to follow his beloved guidance to an amnesty, we fear. Far sighted lovers of their country had only one fear, that the one who had steered thi'ough the sea of war, might not weather the breakers along the shore of peace. Would it do to par- don treason? Could we, as was hinted, "aiford to be gene- rous ?" The old ship of the Confederacy was surely sinking ; would it do to calk it, if only they Avould run up the Stars and Stripes, and set ashore their cargo of slaves ? We knew their ship was not far from sinking, when that crafty old Mississippi rat. Hangman Foote, took to the watei'. It seemed more cer- tain when Hunter, Stephens and Campbell ran out the white Hag, saying, "let us negotiate." The fate of the Rebellion was still more certain as we heard the tramp of Sherman, storming States and outflanking the Alleghanies. But when bavis fled, and Lee surrendered, and Richmond was ours, we l>egan to remember the goodness of the Presidents heart, and we feared that after all, Davis might not sink. But, my friends, they scuttled their own ship, when they shot Abraham Lincoln. We know now their doom. Atnnesty is no longer thought of for wholesale murderers. The nation, almost unani- mously, shouts down to that world where God consigns his rebels, saying, make way d in his deal!', even l»y those lie had conquered. Each was elected to a second term of office ; and that too by a spontaneous outburst of national confidence. Yet were they unlike in this ; Washington was a creative genius, out of chaos producing a stable government, a government uni a will to obey, to turn from our sins, and act righteously, our future shall surely be grander than the imagination can pamt. And now, Abraham Lincoln we bid thee a tender farewell. It is because we owe thee, under God, so great a debt that we mourn for thee so deeply. If tears would restore thee, surely this nation would call thee back. We do what we can ; we go down in sad procession Lo accompany thee to the borders ot another life. Three millions of freedmen come after thee, chanting God bless Massa Lincoln. Twenty millions of Iree- born come kneeling at thy grave, (iod bless our dear 1 resi- dent ' One hundred thousand mothers who gave their boys , one hundred thousand wives who gave their husbands; tive hundred thousand orphans that g:>vo their fathers, come and without exception, pray, 0.i Go-l bless him who so loved and cared for our sons and fathers. .,,.,, i • One man was found in all America, who could kill Inm. Millions would die to restore him to life. ^4 REQuiEir FOR President LijfcoL:^. FOR PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOL^. " Now wake the requiem's solemn moan. For him whose patriot task is done I A Xation's heai't stands still to-Jay With horror, o'er his martyred clay ! 0, God of Peace, repress the ire, Which fills our souls with vengeful fire! Vengeance is thine, and Sovereign might, Alon«, can such a crime requite! Farewell,thon good and guileless heart ! The manliest tear for thee must start ! E'en those at times who blamed thee here. Now deeply sorrow o'er thy bier! Jesns, grant him sweet repose, Who seemed, like thee, to love his foes! These loes, like thine, their wrath to spend, Have slain their best, their firmest friend." GLORIA. Ppaiae God from whom all blessings flow ! Praise him all sorrowing hearts below! Praise him above, ye martyred host, Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost. SERMON, APPEOPRL\TE TO THE OBSEQUIES OF -JEFFERSON DAVIS, AND THE SOUTHERN CONFEDERACY. Roiuxs, 9, 17.—" The Scripture saith uuto Pharaoh ; even for this same piirpose have I raised thee up, that I might show my power in thee, and that my name might be declared in all the earth. " Every man is raised up for a purpose. Pharaoh, though as free to become the emancipator of the Israelites, was never- theless an example of stubborn resistance to what seemed inevitable ; a vain conceited believer in his own omnipotence ; bringing ruin upon liimself and his people, by his arrogant resistance to God. It was evident that the days of Hebrew slavery were ended ; yet Pharaoh endured plagues upon his person, on his neighbors, on crops and trees, on revenue, on cattle, and on the lives of all the first bom, before he would obey the command to "let my people go." And after they had even departed, he pursued them down into the Red Sea, and met the fate that he deserved— the death of a fool. Now in our own day, God has raised up the precise after- type of Pharaoh ; Jeffei-son Davis, the Chairman of the late Confederate States. A better King in Egypt would have delayed the emanci- pation of the Israelites. Abetter Senator than Jefferson Davis would have delayed the emancipation of America. His object was certainly anything but pious or patiiotic, yet, like Pharaoh, his very madness God overruled for glorious and good ends. A believer in Calhounism ; first, a repudiator of State debts, he grew in wickedness as he grew in years, until he 1Q Sermon Appropkiate to the paid : Go to now, let us destroy this great American Union, and get to ourselves a great name. Let us establish a Con- federacy of aristocracy, where we may rule perpetually. Its corner stone shall be African slavery ; its Kings shall be I and mine forever. His object was to aggrandize himself; to perpetuate human slavery ; to get free from the irritation of honest industry, and equality with northern mechanics. To do this he would plot, steal, destroy, repudiate, secede. He thoufrht to take off one half of our territory, and make it a private possession. There were others equally wicked and gnilty, but Davis by common consent, was toreraost of the guilty' crew. This was his plan— but the Lord God had an- other. The Almighty heard the cry of four millions of bonds- men pleading, Oh^Lord ! how long? how long?— Massa Jesus come to deliver ? He saw the finest part of America blighted by slavery; its streams, that might have been Uned with Low- ells and Lynns, idly rolling to the sea. Its inhabitants starv- ing with aristocracy, and besotted with inertness; few schools, and those taught by Northerners; its soil being exhausted by ignorance, and desolation creeping over the whole. God meant to put a new soul into the South ; to give it hands that could work; heads that could think, and hearts that could feel He meant to open the mill-streams to Yankee inventions, and send district schools into the sunny valleys. He meant to commingle this great nation, and abolish Mason's and Dixon s line- to show the poor whites of the South what fools they were in hating Yankees ; to end the long discussion concern- ing slavery; to preach deliverance to the captive, and to let the oppressed go free. And He meant that Jefferson Davis should be the main instrument in doing it. You say Zmcolru No Lincoln did not go one step fsxrther than Davis compelled ^'"ToaccompUshthis work of the Lord, needed a peculiar man He must first be ambitious-ravened with a desire to rule. He must be proudly obstinate, so as to hold on to the end He must be able and cunning, in order to lead the South. He must be unscrupulous in ways and means. He must be an overbearing aristocrat,-the exact and complete type of slaveholding aristocracy. It needed a man who could orgamze Obsequies op Jefferson Davis. 17 and consummate a terrible rebellion; who would not hesitate to shed rivers of blood, and wade through it to power ; a man •who could gloat in the ruin of his country, the defilement of its flag, the misery of its mothers ; and rejoice in the prospect of the carnage and plunder of Northern cities. All this was found in Jefferson Davis. Slavery must die in such a way as to make its death its worst curse, that hereafter it might lie under the execrations of the whole human race. Such was the work that Davis planned — such also the work evidently planned for him. Now let us see what he achieved, and how well he did it. His reign has continued for about four years. At the be- ginning of that period, there were fifteen States in which sla- very was soundly intrenched. It was estimated that it could not be driven from them under half a century. Even Lincoln, at his inauguration, distinctly declared his inability, by right, to interfere with State Institutions. Had it not been for Davis, he never would have touched them. But thanks to aris- tocratic Davis, the work of fifty years has been achieved in four. Human bondage is a shadow, where it exists in name. The Emancipation Proclamation trembled long on Lincoln's pen, but every victory of the South made it more a ne- cessity. And the Lord hardened Davis' heart, till the contraband thing began to be a trench-digger ; aud the spade-user grew up into a musket-holder ; and at last a negro regiment march- ed into Richmond singing John Brown. John Brown's soul has been more troublesome than his body, and what is worse it can't be hung. It marched to Missouri and made it a free State ; to Maryland, to West Virginia, to Tennessee, and set up everywhere new and free governments. It stopped at Governor Wise's parlor and opened a negro school. Four years ago the sound of war was just breaking over us ; and we shuddered to think of our prosperity, our commerce, aU under the blight of blood shedding. We dreaded to think of the future. Fort Sumpter was the first scene ; Bull Run bloody, disastrous, teirifying, was the second ; Ball's Bluff, Shiloh, the Peninsula grave-digging succeeded. Buell's blun- ders, McClellan's indecisions, Halleck's lines of circumvalla tion in the swamps of Corinth, — which ended in taking the 18 Sermon Appeopriate to the village, but nobody in it ; all these sickened us. Then cama the ti-eacher) that ruined Pope and defeated Bm-nside. Gene- rals bidding for the enemies votes for President; pirates ruining our commerce. But what a magnificent change has four years wrought. Gettysburg, Chattanooga, New Orleans, Mobile, Wilmington ; Sherman's circumnavigation of Secessia; Grant's garroting of Richmond ; Lee's army capitulated ; Mosby surrendered ; in fact the old giant, armless, headless, legless, a miserable trunk of lies and sins and filth, only cum- bers the ground till we can learn how best to bury it. By the light of recent successes, it is extremely entertain- ing to read a certain comic paper, published if I remember rightly, last Autumn. It reads: " Resolved, That this Convention does explicitly declare, as the sense of the American people, (it can't mean the com- mon sense,) that after four years of failure, to restore the Union by the experiment of war ! during which under the pre- tense of a military necessity, or war power higher than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and public liberty and private right alike trodden down, and the material prosperity of the country essentially impaired; justice, humanity, liberty aud the public welfare demand that immediate efibrts be made for a cessation of hos- tilities." The modern title of this publication is, I believe Vallandigham's Platform, — a sort of gang plank thrown out, from the wharf of political rats to the ship of State. Its an- cient title was Benedict Arnold's Proclamation. I think John Brown's soul must have been at Chicago just then, and I think if spirits laugh, it laughed right heartily. It seems so decidedly fossil, that I am not sure but the Chicago Platform was some old petrifaction of the dark ages, come to the surface in 1864; or like those antediluvian elephants, that sometimes thaw out of the Siberian icebergs, flesh, hide and hair all on, and as much like life, as anything that has been dead fifty centuries can be. Indeed, may it not be, that that convention was a myth, and never occurred at all. In ten years its own actors will prove conclusively that they were not there. Take Fernando Wood's word for it — if he write his Obsequies of Jefferson Davis. 19 autobiography ten years hence, and it will turn out that not Wendell Phillips, but he was High Priest of abolitionism. Four years ago a Peace Convention sat in Washington to pacify the aristocrats. They recommended that tlie Constitu- tion be amended so that Congress should be forbidden to abolish or interfere, within any State, with the domestic in- stitutions thereof, including that of persons held to labor or servitude by the laws of said State. Now, instead of such ^n amendment, we have recommended byCongress, and sure of ultimate adoption, an Amendment forever forbidding slavery in these States. Thanks to Jefferson Davis for that A little less mad, and you could to-day have held us by the throat, while you lashed your negroes in the Capitol. Four years ago Churches were torn ; sects dissected ; re- ligious societies divided, until we had a slaveholding, slave - defending religion; Free Press divines; others dumb on the great sin of oppression. It was well, for they branded them- selves corrupt. But now who so loud in their condemnation of dead BlsLYeryl who so brave in denouncing human bondage! Jefferson Davis you have healed up the Churches ; taught the ministers the pure gospel ; but really we do not know as we ought to be grateful to you for sending back your pack of hypocrites, just as cowardly and wicked as ever, into the com- pany of honest Christians. But never mind — the next moral battle that comes will point them out as betore. Four years ago we had for our distinguished leaders, Frank- lin Pierce, John B. Floyd, Toucey, Yancey, and James Buchan- an ; illustrious men ! Now we have Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, Philip Sheridan ; and in peaceful coun- cil equally honored and beloved Statesmen. The royal list of American heroes under the old regime ended with Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. The war began at once to shelve the effete relics, and ruling slaves of cotton, and called loudly for men. It tried thoroughly and patiently relay after relay of Generals. The American people tender and just toward all then* leaders, insisted that each should have a lair trial. Up came from all avenues of trade and artisanship, Scott, Mc- Dowell, Buell, McClellan, and Hooker. Each had a full 20 Sermon Appkopriate to the and fair trial ; and each slowly sank with the pity of all the nation into comparative obscurity. We needed no more tricksters ; no more eloquent Generals. The war growing heavy, and and absorbing the largest armies the world had ever seen, called for men of work, of genius, of unselfish patriotism; of nerve, and courage and piety. And thank God they were found. Abraham Lincoln was not at first such a man. The war made him. It gave him a clearer headed statesmanship; it modified his mingled pliability and stub- bornness into a resolute will. It converted him to God. — General Sherman has been called out from among our thirty millions, as the one who can perform the most complicated marches and evolutions, and produce the most accurate com- binations, and eternally outflank everything, and make his foe feed him ; and do it all modestly, and give credit to his superi- or. Philip Shei'idan is given us as the young model of a new order of Young America ; piire, fearless, irresistible,? and modest. Sheridan and Custer gentle and loving as sisters, brave as only such gentle natures can be — brave as boasters never are ; are the twin children of Victory. But above them all, eminent in every grace and power of genius ; as complete a man as America has produced since Washington; the man that the war waited for ; the man that it would not do for the war to close without ; the man that unfound, the war could not close, is Ulysses S. Grant. In these few men, brought into promi- nence and power by the foi'ce of very merit, the nation pos- sesses a gift compensative for the whole war. We go into the contest leaderless, irresolute; with a race of effete. Godless, unpatriotic rulers; we come out having found a score of men, not only to lead us in war, but to rule us in peace. May Grant live, like Washington, to exercise in the councils of peace as benign an influence as in, the councils of war, — President of forty United States. Four years ago, a hound-chased fugitive, fleeing to the portico of our National Capitol, under the shadow of our Goddess of Liberty, kneeling and clinging to the granite steps, praying in the name of God and humanity, could be torn away and driven under lash and curse to the shambles, and Obsequies of Jefferson Davis. 21 not even a Senator — not our President dare protect him. A slave might kneel on Plymouth Rock, and kissing its cold mementoes of liberty, pray that he might not be returned to an infuriated master, and to a grave in the rice swamps or the cotton fields of Legree. Yet a United States Marshal would manacle him, there, in the very lootprints of Winslow ; and a United States Judge would sentence him ; and a Unite d States police force would hand him back to bondage. A slave might then weep in the touching strains of Mrs. Browning : " I stand on the mark, beside the shore, Of the first white pilgrims bended knee, Where exile turned to ancestor ; And God was thanked for liberty. I have run thro' the night, my skin is as dark I bend my knee down on this mark, I look on the sky and the sea ! O pilgrim souls! I speak to you; I see you come out proud and slow. From the land of Spirits, pale as dew, And round me, and round nie ye go O pilgrims ! I have gasped and run, All night long, from the whips of one. Who in your names works sin and woe. And thus I thought that I would come, And kneel here, where ye knelt before. And feel your souls around me hum. In undertone, to the ocean's roar; And lift my black fiice, my black hand Here, in your names, to curse this land. Ye blessed in freedom's evermore. I am black! I am black! And yet God made me — they say. But if lie did so, smiling back. He must have cast his work away. Under the feet of his white creatures, With a lools of scorn, that the dusky features Might be trodden again to clay. And yet He has made dark things. To be glad and merry as light. There's a little dark bird, sits and sings; There's a dark stream ripples out of sight. And the dark frogs chant in the safe morass; And the sweetest stars are made to pass O'er the face of the darkest night. But WE who are dark, we are dark. Ah God we have no stars ! About our souls in care and cnrk. Our blackness shuts like prison bars : The poor souls crouch so far behind That never a comfort can they find. By reaching through the prison bars." 22 Sermon Appropriate to the But to-day, the blackest man in America may kneel be- side the whitest on Plymouth Rock, and kiss it as the first mile-stone on the road to universal freedom ; and on the steps of the Capitol, he may stand as shackleless and inde- pendent as a Senator, — nay he may yet enter the doors as Senator. Thank Jefferson Davis for that ! Four years ago the black man was not a competent wit- ness. Now in the Supreme court of the United States a Senator introduces a lawyer black enough to be king of Congo, and the Chief Justice orders him sworn in as Attorney. Thank Jefferson Davis for that. Four years ago, Toombs pledged himself some day to cal his slave roll from Bunker Hill Monument. Let Massachusetts now invite him to fulfill his promise. Let him stand, the fossil of dead bondage, on the granite type of eternal free- dom. Let the old Bay State, in mass-meeting, be there to respond for the slave. Hear him ! "Bill ; very black, brand- ed on his left cheek with an S. " " Here ! here ! answer fifly thousand freemen from old Hampden. Here, by the grace of God, among us his brothers ; and that S on his cheek no longer means slave, but somebody." "Pompey ; six feet, well built, intelligent — a first-class carpenter." "Here ! here ! comes down a voice from the Berkshire hills ; here, and aa free as the air that whistles through the pines, that he shapes by his trade." "George ; almost white ; his back much cut up from having often run away, and been flogged." "Down here, growls the fisherman of Cape Cod ; down here, and when yon can count the sand along our shore, and the waves of our blue sea, you shall have him back again." "Pompey ; can read and write ; managed to steal his learning in spite of lashes." "Here, here, thunders Wendell Phillips, from among the Temples of Boston ; here and a lawyer pleading now for others rights instead of his own." And the spirits of the old Pilgrim Fathers, rise around Plymouth Rock, to answer to the call ; and Governor Winthrop, and Saintly Hooker, and the ancestors of free American Institutions, and Warren, and Putnam, and John Adams, and John Hancock, and old Miles Standish rise to wave down this dealer in human flesh ; this modern abortion of freedom. They wave him down from Obseques op Jeffekson Davis. 23 that sacred spire of liberty ; and bid him follow dead slavery, into the dark tomb of the past, forever and forever. And Jesus Christ shall roll to the door a great stone sealed -'Liberty to the Captive." Four years ago a Northern Sheet published the following diatribe: "Abolitionism! This ism has a well earned name. It has abolished good feeling between the north and south. It has abolished the lives of tens of thousands of brave white men. It has abolished the Union. It has abolished happy homes for thousands of its darling negroes. It has abolished the Constitution. It has abolished peace and security. It has abolished the respect we commanded abroad as a nation. It has abolished some ot the best military officers of the age. It has abolished gold and silver coin. It has abolished low prices. It has abolished the Habeas-corpus. It has abolished the Trial by Jury. And finds itself at last, like Jean Paul's grandfather, exceeding poor and pious, with little left worth abolishing." Without contradicting these assertions, the time has now come for completing the list. It has abolished James Buch- anan, Franklin Pierce and the like ilk from the White House. It has abolished Hardee from Charlestown, Pemberton from Vicksburg, Buckner fi-om Donaldson, Beauregard from several places, Lee from Richmond. It has abolished black laws from our state statute books. It has abolished slave pens, and cat-o-nine-tails, and gang drivers, and manacles from the Capi- tal of the United States. It has abolished the infamous Fugitive Slave law and the Taney Dred Scott Decision. I has abolished human bondage from America. It has abolish. ed ignorance, and set up schools throughout the South. It has abolished the contempt in which we were held by foreign powers. It has abolished a mixed currency and breaking banks. It has abolished Nullification, Secession and Repudia- tion. It has abolished all the F. F. Vs and the conceit of aristocrats. It has abolished injustice, unrighteousness, and iniquity more in four years than seemed possible. Thank the Lord for Jefferson Davis, for without him Abolitionism would still be in the minority. And now thank God it nas abolished Jeff. too. 24 Sermon Appropriate to the Four years ago Jefferson Davis made a speech to the Ala- baraians. In it he said, "The grass will grow in the northern cities, where the pavements have been worn by the tread of Commerce. We will carry war where it is easy to advance, where food for the sword and torch await the armies in densely populated cities." To day Sherman has just circumnavigated the whole Confederacy, capturing a string of Capitols, and his boys have helped wear down the luxuriant grass in a dozen Southern Cities. Four years ago. Parson Brownlow was a prisoner and then a fugitive ; plundered of his property, and in danger of his life. To-day he is governor of Tennessee; and Andrew Johnson, who could live in his native state, only with an army to defend him, is President of the United States. Four years ago, every man of northern birth was banished from the south, as an alien, or forced to serve in the ranks. It was even good foi'- tune to escape with lite, and without violence. To day, those who hanged and plundered, are begging rations of those they treated with savage barbarity. Four years ago millions of honest debts, owed to the north, were repudiated and all unionists plundered. To day, in the wake of war, every debt is to be collected, and every sufferer reimbursed from his perse- cutors. Four years ago the London Times declared, "The Great Republic is dead." English Lords, with illy concealed joy, uttered many a funeral oration at its obsequies. Now Lazarus steps forth from the tomb, with the new health that Jesus gives to the sorely tried. Is the young Repnblic dead? By the grace of God we believe it is but just at its majority. It was nearer dying when its President was an imbecile ; when its Senate contained a majority of traitors ; when fire-eaters hurled defiance at law from Halls of Congress ; when Floyd was peacably stealing our artillery and munitions of war, we were then fast disintegrating. It was doubtful whether we were anything more than thirty petty, independent principalities. The Constitution was used only as a fetter, to bind us from de- fending our nationality. But, thanks be to Jefferson Davis, he led off his horde of destructionists. He marshalled them in open warfare. He rid us of a secret, insidious, slow destruc- tion — and we are not dead. To day we stand, anticipating a Obsequies op Jefferson Davis. 25 future more glorious than the past, a thousand fold. We see the pure flag, unshamed by bondage, unstained by blood, from mount Katandin to the Sierra-Nevada. We see a people, ce- mented by suffering as well as by prosperity; baptized by blood to a holier use of its liberties. We believe that we owe to this Revolution lessons that will be elements of strength. It has taught us that peace can- not be preserved by sacrificing the right. We have learned the value of Union, and a strong centralized Government. We have a sturdier, better-nerved national manhood. We have opened the fens of ignorance in the South, and taught them what we are. The people will henceforth be one, as as well as the soil. We have learned our power and resources- and yet we are a more modest, less boastful nation. We have shown our teeth to all the world ; and John Bull, looking in, has found them iron clad and double plated ; and yet we have little desire to become a warring Republic. Dead ! Dead ! We were sick. Slavery was a terrible dis- ease. By the help of Davis it is cut out ; the wound will soon heal. Our vitality is not gone. Purer, braver, truer, more Godly, we stand up to the task of another century. But to me, looking at this matter from the standpoint of a christian, by far the proudest achievement of the past four years, is our progress as a nation in righteousness. Then we were almost atheistic. Our public councils ignored the King of Kings. Now, however much we may mourn the intem- perance, profanity and licentiousness of the land ; yet there are, everywhere, individual evidences that this nation is grow- ing toward God, Our coin comes to us with a stamp, that says, they have found God in the mint, down among the money bags. Our President, trusting in policy at the outset, or only coldly acknowledging his dependence on a higher power, showed in every new state paper, a growth in faith, humility and finally, in love for God. Wall Street, that used only to sing, praise Cotton from which all blessings flow; can noAv sing, Praise God from whom all blessings flow. There never was an army before with so many christian Generals in it, — though at the outset we were led by those of a very different order. Converted on the field too, many of them. Our politicians, 26 Seemon Appeopeiatb to the Avith apparent faith, are frequent in their references to Provi- dence. The nation feels that God has saved it. It sees the hand of God in the course of the war so evident that it cannot deny it. Such my fellow citizens has been the work of the past four years ; it has been the work of fifty ! We are now really living, where but for Jefferson Davis, we should have been living in the twentieth century. A mad aristocrat ; leading a horde of mad slaveholders ; ambitions, stubborn ; blind with rage, and hate, and pride, and love of power, has been our Pharaoh. God has been our pillar of fire by night, and our cloud by day ; Lincoln om- Moses ; and Johnson follows to perfect the work. Since writing this sermon, I have come acfoss the obituary of an old colored woman, who confirms my view of the rebel potentate. Peggy was her name ; and aright shrewd observer was she. Her chief fear was lest the rebels should get less than they deserved. Her prayer was, "Oh Lord save Jeff. Davis, because he is the best friend the colored people ever had. He is the soul of the rebellion. Take him away, or Idll him and things will fall right back into the old ways. May the Lord preserve Jeff. Davis, to keep up the fight, tiU the slave- holders are so whipped that they'll never crow again." Peggy had no idea of our fighting a great war and yet standing at its close just where we stood at the outset. Nor do we. It seems like an age since we began the contest. We have lived in deeds not years. God has made the wrath of man to praise him. And now, Jefferson Davis, we are done With you ! It matters little whether you find yotir soar apple tree to-morrow, or next week, — or whether like the wandering Jew, God pro- long your accursed life, a wandering vagabond, praying for a death that you dread, and living a life you still more dread. Poetic justice would be fulfilled, should some one of your in- furiated dupes slay you in your flight, and give you a dogs burial, — then, as the Romans said of King Romulus, when he was suddenly missing, The Gods have translated him to the ekies, so should posterity say of you. The devils have translated him to Hell. We bury you this night, under the curses of twenty Obsequies of jEfTERsoN Davis. 27 millions of people ; we heap on you the execrations of five hundred thousand widows ; we attend your funeral with an army of one million of the fatherless. The ghosts of two million, slain by your ambition, rise from bloody graves, armless, headless, gory, to greet you to the Judgment. All those who weep for Abraham Lincoln, rejoice at your destruction. Four millions of your late chattels, chant your requiem in a shout of jubilee. Oh Jefferson Davis, this world execrates you! It has had enough of you ! It consigns you by the unanimous vote of loyalty to the world where God con- fines his rebels. We will dig your grave in the center of the prison pen at Anderson ville. We will build you a monument of the skulls and skeletons of the sixty thousand you starved to death. We will write high, high, on the fearful pile Aaron Burr, Benedict Arnold, and above them all Jafferson Davis. — This from the American people, to him who sought to be king of a nation of slaves ; but by the grace of God, became the great emancipator. And then we wiU hedge in forever, that hellish cemetry, and sow it to all briors, thorns, thistles and nettles ; and through it shall creep the vile copperhead and lizard; and cursed be he that ever tills one foot of the soil, forever and forever. J'f(hr. /Oo RJe'!3