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no compromises to make with our ruthless and remorseless enemy. We must teach him a useful and practical lesson.--We must establish a Government regulated by liberty and law, which will recognize. the lights of the citizen, personal and social, and secure the rights of property to all. Compromise would ruin us, and we must shun it as we would the pestilence. The Northern people have no well defined eas of freedom and liberty, or of justice and right. The Government, as administered by Lincoln, has become an absolute despotism; and even the conservatism of that section has quietly submitted to the shackles which a heartless tyrant has riveted upon them. Will they continue to sleep on, and awake only to find that even the semblance of republican government no longer exists among them? Our polloy must be changed. We must make this a war of invasion, and we must push it with a zeal and energy equal to that exhibited by our witty enemy. Maryland must be redeemed. Accomplish
ll, where they took a cab and proceeded to the wharf. During the interview an immense and excited crowd of people had congregated about the City Hall, who alternately hurrahs for Jeff Davis, for Gen. Lovell, and most vigorously groaned for "Lincoln and his squadron." To calm this multitude, Pierre Soule addressed them in a few eloquent and effective words, counselling moderation, self-possession, fortitude, and confidence in their cause, declaring that the honor of the Government and at his disposal. That he came here six months too late, and that it was beyond his resources to contend successfully against the enemy's power on water. He advised the citizens to bear themselves manfully, never to stoop or submit to the Lincoln domination, and to wait with patient fortitude for the deliverance from bondage which must soon come to them. The General then mounted his horse, and accompanied by his staff, rode to the Jackson Railroad, where he took the last car, having alr