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Southern arms. The last war with England was of brief duration, but, brief as it was, the Yankees illuminated their house and fired their cannon in frantic enthusiasm when peace was declared, although the war left the questions at issue between the two, nations just where it found them. And if they could now have peace with the South on any terms, the great mass of the nation would be electrified with delight, and throw up their hats a good deal higher than they did at the end of the war of 1812. We do not predict that this will be a short war; we see no signs of its termination so long as the demagogues and speculators control the Yankee Government. But we simply desire the Yankees to understand that when they talk in a magnificent way of waging this war for fifty years, and when an unguarded admission falls from some individual in the South that such may be their honest purpose, ninety-nine out of every hundred of our people regard with equal incredulity and contempt their id