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foregathering signs. The bleaching flag, the faded wreath, Mark the dead soldier's dust beneath, And show the death he chose; Forgotten save by her who weeps alone, And wrote his fameless name on this low stone: Break not his sweet repose. John Albee. Ode at magnolia cemetery used by permission of the B. F. Johnson publishing Company, Richmond, Virginia, publishers of the memorial edition of the Poems of Henry Timrod. Sung on the occasion of decorating the graves of the Confederground of sailors who fell at Hilton head in 1861 This sequestered spot, the burial-place of the sailors who lost their lives in the capture of Hilton Head by the Federal fleet on November 7, 1861, might have been designed to fit the poem by John Albee. The live-oaks droop tenderly above it and cast a gloom around. Through it comes faintly ‘the sea's near murmur.’ But though the names of men like these may be unknown to fame, they are not forgotten in their quiet resting-places. Each Memor
volunteer, M. A. Townsend, IX., 276. A message, E. S. P. Ward, IX., 144, 145, 146. A. Of P., Headquarters, mail and newspapers, VIII., 33. A Second Review of the grand Army, F. Bret Harte, IX., 232. A soldier's grave, John Albee. IX., 274. Abatis V., 210. Abbeville, La., VII., 240. Abbeville, Miss., III., 330. Abbey, H., IX., 108. Abbot, H. L.: III., 186; V., 51, 192. Abbot, J. C., III., 327. Abercrombie, J. J.: I., 28; sons obama Claims, VI., 122. Alabama House, Stevenson, Ala. , IX., 99. Alabama River: fleet steaming up the, in war-time, IV., 139. Alamosa, N. Mex., near Ft. Craig, I., 352. Albatross,, U. S. S., II., 210; VI., 217, 318. Albee, J., IX., 274, 275. Albemarle,, C. S. S., III., 318, 338; VI., 38, 87, 199, 263, 296, 320, 322. Albemarle Sound, N. C., VI., 95, 115, 263, 268, 312. Albert Sidney Johnston, K. B. Sherwood, IX., 92. Alcorn, Lieut. I., 23;