njoyed and promoted by observing all the obligations of the Constitution.
And I doubt not that she sees the danger now, and is prepared to sanction any measure necessary and proper to arrest it and to make her in heart, as she is in interest and in duty, bound to observe in good faith all its engagements.
South Carolina, too. Who is willing to part with her?
Her great names, during the same classic period, won for her and for all, an undying fame.
Her Moultries, Pinckneys, Rutledges, Haynes, Marions, Lawrences, do not belong to her alone — they are as much ours as hers; as the fame of Washington is as much the property and pride of the world as of Virginia.
She, too, is astray now, as she was once before.
She now thinks herself out of the Union.
But there is a common tie, however, for a moment imperceptible and inoperative, that still makes us hers, and hers ours.
The tie of blood, of language, of religion, of love, of Constitutional freedom, of a common ancestry, who in ba
es,
J. B. King,
E. A. Lanson,
Private S. Pilgrum,
W. K. Power,
J. G. Reeks,
T. Roper,
Strom Smith,
Reuben Smith,
W. C. Smith,
J. B. Stroms,
L. D. Thrift,
T. E. C. Vandiver,
R. O. Williams.
Co. K.
2d Sergeant Fielden Walden,
3d Sergeant H. T. McDowell,
4th Sergeant W. F. McAuthor,
1st Corporal G. J. Bullman,
Private John M. Bowen,
N. J. Brown,
G. A. Kirkland,
W. M. Bullman,
J. H. Bullington,
W. B. Cooper,
L M. Cannon,
W. M. Gibson,
J. H. Gibson,
Private T. J. Haynes,
J. F. Haynes,
P. A. Holt,
Thos. F. Hughston,
T. M. Hughston,
Wm. P. Hughston,
W. E. Mauldin,
R. E. Tuck,
John A. Williams,
A. J. Williams,
W. A. Walden,
L. D. Bomar,
W. W. Wyatt.
Co. L.
1st Sergeant W. W. Hamilton,
2d Sergeant David Owens,
3d Sergeant J. B. Moore,
4th Sergeant Elias White,
1st Corporal W. A. Hendricks,
2d Corporal R. L. Stansel,
3d Corporal W. H. Stevenson,
4th Corporal Joseph M. Acker,
Private J. T. Crumpton,
H. C. Erskine,
A. R