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o success in all revolutions, and Jefferson Davis knows how to assume a virtue if he has it not. On the whole the message may be regarded as a caving in of the rebel Confederacy, the first decided symptom of which was exhibited recently by Gen. Polk, at Columbus, when he said to a correspondent of a Northern paper, "Let your man, Lincoln, come out and say that the Dred Scott decision is right, and that the South shall have equal rights in the Territories, they (the rebels) would lay down tlemn oath at the time of his inauguration to carry them into execution, what further "coming out" can the Bishop-General require? [We should infer, from the particular pains taken in the concluding sentence of the above paragraph to answer Gen. Polk's request, that Sawney Bennett is about as anxious for a cessation of hostilities as any one.--Eds Dis.] It is worthy of remark, that while the rebel President is jubilant over a succession of glorious victories at Bethel, Bull Run, Manass