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rise, and the skill, promptitude, masterly strategy and vigor with which it was met and defeated at all points by our commanders and our gallant soldiers, furnish us grounds of exultation, confidence, and general hopefulness, such as no previous campaign of this war has given. Let us all remember how, but a few weeks ago, after the disaster at Missionary Ridge, the Yankees were so confident that the backbone of the rebellion was broken, and that all that remained to finish the war was for Gen. Grant to advance into the interior and disperse the scattered fragments of our defeated armies. It is not to be denied that the disasters at Vicksburg and Port Hudson, and that last defeat at Missionary Ridge, had produced great depression in some of the Southwestern States, particularly in Mississippi. This depression was compounded of disgust, of distrust of our commanders, and an apprehension that the Government had abandoned that section of the country in order to defend other sections. T
ration as it is, they will suster all their strength in demanding a change. The result will most probably be a split in the Republican party, a Cabinet explosion, and two or three Paradental tickets from as many divisions of the party. In any event, this contemptible and this broad and "Irrepressible conflict" in the Cabinet, ought to be succedent to touch the independent mashes of the people their true line of action. The field in open and the course is clear for the election of General Grant as the people's candidate, and it will require only a little initiatory public here and there to secure for him the inside track. Let the ball be put in motion, and it will seen gain a mountain which will carry everything before it. The destruction of the off Charleston. A letter in the Boston Herald, from off Charleston, the 18th ult., gives an account of the blowing up of the corvette by a Confederates torpedo steamer. The event took places about o'clock on one of the co