Page:The Southern Literary Messenger - Minor.djvu/257

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Literary Messenger
231


has been taken from us. The man we delighted most to honor, the chieftain loved and trusted beyond all others is no more."

January, 1864. Jackson can now rest, but Lee and his other friends whom he left in the Wilderness cannot. The war goes on and so does the Messenger, but like Jackson's corps, it has a new commander. Wedderburn and Alfriend have become its proprietors and Frank H. Alfriend editor. Still, the old regime finishes the January number for 1864 and issues a very impolitic and unnecessary valedictory, in which its past is hugely decried and wonderful improvements by the new parties are promised. They "bid their friends and readers a cordial, hearty and hopeful farewell." What is the difference between cordial and hearty?

Filia's "Agnes" and Howison's history, with prose and poetry by others, old and new, fill the number. Among the new contributors are Mollie E. Moore and Edward Porter Thompson. Ikey Ingle also writes; but this may be only a nom de plume.


FRANK H. ALFRIEND'S EDITORSHIP


In the February and following numbers, Mr. Alfriend assumes the editorial department and puts in it some good writing, in his style, which