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IS utntr Mil ®Jfitist.
•‘Holy Bible,--Book Divine,
Precious treasure, thou art mine."
11. C. IIOKWDV, Editor.
J. M WOOD, )
J. S. BAKER, Editors.
D. P. EVERETT, ) __
Correspondents of the Banner.
Eider N. M. Crawford, Penfield, Ga
“ J. H. Campbell, State Evangelist.
“ J. It,. Graves, in the Army.
“ G. C. Connor, Army Chaplain.
“ B. F. Tharp, Perry, Ga.
“ W. N. Chaudoin, Albany, Ga.
R. J. Mays, Florida.
“ A. E. Dickinson, Richmond, Va.
VV. D. Mayfield. South Caroliua
“ G. T. Wilburn.
M. VV. Philips, Edwards, Miss.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA:
Saturday, August 16, 1862.
li.ereu* in Price of the II tuner.
Owing to the immense increase in every
thing connected with the newspaper busi
ness, it has become absolutely necessary to
advance the price of Tne Banner to three
dollars per annum, instead of two as here,
tofora. Our patrons will see the propriety
of this wher. informed that the price of
paper is more than double that of foruiei
rates, and that of printing and mailing has
also advanced.
We can not publish the paper for less
than the amount stated without loss to our
selves, and we call upon our patrons to
pay the*increase of price in order that w>
may keep The Banner going. Those who
have already paid will receive the paper
according to the old rates until their pres
ent subscriptions shall expire.
iYote*.
Brother A. A. 1., Glenville, Ala., writes,
saying : “ E.-closqi is $5 for publishing
tracts for Confederate soldiers." In this
there is a mistake; only $4 were found in
the letter.
—.Owing to the great number of com
munications on hand, we this week give up
the space usually occupied by editorials to
our correspondents. These communica
lions are unusually interesting,
Befrenbinx I’bws,
A revival is now progressing in the
First Baptist Church in this city. Meet
ings are held each day, morning and night.
The members all seem thoroughly aroused
to a sense of duty, and much interest is
manifested by the large sudieuees who at
tend. Several have publicly professed their
hope in the Saviour, and many are earnest
ly asking the most important question ever
uttered by human lips. To God be all the
glory!
A letter from brother A. K. Tribble
gives intelligence of the happy results of a
nin# days’ meeting with the Church at
Tanner’s, Clayton county: Thirty-fm
conversions; received thirty members—
twenty-nine by experience and baptism;
many anxiously Inquiring fur salvation
when the meeting closed. Elder D. L.
DufTey assisted in the meeting.
Elder Dayton’s sermon.
W begin this week to republish brother
Dayton’s excellent sermon upon * Our Na
tional Sin.’ We have been compelled t.
divide it into two parts, on account of th
want of space ; but we trust it will be non*
the less interesting and profitable to th
reader in tha form. Every one shoul
study the subject embraced in this serinm
with much care, and with the firm resolv.
to do all he can for the correction of tht
evil of Sabbath breaking.
El ler J. m. Grave*.
This talented aud esteemed brother is
laboring for the Virginia Colporteur Soci
ety—army eolportage, and will be supplied
with Tracts from this place. All who art
disposed to help in supplying brother G.
with the means of prosecuting his labors,
can send their contributions to the Editor
of this paper, and the m ney shall be usd
as they may designs*c.
Lawreueeti Is .*nlailon.
This body will utt.cu* with the Baptist
Church at Lawrencevdie, on Saturday be
fore the fourth Sabbath in this month.
Mimey Received f*r € *lporlgo.
Rev, J. F. Swansoo, #40,00.
A. A. Kay, #4,00.
BANKER AND BAPTIST.
East I'eanes-ee!
Knoxville, August 9.
Dear Banner : Since I last wrote you,
our whole subdivision has been ordered to
Knoxville. We left Bridgeport on Friday
last, and after a day’s stoppage at Tmer’s
Station, arrived here on Sabbath night.—
Here we remained but two days, when we
were ordered to report forthwith 'at Clinton,
eighteen miles from this place. You will
recollect that a few* days previous the en
emy tore up the track on the road between
Knoxville and Clinton. As yet your cor
respondent has not left Knoxville, as 1 have
been left in command of thirty three con
valescents ; we purpose to leave this eve
ning and join our regiment.
The concentration of our forces at this
point and Chattanooga means, the speedy
emancipation of Tennessee from the thial
dom of Lincoln and his minions,. Uur
strength l do not know—nor would pru
deuce permit me to publish it, did 1 know.
I am confident, myself, that the proposed
plans of our Generals will work out for the
State a glorious deliverance.
I am deeply pained with the treatment
our men receive at many of our hospitals.
Many ofourmen complain bitterly—espe
cially of‘Look Out’ and Knoxville and
Chattanooga. The chief complaint is, in
attention on the part of the surgeons.—
Uur poor boys are abused with.cursings and
slang of the lowest order by those men
called ‘ army surgeons.’ I ask, in the name
of decency, in the name of humanity, in
the name of the loved ones at home, if our
'brave buys must suffer such treatment 1—
Have we not physicians enough in otir con
federacy, who have respect for physical
sufferings and morality, to take the places
of those to whom reference is now' made ?
Have we no philanthropists who will take
this matter in hand 1 Or must our boys
die for want of proper attention, and pre
fer the woods to an army hospital ?
I am very anxious to secure some reli
gious reading for our boys. Can not you,
my brother, and many of the kind readers
of The Banner, furnish me with some tracts?
Brethren, sisters, if you have any, please
forward them by express to this point.
But oil, r emernber us at the Throne of
Grace. Don’t forget us, even though many
miles separate us. In God we trust, and
by Him and through Him wo alone can
secure a glorious deliverance.
G. C. C.
IVoiu our Army Evangelist.
Obligations acknowledged. — A weeping wo
man.—Sickness ant ing soldiers.—-A sor
rowing group. — Ah urUtmefy death.—-A
lone missionary.
Brother Hornady :
Some of your readers have given such
proof of the interest they feel in my labors
among the soldiers, as to entitle them to a
hearing from me occasionally. lam undei
many obligations to you for the privilege
of communicating with them through your
paper.
Though not restored toiny wonted health,
it seemed to be my duty, recently, to make
another trip to the coast, from which 1 have
just returned. Ten miles of travel had
scarce been accomplished when, upon enter
ing the ladies’ car, the first person 1 en
countered was a poor woman, who was
weeping as if some great sorrow had over
taken her. Her’a was a sad tale, and was
soon told: She was now seven hundred
miles from her home in East Florida, and
she had travelled all that way to see her
husband who, she had learned, wa- in a
hospital in Atlanta. How painful was hei
disappointment upon reaching that city a'
four the previous afternoon, to learn hei
husband had been buried at nine 1 His hat
and knapsack lay on the seat beside her.—
Her three little children had been left in
the care of friends during her absence—
W hat was to become of them she did not
know, being left utterly destitute of th
ueans of support.
Ojr troops in Savannah, and especially
hose in the vicinity of swamps and lie*-
| fields below the city, are suffering much
rum sickness. The mortality’ among them
j nas not been great as yet; but there is
reason to fear it will be much greater du
ring the next two and a half months, unless
those in command can be prevailed upon
to remove the up-country tr tops, to more
healthful localities. It is to be hoped thi.-
will be done in time to save many valuabl
lives. 1 had an interview with General
Mercer on this subject. The state of my
health would not admit of my visiting thi
sick in camps and hospitals t whch I deeply
regret; and so I concluded to proceed t*>
Wuynesviile and preach on the following
Sabbath. The churches are without pas
ors, and a cavalry battalion stationed there
is destitute of a chaplain. For these reasons
l have visited the place several times this
year.
I had a pleasant time, distributing tracts
and talking to the soldiers on the Gulf road
They at for hours, as 1 have fr quentfv
ma i others do be ore them, absorbed ii.
ift.D j. Ido act remember when an oath
has been sworn in my presence by a soldier.
Soon after the passenger train had pas-rd,
my attention w s drawn to ag oup of per
sons, ju*t behind me, who seemed over
whelmed with grief. It turned out to be a
poor woman, her father and father-in law.—
She and her father w'ere en route to Savan
nah, to see her soldie -husband in the hos
pital, and they had just met his corpse in
charge of his father. He had left four
mall children with scarce any thing t<>
support them. What multitudes of widows
and orphans w'ill be left in the land, when
this war shall close !
At Waynesville I preached twice on
Sabbath—in the forenoon at the church,
and in the afternoon in camps. In half an
hour after 1 had addressed the soldiers, one
of them received hi death-wound, by the
HCcirental discharge of a gun in the hands
of his tiest friend, of which he died next
morning. He expressed hope in Christ,
a< and only regretted that he could not se*
his parents once more-*—a common regrei
with the dying soldier.
As far as 1 know, 1 atntbe only volunteei
missionary among the soldiers in the Stale
There may be others; but, it so, I have not
heard of them. A great work thus de
volves upon me. Oh, that 1 had strength
and grace to perform it acceptably to God !
J. H. Campbell.
August 8,1862.
Correspondence of The Banner.
Vicksburg, July 25, 1862.
Dear Brother Hornady:
1 last wrote from the rear of the batteries
at Vicksburg—in hearing, though not in
sight, of the fighting. On Monday morning
I went to the front, under a constant fire of
shells from the fleet. Bef re I got within
one mile of the batteries, the shells fell un
pleasantly close, now plough.ng up tht
ground, now exploding a mile above my
head and raining the fragments in every
direction. No place seemed safe, and yei
one quite as much so as another. Th
sharp concussion occasioned by a large shel
exploding in the air, is quite like that pro
duced by a lightning stroke in a few rod.-
of you ; and then the whirring of the pieces
naturally makes one nervous until he get
used to it. 1 passed a negro who had jus
been killed by one of these fragrnen s
This was the only casualty 1 heaid of. i
reached the Marine Hospital building, site
; sited at the lower end of the city—a large
three-storied brick, which was used as oa.
racks by Captain Todd’s battery, and hospi
tal for his sick. luc epted the hospitality
of Captain Todd’s blanket and table, anti
shared the dangers of a week’s bombard
ment with him. Captain T. is the brothej
of Mis. Abe Lincoln, and is us true
-Southern man as you can find any where
as is his y ounger brother whom 1 saw while
here. Captain Todd has heroically defend
ed this water-battery for weeks under an
almost daily shower of iron, it is regarded
as the most dangerous position on the river.
I can give you no idea how the hospital is
riddled with shot from the roof to the bot
tom, by falling shell, and through the sides,
every few feet of w e yard ploughed up oi
perforated by -shell, while tons of fragments
cover the surfaoe of the ground. The water
buttery is a few rods in front of the huspi
tal, and within musket-shot of the river—
tne upper batteries are situate upon the
high bluffs immediately in the rear, and
can fire over the lower ones. The mortar
boats seemed to direct their fire so as t<-
effiect the destruction of the ‘ Arkansas.’—
Fo resume the history of the ‘ Ram Arkan
sas ’ where 1 left off in my last. That ter
rible night cannonading turned out to be
an attack upon the Arkansas by the most
powerful vessels ot the entire fleet. Here
is a graphic description of the whole effaii j
by a Yankee correspondent :
** Having thus c rnered their enemy, our fleet
was not alow to take advantage of the position
ahe lay tnd to the levte, un ler cover ol the
upper bauerita and a plan was immediately
formed which, it was boj>ed, would succeed in
sinking her. 1 his was, to pass down that very
night, with Com. Far. agut’s entire fleet, and
pour into the contumacious boat successive
broadsides as each vessel passed her.
" The fleet of Com. Davis accordingly' took
up a station at about daik, and opened on their
batteries to draw their fire. They succeeded
admirably, and, at an unexpected moment, the
fleet of large vessels struck into the channel and
descended the river. As each boat united op
posite the Arkansas, she slackened and poured
her broadside into her. She answered as well
as she could in such a storm ol missies, and put
ou or two balls into our vessels, but her main
occupation was to be atdiand take it. Upwards
of a hundred guns, some of them throwing ten
inch shots, poured their deadly charge* into her.
even inch steel-pointed shot were fired into
her, and I learn, by rebel sources, that one of
them went through her and killed two men.—
This, they maintain, is the only damage done
uer. The firing was tremendous. Th Sumter
also ran into her, anti tried to knock a hole in
her hull, but seemingly might as well have run
into a rock, The batteries, ol course, joined the
engagement, and poured shot into our vessels as
welt as they could in toe dark ess.
“The ruarot guns was like an eatthquake,
and nothing more terrific ever whs conceived
than this grand artillery duel by night. It last
ed an hour and then our vessels pas-ed below,
and took p their old anchorage.
“In the morning messengers were d'spat bed
to see what damage the ArKaosas but .-u,tam
ed. By going up the opposite bank of the river,
-he could be plainly seen. She wasca e tied,
•*a if to stop Indcs *m .her huh, and her team
[pumps were at work, A barge lay a ta^de
for the use of carpenters. It did not appear
that *he was m any danger of sinking 1 *
‘•Two battles, such as no boat in the world
ever went through before, had failed to demol
ish her. I find, by the account of those who
; had good v e vs of her, that this formidable crait
] has perpendicular sides of six or eight feet, in
which the port holes are pierced, i his is dif
ferent from the common understanding of her
model, which has been that her perpendicular
sides were low. She presents six or eight feet
in height of sold iron eight inches thick. She
is one hundred and fifty feet long.
“ The broadsides from our own vessels did as
much damage as the guus of the Arkansas The
Dickey got three shots, and the Lancaster sev
eral. and other transports were nearly riddled."
Thus failed most signally' the first effort
to destroy the Arkansas; but our enemies
are not easily turned aside in accomplishing
a purpose. On Wednesday morning, a
little after day light, we were awakened by
the firing of the batteries of the upper
point. Captain Todd ordered all hands in
to the battery, the sick into the least ex
posed part of the building, while I sprang
to the roof of the building, from which el
evated though exposed position the whole
fight could be seen. A description of the
fight, from the Memphis Bulletin, I al-o
■,end y ou. It will show you what a noble
boat the ‘ Arkansas ’ was.
‘•The recent brillia t exploit of the rebel ram
V. kausaa, runui g he gauntlet of the Federal fleei
at Vicks i urg, was felt to be a stigma by those in
ihe ser vice, which it was iinpoi taut should be wit eu
~ut. Hence, it was agreed, between Com. Ellet.
,u . Davis nd Com Farragut, that ai un ted el
[on, should be made to run ashore and capture th
.rkauow. The lime aereed upon was lasi Wt-dne
morning. Ihe plan was lor Coo . Davis to send
i.e gunboat Benton, Cincinnati and Louisville, ane
ibe rani Bragg to engage the iand batteries, whih
he Essex was to ap, roach the Arkau as at short,
.tud grapple her, the ram Que n of the West iu-au
ame to butt her from the rear. C m. FamuutV
deel was io operate from below, and, if it beeam
accessary, to send the Sumt- rup to assist By da>-
oreak on Wednesday morning, everything was in
. eadiuess, and, by tive o’c.ock, the gunboats were
already on the move.
*• The guuboa a Benton. Cincinnati and Louls
vide nrst moved out to engage tne land batteries. —
they were followed by the g .liboat Essex, which
was to draw ihe Arkansas out and grapple her. The
las to move wa the Queen of the West. Corn
Eiiett, on getting round Louisiana Poiut, in view
oi the Arkansas, was astonished to find the Essex,
who. so lar from carrying out her part of the agree
ment, had fired three shots, and was already thre
quarters ol a mile below the Arkansas, auu still pur
uiug her cours down the river. •
“ On pa si. g the B- nton, Commodore Davis pui
uis heai. to the port-hole and said something, which,
iroru the s und aud the st.auge conduct oi the Es
-ex. wa> coustrued into an order to ‘go back.’ Ira
ni diately Com Elicit gave the order to reverse the
ngiue*; but wheu the Benton approached, it war
iound that wtuu was thought anew o dcr, was on
ly a beueclictiou oi ‘Good luck! Good luck!’
“ Ail this of-cui red amid t a gall.ng fire from lk<
land ba teries.
*• Tne Queeu of the West now started down agait
o eugajie ihe Arknsa single handed. The Ar
.ansa*, meantime, had prepared herself for ti e con
eat. Her a ait was now turned up stream, and ht-i
tern iu shore, so as to use guus on both sides e>-
dually. The Queen of the West now made, a gal
ant tun down * ream mih midst of a period rain
i fire and had, but was compelled, from the post
tou of the Arkansas, to p..ss nelow and run up ti
ie This she did, striking ihe Aikansas aft the
ulrd gun on the port side. The blow was not di
.ect, tun a sort ot glancing one, and veiy material
y weakened the Queen, which immediately or. *
aek, and run ashore at Vicksburg, the Arkansas
i auwh le, pouring a destructive fire upon her.-
l>eii ills Qua u ran into the Aikansaa, lour n'-ei
.tit aid to have j mped a hore from the latter,
.vhile, Horn -he uoi e aud confusion which follow
-i, It w a clearly to be inferr and that she was badly
injured.
- JJuri. g the colTslon, the Queen wa* under i
al tug urc all the time, and (Jom. Kl.ett and hi
on. a mere vouib, s ood upon the deck, and both
discharged their pistols into the port-holes of tin
trkansa.
The lire from the land batteries and the Arkai •
-as being very hot, t om. Elleit backed ou Iron
he shore, and found, to nia surprise, that Com. Da
v i-, with all his gunboats, had retired, Instead o< e
maining to cever his retreat, as had been agreed up
-m!
“ The Queen came out of the rain of lead as bes<
-he could, and when r-he returned to her anchorage
Com Davis is reported to have said that the reus
~n lie did not rein tin with uis boats, and cover th
retr at. was that lie neve- expected to see (he boa -
return, aud had forgotten that pa t of the agre
ment.
■ dtrange to say, the only easuality on the Que- n
wa one man .njured in the h-nd by a flying spiiu
ter.
“ The gunhoat Essex, which made such good tim
down the iver, had a man killed aboa-d of her, and
two or th ee wounded.
“It is said (hit the reason Com. Farragut dldn’
ren-ier mo-e assistance, aas that he couldo t get hi;
boats under way in time.
“ A together, the wtiolc affair seemed to liav<
been will planned, aud most bungliugly executed,
but whether from p-uptr understanding, or prope
co-ooeratiou re ains to be seen. 1
“Notwithstanding the alleged injuries to the Ar
k n as, ihui - oat came up to the point on Tburs
day mo n-ng, i . order to let the fl et know that she
was ready u>r another engagement. We inter, from
this moveme t, that her injuries couldn’t have beet,
ver* disastrous.
“ The i-anittge to the Qu en in her encounter witl.
the Arkansas wa9 qui e serious. She broke he
prow all to pieces, and the timbers qu hsr starboa <
side Were started, and have hruuk considerably
Her esi ape- ipe was cut away, and a shot passu
through the flre-gratings.
"The e were several remarkable sbo sand ringth
engagement, but we must coutent ourselves witl
tracing the ct-ur eof one as follows: It was a 82
,-oU'id ball. It entered aft starboard, raked ev ry
state r>om in the cab n, went th ough an Iron sa t
in ibe clerk’s oflk-e, shatter- and a gun carriage a* th
now, iimde an indentation on the b-etch t f tin
gun, rebounded and slightly wounded Lieutenan
umcr.”
Friday morning.—A. thousand cheers!
The victory here is at length completely
won ! The river, for fifty or one hundred
miles in front, is ours ! Not a boat in sight
—the enemy has skeduddltd to parts un
known; the canal is deserted, the soldiers
and negroes withdrawn. The Yankees
found a grav-yard, rather than a prize, at
Vicksburg; six hundred graves tell the
tale on shore, while the waters of the Mi>-
sissippi keep a record of some two or thre*
hundred more. A disastrous siege has it
been to them. During eight weeks they ■
have bombarded the place, and have killed
onshore, all told, but seven soldiers, one
woman, and one negro. They have fired
some twenty thousand shells to do this !
They have lost five or six vessels, larg*
quantil es of stores (burned by the lowei
fleet, when they expected the Arkansas t*
attack it), and of men not a few. There i.*
’w a movement to be made below, upoi
Ban >n Rouge, and perhaps New Orleans
Breckenriifgr’s ommarid is all leaving f<<
**•*•* p*>int bel*w Magnolia, and, as th-r
a no.h.ug more to be done here for mouth*,
I shall leave with them, aud w<ii finish this
letter when I have the important fact about
to be accomplished, to communicate. •
Magnolia, August 8.
I reached this place one week ago, and
have been under the care of a physician
ever since. I am to-day for the first time
able to write and close my lett ir.
That fact has been attempted. Would
that 1 could say it was accomplished. The
telegrams anuounce it a glorious day 1—
It was a dolorous day, rather. The design
was a magnificent one, but indiscreet and
rash in the extreme, for which Van Dem
and not Brec ken ridge—is responsible. The
desigu was for the ram Arkausas. to go
down, engage and drive the fleet out ..t ihe
river from before Baton Rouge, and Br*ck*
cundge w ith 2500 men to fall upon the
6000 or 8000 Federal:* and kill or take
them all prisoners. The result is as follows ;
W QeU the Arkansas reached Bayou Sara,
she broke her shaft and floated on down
the stream until she grounded upon, a saud
oar lu the river. Her condition being a
uopeless one, to prevent her from railing
mto the bauds of the enemy she was blown
up, and so fared the same sad fate of every
guuboat we have built. Report says that
when the enemy learned of her disabled
condition they sent up an ‘ iron-dud’ to
take possession of her, but the Arkansas
gave her the benefit of her guns,., aud she
round it safe to retire.
Breckenridge, expecting the ram to fright
en off the fleet, early on the 6th moved his
small force of 2500 upon the enemy strong
ly entrenched upon the second puralell of
mils back of the city. The telegram reads:
The fight raged with great fury. We drove
the enemy to the shelter ot their gunboats with
great slaughter, destroying their unis and com
missary stores. Gen. Williams, the Federal
commander, was killed. We lost heavily in
field officers, but Generals Breckenridge und
auggies are unhurt Gen.' Clark, of Miss., is,
uis ieared, mortally wounded; fie fell at the
post of duty. Uur loss will not exceed two
Hundred and fitly.
bo suou as the enemy had reached the
cover of the second ridge, they were com
pletely protected by their gunboats and our
meu completely exposed. The boats open
ed a well-directed aud murderous lire, from
which our forces were compelled to with
draw in haste. Thus ends the niagnificeut
design of Van Dorn, of retaking Baton
Rouge and New Orleans. Theittjvere two
other gunboats, in certain rivers in Louisi
ana, completed and ready for service, or
nearly so. Had he postponed this assault
mtil these boats could have, been brought
out so as to cooperate.with the Arkansas,
there could have been little doubt but that
vhe city and the entire army would have
been captured, and a proud viotory it would
nave been; and with it, New Orleans would
nave fallen into our hands. Thus, ‘ haste
maketh waste.’ As it was, a • mall force of
Kentuckians (only about 2500) drove six
or eight thousand Federal soldiers out of
their strong entrenchments and pell-mell
into the city and under cover of their gun
ooats. We will save aconsiderablearnount
of commissary store, if r. ports ie true
It will be a week or more before l can
go into camp again, but Providence has
•pened a wide door of usefulness to me here,
fhe hospitals for this prim of the south
vest are located in Magnolia. It I had a
i'ew thousand tracts, I could supply reading
matter for these for some time. J have
nade an appeal to the Baptists of Missis
sippi for a few thousand dollars with which
to inaugurate a Tract movement in this
State. We can get paper here at S6O per
bundle, that used to cost $5 or $6. I will
-romptly acknowledge the reception of any
tracts you may succeed in sending me.—-
\nd if any thing of inter eat. occur* out here
i w-ill inform you by due course of mails;
if any thing remarkable, by telegram.
Truly yours, J. R. G.
The Army In ibe We#f,
Dear Brother Horuady:
I have recently visited the Army in the
Vest, and find the destitution appalling
1 do not believe one in ten of the men have
i Testament. They are very anxious for
t and for tracts. “ Can’t you send us some.
reading matter?” was asked me on
-very hand. We need funds with which
odo this. I beg that your readers will
•xert themselves in this behalf, and enclose
the amount to you. Now is the moat fa
vorable time to make an effort. Will not
the pastors and churches respond 1
A. E Dickinsos, •
Agent Army Colpurtage.
All letters containing remittances, or article*
or the Paper, should be directed to the Baxnkb
% Baptist, Atlanta, Georgia, and not to the Edi
tor* by name
DIEO.
Of inflamation o’* the b< w Is, Augmt °,
1964, at Mrs. Mary Fort’s,Stewart comity,
G.i., Alicr Georoia Clark*, on b daughter
,t Rev. John T. and Mrs. Laura F. Clarke
-being twenty-one months and thre* days
•Id.
Hark ! I hear another harp in Heaven !
rattle black-eyed A LICK has joined the
„ag lie choir.