fest an indifference toward them for they are the life of the campaign, and the campaign is the preparation of men's minds for a wise and judicious choice of ruler. Consider the matter, for it is only by our own study of political questions that we ever stand independent. THOUGHTS AT SUNSET IN A FOREST. Ms near the hour of eventide, The sun's last rays yet tinge the sky ; The evening breezes gently glide Through trees that bend and softly sigh The robins sweet their carols sing A farewell to the closing day, And slow the coining shadows bring The holy calm of evening's .gray. The leafing trees- r -stately and tall, Grotesquely cast their shadows o'er A scene that cloth to mind recall Some picture found in fairy lore. Each tree a huge pilaster, made • Its leafy castle to sustain, That courtly fairies brightly au ay«l Might fitly servo in Echo's train. Eon as the vesper breezes glide, Methinks I hear this wood-nymph's voice, Softly and low—yet meant to chide The false Narcissus of her choice. It dies—but ah I how sadly sweet It steals upon the listening ear, Recalling thoughts we fain would greet, If held less sacred and less dear. From ancient myths and fairy lore, From past and present thoughts I turn, That I o'or deeper things may pore THE FREE LANCE. TROUI3ADOURS AND TROUVIRES. In the poetry of Provenc, a Troubadour was a highly polished and cultivated poet, who did not make a trade of his muse, directly in opposi tion to the musician and youngleur who won dered about the country singing for money. Yet this distinction only showed itself little by little. At first all classes of the community were equally rude and uncultured and the thing pleasing to the peasant was attractive to the eye of the prince also . ; but by degrees a superior refinement and sensi bility manifested themselves in the tastes and manners of courts, and this superiority found poetical expression in a more artistic kind of verse than had hitherto prevailed. Great nobles, princes and kings who practiced verse -making for their pleasure or out of chivalrous gallantry, were always called troubadours; while inferior knights, court attendants, and even citizens and serfs who lived by their art, were called youngleurs. And thus of nature something learn— Learn that beyond, above us all Some unseen power, its laws enforce, That from our lips unconscious fall Praises to Him, of life the source. • Who, that doth Nature truly love Or searches Out her hidden ways, Would dare deny there lives above Him who her every law defines. Each plant a living witness stands, Each flower his handiwork displays, The glowing tints by artist bands But shows his power in various ways Since in the huillan heart there dwells A sense of Omnipresent force, Can 1111111 whom Nature thus impels Deny the soul this intercom's° 't No I no I I say 'twould be in vitin To rob the soul of this commune, With Nature, that God cloth ordain Shall be to man a constant boon, At• all the courts in Southern France, Nor-