times, both Whig and Democratic. Garrison through the columns of the Liberator (issued from an obscure garrett in Boston) had just begun to denounce the Union as a "covenant with death and a league with hell” on account of its support of Slavery; Wendell Phillips had dedicated his young manhood, his learning, his culture [and his eloquence to the unpopular cause of Anti-Slavery; Salmon P. Chase had imperiled his reputation as a lawyer, by accepting the hunted fugitive as his client; and Lowell, urged by his young wife was devoting his muse to the the same cause. The hearts of the people were profoundly stirred upon the question of human rights, and the poetry of Whittier gave a powerful stimulus to the agitation. One can get no clearer conception of the spirit of the times, than by reading his poems of that pe riod,—such as the "Slave Ship,” “The Christain Slave,” "Massachusetts to Virginia,” "A Voice to New England,” "ToFaneuil Hall,” etc. Prophetic andintense-they met with a quick response. They were read at the domestic hearth, and declaimed in Lyceums and at Anti-Slavery gatherings. Whittier himself actively engaged in the crusade, by corresponding for and editing Anti-slavery pa pers. While editor of the Pennsyvania Freeman, in Philadelphia, he was mobbed and his paper burned out. He continued in this "Moral War fare” until the adoption of the admendment to the Constitution of the United States, forever prohibiting human slavery. His labors in that direction were then ended, and he commemorated the victory by the poem "Laus Deo” closing with the lines: It Is done t In the circuit of the sun Shall the sound thereof go forth, It shall hid the sad rejoice, It shall give the dumb a voice, It shall belt with joy the earth I Bing and swing Bells of joy I On morning’s wing Send the song of praise abroad 1 With a sound of broken chains Tell the nations that He reigns, Who alone is Lord and Qod - With the conclusion of this stress period of his THE FREE LANCE. life the poet returned to his home at Amesbury, Massachusetts. In the quiet of domestic life, liv ing with his mother and sister, he wrote the bal lads and other poems, that like the lyrics of Burns, find an echo in every human heart not wholly de void of sensibility. It is these later poems which have given him his enduring fame. Every one will recall among such : “Maud Muller,” "Mary Garvin,” "My Playmate,” "Barefoot Boy,” "Snow Bound,” etc. Whittier’s belief in an overruling and loving Providence was as fixed as his own New England hills, and is frequently revealed in his poems as in the one entitled "Eternal Godness:” Edited with explanatory notes, by Thomas Chase LL. D., late President of the Haverford Collego. Eldredge and Brothor, Philadelphia, 1892. Horace is the business man’s poet. He would have been the laureate of commuters, if express trains had existed in B. C. 33. Not that he ever celebrated the joys of the ledger; or indited rom ances on the overdue mortgage : such specialties were left for modern bards, the news paper poets, the base-ball editors, the Will Carleton’s, and S. W. Foss’s of our day. But the poetic side of man’s life is not found in Wall Street, it appears after business hours. To hurry down to the ferry and snatch a breath of salt air, as one crosses the North River, to press one’s nose to the car window and watch the varied panorama of the closing day, streets crowded, stores closing; to rush through salt marshes and green fields, •to thunder past quiet stations with their little groups of wide eyed watch ers, to climb off -the train at one of them, and peep through the blinds at the waiting family— this is the romantic part of business life—and it is the part of which Horace sang. He could not I know not where His Islands, lift Tlielr fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond His love and care. THE WORKS OF HORACE.