columns. The large universities publish dailies and weeklies which attend to all this work and ac cordingly can afford to get out purely literary pub lications, but we smaller institutions must forego that pleasure. THE MODERN PROVENCAL REVIVAL The literature of Southern Europe has in its ori gin everywhere a vigorous native growth. Of no other branch is this truer than of the Provencal. From the earlier times, the Province had been noted for its independent development of the civ ilization received in large part from Rome, in part through Marseilles from Greece. Julius Cresar at tributes the greater rudenesss of the Belgians to the fact that "they are farthest distant from the culture and refinement of the Province." Pliny was so impressed by this evident culture that he declares the region "rather another Italy than a province." So when the Roman power was no more, Latin a dead language, and a new and lo cal dialect, Provencal, the common medium of communication, a fresh manifestation of this na tive grace and force began, far in advance of oth er Latin countries. In that mild climate and up on that fertile soil, a premature refinement of thought and manners started up, which flourished through a short and brilliant season and was then as- suddenly checked and blighted by the influ ences of the surrounding barbarism. It had reached a development not known since the fall of the Roman Empire, and had set the style of poetic diction 'for even the earliest Italian writers. Swept away at the beginning of the twelfth century by the fierce and cruel persecution of the Albi genses,—less a religious crusade than a movement of the most implacable, political ambition,--,-the Provencal literature was almost destroyed on its native soil, finding a few representatives still at the courts of petty princes with whom the exiled poets found protection, and where their art was still held in honor. From the end of the XIII century, their songs were rarely heard; with the THE FREE LANCE. beginning of the XIV century, the purity of their language disappeared; and, a little later, that re fined idiom which had long anticipated and even inspired some of the finest literary efforts of France and Italy sinks to the position of a dialect ; which, with varying fortune, it has remained until this day. • Not until 1323 did even the Provencal people themselves realize what had been lost in the de struction of their literature, and in that year a desperate attempt was made to revive it. At Tou louse the authorities of the city formed a guild of the "Ever gay Company of the seven Trouba dors." In a letter elaborately prepared in prose and verse they summoned all poets to resort to their city on the ist of May, 1324, and there "with joy of heart contend for the prize of a gold en violet," to be the reward for the best poem. With this event begins the more artificial period of Provencal verse with which we are all more or less familiar; in 1355 the board of managers was made a corporate body, under whose successors a festival of some sort has been celebrated every year at Toulouse on the Ist of May, under the names of the Floral Games. The traveller in the south of France in our days is impressed at once with the fact that the polished language of Paris, although serving his needs in the cities and on all the main routes of travel, does not permit him to converse with the bulk of the population, whose dialect he can make noth ing of. If he asks the average Frenchman of the North what these people talk, the answer is gen erally given with a shrug of the shoulders and a single word "Languedoc,"—the name of the dia lect since its representative centre was fixed at Toulouse. Even the more learned tourist who reads the Old Provencal and is perfectly convers ant with the history of the land cannot under stand the present idiom, so utterly has it changed its vocabulary, its form, and its construction. On ly a term here and there sounds familiar to him. The cultivated Ilative despises the dialect and wil-