side, the river-meadows, golden with harvest, the twilight walk along the river, the summer Sunday in the old church, parents, wife, child, mistress, and go away to uncertain war. Putnam heard the call at his plough, and turned to go, without waiting. Wooster heard it, and obeyed. Not less lovely in those days was this peaceful valley, not less soft this summer air. Life was dear, and love as beautiful, to those young men as it is to us, who stand upon their graves. But, because they were so dear and beautiful, those men went out, bravely to fight for them and fall. Through these very streets they marched, who never returned. They fell, and were buried; but they can never die. Not sweeter are the flowers that make your valley fair, not greener are the pines that give your river its name, than the memory of the brave men who died for freedom. And yet no victim of those days, sleeping under the green sod of Connecticut, is more truly a martyr of Liberty than every murdered man whose bones lie bleaching in this summer sun upon the silent plains of Kansas. Gentlemen, while we read history, we make history. Because our fathers fought in this great cause, we must not hope to escape fighting. Because, two thousand years ago, Leonidas stood against Xerxes, we must not suppose that Xerxes was slain, nor, thank God, that Leonidas is not immortal. Every great crisis of human history is a pass of Thermopylæ, and there is always a Leonidas and his three hundred to die in it, if they cannot conquer. And so long as Liberty has one martyr, so long as one drop of blood is poured out for her, so long from that single drop of bloody sweat of the agony of humanity shall spring hosts as countless as the forest-leaves, and mighty as the sea. Brothers! the call has come to us. I bring it to you in these calm retreats. I summon you to the great fight of Freedom. I call upon you to say, with your voices, whenever the occasion offers, and with your votes, when the day comes, that upon these fertile fields of Kansas, in the very heart of the continent, the upas-tree of slavery, dripping death-dews upon national prosperity and upon free labor, shall never be planted. I call upon you to plant there the palm of peace, the vine and the olive of a Christian civilization. I call upon you to determine whether this great experiment of human freedom, which has been the scorn of despotism, shall, by its failure, be also our sin and shame. I call upon you to defend the hope of the world. The voices of our brothers who are bleeding, no less than of our fathers who bled, summon us to this battle. Shall the children of unborn generations, clustering over that vast Western empire, rise up and call us blessed, or cursed? Here are our Marathon RICHARD HENRY STODDARD was born in Hingham, Massachusetts, on the 2d of July, 1825. His father, who was a sea-captain, sailed for Gottenburg when our author was about a year old, and the vessel was never after heard of. In 1835, his mother, who had married again, removed to New York, where he has resided ever since. When he was old enough to do any thing for himself, he went into a lawyer's office and copied law-papers; but, not liking this, he afterwards went into an iron-foundry, where he worked six years in learning the trade of an iron-moulder. Here he began to write verses, and, soon after the "Union Magazine" (afterwards Sartain's) was started, he became, in 1847, a contributor to it. He now commenced his literary career, publishing, in 1848, a small volume of poetry, entitled Footprints, and writing for various magazines,-the "Knickerbocker," "Putnam's Monthly," "Graham's," and the "International." In the fall of 1851, a second volume was brought out by Ticknor & Fields, entitled simply Poems, which consisted of his contributions to the above-mentioned magazines. About this time he was appointed to a situation in the New York Custom-House, and in the next year (1852) he gave to the public a volume of very sweet poetic prose, entitled Adventures in Fairy-Land, and in the autumn of the same year he was married to Miss Elizabeth D. Barston, of Mattapoisett, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, herself a poetess of very decided merit. In 1856 appeared Songs of Summer,' in which are some short pieces of exquisite beauty. Mr. Stoddard is still in the Custom-House in New York,-a location, one would think, not very near Parnassus; yet he continues to devote his leisure moments to poetry and general literature,- with what success the following beautiful pieces show. HYMN TO THE BEAUTIFUL. My heart is full of tenderness and tears, My youth is gone, but that I heed not now; My love is dead, or worse than dead can be; 1 See his Dedication to Songs of Summer, under George H. Boker, p. 745. Only the golden flush of sunset lies Within my heart like fire, like dew within my eyes! Spirit of Beauty! whatsoe'er thou art, I see thy skirts afar, and feel thy power; Nor mine alone, but myriads feel thee now, For all men worship thee, and know it not; We hold the keys of heaven within our hands, Transfigured in the light that streams along the lands! And up and down the skies, With winged sandals shod, The angels come and go, the messengers of God! We walk as heretofore, Adown their shining ranks, but see them never more! Not heaven is gone, but we are blind with tears, Groping our way along the downward slope of years! From earliest infancy my heart was thine; A voice of greeting from the wind was sent ; The rivers wove their charms, And every little daisy in the grass Did look up in my face, and smile to see me pass! Not long can Nature satisfy the mind, Nor outward fancies feed its inner flame; Divinest Melancholy walks with thee, Her thin white cheek forever lean'd on thine; And Music leads her sister Poesy, In exultation shouting songs divine! But on thy breast Love lies,-immortal child!— The more we worship him, the more we grow For here below, as in the spheres above, Not from the things around us do we draw The painter's picture, the rapt poet's song, The sculpture's statue, never saw the Day; Not shaped and moulded after aught of clay, Whose crowning work still does its spirit wrong; Hue after hue divinest pictures grow, Line after line immortal songs arise, And limb by limb, out-starting stern and slow, Sound after sound is born, and dies like wind, For thine the more mysterious human heart, Earth is thine outer court, and Life a breath; And all the worlds, with all that they contain And hung below the throne Where Thou dost sit, the universe to bless,— Thou sovereign smile of God, eternal loveliness! THE TWO BRIDES. I saw two maidens at the kirk, And one in her winding-sheet. The choristers sang the hymn, And one for life to Life And one to Death was wed. They were borne to their bridal beds, One in a merry castle, The other a solemn tomb. BAYARD TAYLOR, whose ancestors emigrated with William Penn, was born in Kennet Square, Chester County, Pennsylvania, on the 11th of January, 1825. At the age of seventeen, he became an apprentice in a printing-office at West Chester, devoting his leisure time assiduously to the study of Latin and French, and writing poetry for the "New York Mirror" and for "Graham's Magazine." These effusions were collected and published in 1844, in a volume called Ximena |