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The "Landlady's Daughter" is one of the most popular of German songs, and is said to be a great favorite among the students of the various universities. We have either read somewhere, or the idea is our own, that a political meaning is couched in these verses, the dead daughter representing the spirit of German freedom, and the exclamations uttered by the three students respectively, the sentiments with which its loss is regarded by different minds.

Once over the Rhine three students strayed,
At our landlady's door a halt they made.

"Oh! landlady, hast thou good beer and wine, And where is that fair little daughter of thine?"

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My wine and beer are fresh and clear;
My daughter lies stretch'd on her cold death-
bier."

As into the chamber they took their way,
In a sable coffin the maiden lay.

Then quickly putting the death-veil by,
The first look'd on with a mournful eye :

"Oh! would thou wert living, fair maiden,"
said he ;

"Forever henceforth, my beloved thou should'st
be.'

The second the veil o'er the features cast,
And turn'd away, while his tears fell fast:

"Alas! that thou li'st on thy cold death-bierThou whom I've loved for so many a year."

The third quickly lifted again the veil,
And press'd a kiss on that mouth so pale:

"I love thee to-day, as through all the past—
I will love thee hereafter while time shall last."

Here is a ballad of the days of the Northmen, containing more strength and nerve than is commonly found in Ühland's poems.

THE BLIND KING.

Why stands, on yonder hilly shore, that band of Northmen bold ?
Why thither goes, with hoary locks, that monarch blind and old?
He leans upon his staff, and cries, in agony profound,
Till o'er the intervening strait the island shores resound:

"Give, robber, back, my child to me, from out thy dungeon cleft;
Nought save her lyre and song so sweet to soothe mine age was left.
Thou'st torn her from the verdant shore, while there the dance she led;
This bringeth lasting shame on thee, and bows my aged head."

Forth from his cavern, fierce and tall, the robber stood reveal'd,
He swung his giant sword aloft, and struck upon his shield:
Why, then, of all thy guards around, did none the foe deter?
Of all the warriors in thy train, will no one fight for her?"

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Yet not a warrior leaves the ranks, nor maketh one reply;
The sightless monarch turns around: "Then all alone am I?"
The father's hand his youthful son now grasp'd with fervent zeal :
“Oh! let me fight the foe! there's strength in this young arm, I feel."

"Oh! son, the foe is giant strong, and none his might withstand,
Yet thine I feel is valor's stamp, while here I grasp thy hand;
Then with thee take, in song renown'd, my old and trusty glaive,
And should'st thou fall, my aged limbs shall find an ocean grave."

The deep abyss sends o'er the sea a roaring, surging sound,
The blind old monarch listening stands, and all is still around;
But hark! from yonder side there comes the clash of spear and shield,
And echo loud the battle cry and tumult of the field.

Full soon the old king blithely cries, "Oh! what can now be seen?
My own good sword! I heard its clang, I know that sound so keen."
"The robber chief lies overthrown-his meed of blood is won;
Then hail to thee, of heroes chief, thou monarch's valiant son."

Again 'tis silent all; the monarch stands with list'ning ear:

"A rushing sound, as if of oars, across the waves I hear."

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Returning now they're bringing back thy son with spear and shield

With gleaming locks of golden hair, thy daughter dear Gunild."

A welcome from the lofty rock the hoary monarch gave:

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My age will now pass gladly on, and honored be my grave;

Beside me thou, my son, shalt place my sword that rings so clear, And thou, Gunild, my dirge shalt sing, oh! ransomed maiden dear."

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"dead but sceptred sovereigns Who still rule our spirits from their urns ;" and while his songs preserve the records of the past, which else had perished from mortal memory, they afford the surest pledge of his own exemption from oblivion.

THE MINSTREL'S RETURN.
There on his bier the poet lies,
His pallid lips are songless now,
A wreath of Daphne's golden hair
Adorns that once inventive brow.

They place around, in fair, white scrolls,
His minstrel lays, the last he sang,
And in his arms all silent lies

The harp that late so clearly rang.

Tho' sunk in death's oblivious sleep,
Round ev'ry ear still floats his lay,
And bitter grief it wakens still,

For him, the lordly, past away.

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Yet, as with quicken'd strength and power,
Returns the year's delightful prime,
So now, with youth and grace renew'd,
The minstrel roams in his new time.

He mingles with earth's living crowds,
His form no funeral trace displays;
The olden age, that deem'd him dead,
Itself lives only in his lays.

"Walter the True Knight" is a ballad of the middle ages, portraying man's fidelity and woman's inconstancy, contrary to the usual burthen of such ditties, and showing that all damsels were not, in those days, quite so devoted as the "nut brown maid in the old English song, who refused to abandon her lover, even when he informed her

"That he must to the greenwood goe, Alone, a bannyshed man."

The valiant Walter rode along,
Our Lady's church beside;

A maiden on the threshold knelt,
By sorrows deeply tried:

"Oh! halt, my Walter true, for me;
Hast thou forgotten-can it be

That voice of old so welcome ?"

"Whom see I here? the faithless maid, By me belov'd of yore? But where are now thy robes of silk,

Of gold and gems thy store?" "Alas! that I my true one left! For Paradise from me is reftWith thee again I find it."

With pitying hand he raised the maid,
Upon his courser sprung,
And fast around his stalwart form

With frail, white arms she clung.
"Oh! Walter true, this heart, alas!
Is beating now 'gainst cold dull brass,
And not upon thy bosom."

To Walter's castle on they rode,
There all was still and lone;
The visor from his face she took--

His blooming looks had flown. "These sunken eyes, these cheeks so white, Become thee well, thou faithful knight—

I love thee more than ever."

The gentle maid the armor loosed, Which he, the wronged one, wore. "What see I here? a sable garb?

What loved one is no more ?" "For one beloved my sorrows flow, Whom I on earth no more shall know, Nor ever in the future."

She sank beside his feet, and there
With outstretched arms she lay :
"On me, poor, hapless penitent,
Some pity take, I pray;

Oh! raise me up, and make me blest,
And let me on thy faithful breast
From all my grief recover."

"Forbear, forbear, thou wretched child, For vain is thy request;

These arms are bound, as if in chains,
And torpid is this breast.
Be sad, as I am sad, for aye!
Love from this heart hath fled away,

And never more returneth."

Thus have we culled, here and there, a few scattered flowers from the wilderness of sweets in which we have lately been wandering; but, like all exotics, when transplanted from the parent soil, they have lost in the process much of their native freshness and vigor. And even if all their "original brightness" has not yet departed, the faint trace of its existence that may still remain, affords but little indication of their beauty when flourishing in a more genial clime. They resemble the plant which, in the masque of Comus,' the shepherd gave to the attendant spirit :

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A PLEA FOR PHILOSOPHY.

SOME will have it, that all philosophy is vain; and that the time bestowed upon it, in our colleges and elsewhere, is only wasted, or worse than wasted, in the pursuit of a phantom that can never be reached, while it leads us away continually from the proper use of life. What What men need in this world, we are told, is not speculation, but an active apprehension of the living realities with which they are immediately surrounded, and the proper practical use of these for the ends of their own existence. The world is a fact, broadly and palpably spread out before our senses; and our life is a fact, which we are required to turn to right account, by making the best of it for ourselves and others, in the circumstances in which we may happen to be placed. Why, then, should we occupy ourselves with things that lie wholly beyond the sphere of our actual existence, and that can only serve to disqualify us for understanding and using the world as it is? The sense of the world is sufficiently clear of itself for such as are disposed to take things just as they are, without troubling their heads about what they are pleased to call its inward spiritual constitution and design. We have had ample experiment besides of the vanity of philosophy, in the past history of its own achievements. The world has been philosophizing since the days of Pythagoras at least, and from a still earlier date, and yet to what has it come in the end? Has its philosophy made it any wiser or better? Has it accomplished any solid gain whatever for the human race? Is the world improved in any respect by the long exploded systems of Greece, by the profound lucubrations of the schoolmen in the middle ages, or by the vast upheavings of thought which have had place since the days of Immanuel Kant, in the modern metaphysics of Germany? Is it not, in fact, a history of contradictions and confusions, from beginning to end-one

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system continually surmounting another, only to be as certainly overwhelmed after the same fashion, in its turn? It will be time enough to challenge our respect for philosophy, when philosophy shall have come to some proper understanding, in the first place, of her own mind and meaning. When she shall have become once mistress of herself--a house no longer divided against itself, the very cavern of Æolus where all pent-up minds are struggling perpetually in fierce conflict-it will be time enough to think of proclaiming her mistress of the world. Till then, let her be remanded to her proper dwelling place in the clouds, the land of far-off shadows and dreams. The world has too much serious business on hand, to be interrupted by her pretensions, and may reasonably say, in the language of Nehemial to Sanballat and Geshem the Arabian of old: "I am doing a great work, so that I cannot come down; why should the work cease, whilst I leave it and come down to you?"

All this is very comfortable doctrine, of course, for those who have no disposition and not much power, possibly, to think for themselves, while they have just as little wish or will to be bound by the thinking of others. Agrarianism, indeed, we may call it, of the most truly democratic order; for is it not something more to level thus the aristocracy of mind, than it is to bring down simply the aristocracy of birth or fortune? Is it not a species of self-exaltation, particularly soothing to the sense we commonly have of our own importance, to be able in this way to compare ourselves so favorably with what has generally been counted the highest order of the world's intellect, and the true nobility of its life? The man who can say of all philosophy, It is mere wind, must needs feel himself in this respect somewhat superior to the great minds which, in differ

ent

ages, have counted it worthy of their attention and study. It is much, surely,

for any one to have the thought clearly present in his own consciousness: "Pythagoras was a fool, Plato was a fool, Aristotle was a fool; all the old Greek philosophers were fools; the seraphic, irrefragable doctors of the school divinity, Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventura, Duns Scotus, the whole of them together, were fools; and the same character belongs most eminently to the modern German thinkers, Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, and all who think it worth while to waste any time upon their speculations: but I am wise; for I have sense enough to know that all philosophy is nonsense, and that the less the world is troubled with it the better. My life is more rational, and likely to be of far more account at last, than theirs." This, we say, is comfortable; and it is not much wonder, perhaps, that philosophy should be in bad credit with so many persons, when so fair a premium in this way is made to rest on unthinking ignorance and sloth.

And then, the case becomes still worse, of course, when the prejudice of religion comes in, as it is always ready to do, in favor of the same conclusion. It is bad enough, we are told, that philosophy should pretend to interfere with the actual world, in its common life, abstracting men's minds from its practical realities, and amusing them with its own theoretic dreams; but when the evil is made to reach over, in the same form, to the sphere of religion and faith, it is something still more difficult to be endured. And is there not in fact an original, necessary opposition between revelation and philosophy? Is not faith the simple contrary of speculation? Is it not written, "Let no man spoil you through philosophy;" plainly implying that we should have nothing to do with it, in the business of Christianity? And is not the history of the church from the beginning full of instruction and warning, in the same direction? Have not all corruptions and heresies sprung from philosophy, undertaking to rule and set aside the simple doctrine of God's word? Witness the flood of Gnostic speculations in the second century; the subsequent errors of Origen and his school; the scholastic subtleties of the Aristotelian theology, at a still later period; and above all, the rationalistic, pantheistic systems, to which the

modern German philosophy has given birth. Philosophy and infidelity are found to have, in all ages, a close inward affinity for each other. The first may be considered the elder sister, if not in fact the proper natural mother of the second. That state of the church accordingly is to be accounted the most prosperous, in which religion is as little as possible the subject of speculation; and the man who meddles least with the contents of his faith, in the way of inward thought and reflection, is likely to show himself the best Christian, and make his way most successfully to heaven.

But now, in opposition to all such popular cant, that can hardly be said for the most part to understand its own meaning,— it is at once an ample reply to say, that philosophy belongs to the very constitution of our life, and cannot be expelled from it therefore without the greatest violence and wrong. For what is it at last, more or less than the endeavor to know ourselves and the world, and the form in which, at any given time, this knowledge reflects itself in our consciousness? And can it be a question at all, whether it be proper and right for us to seek the knowledge of ourselves in this way? It lies in the idea of humanity itself, that it should comprehend within itself such a mode of existence, just as it necessarily includes also the life of art or the law of social, or political organization. The question whether philosophy is to be tolerated and approved, is precisely like the question whether we should approve and tolerate government or art. These are all so many several spheres only of our human existence itself, which are necessary to make it true and complete, and which cannot be sundered from it, without overthrowing, at the same time, its essential constitution. It is not by any arbitrary option or will of ours, that they come to have the right of being comprehended in the organic structure of the world; their right is as old as the world itself, and must stand as long as man and nature shall be found to endure. If any number of men, for instance, in vast world-convention assembled, should pretend to sit in judgment on the right and title of the fine arts, music, sculpture, poetry and the rest, to retain their place in the world, and at last

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