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 256 Lowell of his later addresses, that criticism must seem groundless. To be sure, his long residence abroad increased his liking for England and Englishmen; and the course of American politics was a rather dismal sequel to the Gettysburg Address and the Commemoration Ode. After vanquishing slavery, the nation found itself facing still more dangerous evils, and was somewhat loth to gird its loins for the struggle. Lowell had greeted the dawn that was brightening the New England of his youth, and had seen the noonday of heroic effort in the Civil War. Now, as his own days were lengthening, he could be excused if he saw only a dubious twilight in the America of the eighties. As a matter of fact there is little doubt and no indifference in these later writings. The maturing years had widened Lowell's perspective without vanquishing the idealism of his youth. He could look back on the course of the industrial revolution which had transformed his New England as well as older lands; and he could foresee the impending revolution that science had already begun in men's standards and pro- cesses. The effect of these movements on his own thought are manifest in his poetry and essays mainly by implication and suggestion ; but in the utterances of the last decade of his Hf e he often looks upon both his own career and the American purpose directly from this more modernjpoint of view. In his address at Manchester, in 1884, on Democracy, he declared : By temperament and education of a conservative turn, I saw the last years of that quaint Arcadia which French travellers saw with delighted amazement a century ago, and have watched the change (to me a sad one) from an agricultural to a proletary population. Nevertheless, though opposing the single tax and State Social- ism, he could see with hopefulness the portents in the air and even believe that democracy was to be the ftdcrum for a Socialism possessing "the secret of an orderly and benign con- struction." He is wilUng to rebuild his house and believes that it can be builded better. The forward call is to be foimd in those speeches as well as in the ardent verse of youth, the call of "the radiant image of something better and nobler and more enduring than we are." This moral earnestness, this desire for perfection, this zeal