Poets of the South
were written at random,-off and on, here, there, anywhere,-just as the mood came, with little of study and less of art, and always in a hurry." His poem
lace in the realm of song; yet the wish he expressed, that they might echo from
ith a voi
ard beyo
ys of my pe
songs p
ow hears
w belong
the birds', w
ten shall
who knows
dest son
e, humble, and
from heart
mparisons made and the immoderate laudation expressed are far from agreeable. But we are not left wholly at a loss. With the few recorded facts of his life as guide, the poems of Father Ryan become an interesting and instructive autobiography. He was a spontaneous singer whose inspiration came, not from distant fiel
land, had immigrated not long before. He possessed the quick sensibilities characteristic of the
t it up! the old
sons has but brig
e tyrant has t
emblazoned with
ith an unusual reverence for sacred things, early indicated the priesthood as his future vocation. In the autobiographic poem, Their Story Runneth Thus, we have a picture of his youthfu
was full
and face the d
intermingled. H
s bright prattle
d go, and nev
lips, and ne
e. He was so
r-change
ation. The writer of his memoir dwells on the regret with which he severed the ties binding him to home. No doubt he loved and honored his parents. But there wa
l, with great, bro
listen just a
ring with the p
equal self-abnegation, resolved to give themselves to the church, she as a nu
mid of May t
the stars tha
t from themselv
t touched to sep
inked in look, wh
rain, upon the
no more. Their h
sp in twain; an
own on them, whi
neel, around t
any heart
rt of that las
s beating.
go to Calvar
garden of
our heads and br
bleeding, while
Father! but T
ature enters it only in a subordinate way; its forms and sounds and colors do not inspire in him the rapture found in Hayne and Lanier. He not only treats of Scripture themes, as in St. Stephen, The Masters Voice, and A Christmas Chant, but he also finds subjects, not always happily, in distinctive
n 1863 he ministered to the inmates of a prison in New Orleans during an epidemic of smallpox. His martial songs, The Sword of Robert Le
ts scabbard!
d might v
r triumph w
heart grew
d on while gl
le Rob
its scabbard
shed the s
d now in its
sleep of our
yet withou
and peac
Confederate flag, words like the following appealed stro
anner down!
ts staff an
iant hosts
m it flo
ard for us
k there's no
ose who once
furl it w
Banner! Tru
athed around
live in son
folds are i
me on brig
poets an
ounding do
lds though
war. The wrongs of the so-called Reconstruction period aroused his ardent indignation, and fou
the victor's
the dead ar
the chain t
s to them a
touched by the splendid generosity of the North; and, surrend
n thy own
thy mounta
an the oc
an thy own
d! to thy
rcy's generous
tter place he published for some three years the Banner of the South, a periodical that exerted no small influence on the thought of the state. In 1870 he became pastor of St. Mary's church in Mobile. Two years later he made a
ce to-day; he
human rage, no
ks the twilig
ief the starli
es, with droopi
mes where tears
rangely sweet-
lips speak oft
After Sickness, we find an expression of his
d, I almost t
etween foreve
rd the awful
ur, while I d
; but alas! 't
opened and the
spirit frequently found utterance in song. In 1880 he published a volume of poems, to which only a few additions were subsequen
e the place o
at are harro
far betwee
His angels
he dark moun
right mountai
he cause of this sadness? It may have been his keen sense of the tragic side of human life; it may have been the endur
voices of air,
es that soun
y be joyful to
each chord and a
sighs swell the
ils them: they
forever-but n
poetry sound
not answer you;
and weariness, Father Ryan was no pessimist.
one: no m
ir lot-or h
ve clouds-but
of bright ar
s truest o
stronger he
f life, far
e reign of s
smiles for l
tree-grief b
med to him but a skeleton masque. He preferred those melodies that rise on the wings of thought, and come to human hearts with an inspiration of faith and hope. He regarded genuine poets as the hig
dreamers; in t
ross th
ystery of the
ic rhyt
in themselves-t
th deepe
breast a heav
torment
neliest men that
r what t
unlight of thei
r them i
at Nature is but the vesture of God, beneath which may be discerned the divin
verywhere-and
m which His
ide His prese
e, power, to
h upon this
eyes, thro' a
vision of the
d forms- its birds and flowers-should inspire devotion. In St.
s close t
v'ry rose
ding-and
h calls to
far, and h
gle flower
ery sweete
uds or un
l ever-y
f I read Go
t of any other American singer. "Religious feeling," it has been well said, "is dominant. The reader seems to be moving about in cathedral glooms, by dimly lighted altars, with sad procession of ghostly penitents and mourners fading into the darkness to the sad music of lamenting choirs. But the light which falls upon the gloom
lighted unduly in alliteration, assonance, and rhyming effects, all which he sometimes carried to excess. In the
Banner, for
aff 'tis dro
fold it,
not a man
not a swor
not one le
d which her
now scorn a
ide it-let
akable echoes of Poe, as in the
emple vas
nd vast
e last sweet
ating f
hat taberna
the home
an with the
went o
this question fully. But in addition to the merits already pointed out, the work of Father Ryan is for the most part simple, spontaneous, and clear. It generally consists of brief lyrics devoted to the expression of a single mood or reflection. There is nothing in thought or style beyond the ready comprehension of the average reader. It do
in time of suffering or disappointment, to come to most of us. The moral sense of the American people is strong; and sometimes a comforting though commonpla
rose, with
lessly the
rose bleeds
far more r
ruth beyon
ruth that a
h roses a
hearts are th
which Bethle
art all ful
forth its f
ross became
dder aspects of life. The truths of religion, the vicissitudes of human destiny, the tragedy of death-these are the themes in which he finds his inspiration, and to which we all turn in our most serious moments. And though the strain in which
no fate-
eneath e
all la
without
enterprise. At his best he was an eloquent speaker. But during the later years of his life impaired health interfered with prolonged mental effort. His mission h
aried, and my h
l oppr
what I have
only
*
ry a weak a
rt opp
gh a weak a
st-for
ife to which he passed, we may believe that he was welcomed by her to whom in youth he had given the tender name of Ullainee, a
E SELECTION
FROM FRANC
SPANGLED
see, by the daw
hailed at the twili
nd bright stars, thro
] we watched, were s
ed glare, the bomb
the night that our
t star-spangled
the free and the
y seen thro' the
ghty host in dread
the breeze, o'er
ows, half conceal
e gleam of the mo
flected now shin
angled banner; O
the free and the
at band who so
f war and the ba
ntry should leav
hed out their foul
d save the hir
f flight, or the
ngled banner in
the free and the
ever, when fre
ed homes and the
and peace, may the
at hath made and pr
must, when our c
r motto-"In Go
ngled banner in
the free and the
the circumstances that gave rise to
nry, on the north bank
d by the British fleet
unsuccessful, the British beca
e attack upon Baltimor
d the capitol and ot
mpared other martial lyr
. Howe's Battle Hy
ers of England and
ge of the Light
*
FROM RICHAR
NZA
like the
to the mo
shades of e
on the grou
e rose's
dews of nig
wept the w
all weep a
like the
s in the moo
frail-its da
nd soon to
leaf shall f
ree will mou
ewail the l
ll breathe a
ike the prin
Tampa's [3] d
rising tid
ll vanish fr
f grievin
e of the h
shore loud
las! shall
LL TO AM
more than f
eart and fri
side some fo
hall I re
o'er the
sigh to th
g and bel
or me,-for w
o matter h
me thoughts
red in our
led, and ne
r at the
speak not o
all I each
ved face be
nths,-it may
no!-I wil
h gloom,-fond e
shape unce
e,-few and f
and eyes ar
e love no ti
chance or cha
seen, and
rs them mo
hopes fade,
ives when a
more than n
eek or hop
I will, wha
th them and
of Wilde, page 13. This
ay and announced as a
wever, was soon detect
em received a du
te theme of poets ever since Job (vii. 6) declared
ence seems to be to th
west coast
e 4: See
be remembered that th
lan
834-1840 were spent in E
n's farewell to Englan
ro
*
ROM GEORGE
OSING
s holy hour, a
like a gentl
lseless world. H
tones are swelli
departe
neral
t; yet on the s
ly light, the
tless shroud; th
er's sigh; an
till and placidl
f the seasons
ight Summer, Aut
h his aged loc
cadences tha
d-harp's wild an
dirge o'er
the eart
s a
for tears. Wi
of the heart
like the wizar
tomb of ages,
finger to t
ons that have
shadow of th
te of life. Tha
of Hope, and
mournfully ab
slumber there, sc
s passed to
e
with it many a
s. Its mark is
ach heart. In i
scepter o'er
not. It laid
ng man,-and t
d the flashin
ll of revelry,
joyous, and t
s is heard, whe
hout resounded
where sword, and
light of midday
ts is shivered
soil of carna
d mouldering s
e a wreath of
elted in the
its millions
im land
seles
the glass and s
n his silent c
rt to pity?
nd forever. T
f the Andes,
s unfathomable
the northe
plumage in the
wings at nightfa
his mountain
weight of slee
p darkness has
pinions. Rev
troubled vision
orrow,-cities
on the wate
from the ocea
rious caverns,
bald and blacken
to the plain,-n
strength of ho
like the Alp
nations,-and t
d burning bla
le in their e
leiad, lovelies
glorious spheres,
he trackless v
uilder, holds hi
all-pitiless,
y wrecks that
se, like othe
rful ruin he
Year should be compared with Bryant's The Flood of Years; similar in theme, the two poems have much in common. Th
the
hadowed present
hose reign no
d never shall
whose reign th
rowth and actio
ing Concord h
upposed to form the Pleiades has disappeared. Such a phenomenon is not unknown; modern
*
ROM WILLIAM
ST PLE
n the
it w
minence of l
e tops of the g
ansions of th
eautiful
its great cav
bright w
as of old, hig
e!
ermore,
who holds his
ic, through t
turn to watcher
t again
t-loving cert
n the shut eye
oking shepher
ght-returning
y her beauty
ng his
dreary watch a
meward o'er th
waiting still,
while the drow
t!-how lingers, in
the expected a
l to his
lo
irst, in smilin
happy circle
dream, until her
ever confisca
ivion the pur
rth, its common
should fal
ow blasted by a
ncerted spri
nd the generous
ill th
tness fills the
ars, lamentin
he selected o
en most lovely,
ever thus t
s song hath e
for bliss too
precious is th
sweet is first t
rt-lived things
ale star, shoot
ever brighte
one sphere
WAMP
ere the Swam
and merry
troop of Tarl
in the cyp
hammock
in the red
the tree-t
wild and
ay and shun
to strike th
start with
he forest tra
hears our ch
g saber bli
drives away
from his ca
bit, good ga
not ask a
Santee [8]
heels the fo
art and the
stubborn
bore, the sm
Marion's me
e fire and c
haps, that we
wamp Fox rou
a sign we m
to the scout
is order c
our torch ac
see the b
see their f
should they fi
strong and
coward ter
t as long as
speaks the
then, they tu
ning shade and
e fire and
re gone, and
lonel [9] be
slumbers t
comrades; 't
t's fightin
night comes,
pon his kn
t hoecake, b
silent jug t
it should
s men have n
that our l
this we just
tatoes on
call for su
brush and r
, but a sol
the time in
think of
hooting t
0] crawling o
pond the f
e the alli
he signal! s
the Santee s
aid of fri
en help us!
comrades! M
x takes us o
swords and spu
y chance, I t
ere the Swam
swamp and c
e in our cou
for the st
amp is now
e cowers wi
shouts, he dr
d flies from
m; for the constellation of the Pleiades was named by the Greeks from their word plein, to sail,
stars with profound interest. The hope expressed for the return of the star cannot be regarded, in the light of
dark bodies. Astronomers tell us that there is reason to believe that the dark bodies or burned-out suns of the universe are more numerous than the
ead: "When the morning stars sang together." According to the Platonic philosophy, this music of the spheres, t
smallest orb wh
otion like a
to the young-e
y is in imm
his muddy ve
ose it in, we c
Venice, Act
h of Simms, page 16. T
three novels descript
tch of General Francis
and escape earned f
mp F
l in the army of Cornwallis. He was a brilliant and successful officer
f the state; and from these they kept up an active warfare with the British. Their desperate battles, night marches, surprises, and
principal field of ope
nd Pedee
evolution, and was made lieutenant colonel for gallant conduct in the
ater tortoise or
nt's Song of
*
ROM EDWARD C
ALTH
s cup to o
elines
of her
eming
he better
y stars h
air, that,
of earth t
tone is mu
e of morn
ing more t
ver in h
of her hea
her lips
see the b
sue from
re as though
ures of
gs have th
ess of you
passions, c
her, she
f themselve
l of pa
face one gla
re on t
voice in ec
must lon
, such as
much e
is nigh my
be life's
s cup to o
elines
of her
eming
d would on ear
e of suc
might be a
iness a
O
glass, whos
loved heal
pledges, l
the hallowed
roke a heart
feelings o
by after-tim
ar to
he old, imp
s of my m
unhappy li
chambered
looks as wh
flights of si
chain of sp
gems,-t
IVE
ncense, han
thine ea
cheer the p
mock it
smoke and bre
ul influe
ir perfume an
ered to
is the Afgh
rit may
died sens
nce, near
gh that sh
e in livi
late besi
these hea
nd the following songs is quite remarkable. It is traceable to the skillful use of l
le rhyme used in the first and seventh lines of the other stanzas is he
rinking song we may comp
Jons
e only with
l pledge
kiss but
not look
at from the s
a drink
of Jove's
ot change
ee late a
uch hono
it a hope
not wit
ereon didst
'st it b
grows, and s
tself, b
ul poem by Amelia C. Welby (1819-1852), a Souther
hours like b
tly and
d stars wer
sand on
ave with di
ped upon
a star in i
t tremblin
*
OM PHILIP PE
NCE V
hee long
ence
right dream
come
in my fon
t's dea
and thy
ence
lone an
ruin
didst har
ven
t-the hu
y and
re in my
ence
ovelier tha
eir p
excelled
etest
t was as
t a ma
ad loved
ence
st, colde
lorio
e green
the
ots not t
disd
n love's
ence
es of th
g grave
ies love
maiden
loom, in be
er
earthly pa
ence
d Rosalie Lee, another brief lyric, had "met with more favor than I could ever perceive their just claim to." Hence he was kept from "venturing
the capacity to love, but directed her love to no object. Her passions went flowing like a lost river. Byr
an to the river
nated all.'
quire to be interpreted,
ld avoid the over concen
e the idea clearer
r, 1850,
*
FROM THEOD
AC OF THE
drum's sad r
ier's la
Life's para
ve and f
eternal ca
nt tents a
ards, with s
uac of t
of the fo
ls upon
thought at m
ones le
of the mor
or's drea
horn nor sc
hall call
d swords are
med heads
y banner, tr
eir marti
funeral tear
ains from
d forms, by
from an
g troop, the f
's stirri
the dreadf
nd shout,
ld note nor
ll with fi
s that never
ure of t
erce northe
s his grea
the triumph
the serrie
he thunder
r the fie
he watchwor
ctory o
doubtful co
that stri
iercer figh
ul blood o
he storm of
lled the
stout old ch
is strength
t hour his s
o a mart
of his be
on's fla
of their f
born laure
deemed the s
ves for
norther's br
stura's p
e pitying s
s molder
scream, or e
erd's pe
es each su
d o'er that
Dark and B
not slum
r steps and t
he heed
oud land's
your fitt
rom war his
es of h
heir parent t
the gor
Spartan mot
bloody s
ne of thei
adly on
eyes and hea
oes' se
balmed and
the bloo
ootstep here
age of y
your glory
e her rec
ints the ha
or proudl
instrel's vo
ess song
vanished age
ry how
change, nor w
s remorse
ne ray of g
your deat
f O'Hara, page 21, for th
flag of truce to demand surrender. "You are surrounded by 20,000 men," wrote the Mexican general, "and cannot, in any human probability, avoid
e heavy losses. The Americans lost 267 killed and 456 wounded; Santa Anna stated his loss at 1500, which was probably an underes
ky, and won his first laurels in command of Kentuckians in the War of 1812, during which he was engaged in fighting the Indian allies of Great B
fought, so called from the mountain pass of Angos
mother who was accustomed to say, as she handed a shield to h
*
ROM FRANCIS
IANS OF TH
est of the k
ce the da
the lamp o
n hearts
est of the
rely hat
Spotswood [2]
igh round
the blue Vir
embatt
there, in
y and t
nce lives in
uty stars
he hearths o
eliness
ey slept!-the
s of nob
d while the
heir vig
"Golden Hors
Dominion
ve found ench
a knight
E GIF
focal and f
hospital wa
grape-shot
attle [5] and
uch as you
ffen, of
welcome!" the
octor can he
im; and brou
sweet in th
im down on a
arus, hee
the war with
against ske
orture, how
of the stick
lint of the s
pirit that
ay, more! in
skeleton "lea
at first, of
," inquiring
swer: "Of ei
d I are l
m from the w
sed at the fr
fen was up
irst-as he b
int of his st
pared!" There was
iffen.-He did
fancy that
Knights of the
of the minstre
r legend that
best on his
t soul of
Giffen," o
ion of this poem. In this poem the exact meaning and seque
irginia "in the name of his Majesty King George of England." On his return to Williamsburg he presented to each of his companions a miniature golden horseshoe to be worn up
iament, in which it is designated as "the colony and dominion of Virginia." In his History of Virginia (
on said: "If there is a finer lyric than this in the
, which opened December 31, 1862, and lasted thr
led in some battle near
ce to King Arthur and
bl
compared Browning's Inc
*
FROM JOHN
IN C
covered hil
ahannock's
crimsoned w
s recent s
ouds lay pitc
of heaven
ead gun of
its hid e
so softly b
t leaf t
e of the ran
owly from
e circling hi
on grimly
ss camp and
en sunse
fervid air
ow rich, n
seemed its
departing
nd, which, e
ures brave
ck up, with f
y clash o
the soldiers
ined by it
ore was blue
s gray wit
still, and
ent light
nd forest, hi
ate with
stream with
ly o'er it
throughout it
ing of th
ause, and
ets peale
Doodle" wa
he shore g
g ripple sh
he shinin
the swarming
e to th
e more the
he stor
pon the ev
gned a ho
stream its n
the gliste
now the Yan
t stood t
nsive soul
tive note'
me, Sweet Hom
n founts
Gray the so
e wand o
'neath the l
n by the
warm, his n
eir beauty
the tear-mist
ones stand
the iris
s tearful
vanished, a
ght died
waked by m
in simples
sternest Yan
the Rebel
e form of m
t celestia
mid war's em
one touch
ketch of John R. T
e occurred in 1862 or 1863. In both years the Union and Conf
*
OM MRS. MARGA
nt is here made to Dr
ission to use the t
BER NOC
ir sweeps fa
maple-cre
on m
tinglin
sterious, woo
twig, from s
th yet a tin
tant,
ath t
leaves come w
hectic tre
dence, doom
ate o
n its
hing sob-lik
dream of p
r in twil
any h
imes hav
ng pathos o
shiver as
g through eac
ere ar
unde
midnight
out its dir
clinging le
im wh
and
no heart-brea
rd gives the
urgam[2] e
asy
the
o anodyne
THE AN
o it. Some d
lacken this
ing our very
to our hea
enough to l
s of angels
do it. Oh,
en of daytime
muse while the
archs sat in
with a heaven
or angels
hem afar at
he world's hot
ve bidden th
in conver
to hallow the
ur wine and b
hearts that w
k reaches the l
that we groan wi
ome such c
care's dis
'll call th
e dreamed of c
of every mo
spirit and sho
t the doo
watch as the
s we meant to
e following poem are good examples of her poetic art, and exh
rgam (Latin), I s
e men stood by him: and when he saw them, he ran to meet them from the tent door, and bowed himself toward the ground, and
*
FROM EDGA
ELEN
hy beaut
icaean [2] b
, o'er a pe
wayworn w
wn nativ
seas long w
hair, thy c
rs, have bro
ory that
ndeur that
brilliant w
like I see
lamp withi
[4] from the
ly Lan
EL LE
y and many
dom by th
there lived wh
me of Ann
she lived with
ve and be
ld and she
ingdom by
h a love that wa
y Annab
t the winged se
her an
the reason th
ingdom by
out of a clo
iful Ann
highborn kin
her awa
er up in
ingdom by
ot half so ha
ying her
the reason (as
ingdom by
ame out of the
killing my
was stronger by
ho were ol
far wise
he angels in
ons down un
ever my soul
autiful A
r beams without b
autiful A
er rise, but I fe
autiful A
ght-tide, I lie do
y darling-my li
lcher there
b by the s
NTED PA
enest of o
angels t
r and stat
lace-reare
rch Thought
ood t
aph sprea
ric half
low, glorio
f did floa
this-was i
long
entle air t
t swee
mparts plume
odor we
in that ha
o luminous
moving m
's well-t
a throne whe
hyro
s glory wel
of the rea
h pearl and
fair pal
ame flowing, fl
rkling
Echoes, who
ut to
of surpass
wisdom of
ngs, in robe
e monarch's
mourn, for
upon him
bout his ho
shed and
dim-remem
ld time
s now within
red-litten
that move f
scordan
a ghastly r
the pa
hrong rush
-but smil
QUEROR
s a gal
lonesome la
rong, bewin
and drowne
a theat
f hopes
chestra brea
c of the
he form of
and mum
r and thi
s they, who
of vast for
the scenery
m out their
sibl
ey drama-
l not b
ntom chased
d that se
cle that ever
self-sa
Madness, and
the soul
mid the m
ng shape
hing that wri
enic s
writhes!-wit
s become
s sob at v
n gore
e the ligh
each quiv
in, a fun
ith the rush
gels, all pa
unveilin
ay is the t
ro the Con
RAVE
dreary, while I pon
and curious volume
ly napping, suddenly
ly rapping, rapping
I muttered, "tappin
and noth
emember it was in
ng ember wrought its
e morrow;-vainly I
se of sorrow-sorrow
iant maiden whom the
here for
ncertain rustling of
with fantastic terro
the beating of my he
entreating entrance
ntreating entrance
s and not
rew stronger; hesit
Madam, truly your f
s napping, and so ge
ame tapping, tapping
e I heard you"-here I
here and n
peering, long I stood t
eams no mortal ever d
unbroken, and the st
re spoken was the whi
d an echo murmured b
is and no
r turning, all my so
a tapping somewhat
rely that is somethin
at thereat is, and t
ill a moment and t
ind and no
shutter, when, with ma
tately Raven of the
e made he; not a minut
d or lady, perched a
of Pallas just abo
d sat, and
d beguiling my sad
ern decorum of the
horn and shaven, thou,
av
ent Raven wandering f
ly name is on the Nig
Raven, "
ungainly fowl to hear
little meaning-lit
agreeing that no
with seeing bird ab
he sculptured bust a
name as "N
ng lonely on that pl
his soul in that on
he uttered; not a fea
an muttered,-"Other fri
leave me, as my Hope
ird said,
llness broken by re
"what it utters is it
nhappy master whom
lowed faster till his
his Hope that mel
er-neve
beguiling all my s
shioned seat in front o
et sinking, I betoo
hinking what this o
ly, ghastly, gaunt, an
roaking "N
in guessing, but no
ery eyes now burned
divining, with my he
et lining that the la
et lining with the la
press, ah,
ir grew denser, perfum
ose footfalls tinkle
y God hath lent thee-b
t t
nepenthe from thy
kind nepenthe and for
Raven, "
ing of evil! prophet s
or whether tempest t
daunted, on this de
rror haunted-tell
balm in Gilead?-
lor
Raven, "
ing of evil-prophet st
bends above us-by th
orrow laden if, withi
nted maiden whom the
iant maiden whom the
Raven, "
gn of parting, bird
tar
he tempest and the Ni
as a token of that li
unbroken! quit the
my heart, and take thy
Raven, "
flitting, still is si
f Pallas just above
the seeming of a dem
im streaming throws his
that shadow that lies
lifted-
tions from Poe, the biographical and cr
nner made a deep impression on his boyish heart, and soothed his passionate, turbulent nature. In after years this poem
rfumed sea" would then be the Ligurian sea. But one half suspects that it was the scholarly and musical sou
After seeing her the first time, "He returned home in a dream, with but one thought, one hope in life-to hear again the sweet and gracious words that
utiful that mortals did not dare to love, but only to wor
le poem-very beautiful
a poet: it is indefinit
she was the only woman whom he ever truly loved; and this is evidenced by the exquisite pathos of the little poem lately written, called 'An
s Poe's poetic desi
er his escapade at West Point. A more than cousinly affection, which gradually grew in intensity, resulted from their frequent communion
kin in sweet, gentle character. "A lady angelically beautiful i
ited the tomb of "Helen"; and "when the autumnal rains fell, and the winds wailed
oem becomes quite clear. The "banners yellow, glorious, golden" is the hair; the "luminous windows" are the eyes; the "ruler of the realm" is re
ace. The former should be read in connection with the latter. Though some resembla
life. The "mimes" are men, created in the image of God, and are represented as the "mere puppets" of cir
or, N. P. Willis, "it is the most effective single example of 'fugitive poetry' ever published in this country; and unsurpasse
reaming of a beloved mistress deceased. The casement being thrown open at the fluttering of the bird's wings, the bird itself perches on the most convenient seat out of the immediate reach of the student, who, amused by the incident and the oddity of the visitor's demeanor, demands of it, in jest and without looking for a reply, its name. The raven addressed answers with its customary word, 'Nevermore'-a word which finds immediate echo in the
e raven is "emblematical of mourn
or. But the author says: "My conception was that of the bracket candelabrum affixed against the wall, high up abo
*
FROM PAUL H
ures, and Lyric of Action, the grateful acknowledgments of the editor ar
AND THE
ll to soar, bu
orever on a
y shapes of g
splendors of
he charm [2] that
ssals of that c
esent and et
en, nor fear
om of Tantalus
almy fount to
sion that our s
omptings-unful
ather in the
mortal templ
ng by that rad
h the haughtiest
hrough the bars,
ief glimpses o
r, mysterious
[5] that guards
TUDY
ld! within the
ely service;[
our frenzied
st and echo;
t to me is les
elds of quiet
y the brink
endance of untr
lier humor s
lse, 'tis not fo
l with which o
icts crowned by
of the lost,
the gorgeous v
HRA
t tradition,
athos! Hearken
ndercurrents
its cord
a c
ng of Sparta,
iles of his u
and of eage
es on fair Ital
oracle had d
loudless skies a
ates decree tha
ur househol
d by
ersed-with his
nteous realm; b
ners, and the st
ieges grimly la
anxious thoughts
is rude helme
weary head
ife, who love
ank a generous
his brow, all
ks, which pain h
ng touches of
sudden bitte
ce, and, wonde
hou, my A?thra
ant, "from who
falls to fert
le's solved-the g
ht he stormed T
st at vantage,
aptains. Thence
pleasant regi
ven than his
r whose gentle
ut mystery o
THE PI
mory of H
estic pine i
the twil
, melancholy
topmost l
, and mused, and
these sh
thou no memor
ho comes
mory of those
y calm a
ays of sunset,
ike a roy
nd outstretched
with burnin
ink the sunset l
d in tran
shy and timorou
ng's vir
st thy mighty
y head;
ike the first co
ht a pea
ssion died fro
ng from st
lm he loved to
wind-ange
the uppermost b
e heard
med) far up th
ns rustli
ot his poet-to
f heavenl
the folded dulln
thy na
hrobbings, and th
, unknow
there sweeps
s the for
al stain, o
of tempe
, no lithe bough
t, flicke
im, and seems t
the lov
reathed from ou
et airs
en the twilight
he stars
quiet eve co
ply, thr
ty hopes which
is morta
f immortal m
his heart
rthly breezes
, "Look u
ar thee! Ah, tho
gh the sa
ms a wild and s
and all
ve which holds h
ter many
lm that crowns
can wrin
peace-patheti
ps the h
er from our dead
om, a type
waxed to wings of
is soul f
Christ! whereby
it at Go
PICTUR
ellow grasses,
t; yonder, th
enery; and his
lic breeze o'er
bold stave wit
to low breat
oyance. At cal
road blue spac
ud-groups, softl
s, fantastic, be
o'er yon airy w
l, from marvelous
guarded roof,
archway, and
reezes to their
above whose t
ave with motio
oping in the n
Orient pilgrim
amels, o'er t
ds their proph
d a shoal of
onstrous frontl
arches of sun-
intered iceberg
urrents of som
of a Titan's wo
breadths of barr
rge fades down a
foam-capped bill
t water-like a
pply cadence a
re-slopes of H
ains rife with
in! and many
t the dew-lit
gantic citie
r-god built!-o'
g; caverns, suc
esolate bosom;
everent faces
een, laid in h
d-her pallid
ic! her strang
ements of the
, fancy-gender
beams and shado
t visions vani
OF ACT
rt of a cow
that is with
heart's roses ar
the heart's
he grand heav
f an angel thrills
thine armor, pres
or the crime
en too hea
re-bloom on th
us and cra
ith the fett
of thy valor a
at illumes and th
hrough God's
e to life's ne
a phantom that
that repents
u hast made
the strong wings o
o reach thou shalt
the contes
the past, w
heart's roses ar
the heart's
the fair hea
e seraph [18] who
e of joy when th
ms, see Chapter III. The selections are intende
ions, gives expression to a strong literary impulse. It was genuine in sentiment, an
mula supposed to exert a m
oment, she put
es and of wa
s Merlin a
where the Earth-spirit comes in o
counsels of Zeus, was afflicted in the lower world with an insatiable thirst. He stood u
lame man who was "laid daily at the gate of the
ce to the veil that hu
ne," of the temple. Co
et. To him quiet reflection was more than action. He loved to dwell in spirit with the good and great of the past
e refreshment of a person; here an i
and contentment; so called from a picturesque district in Greece
l in the use of blank verse. It is a piece of rare excellenc
s migration occur
egarded, among other things, as the god of song or minstrelsy, and also as the g
now Taranto. It was in ancient times a
ee page 61. The poet had a peculiar fondness f
ing! set 'twixt
d, yet statel
a half-dozen poems,-T
n the Pine Barrens, Th
The Axe and the Pine
est v
n The Pine's My
stery murmur th
tery, touched b
of long, low
ost that shall
re there seems to be an infelicitous epithet that amounts to a sort of ta
agination. He is less concerned with the messages of Nature than with its lovely forms. This poem, in its felicitous word-painting,
t vividness, the somber appearance of the clouds in autumn. See also A Phantom in the Clouds. No
helley's
temperament he was akin to Keats rather than to Longfellow. Even in his didactic poems, he is medita
God's Light. In Revelation (xix. 17) we read, "And I
el Uriel-one
esence, nearest
ady at c
ost, Book I
*
S FROM HA
O SPIRIT O
O Spirit
ng sleeps i
the soul of y
oveless s
thy strengt
ers there
re still, and th
heir wild
I knew, w
m as this s
orn that was f
n his bosom
ht him alive w
that he walk
ey guessed th
less corps
n thy stren
he deep ti
the soul of t
s ten thou
TO A
n of the mo
lers in
by the ch
hened in
byre,[3] leav
e bloodle
d case, and
your book
oves your fa
he flies
must grow bu
s be sheave
o mildew
ess tool
ur country'
ds of cri
he weapons a
et, pike,
e deadliest
est holds
drives its
a patriot
a tyrant w
him with
falter? l
rave maid
he holy fir
subluna
ou like you
heir spi
see your l
the vict
God! would
s like these
lmly braves
the Palm
let its bra
] that swee
he Lily's
to breast
n of the mo
lers in
by the ro
hened in
ing gayly t
st, hill,
or our Coun
the Lily
E
y in your hu
yrs of a fa
no marble c
rim here
f laurel i
of your fa
e, waiting f
is in th
I
ehalf [7] th
trust your s
sisters bring
e memori
! but your sha
on these wr
me cannon-mo
erlook t
s, hither fr
holier spo
defeated
ng beauty
R-LIF
, next to yo
books, and
e world o
heir beaut
tender thin
creed I've
re sentient
matter f
h secretly
the fa
y love, and
hey often
noisier cr
the faint
cannot dee
from the gl
e someti
without an
uld break som
ant of fri
r far hav
wild or thoug
crushed the t
ould shut
of the ten
r drear i
angel-flowe
me through
friend, the c
even with pa
d you be
capaciti
helpless ag
weak to fl
the fee
lways, the
hether fal
my faith
ncies pleas
shall blosso
Sibyl-leaves
eless ev
h I give y
ot hard t
to part
ous of the
ld flow with
plead agains
n with yo
NET
a lasting
ng hopes, thou
hine own happy
lowly earth a
ame be dear to
blest truths by
fruit of wholes
et labors of
tars are neares
rack the mig
hadow of a sl
ard, humili
draw from matt
nations, and
NET
ove but as a pa
n some corner
elves; and only
pauses of tha
orld might else
orth (as one d
e ardent, kis
p to sister,
not love and
hus alone, wh
sible God, migh
arts grow noble
ungeon floor
olden court-w
MER BOW
whither I ha
ound it, secret,
ecess in neig
erest hues, thic
head and col
overt, natu
im; though now
entlest breeze
unweakened.
and unfreq
ay be calm, n
h pines in one
sometimes wit
fall of voic
and you do not
ft and green,
, save one, star-
its name-which
a sapphire s
ning in the
, is large e
glimpse a dream
and the bless
ways bent my
essed, or joys d
calm I looked
quiet rapture
one
uly days when
whither, I, mo
t shall be namele
st unhealthful,
touched with dis
xcuse, nor ca
houghts, and on
stomed haunt, an
icinal
a
whispering welcom
se and humid
lant and imp
feless. Somethi
illness, the
secret influen
sense like si
cloud was vis
y look throug
lue eye
ange,
nough; my jau
and the time
awn a lesson
in these vers
e tranquil preci
n all shades of
hun to desec
nings, sickl
ve sorrows. N
as in Eden wh
e brow of Eve,
y and with a
with human s
ins, the fever
f a weak, un
lace; and who
roubles over w
r unreplyin
to the guilty
like co
ion to the following se
is perfectly cl
e lowly and
describe Nature for its own sake, as Hayne often does, but for the sake of some truth or lesson in relation to man. The le
he poet's martial lyrics. Compare Bannockburn by Burns, which
: Byre is a
ually wrack, signifie
he graves of the Confederate dead in Magnolia Cemetery, Charleston, Sou
this prediction has been fulfilled. A monu
d of in behalf of, is a rat
a color bearer on a granite pedestal
ssenger in 1851. The first stanza of this half-playful, half-seri
support from recent scientific experiments. But that this senti
The sibylline leaves or books contained their teachings, and were preserved with the utmost care in Rome. T
. This fact imparts unusual simplicity to his verse-a simplicity that strikes us all the
etic themes, treats of love in a deep, serious way. I
reminds us of a well-k
of man's life
hole existence
church, the ves
ain, glory, of
mbition, to fi
re whom these c
h will bring the true "Golden Age." "God is love; and he that d
nger in 1852. It will serve to show Timrod's manner of using blank ve
the closing lines of Longfe
rt worn an
that thou w
t read a lesso
ainting and thy
oods and hi
look that Na
he following lines from
n the love of
her visible f
guage; for hi
ce of gladnes
of beauty, a
ker musings,
sympathy, th
ness, ere h
*
S FROM SI
HE CHATTA
hills of
valleys o
rain,[3] to r
rapid and le
rock and to
bed, or nar
om folly on
s pain to att
he hills o
the valle
he hills o
h the vall
cried, Ab
ater weeds h
ow-laving,[4]
the fondling g
dipped for to
e reeds sighe
e hills of
he valley
he hills of
he valley
ry told m
f shade, the
er shadowy s
the oak, the w
th flickering m
ot so cold t
of the hills
in the vall
the hills o
the valle
shone, and the
f passage with
metal lay
d, the garnet,
l that prisons
e my own from eac
of the hills
of the val
the hills
t the vall
rain from attai
the voices
il and be mixe
burn and the mi
meadows [9] m
10] main from b
the hills o
rough the va
RYSTA
th's and truth's
n the spirit's
rumble of the c
lence in a m
clears our vis
and the soul's
flitteth here
ody tracts o
or to sit u
arp, of some lo
gaunt place,-'t
editative dar
of governor-s
bringers-down
led heavens, h
and stellar v
bout the ski
e shine, insu
n look hard
uster blazet
heinous freckl
ing cheek, no
ued with inte
a, you master
iveness, which
you, heavenly
o with love, a
es with our
O sweetest Sha
urts a day
ut, enchantment
uibble; ... Hen
way that sleep
e's [14] unnatur
ts of maids th
ses that could
a, Portia,
drear, and n
ure that had a
her Hom
forgive thy
talogue,[16] th
e patience of
rap of story,
-o'-love,[17]-t
er with
Socrat
very strong
cloak, thine i
andy upside-dow
ldlier spoke, had
0] beautiful!
All thou hads
and thy Bes
not
te,[21]
hates that in t
eze thy fellow
nor time
I fo
ose thy comic-dr
th gross and in
ite immortal
ll heaven
o t
,[23] thee I fo
are bright just
ever learned t
s shi
ee, Lucreti
art hath loved t
mplaining?) f
thine error ri
es eat sou
ll you
sweet righteo
ine, oft superf
] overmild;
ught, still with
rapt too far; hig
ngley,[30] that
ung Piers Plow
gs, whereof 't
ble; Caedmon,[
els with the
ught up the c
t yet, in find
es; tense Keats,
better; Tennyso
, yet some r
all, I pardon,
ss, your little
nd your kinshi
hee, O sovereig
oets' Poet, W
's best Man, O
fe in perfec
rade, Servant,
what mole, what
efect or sha
, tattled
loose, what
s grasp, or slee
ss may I for
agon, thou Crys
ISE
s fain of their
ak, the marsh
aves would not let
marshes, a message
tures of wild sea-l
lapped leaves s
he gates
, in the dark of
Captives hid in t
twos and by th
f sleep fel
of a lady that
with ha
of sleep s
e come, my beloved!
dawn, O beloved, m
peling gloo
, the marsh my marsh
burly-barked,
the dark are emb
e these tears at t
reason, but deeper
not one t
c of gree
eautiful trees and
aves, little maste
dark with your lumino
ss of night into
o
ld know, but wou
ion embroid'rin
ion o
ences purfling th
o the dead for
r th
the
have wr
night of our kn
taugh
o
now somewhat mo
isperers, sing
murmuring fai
t for each passi
erly, sweethea
from your darks
now from winds
mors of sweet
of more than th
that swiftly but
side bank of the
terms of sile
patience,-sift
ere, o
ur myriad palms up
myriad p
the owl,-
leaves of the lo
the beach,
have ye ut
, low-couched
st, rapt
ing sil
father-age ha
that dissolves
for this sile
larity of re
ll: man, matter,
ove, sin
ilence' clear
crystal nothin
ht could bring u
qualities of
vast margins
l's at latter
breathe no bigg
owed, when that
om, or grace e
at New thou tel
here, thou canst
t free, and b
sh, in lone
ll: the marsh wi
impid labyrin
eek in grave en
f morning-st
with one for
en: looped on his
a sound sh
a bound sh
g tension of beauty a
the bow, or the hold
r me yon dome of
bubble o'erblo
nuous tissues of s
h stars, overfre
beauty and si
e that brok
degree to this
d or a mo
ade: list! some
er
eaves? i
t? is a mo
awn, like a nicker
palpable: low mul
woods; the little on
's to be looked for;
y heart and the e
ld duck sails round t
ere a passi
is bending
ss in serial shi
ngs, fast fleeti
be
as my heart beats,
e flowing from
e, littl
fuls of stars
unseen is hoi
the inshore cur
y flutters
East! Will th
eiled, the East
; 'tis alive; 'tis
nay, 'tis abiding
sweet Heave
e through that dream
cending, a dome
pe as a beehive, f
old undazzling,
Bee, the bu
gold is the
from the hive-hol
wdrop, now the
eir little lu
sun their sou
ttiest persona
shines complet
ll heaven: with
to the farthes
tal marsh on
es. Peace to
ing, blissfu
ht but peace,
jesty moves, for a
er than dateless Ol
n ample garments from
sea-rim sinks unj
ling, reveali
se, halfwise, who
rrow, l
voice, with a
he marsh and th
glittering stream of
ood and most heaven
in the purple
onate atoms tha
e death-cold onene
elements,-fellow
se of flame, tha
, yet laborest
forge-thunder,
a man, thou Moti
, of whose art yo
greens and manifo
l-tint, ancientes
the maidens,-
and each mild
irginal bosoms of
ine, it
rms, whether drivin
subtiler essences
h,-yea, thou with
, many-spotted w
ndered, yet ever
tist, ever more
a man may avail
face, I must pass fro
e and agog, ever
ss to his work in
, and I fear not th
the strength of
soever the race tha
t with
mast-high ru
c shall h
colored smoke o
e t
k of the time
e t
ugh the night shall wi
l my spirit, as one
e, in art,-till
all float,
y bein
uction to Lanier's p
at once became popular, and was copied in many newspapers throughout the South. It was subsequently revised, and
due to the skillful use of short vowels, liquid consonants, internal rhyme, and constant alli
ities of meter. The fundamental measur
cried, Abi
et without interfering with the time element of the verse. These irregula
rsham County, in northeastern Georgia, and in its south- westerly course passes th
amain," with the present tense of the following
This line w
laurel turne
s antiquated form may be fairly questioned. In
hanged to "did bar" in the
our lines show a decided poe
a luminous
ar or a-clou
net, and
he lightnings of
awkward pause after the first foot, and
ain for to wat
anged to "myria
lenges comparison with other pieces of similar theme. It lacks the exquisite w
r over st
sharps a
into eddy
on the
with Hayne's The River
ow B
tinkle,
he tiny
ts softly
ke a fai
note, drop
w glamou
caught and
sheaves
urpose. The noble stream consciously resists the allurements of pleasure to heed
ntellectual rather than the musical side of Lanier's genius. It is purely didactic, and thought rather than melo
s longer than that of Paradise Lost, without Milton's unity and force. Such ponderous sentences are all too frequent in Lan
and study, and it exhibits his penetration and sanity as a critic. In the long list of great names he never fails to put his finger on the vulnerable spot. Frequent
remembered that Lanier
e lectured to private
ing Henry IV, iii. I. The passage
usand of my p
his hour
ee The Two Gent
racters are found as fo
Two Gentlemen of V
e; and Rosalind i
g to the well-known ca
ok of the
to fame s
, and enumerat
in particular that Hom
recalled that Paris, so
airest of women and wi
m to Troy. This incident
an W
icero said that he "brought down philosophy from the heavens to the earth."
austerity was as much affected as the dan
Buddhist religion, which teaches that the supreme attainment of mankind is Nirvana or extinction. This doctrine naturally follows from
poet of Italy and one of the greatest poets of the world. His immortal poem, The
th the expulsion of Satan and his hosts from heaven, as related in the sixth b
in its sternest aspects. His Prometheus Bound has been translated by Mrs. Browning, and hi
led De Rerum Natura. It is Epicurean in morals and atheistic in philosophy. At the same time, a
ors of Rome, was a noble Stoic philosopher. His Meditations is regarded by Jo
as Dean Milman says, "is gathered and concentered all that is elevating, passionate, profoundly pious
moral teachings resemble those of Christianity. But he unduly emphasized renunciat
tic philosopher, whose speculations, containing much that was beau
ologian. His principal work, Arcana Caelestia, is made up of profound speculat
poet, whose Vision of Piers Plowman, written in strong, alliterative verse, describes, in
by in England. Later he became a poet, and wrote on Scripture themes in his native Angl
us, but his beliefs were broader than a
me alone: I
ith categoric
my Lord by r
sense of the unapproachable beauty of the life and teachings of
woods my M
rspent,
oods my Ma
with love
they were not
ay leaves wer
ree had a m
the wood
woods my M
as well
woods my
ith death
d Shame would
e trees they
tree they s
f the wood
ems that have been written on this side of the ocean." With this judgment there will be general agreement on the part of appreciative readers. On the emotional side, it may be said to reach the
mouth and when a burning fever was consuming him. Had he not made this supreme effort, American literature would be the poorer. This poem exhibits, in a high degree, the poet's love for Nature. Indee
all the poetic feet -iambics, trochees, dactyls, anapests-so that it almost defies any attempt at scansion. But the
oaks and marshes. 3. His address to the "man-bodied tree," and the "cunning green leaves." 4. His petition for wisdom and for a prayer of intercession. 5. The stirring of the owl. 6. Address to the "reverend marsh, distilling silence." 7. Description of the full tide. 8. "The bow-and-string tension of beauty and sile
s glooms that convey to the sensitive
ity to the objects of Nature, and places them in ten
sterly, sweet
y were "little masters."
il on, fair
is a passage of
t wave against
ds; the embracin
of mighty
hs into little
on like beati
'twixt lips n
ture is regarded as a teacher who suggests or reveals ine
est flower that
often lie too d
tion and metaphor. In this poem almost every object-trees, leaves, marsh, streams, sun, heat-is per
naptness or remoteness in his resemblances. To liken the naming heavens to a beehive, and the risids, which the Course-of-thin
ool, un
o'er my hills a
t his tongue, and
se, about my
sts the
mps and
urning jaws and
l, have no need of strenuous haste. They may well m
*
S FROM FA
THE MY
the Valley o
, voiceless
ot the fall
save God's
h of my hea
here angels
as I weary
my heart c
as I weary
my soul wit
as I weary
but the huma
he world with
at the worl
"In the worl
ike a star on
n the shores
ike a dream
d I pine for
nd the False
id the Huma
mere glimps
en the clouds
that glimpse
n, heart-tired
d 'mid the
, long ago,
voice call m
wn the Vall
far beyond
hat I found
ing Place wit
at the feet
a voice sai
e from the dep
heart shal
ow I live in
I dream-a
are as sweet
on the ros
like a perfume
to God nig
of the Valle
the songs th
floats down
inds a word
, like the dov
f peace the
he deep ther
hall break o
eard songs i
shall float
had dreams
for langua
en thoughts i
my spirit w
holy veils o
eps can scar
ugh the Valley
the touch o
e the place
at are harro
far betwee
His angels
he dark moun
bright mount
UERED BA
anner, for
aff 'tis dro
fold it,
not a man
not a swor
not one le
d which her
now scorn a
ide it-let
nner down! '
ts staff an
iant hosts
m it flo
ard for us
k there's no
ose who once
furl it w
Banner! fu
usands haile
ousands wi
should fo
oeman's swor
theirs entwi
lag should
freedom or
the hands tha
ts that fond
dead are
anner-it i
d it sounds
ople in t
conquered, t
, dead hands
ose who fel
who trailed a
ildly they
url and f
anner! True
athed around
live in son
folds are i
me on brig
poets an
ounding do
lds though
anner, soft
gently-it
oops abov
not-unfol
p there, fu
ple's hopes
OF ROBER
s scabbard, p
the swor
ront of the
brave in the c
sheen, like
to vi
cabbard, whe
ered pea
s rest by the
feeble, smit
right, avengi
the swor
ts scabbard,
Virgin
o saw it gl
bore it, kn
at sword led
ow-and
scabbard!
d from sta
sword led
led for a br
land had a ca
a chief li
ts scabbard!
d might v
r triumph w
heart grew
d on while gl
le Rob
its scabbar
shed the s
d now in its
sleep of our
yet withou
and pe
TH
shadows o
unshine of
light of
land ve
e world v
rapture
day's sin
lissful
ay witho
nd filled w
e dead and
and with
life of c
ept oft as
he wrecks d
nd calm a
torm come
reck on i
land in w
fade all
he land
Eden wher
, and sweete
all with
world of
the anguishe
e world o
world tha
ight vision
world of
life ever
land very
eak exile w
oy-land
's a Father
home-"Swe
NTIME
oice from
l, sad,
ight from t
he night
hand, with
my spiri
ar from the
ow o'ersha
s and skies of
neth etern
ss and shadowl
never pa
the voice;
or in Hea
id shadow p
nd its str
must hasten
r! Thou cal
light; 'twas
om the crown
that with jewe
kissed oft
hat with raptur
on me swe
e hand with
and-holy
ng ago to t
the wreath I
I look up to
t I soon may
THOUGH
n their ag
re their l
ir days by the fl
, by the moans
of earth
not the dep
ey come, few o
is best measu
by the s
through th
scenes that we
furrows the f
d and face
we count
of the earth,
and the fall
ung are of
brow be bri
beats warm, thei
pringtime, but
d are oft-
hair is thi
in age, as in
, for their cr
d by be
ary of
a cross they l
est with a ble
a day o
entury o
ad of a long
s and tears
nd joys
lows of al
m brings the brav
the haven t
tion to Father Ryan's
It therefore properly opens his volume of poems. It became popular on its first publication, an
of The Valley of Silence i
this stanza, and the two following ones, the poet refers to that period
r of his poetry. Inspired in The Valley of Silen
re come to him elusive glimpses of truth and beauty whic
re rise, from
my inmo
scenes than e
ng's ori
int the vis
r glories tur
anner of the South, March 21, 1868, from which it is here taken. Coming
the versification of this stanza
veral of his lyrics referring to the war. In spite of his strong Southern feeling, there is no
l 'mid ruin, wr
, where all wa
ildren and my
n. Father, hea
eling in 1868. In a similar strain
lled with angui
uried with my
ed, my tears ar
hee, our Father
things-an era in which vain regrets gave pl
m first appeared in th
the preceding one, has
ut
the South the popular hero of the war. In the last of his Sentinel Songs, the poet-
y, and fo
ain's hall
, keep et
be this
r bright emb
the yea
names to fl
reat Robe
ril 25, 1868. It illustrates the profounder themes on which the poet loved
nful view of life appea
De Profundis, for
urs are ful
d! woe
watch in bri
is strung
we! wo
ht hath lef
ing, awe-st
them onl
them only
fords a glimpse of the tragical romance of the poet's life. The voice that he hears is that of "Ethel," the lost love of his yout
ccurs in several poems, as When? and
so; when but
her's
ttle head-e'e
-for r
th, where it appeared June 29, 1870. In the volume of colle
is changed to "lone" i