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THE EDITOR TO THE READER.

HE present enlarged edition of the "Library of Poetry and Song" has

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been projected with a view of making the collection more perfect, both in the choice of poems and the variety of sources from which they are derived. Within a very few years past several names of eminence have been added to the list of poets in our language, and every reader would expect to find samples of their verse in an anthology like this, to say nothing of the air of freshness which these would give.

That the demand for compilations of this character is genuine and very general is sufficiently demonstrated by the appearance, since the first edition of this was published, of Emerson's "Parnassus" and Whittier's "Songs of Three Centuries." These, however, do not seem to have supplanted Dana's "Household Book of Poetry," which still retains its popularity. It often happens that the same household contains several of these publications. The present volume, moreover, in addition to the fullness of its material, has been got up with much expense in the way of engraved illustrations, so that it will occupy a place by itself. Regarded from a literary point of view, it owes much to the expert hands of Mr. Knight and Mr. Raymond, who have assisted in its compilation and the perfecting of its details. The first edition has proved, commercially speaking, one of the most successful publications of the day; and if the compilation in its present shape should meet with the same favor, the Publishers, it seems to me, can ask no more.

When I saw that Mr. Emerson had omitted to include any of his own poems in the collection entitled "Parnassus," I doubted, for a while, whether

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I ought not to have practiced the same reserve. Yet when I considered that the omission on his part was so far a defect, and that there is not a reader of his volume who would not have been better pleased to possess several of his poems along with the others, I became better satisfied with what I had done, and allowed such of my poems as I had included to remain. In one respect, at least, the present compilation will have the advantage over Mr. Emerson's, namely, that it contains several of the poems with which he has enriched our literature.

JULY, 1876.

WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT.

Thow who wouldst wear the rame

Of Port might

thy brethren of mankind,
And clothe, in words of flame?

Thoughts that shall live within the general mund/
Deem not the framing of a deathless lay
The pastime of a drowsy Summer day

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Bur-gathere

But gather all thy Powers,

And wreak them on the vente that thou dost weave,
And, in thy lonely hourd,

At Silent morning or at wakeful eve,
While the teatm current tingles throughthy veins,
Set forth the burning wordd in fluens strains .

No smooth array of phrase,
Artfully sought and ordered though it be,
Which the cold rhymer layel-

Upon the page wrste languid industry,
Can cake the listless pulse to livelier speed,
Or fill, with seedden tears, the eyes that reads

The secret wouldst thou know
To touch the heart or fire the blood at will,
Let thine eyes derflow

Lot thy lips queverwitte the passionate thrill,
Leize the great thought ere yet it's power be past,
And bind, in words, the fleet emotion fast.

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Then, should thy verse appear Halting and harsh and all aptly wrought, Touch the crude line with fear,

Save in the moment of impassioned thoughts Then summon back the original glar and mend The Strain with Expture that wrth five was penned o

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Yet let no empty gust

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Of passion find

an utterance in the

A blast that whirls the dust

thy lay,

Along the howling Street and died away;

Per feelings of calm power and mighty Sweep, Like currents journeying through the windless deep

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