TO A KATYDID You make at night for me; . From weed and bush and tree. The wild flowers in the vale By every little gale. Is more than half waycrossed, But "Frost-six weeks of frost!” I know as well as you do That summer's on the wane, On valley, hill and plain. Which I perhaps might do My window echoes through. Six weeks and all the glamour Of outdoor work is lost, JAMES J. MONTAGUE. Copyright, 1924, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc. A DESERTED FARM GEORGE STERLING. From The Century Magazine. PAN ADDRESSES MODERN POETS Are the themes of which you sing. In unending songs you bring. Empties to the world his soul. Should not be the poet's goal. You forget to soar and dream. Source of each poetic stream? As they did long, long ago, For their days of weal and woe. Which a Homer would create Daily here beside your gate. To emblaze with form sublime Welded by immortal rhyme. Round Olympus' mountain-side Each his Pegasus to ride. As beneath the heights you throng, JOHN H. HORST. CRESCENT MOON While after the vexatious gang I hope it will not turn and strike Persuade the Landlord to the door. A kind old Gentleman I like! VINCENT STARRETT. RECESSIONAL. Lord of our far-fung battle line, - On dune and headland sinks the fire. Beneath whose awful hand we hold Lo! all our pomp of yesterday Dominion over palm and pine, Is one with Nineveh and Tyre ! Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Judge of the nations, spare us yet, Lest we forget,-lest we forget! Lest we forget,-lest we forget! The tumult and the shouting dies, If, drunk with sight of power, we loose The captains and the kings depart : Wild tongues that have not thee in awe, Still stands thine ancient sacrifice, Such boasting as the Gentiles use An humble and a contrite heart. Or lesser breeds without the law,Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget,-lest we forget! Lest we forget,-lest we forget! In reeking tube and iron shard, And guarding calls not thee to guard, RUDYARD KIPLING. POETS AND POETRY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. [MR BRYANT'S INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST EDITION.) So large a collection of poems as this demands of its compiler an extensive familiarity with the poetic literature of our language, both of the early and the later time, and withal so liberal a taste as not to exclude any variety of poetic merit. At the request of the Publishers I undertook to write an Introduction to the present work, and in pursuance of this design I find that I have come into a somewhat closer personal relation with the book. Ir its progress it has passed entirely under my revision, and, although not absolutely responsible for the compilation of its arrangement, I have, as requested, exer cised a free hand both in excluding and in adding matter according to my judgment of what was best adapted to the purposes of the enterprise. Such, however, is the wide range of English verse, and such the abundance of the materials, that a compilation of this kind must be like a bouquet gathered froin the fields in June, when hundreds of flowers will be left in unvisited spots as beautiful as those which have been taken. It may happen, therefore, that many who have learned to delight in some particular poem will turn these pages, as they might those of other collections, without finding their favorite. Nor should it be matter of surprise, considering the multitude of authors from whom the compilation is made, if it be found that some are overlooked, especially the more recent, of equal merit with many whose poems appear in these pages. It may happen, also, that the compiler, ill consequence of some particular association, has been sensible of a beauty and a power of awakening emotions and recalling images in certain poems which other readers will fail to perceive. It should be considered, moreover, that in poetry, as in painting, different artists have different modes of presenting their conceptions, each of which may possess its peculiar merit, yet those whose taste is formed by contemplating the productions of one class take little pleasure in any other. Crabb Robinson relates that Wordsworth once admitted to him that he did not much admire contemporary poetry, not because of its want of poetic merit, but because he had been accustomed to poetry of a different sort, and added that but for this he might have read it with pleasure. I quote from memory. 39 |