Page 10. Third line: read haunt for haunts.
Page 26. Tenth and eleventh lines: omit the word no.
Page | |
Gloucester Harbor | 9 |
Leonore | 12 |
A Ballad of Metz | 14 |
Private Theatricals | 21 |
Divination by an Easter Lily | 22 |
The Rival Singers | 23 |
After the Storm | 26 |
Hemlock River | 28 |
On One Poet Refusing Homage to Another | 29 |
Brother Bartholomew | 33 |
Reserve | 36 |
Patriot Chorus on the Eve of War | 37 |
Lo and Lu | 39 |
Her Voice | 42 |
An Epitaph | 44 |
The Falcon and the Lily | 46 |
Boston, from the Bridge | 48 |
The Red and Yellow Leaf | 49 |
“Poete my Maister Chaucer” | 51 |
Mount Auburn in May | 52 |
Among the Flags | 53 |
[6]Child and Flower | 54 |
Knight Falstaff | 56 |
The Poet | 57 |
A Criminal | 59 |
Orient-Born | 60 |
Charondas | 62 |
Crazy Margaret | 65 |
To the Winding Charles | 69 |
My Neighbor | 70 |
The Sea-Gull | 73 |
Lily of the Valley | 74 |
Lover Loquitur | 76 |
Vitality | 77 |
To the River | 78 |
The Second Time they Met | 79 |
On Not Reading a Posthumous Work | 81 |
Bessy in the Storm | 83 |
After a Duel | 85 |
Indifference | 87 |
The Pledging | 88 |
At Gettysburg | 90 |
Early Death | 92 |
My Soprano | 93 |
The Cross Roads | 94 |
“Heart of Gold” | 98 |
A Jacobite Revival | 100 |
Spring | 104 |
Adventurers | 105 |
L’Etiquette | 107 |
The Grave and the Rose | 110 |
[This incident actually befell a private in a Massachusetts volunteer regiment, belonging to the Fifth Corps, at the battle of Malvern Hill.]
[A] Lydgate so calls him,
[B] The author’s title runs: “Sur la Fille de mon Ami, enterrée devant moi hier au Cimetière de Passy: 16 Juin, 1832.”
[C] For this trifle, obligations are due to Maestro Mozart. A sunny little opening Andante of his, from the Second Sonata in A major, suggested immediately and quite irresistibly the words here appended, which follow its rhythm throughout.
[D] Jacob Sheafe, an old Boston worthy, laid away in 1658, in a quiet northerly corner of King’s Chapel Burying-Ground.
[E] Hawthorne’s “Doctor Grimshawe.”
“In fair and discreet manhood; that is, civilly, by the sword.”—Ben Jonson.