Oberon and Puck
VERSES GRAVE AND GAY
BY
HELEN GRAY CONE
NEW YORK
CASSELL & COMPANY, Limited
739 & 741 BROADWAY
Copyright, 1885,
By O. M. Dunham.
PRESS OF HUNTER & BEACH,
NEW YORK.
PAGE | |
OBERON. | |
Oberon | 11 |
The Accolade | 14 |
The Olive Bough | 21 |
Flower Fancies: | |
I.—A Yellow Pansy | 25 |
II.—A House Divided | 27 |
III.—A Song of Failure | 28 |
IV.—The Dandelions | 29 |
V.—A Fairy Tale | 30 |
Lepage’s Joan of Arc | 32 |
The Merchant of Venice | 34 |
A Nocturne of Rubinstein | 37 |
An Epitaph on a Butterfly Drowned in the Sea | 41 |
Emelie | 43 |
Elsinore | 46 |
Fiammetta | 50[vi] |
Haroun al Raschid | 53 |
A Rondel of Parting | 55 |
A Christmas Greeting | 56 |
At Easter-Tide | 57 |
To-Day | 58 |
A Conservative | 59 |
A Radical | 60 |
A Retrograde | 61 |
The Resolve | 62 |
The Nooning | 63 |
The Inheritance | 64 |
Long Summer Days | 66 |
The Goldenrod | 67 |
Hey Robin, Jolly Robin! | 69 |
The Undersong | 71 |
The Passing of the Year | 72 |
A Charmed Cup | 73 |
In Hush of Night | 74 |
The Wayfarers | 76 |
An Invocation in a Library | 78 |
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow | 80 |
Ralph Waldo Emerson | 82 |
On Landor’s Hellenics | 83 |
Bach’s St. Matthew Passion Music | 84 |
Salvini’s Othello | 85 |
Ellen Terry’s Beatrice | 86 |
“Songs of a Semite” | 87[vii] |
On Reading the Poems of Edith Thomas | 89 |
Posies: | |
I.—Friendship | 90 |
II.—A Rose | 90 |
III.—Wistaria | 91 |
IV.—On a Fly-Leaf | 91 |
An Ivory Miniature | 92 |
To My Goldfish | 95 |
“As the Crow Flies” | 97 |
Sprigs o’ Heather: | |
I.—To Comin’ Years | 98 |
II.—Wonderfu’ Slee | 99 |
III.—My Ain, Ain Lass | 100 |
Evening Primroses | 102 |
A Humming-Bird | 103 |
Child Songs: | |
I.—Wool Gathering | 104 |
II.—The Land Without a Name | 105 |
III.—A Lullaby | 106 |
PUCK. | |
Puck | 109 |
Narcissus in Camden | 110 |
The Song of Sir Palamede | 118 |
A Merry Jest of a Modern Maid | 123 |
The Rhyme of the Hercules Club | 125 |
The Ballad of Cassandra Brown | 129 |
The Sweet o’ the Year | 132 |
The Tender Heart | 138 |
A Commencement Poem, read to the Graduating Class at Smith College, June 18th, 1884.
A Memorial Poem, read to the Associate Alumnae of the New York Normal College, June 30th, 1883.
—With that Sir Gawain departed, joyful and sorrowful: joyful because of what Merlin had assured him should happen to him; and sorrowful, that Merlin had thus been lost.
Morte d’Arthur.
(“In the course of his lecture Mr. ⸺ remarked that the most impressive room he had yet entered in America was the one in Camden town where he met ⸺ ⸺. It contained plenty of fresh air and sunlight.... On the table was a simple cruse of water.” ...)
BEING A BALLAD OF TO-DAY, DESIGNED TO ILLUSTRATE THE PRINCIPLE OF REACTION, AND TO SET FORTH HOW THERE MAY BE TOO MUCH OF AN EXCELLENT THING.
[1] “H. A. A. A.”: Hercules Amateur Athletic Association.
[2] Frigid day, or day of low temperature: A singular idiom of the American language, expressing grave improbability.
This trifle may derive interest from the music, by Mr. E. C. Phelps, in Scribner’s Monthly for August, 1880.
SCENE.—A Lowly Cot.
Intermission—Agent heard without tacking up bill.
Enter Left—Chorus of Feminine House-Seekers and Chorus of Masculine House-Seekers, waving permits.