Title: Poems
Author: Josephine Daskam Bacon
Release date: February 28, 2025 [eBook #75489]
Language: English
Original publication: New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903
Credits: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
[Pg i]
⁂
JOSEPHINE
DASKAM
[Pg iii]
POEMS
BY
JOSEPHINE DASKAM
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
MDCCCCIII
[Pg iv]
COPYRIGHT, 1903, BY CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS
PUBLISHED OCTOBER, 1903
D. B. UPDIKE, THE MERRYMOUNT PRESS, BOSTON
[Pg v]
TO
M. A. J.,
the first and cordial critic of many of these verses, it gives me
great pleasure to dedicate this collection of them.
J. D. B.
[Pg vii]
PAGE | |
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MOTHERHOOD | 1 |
THE SLEEPY SONG | 3 |
THE GOLDEN DAYS | 5 |
THE VIGIL | 6 |
THE SEA MAN | 8 |
THE SONS OF SLEEP | 12 |
FOUR SONGS: | |
I. THE PEASANT GIRL | 14 |
II. AN INTERLUDE | 15 |
III. HEART’S SEASONS | 16 |
IV. OVER THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY | 17 |
THE SAILOR’S SONG | 18 |
QUATRAIN | 19 |
THE OLD COUNTRY | 20 |
THE LITTLE BLIND BEGGAR | 22 |
THE STRANGER CHILD | 24 |
SONGS OF ISEULT DESERTED | 26 |
THE OLD CAPTIVE | 28 |
SONG TO OPHELIA | 31 |
A CHRISTMAS HYMN FOR CHILDREN | 32 |
THE GYPSY MAID | 34 |
[Pg viii] THREE SONGS: | |
I. THE SAILOR | 36 |
II. THE HUNTER | 37 |
III. THE PRINCE | 38 |
THE LITTLE DEAD CHILD | 39 |
AT PARTING | 42 |
THE NIXY | 43 |
A JAPANESE FAN | 44 |
TWO SONNETS FROM THE HEBREW | |
I. THE PREPARATION | 45 |
II. THE INCARNATION | 46 |
ODE: WRITTEN FOR THE TWENTY-SECOND OF FEBRUARY | 47 |
THE DEATH SONG | 50 |
SEVEN CHILD SONGS | |
I. DO YOU KNOW? | 53 |
II. THE SECRET PLAYMATE | 55 |
III. LONELINESS | 56 |
IV. DREAMS | 57 |
V. THE SHADOW | 58 |
VI. HEAVEN | 60 |
VII. THE PEAR TREE | 61 |
INSCRIPTIONS:[Pg ix] | |
FOR A CHILD’S PLATE | 62 |
FOR HIS CUP | 62 |
FOR HIS CHAIR | 62 |
FOR HIS BED | 63 |
THE WANDERERS | 64 |
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“And he said, I will not destroy it for the ten’s sake.”
[Pg 46]
“Yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee!”
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“The island of Martinique will not, in all probability, be built up again.”
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The Prince
A Man-at-Arms
A Gypsy
Scene: The Edge of the Forest
(The Gypsy song is heard.)
Oh, the goodwife turns the wheel at home,
And the bird will keep her nest,
But it’s ah me! for the world’s to see
Or ever my heart have rest!
[Pg 67]
(Gypsy sings.)
The king he wooed the Gypsy maid
And kissed her to the throne;
She fell asleep, but blood runs deep,
And the forest claims its own!
(Gypsy sings.)
Ah, vain for him the diadem,
Heavy the scepter’s load,
For he was lord o’ the windy wood,
And prince o’ the winding road!
(Gypsy sings.)
And it’s we will fling the world away,
And reap where God has sowed,
And we’ll roam for ay the windy wood,
And wander the winding road!
[Pg 72]
(They enter the forest; the Gypsy song is heard.)
[Pg 73]