POEMS Chosen by Boys and Girls - Book III
Arranged by Fowler Wright
and Crompton Rhodes
Basil Blackwell
Broad Street, Oxford
MDCCCCXXIII
BOOK III
... Again, the dream is true:
Again, to each, the well-worn path is new.
PREFACE
The poems in these little books of verse have been chosen, not by a man or a woman, but by ten thousand boys and girls. This needs some explanation. They are the result of an appeal in Poetry for the assistance of those teachers who love poetry, and who have conveyed their love of poetry to their boys and girls. The appeal at once received the cordial sympathy and support of the entire educational press, and the response was a large number of essays containing lists of poems which were received from teachers in every type of school, public and private, urban and rural, primary and secondary. The poems in each list were those which had appealed most to scholars, which had given them the deepest joy, the highest delight. With singular generosity these lovers of poetry placed at the disposal of the editors the wisdom and experience of years, often with hundreds of children, in many schools. Ten thousand is, indeed, too low a figure to cover the number of collaborators, and to those teachers who contributed these most valuable essays the warm thanks of the publishers and the editors are tendered.
Apart from the arranging of the poems into books and negotiating copyrights, the editors' work has been, and been only, the ensuring that the poems chosen are those which, under the guidance of lovers of poetry, have carried their beauty into the hearts of the boys and girls - the real collaborators of these books.
S. F.W. & R. C. R.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Acknowledgments for permission to reprint are due to William H. Davies, Macmillan & Co., Ltd., (for Rudyard Kipling), John Murray (for Robert Bridges), and to Lady Newbolt (for Sir Henry Newbolt).
CONTENTS
A thing of beauty is a Joy for ever | John Keats |
Upon Westminster Bridge | William Wordsworth |
The Reaper | William Wordsworth |
Leisure | William H. Davies |
To a Snowflake | Francis Thompson |
Three years she grew in sun and shower | William Wordsworth |
She dwelt among the untrodden ways | William Wordsworth |
Days that have been | William H. Davies |
Kubla Khan | Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
To a Skylark | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
Life is sweet, brother | George Borrow |
Thou wast not born for death | John Keats |
To the Night | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
To the Moon | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
WINDS AND SEASONS | |
The year's at the spring | Robert Browning |
Spring goeth all in white | Robert Bridges |
Spring | Thomas Nash |
Ode to Autumn | John Keats |
Winter | William Shakespeare |
Ode to the West Wind | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
Ode to the North-east Wind | Charles Kingsley |
The Cloud | Percy Bysshe Shelley |
WANDERING AND HOMING | |
Wander-thirst | Gerald Gould |
A Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea | Allan Cunningham |
The Joys of the Road | Bliss Carman |
A Son of the Sea | Bliss Carman |
The Sick Stockrider | Adam Lindsay Gordon |
A Wish | Samuel Rogers |
Home Thoughts from Abroad | Robert Browning |
Home Thoughts from the Sea | Robert Browning |
CHIVALRY | |
America: 'Battle Hymn of the Republic' | Julia Ward Howe |
Hervé Riel | Robert Browning |
Shameful Death | William Morris |
The Young Queen | Rudyard Kipling |
He fell among Thieves | Sir Henry Newbolt |
To Lucasta, on Going to the Wars | Colonel Lovelace |
Gathering Song of Donald the Black | Sir Walter Scott |
O Captain! my Captain! | Walt Whitman |
Horatius | Lord Macaulay |
Hohenlinden | Thomas Campbell |
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