Poems. Volume I / H.F. Gould [electronic text]
About this Item
- Title
- Poems. Volume I / H.F. Gould [electronic text]
- Author
- Gould, Hannah Flagg, 1789-1865
- Publication
- Boston, Mass.: Hilliard, Gray, & Co.
- 1836
- Rights/Permissions
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- Link to this Item
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAD5889.0001.001
- Cite this Item
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"Poems. Volume I / H.F. Gould [electronic text]." In the digital collection American Verse Project. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/BAD5889.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 26, 2025.
Pages
Page 2
Page 3
THE SUN-DIAL'S MATINS.
Page 4
Page 5
THE LOOSE FEATHER.
Page 6
THE WHITE CLOUD.
WHAT next—what next, thou changeful thing, With the feathery breast and the silver wing, That seem'st, like a lonely bird, to fly To some distant home, o'er the clear, blue sky? I saw thee suspended, a moment ago, By a hand unseen, like a wreath of snow, Withheld from a fall that might give it a stain So deep it could never be blanched again. And once thou hast shown in a cluster of flowers, Pure as if bent from the heavenly bowers, Defying this valley of shadow and blight To sully or wither their leaves of light! I've seen thee, too, pass over my head, Like a beautiful ship with her sails all spread, That, laden with treasures too pure and bright For an earthly touch, or a mortal's sight,. Was proud to some far-off port to bear Her viewless riches through seas of air! Again—thou hast seemed as the spirit of love His mantle had dropped from the realms above, And 't was floating along, as a sign, to show To those who should look from the world below, That their garments must be of a spotless white Before they can enter a world of light! Beautiful changeling! now—even now, I see thee dissolving, I know not how— Thine atoms are scattered, and, one by one, Melted and lost in the rays of the sun!Page 7
Page 8
THE GROUND LAUREL.* 1.1
Page 9
Page 10
TO THE MOURNER.
Page 11
THE FORTUNE-TELLER.
Page 12
Page 13
Page 14
SONG OF THE BEES.
Page 15
THE CONQUEROR.
Page 16
Page 17
THE SNOW-FLAKE.
Page 18
Page 19
Page 20
THE BLACK AT CHURCH.
Page 21
Page 22
THE LITTLE FOOT.
Page 23
Page 24
THE WINDS.
Page 25
Page 26
THE TRUNK FROM SEA.
Page 27
Page 28
WHO IS MY NEIGHBOUR?
Page 29
Page 30
WHAT IS THIS?
Page 31
Page 32
THE FROST.
Page 33
Page 34
THE SCAR OF LEXINGTON.
Page 35
Page 36
THE STORM.
Page 37
THE BROKEN HEARTED.
Page 38
Page 39
A VOICE FROM MOUNT AUBURN.
Page 40
Page 41
Page 42
THE SOLDIER TO HIS PLUME.
Page 43
MY OWN WILD BOWER.
Page 44
THE CORONATION.
Page 45
THE DEPARTURE.
Page 46
THE WEEPER.
Page 47
Page 48
THE DYING EXILE.
Page 49
Page 50
THE STAR.
Page 51
Page 52
THE WOUNDED BIRD.
Page 53
Page 54
TO THE SIAMESE TWINS.
Page 55
Page 56
WARNING FROM THE GOLD MINE.
Page 57
Page 58
THE FROZEN DOVE.
Page 59
THE DYING STORM.
Page 60
THE FLY'S REVENGE.
Page 61
Page 62
Page 63
THE VOICE OF THE EAGLE.
Page 64
Page 65
Page 66
THE YOUNG ARTIST.* 1.2
Page 67
Page 68
Page 69
THE METEOR.
Page 70
THE EMPALED BUTTERFLY.
Page 71
Page 72
THE BREAST-PIN.
Page 73
THE WINTER BURIAL.
Page 74
THE ROBE.
Page 75
Page 76
THE CHOICE OF A PRIZE.
Page 77
Page 78
Page 79
THE LILY.
Page 80
MOUNT OLIVET.
Page 81
Page 82
THE MERMAID'S SONG.
Page 83
THE CONSIGNMENT.
Page 84
Page 85
THE MUSICAL BOX.
Page 86
Page 87
ADDRESS TO THE AUTOMATON CHESS PLAYER.
Page 88
Page 89
Page 90
THE EMPTY BIRD'S NEST.
Page 91
Page 92
THE SOUL'S FAREWELL.
Page 93
Page 94
THE PLAYTHINGS.
Page 95
THE MANIAC.
Page 96
Page 97
NATIVE ATTACHMENT.
Page 98
Page 99
THE SLAVE MOTHER'S PRAYER.
Page 100
Page 101
THE LITTLE BOY TO THE CRICKET.
Page 102
Page 103
Page 104
Page 105
THE MIDNIGHT MAIL.
Page 106
Page 107
A VOICE FROM THE WINE PRESS.
Page 108
Page 109
Page 110
TO MY WATCH.
Page 111
Page 112
THOUGHTS.
Page 113
Page 114
Page 115
Page 116
THE ZEPHYR'S SOLILOQUY.
Page 117
Page 118
Page 119
FOREST MUSIC.
Page 120
THE PROSTRATE PINK.
Page 121
Page 122
THE BENEFACTOR.
Page 123
Page 124
Page 125
THE NEW TOMB.* 1.3
Page 126
Page 127
THE BLIND MAN.
Page 128
Page 129
THE SHIP IS READY.
Page 130
Page 131
THE ANEMONE.
Page 132
WRITTEN IN AN ALBUM.* 1.4
Page 133
RECOLLECTIONS.
Page 134
Page 135
TO THE MOONBEAMS.
Page 136
THE CHEROKEE AT WASHINGTON.
Page 137
Page 138
THE THRICE-CLOSED EYE.
Page 139
Page 140
* 1.5TO A ******
Page 141
Page 142
A HYMN AT SEA.
Page 143
AMERICAN HYMN.
Page 144
Page 145
FUNERAL DIRGE.
Page 146
THE INDIAN BOY WITH HIS FATHER'S BOW.
Page 147
WHITEFIELD'S REMAINS.* 1.6
Page 148
Page 149
THE RELEASE.
"And when Herod would have brought him forth, the same night Peter was sleeping between two soldiers, bound with two chains; and the keepers before the door kept the prison."
Page 150
Page 151
THE MOON UPON THE SPIRE.
Page 152
Page 153
THE WIDOW'S LULLABY.
Page 154
THE METHODIST CHURCH.
Page 155
Page 156
THE BUTTERFLY'S DREAM.
Page 157
Page 158
Page 159
MARY DOW.
Page 160
Page 161
Page 162
THE CROCUS'S SOLILOQUY.
Page 163
Page 164
THE DISSATISFIED ANGLER BOY.
Page 165
CUPID'S WARNING.
Page 166
Page 167
THE REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIER'S BEQUEST.
Page 168
Page 169
Page 170
Page 171
TO MRS. L**,
Page 172
Page 173
Page 174
THE PEBBLE AND THE ACORN.
Page 175
Page 176
Page 177
IT SNOWS.
Page 178
Page 179
A SABBATH AT NAHANT.
Page 180
Page 181
THE SPOUTING HORN.
Page 182
Page 183
THE LOST KITE.
Page 184
Page 185
THE VETERAN AND THE CHILD.
Page 186
Page 187
THE RUIN.
Page 188
Page 189
Page 190
THE VOICE.
Page 191
Page 192
THE ALABASTER BOX.
Page 193
Page 194
THE EMPTY BIER.
Page 195
Page 196
THE LOST HYACINTH.
Page 197
Page 198
ECHO.
Page 199
Page 200
HYMN OF THE REAPERS.
Page 201
Page 202
THE QUAKER.
Page 203
Page 204
Page 205
Page 206
Page 207
WASHINGTON.
Page 208
Page 209
Page 210
THE GREAT REFINER.
"And he shall sit as a refiner and purifier of silver."
Page 211
Page 212
THE WATERFALL.
Page 213
Page 214
WINTER AND SPRING.
Page 215
Page 216
FOLLY MADE LEFT-HANDED.
Page 217
Page 218
SUNRISE TO THE SLAVE.
Page 219
Page 220
DEATH OF SIR WALTER SCOTT.
Page 221
Page [222]
Page [223]
Notes
-
* 1.1
* Epigæa Repens.
-
* 1.2
* An engraving originally accompanied this poem, representing a boy seated on a flowery bank, with pencil and book, sketching from the natural objects around him. His little sister, who has playfully twined a wreath of budding flowers about his brow, sits beside him, looking into his sketch book. In the distance is seen an old and ivy-mantled castle, supposed to be the home of the children in the foreground.
-
* 1.3
* These lines were occasioned by an event which took place in Boston a few months since.
-
* 1.4
* These lines were inscribed on a leaf but two inches square.
-
* 1.5
* Addressed to a child, whose parents had embarked for Europe.
-
* 1.6
* The remains of the Rev. George Whitefield are deposited beneath the pulpit of the Church of the First Presbyterian Society in Newburyport, Mass., in which there is a marble cenotaph to his memory.
-
* 1.7
* The removal of these remains to the public burial ground, was contemplated at the time this was written.
-
* 1.8
* Silver, undergoing the process of refining, suddenly assumes an appearance of great brilliancy, when purified, and reflects objects like a mirror.