Page:Library of Southern literature, Volume One (1909).djvu/44

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4
SOUTHERN LITERATURE

is a feat no less than wonderful, an achievement almost unparalleled in American literature.

Among the manuscripts of Dr. Adams is the fragment of another epic, 'The Lost Restored.' The argument for five books is complete. A lyric invocation and most of the first book in blank verse have been written. Heaven and illimitable space, saints and angels, Christ and God are the objects and personages in this projected epic. Men and devils do not appear, for the Judgment with its momentous issues has long since passed. Twelve legions of angels dispatched ten thousand years before to a universe millions and millions of miles distant have not returned. A council is held in heaven. How they were lost and how restored is the theme of this well-nigh celestial tragedy. It is referred to only to show more fully the ardent poetic nature and the lofty literary aspirations of Dr. Adams.

Dabney Lipscomb

BIBLIOGRAPHY

For fuller information of the life and writings of this poet, preacher and scholarly teacher, the reader is referred to the appended bibliography. His manuscripts in excellent state of preservation are in the hands of his widow, Mrs. Susan S. Adams, who now lives at Emory, Virginia, her paternal home.

Enscotidion; or. Shadow of Death. By the Rev. T. A. S. Adams, A.M.; With an Introduction by R. A. Young, D.D.; Edited by Thomas O. Summers, D.D. Nashville, Tennessee, Southern Methodist Publishing House, 1876.
Aunt Peggy and Other Poems. By Rev. T. A. S. Adams; Cincinnati, Walden and Stowe, Printers, 1882.
Memoir of T. A. S. Adams, D.D. By W. T. J. Sullivan, D.D.; North Mississippi Conference Annual, 1889.
T. A. S. Adams, Poet, Educator, and Pulpit Orator. By Dabney Lipscomb; Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society; Vol. IV., 1901.