Page:The poems of Richard Watson Gilder, Gilder, 1908.djvu/24

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xviii
CONTENTS
A Call to the Mountains 325
Spring Surprise 327
Autumn Trees 327
"The light lies on the farther hills" 327
"Ah, near, dear friend" 328
Music in Darkness. (Adele aus der Ohe) 328
The Anger of Beethoven 330
Mother and Child 330
Alice Freeman Palmer 331
"Mother of heroes." (Sarah Blake Shaw) 331
The Great Citizen. (Abram Stevens Hewitt) 332
On Reading of a Poet's Death. (Carlyle McKinley) 332
John Henry Boner 333
"A wondrous song" 333
A New Poet 334
The Singer of Joy 335
Bread upon the Waters 335
Lost 336
"What man hath done" 336
"He pondered well" 337
"Thou thinkest thou hast lived" 338
The Good Man 338
"So fierce the buffets" 339
Two Heroes 339
The World's End 340
Shelley's "Ozymandias" 340
La Salle. (Explorer of the Mississippi) 341
Inauguration Day 341
The Washington Monument. (At Washington, D. C.) 342
Builders of the State 342
Impromptus:—
  To William Watson. (On his Coronation Ode) 344
"Life is the hammer." (Sidney Lanier) 344
"The critic scanned the poet's book" 344
"Her delicate form" 345
Francesca Mia 345
Age, and the Scorner 345
To Jacob A. Riis. (On his Silver Wedding) 346
Music and Friendship 346
Friendship. (To ——) 346
To E. C. S. (On his Seventieth Birthday) 347