wert within, and I abroad searching for thee. Thou wert with me, but I was not with Thee." - August. Soliloq., Book X. Page 297. Tides of everlasting Day. "And I saw that there was an Ocean of Darkness and Death: but an infinite Ocean of Light and Love flowed over the Ocean of Darkness: And in that I saw the infinite Love of God." - George Fox's Journal. Page 306. LE MARAIS DU CYNGE The massacre of unarmed and unoffending men, in Southern Kansas, took place near the Marais du Cygne of the French voyageurs. Page 321. THE QUAKER Alumni. Read at the Friends' School Anniversary, Providence, R. I., 6th mo 1860. GENERAL INDEX OF TITLES AND FIRST LINES A Beautiful and Happy Girl, 179. A Bending Staff I Would not Break, 199. Above, Below, in Sky and Sod, 299. Abraham Davenport, 417. A Christian! Going, Gone, 64. Across the Frozen Marshes, 269. Across the Sea I Heard the Groans, 380. Across the Stony Mountains, 102. Address on Opening of Pennsylvania Hall, A Dream of Summer, 139. A Few Brief Years have Passed Away, 71. Ah, Weary Priest! - with Pale Hands A Sound of Tumult Troubles All the Air, Astræa, 209. Astræa at the Capitol, 357. A Strength thy Service Cannot Tire, 90. A Strong and Mighty Angel, 420. As They who, Tossing Midst the Storm at As They who Watch by Sick-beds Find At Morn I Prayed, "I Fain would See," 302. A Track of Moonlight on a Quiet Lake, Autumn Thoughts, 182. A Wild and Broken Landscape, Spiked A Word for the Hour, 353- Ballads, 255. Barbara Frietchie, 363. Barclay of Ury, 153. Beams of Noon, like Burning Lances, 99. Beside a Stricken Field I Stood, 355. 340. Bland as the Morning Breath of June, 139. Blest Land of Judæa! Thrice Hallowed of Song, 105. Boundless Eternity! the Winged Sands, 337. "Bring out Your Dead!" The Midnight Street, 115. Brown of Ossawatomie, 325. Bryant on his Birthday, 430. "Build at Kallundborg by the Sea," 411. 1 Here is the Place; Right Over the Hill, Here, While the Loom of Winter Weaves 250. He stood on the Brow of the Well-known Hill, 335. Home Ballads, 275. Home Ballads, 365. Ho! Thou who Seekest Late and Long, Ho! Workers of the Old Time Styled, 144. How has New England's Romance Fled, How Smiled the Land of France, 121. How Strange to Greet, this Frosty Morn, 247. How Sweetly Come the Holy Psalms, 311. Hymn for Opening of Thomas Starr King's House of Worship, 1864, 431. Hymn Sung at Christmas, 383. I Ask not now for Gold to Gild, 190. I Call the Old Time Back; I Bring These Lays, 275. Ichabod, 185. I do Believe, and Yet, in Grief, 193. If I have Seemed More Prompt to Censure I Give Thee Joy! - I Know to Thee, 373- I have been Thinking of the Victims I have not Felt, O'er Seas of Sand, 105. I Heard the Train's Shrill Whistle Call, I Know not, Time and Space so Intervene, I Love the Old Melodious Lays, xxiv. Immortal Love, Forever Full, 426. I Mourn no More my Vanished Years, 305. In Calm and Cool and Silence, Once In My Dream, Methought I Trod, 245. In Peace, 205. In Remembrance of Joseph Sturge, 300. In Sky and Wave the White Clouds Swam, In that Black Forest, Where, When Day is In the Fair Land O'erwatched by Ischia's In the Old Days (a Custom laid Aside), In the Outskirts of the Village, 286. In the Solemn Days of Old, 183. Invocation, 209. In War Time, 353. In Westminster's Royal Halls, 98. I Said I Stood upon Thy Grave, 249. I Shall not Soon Forget that Sight, 165. Is it the Palm, the Cocoa-Palm, 310. Is this the Land Our Fathers Loved, 65. Is this Thy Voice, whose Treble Notes of Fear, 96. Italy, 380. It Chanced, that While the Pious Troops It is Done! Clang of Bell and Roar of Its Windows Flashing to the Sky, 315. It was Late in Mild October, 147. It was the Pleasant Harvest Time, 275. I Wait and Watch: Before my Eyes, 374. I would I were a Painter, for the Sake, 375. I would the Gift I Offer Here, 142. John Brown of Ossawatomie Spake on His Just God! - and These are They, 63. Kallundborg Church, 411. Kenoza Lake, 312. Know'st Thou, O Slave-cursed Land, 359. Last Night, Just as the Tints of Autumn's Sky, 249. Later Poems, 262. Laus Deo! 422. Leagues North, as Fly the Gull and Auk, 414. Leggett's Monument, 141. Le Marais du Cygne, 306. Lift Again the Stately Emblem, 87. Lift We the Twilight Curtains of the Past, Light, Warmth, and Sprouting Greenness, Lines Accompanying Manuscripts, 164. Lines for the Agricultural Exhibition, 314. Lines for the Burns's Celebration, 311. Lines for Third Anniversary, British Eman cipation, 70. Lines on a Visit to Washington, 88. |