AUTOGRAPH EDITION
Printed for subscribers only
This Copy is
No. ___________
UNDERNEATH
THE BOUGH
A BOOK OF VERSES
By
GEORGE ALLAN ENGLAND
THE GRAFTON PRESS
NEW YORK
Copyright, 1903, by
GEORGE ALLAN ENGLAND
This little book is offered to
AGNES
its inspirer, in this the tenth year
of her reign.
I desire to express my sincere thanks to Dr. Titus Munson Coan, Mr. Justo Quintéro and Mr. A. B. Myrick for assistance rendered, and to acknowledge the kind permission to reprint certain of these verses given me by The Literary Digest, Harvard Illustrated Magazine, Vogue, Middletown Forum, Red Letter, Literary Review, Boston Transcript, Town Topics, Smart Set, The New York Herald and other periodicals.
G. A. E.
PAGE. | ||
I. | The Race of the Mighty | 1 |
II. | Songs & Sonnets. | |
Love Beatified | 9 | |
Morning, Noon and Night | 10 | |
Dante | 11 | |
Love’s Blindness | 12 | |
Hesperides | 13 | |
My Garden | 18 | |
Erinnerungen | 19 | |
The Battle Royal | 20 | |
España | 21 | |
Love’s Fear | 22 | |
Longings | 23 | |
Horace, IV, 8 | 24 | |
Ricordatevi Di Me! | 26 | |
The Tower | 28 | |
Love’s Prayer | 30 | |
Combien J’ai Douce Souvenance | 31 | |
My Little Red Devil and I | 33 | |
The College Pump | 37 | |
I Disputanti | 38 | |
Quand Vous Serez Bien Vieille | 39 | |
One Summer Night | 40 | |
A Une Fleurette | 42 | |
Blest Be the Day | 43 | |
Mignonne Allons Voir Si La Rose | 44 | |
Religion | 45 | |
The Great Woods Were Awakening | 46 | |
I-N-R-I | 47 | |
Fayre Robyn | 48 | |
Coeur de Femme | 51 | |
III. | Ballades & Rondeaux | |
Ballade of the Sick | 54 | |
Three Rondeaux from Charles d’Orléans | 56 | |
The Song of the Poor | 59 | |
Kyrielle | 62 | |
Rondeau | 64 | |
When I First Saw Edmée | 65 | |
My Old Coat | 66 | |
A Pantoum | 68 | |
When Doris Deigns | 70 | |
IV. | The Year | |
Spring—May Evening | 72 | |
Summer—August Rain | 73 | |
Autumn—November in Cambridge | 74 | |
Winter—Hampton Holidays | 75 | |
V. | Mors Omnium Victor | |
Gunga Din in Hell | 78 | |
Cui Bono? | 79 | |
The Bride-Bed | 80 | |
Dead Loves | 81 | |
Death the Friend | 82 | |
La Jeune Fille | 83 | |
Lucie | 84 | |
Luctus in Morte Passeris | 89 | |
Death in December | 90 | |
The Royal Council | 92 | |
Carmen Mortis | 93 |
With a copy of “Sonnets of this Century.”
To C. Martius Censorinus.
“Donarem pateras grataque commodus...”
(Terza Rima.)
(After Chateaubriand)
“The Prince of Darkness is a gentleman.”
Twelfth Night.
Ronsard.
The Fens, June, 1897.
The XXXIXth Sonnet
of Petrarch
to his Lady Laura.
He blesseth all the divers causes and effects of his love toward her.
After Ronsard.
“Les grands bois s’éveillaient; il faisait jour à peine...”
Pradel.
“O Rois qui serez jugés à votre tour.”
Banville.
(Villanelle.)
“Sois-moi fidèle, ô pauvre habit que j’aime.”
Béranger.
“An’ I’ll get a swig in Hell from Gunga Din!”
Kipling.
“Elle était bien belle, le matin, sans atours!”
“Lugete, O Veneres Cupidenesque, et quantum est hominum
venustiorum.”
C. Valerius Catullus.
(To the Peruvian Mummies in the Peabody Museum at Cambridge.)
[A] From Gaëtan de Méaulne’s “Course des Grands Masqués.” Here reprinted by courtesy of the New York “Herald.” To this translation was awarded the Herald’s First Prize of 500 francs.
[B] This North Country ballad probably dates from about 1525. It was found in a fragmentary condition in a copy of the 1684 edition of Abraham Cowley’s Poetical Works, and is here for the first time completed and made public.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.