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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I
>
Poets of the Civil War II
> F. F. Browne; Later Anthologies
Davidson;
Living Writers of the South
Value and Interest of these Poems
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVI. Early National Literature, Part II; Later National Literature, Part I.
III.
Poets of the Civil War II
.
§ 20. F. F. Browne; Later Anthologies.
In 1882 Francis F. Browne of Chicago carried out the purpose that Richard Grant White had expressed by publishing
Bugle Echoes
a collection of poems of the Civil War, Northern and Southern. Drawing upon the anthologies that have been discussed and upon separate editions of Southern poets, such as Haynes edition of Timrod (1873), of Ticknor (1879), of Hayne (1882), he finds a much larger number of Southern poems that fit into his plan of suggesting the story of the Civil War by poems written at the time. Thus for the first time a systematic arrangement was made of this material. The result is altogether striking. The Southern poems, while slightly fewer in number (the proportion is 60 to 85), measure up well with those of the North. Side by side in this volume appear Bryants
Our Countrys Call
and Timrods
A Cry to Arms,
Whitmans
Beat, Beat Drums
and Randalls
My Maryland,
Pikes
Dixie
and
The Battle Hymn of the Republic,
Holmess
Voyage of the Good Ship Union
and Ticknors
Virginians of the Valley,
Lowells
Commemoration Ode
and Timrods
Ode to the Confederate Dead,
and at the very end Finchs
The Blue and the Gray
and Laniers
The Tournament
both of them prophetic of a new national era. Not only was Brownes idea happy and well executed; his introduction and notes are invaluable. He established the fact that the author of
Stonewall Jacksons Way
was Dr. J. W. Palmer. He printed in connection with the poems valuable letters as to the circumstances under which were written
My Maryland
and
The Conquered Banner.
The volume as a whole was so marked by a careful critical judgment and good taste as to distinguish it from the hastily prepared anthologies by Southerners.
28
Two books of similar nature are Egglestons
American War Ballads
and Burton E. Stevensons
Poems of American History,
in both of which the poems are published in chronological order, and in Stevensons book with the historical setting which interprets many of the individual poems. In later years selections from Southern writers by Miss Manly and Miss Clarke and Professors Trent, Kent, and Fulton, and biographical sketches by Baskervill and Link, have brought the best poems and poets within the reach of a larger circle of students and readers.
The Library of Southern Literature
is a valuable mine of selections and biographical material.
29
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Davidson;
Living Writers of the South
Value and Interest of these Poems
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