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The poems of Trumbull Stickney
Stickney, Trumbull (1874-1904)
[section]
1.
I DRAMATIC VERSES
2.
II FRAGMENTS OF A DRAMA ON THE LIFE OF THE EMPEROR JULIAN
3.
III LATER LYRICS
4.
IV A DRAMATIC SCENE
5.
V JUVENILIA
6.
VI FRAGMENTS
1.
[I The Autumn's done; they have the golden corn in]
2.
[II She sat under the naked bough]
3.
III FRAGMENT OF AN ODE FOR GREEK LIBERTY
4.
[IV My Ludovico, it is sad]
5.
[V The weakened eyes regain their sight]
6.
[VI And I stood ringed about with marble dreams]
7.
[VII 'T is said that hearts are won, at length]
8.
[VIII We learn by suffering and we teach by pity]
9.
[IX I hear a river thro' the valley wander]
10.
[X Nay, take it all in all, the human sort]
11.
[XI The passions that we fought with and subdued]
12.
[XII As one who loving beyond words will bring]
13.
[XIII Teased by the burden of this little sky]
14.
[XIV If with my life I lifted from thy head]
15.
[XV The immortal mixes with mortality]
16.
XVI FRAGMENT OF A DRAMA CALLED “THE CARDINAL PLAY”
17.
XVII “DRAMATIC FRAGMENTS
1.
I
2.
II BLINDNESS AND DEAFNESS
3.
III THE SOUL OF TIME
4.
IV
5.
V
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The poems of Trumbull Stickney
312
V
Sir, say no more.
Within me 't is as if
The green and climbing eyesight of a cat
Crawled near my mind's poor birds.
The poems of Trumbull Stickney