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CERVERA, Bertrand Shadwell

MCILRATH OF Malate, John Jerome Rooney

WHEN THE GREAT GRAY SHIPS COME IN, Guy Wetmore Carryl

FULL CYCLE, John White Chadwick

BREATH ON THE OAT, Joseph Russell Taylor

THE ISLANDS OF THE SEA, George Edward Woodberry

BALLADE OF EXPANSION, Hilda Johnson

"REBELS," Ernest Crosby

ON A SOLDIER FALLEN IN THE PHILIPPINES, William Vaughn Moody

THE BALLAD OF PACO Town, Clinton Scollard

THE DEED OF Lieutenant MILES, Clinton Scollard

AGUINALDO, Bertrand Shadwell .

THE FIGHT AT DAJO, Alfred E. Wood

AN ODE IN TIME OF HESITATION, William Vaughn Moody

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A SONG OF PANAMA, Alfred Damon Runyon

HYMN OF THE WEST, Edmund Clarence Stedman

V BRITANNIA TO COLUMBIA, Alfred Austin

THOSE REBEL FLAGS, John H. Jewett

THE SONG OF THE FLAGS, S. Weir Mitchell

ARIZONA, Sharlot M. Hall

SAN FRANCISCO, Joaquin Miller

SAN FRANCISCO, John Vance Cheney
TO SAN FRANCISCO, S. J. Alexander
RESURGE SAN FRANCISCO, Joaquin Miller
GROVER CLEVELAND, Joel Benton

UNGUARDED GATES, Thomas Bailey Aldrich
NATIONAL SONG, William Henry Venable
AD PATRIAM, Clinton Scollard

O LAND BELOVED, George Edward Woodberry
THE REPUBLIC, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

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PART I

THE COLONIAL PERIOD

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And so where our capes cleave the ice of the poles,

Where groves of the orange scent sea-coast and shoals,

Where the froward Atlantic uplifts its last crest,

Where the sun, when he sets, seeks the East from the West:

The clime that from ocean to ocean expands,
The fields to the snow-drifts that stretch from the sands,
The wilds they have conquered of mountain and plain,
Those pilgrims have made them fair Freedom's domain.

And the bread of dependence if proudly they spurned,
"T was the soul of their fathers that kindled and burned,
"T was the blood of the Saxon within them that ran;
They held to be free is the birthright of man.

So oft the old lion, majestic of mane,

Sees cubs of his cave breaking loose from his reign;
Unmeet to be his if they braved not his eye,

He gave them the spirit his own to defy.

ARTHUR CLEVELAND COXE.

POEMS OF AMERICAN HISTORY

CHAPTER I

THE DISCOVERY OF AMERICA

Bjarni, son of Herjulf, speeding westward from Iceland in 986, to spend the Yuletide in Greenland with his father, encountered foggy weather and steered by guesswork for many days. At last he sighted land, but a land covered with dense woods, -not at all the land of fiords and glaciers he was seeking. So, without stopping, he turned his prow to the north, and ten days later was telling his story to the listening circle before the blazing logs in his father's house at Brattahlid. The tale came, in time, to the ears of Leif, the famous son of Red Eric, and in the year 1000 he set out from Greenland, with a crew of thirty-five, in search of the strange land to the south. He reached the barren coast of Labrador and named it Helluland, or "slate-land;" south of it was a coast so densely wooded that he named it Markland, or woodland." At last he ran his ship ashore at a spot where "a river, issuing from a lake, fell into the sea." Wild grapes abounded, and he named the country Vinland.

THE STORY OF VINLAND1

From "Psalm of the West"

FAR spread, below,

The sea that fast hath locked in his loose flow All secrets of Atlantis' drowned woe

Lay bound about with night on every hand, Save down the eastern brink a shining band Of day made out a little way from land. Then from that shore the wind upbore a cry: Thou Sea, thou Sea of Darkness! why, oh why Dost waste thy West in unthrift mystery?

But ever the idiot sea-mouths foam and fill,
And never a wave doth good for man, or ill,
And Blank is king, and Nothing hath his
will;

And like as grim-beaked pelicans level file
Across the sunset toward their nightly isle
On solemn wings that wave but seldomwhile,
So leanly sails the day behind the day
To where the Past's lone Rock o'erglooms

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Stout Are Marson, southward whirled
From out the tempest's hand,
Doth skip the sloping of the world
To Huitramannaland,

Where Georgia's oaks with moss-beards curled

Wave by the shining strand,

And sway in sighs from Florida's Spring Or Carolina's Palm

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