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Summer of 'sixty-three, sir, and Conrad was gone
away, 494.

Sun of the stately Day, 575.
Sunday in Old England, 526.

Sure never was picture drawn more to the life, 129.
Sweet land of song, thy harp doth hang, 375.

"Talk of pluck!" pursued the Sailor, 516.
Tell the story to your sons, 319.

That balmy eve, within a trellised bower, 43.
That seat of Science, Athens, 140.
That was a brave old epoch, 101.

The banner of Freedom high floated unfurled, 294.
The billowy headlands swiftly fly, 624.

The boarding nettings are triced for fight, 295.
The breaking waves dashed high, 57.

The breeze has swelled the whitening sail, 57.
The breezes went steadily thro' the tall pines, 185.
The captain of the Shannon came sailing up the
bay, 300.

The "Catamount Tavern" is lively to-night, 194.
The Chesapeake so bold, 301.

The chill New England sunshine, 90.

The combat raged not long, but ours the day, 437.
The despot treads thy sacred sands, 515.
The despot's heel is on thy shore, 415.

The dog that is beat has a right to complain, 259.
The flags of war like storm-birds fly, 460.
The footsteps of a hundred years, 335.

The four-way winds of the world have blown, 625.
The great unequal conflict past, 263.

The guns are hushed. On every field once flowing,
562.

The heart leaps with the pride of their story, 634.
The home-bound ship stood out to sea, 36.
The increasing moonlight drifts across my bed,
449.

The Indian war was over, 123.

The knightliest of the knightly race, 417.
The land, that, from the rule of kings, 595.
The lioness whelped, and the sturdy cub, 558.
The Lord above, in tender love, 264.

The loud drums are rolling, the mad trumpets
blow, 614.

The morn was cloudy and dark and gray, 404.
The Mothers of our Forest-Land, 330.
The muffled drum's sad roll has beat, 368.
The Pilgrim Fathers, where are they, 66.
The roadside forests here and there were touched
with tawny gold, 97.

The soft new grass is creeping o'er the graves, 449.
The stars of Night contain the glittering Day, 486.
The sun had set, 484.

The sun had sunk beneath the west, 310.
The sword was sheathed: in April's sun, 274.
The tent-lights glimmer on the land, 461.
The twenty-second of August, 219.
The 'Vention did in Boston meet, 271.
The Volunteers! the Volunteers, 374.

The war-drum is beating, prepare for the fight, 412.
The war-path is true and straight, 614.

The wind blows east, -the wind blows west, 91.
The winding way the serpent takes, 32.
The windows of Heaven were open wide, 600.
The winter night is cold and drear, 188.
The word of God to Leyden came, 56.
The word of the Lord by night, 478.

The years are but half a score, 585.

There are twenty dead who're sleeping near the
slopes of Bud Dajo, 645.

There is blood on thy desolate shore, 606.
"There on the left!" said the colonel; the battle
had shuddered and faded away, 445.
There was no union in the land, 492.
These words the poet heard in Paradise, 591.
They come! -they come! -the heroes come, 262.
They fling their flags upon the morn, 632.
They have met at last as storm-clouds, 423.
They held her South to Magellan's mouth, 637.
They say the Spanish ships are out, 621.

They slept on the field which their valor had won,
443.

They've turned at last! Good-by, King George,
183.

This is the place where André met his death, 239.
This was the man God gave us when the hour, 275.
This year, till late in April, the snow fell thick and
light, 414.

Those were the conquered, still too proud to yield,
492.

Thou hast not drooped thy stately head, 514.
Thou, too, sail on, O Ship of State, 660.
Thou wonder of the Atlantic shore, 338.
Though with the North we sympathize, 428.
Thrash away, you'll hev to rattle, 360.

Three days through sapphire seas we sailed, 530.
Three ships of war had Preble when he left the
Naples shore, 282.

Through calm and storm the years have led, 574.
Through darkening pines the cavaliers marched
on their sunset way, 19.

Through the clangor of the cannon, 302.

Through verdant banks where Thames's branches
glide, 70.

Thunder our thanks to her

lips, 594.

-guns, hearts, and

Thus, some tall tree that long hath stood, 275.
Thus spake the Lord, 610.

Thy blue waves, Patapsco, flow'd soft and serene,
316.

Thy error, Frémont, simply was to act, 477.
Thy merits, Wolfe, transcend all human praise,
123.

-

Time was he sang the British Brute, 642.
'T is done the wondrous thoroughfare, 579.
"T is God that girds our armor on, 264.
"T is like stirring living embers when, at eighty,
one remembers, 163.

"T is noonday by the buttonwood, with slender-
shadowed bud, 152.

"T is not the President alone, 649.

'T is of a gallant Yankee ship that flew the stripes
and stars, 223.

"T is of a little drummer, 451.

To arms, to arms! my jolly grenadiers, 112.
To deities of gauds and gold, 660.

To drive the kine one summer's morn, 233.
To drum-beat and heart-beat, 186.

To eastward ringing, to westward winging, o'er
mapless miles of sea, 640.

To Houston at Gonzales town, ride, Ranger, for
your life, 355.

To the Cowpens riding proudly, boasting loudly,
rebels scorning, 252.

INDEX OF FIRST LINES

To the God of all sure mercies let my blessing rise
to-day, 77.

"To the winds give our banner," 99.

To western woods and lonely plains, 331.

Toll! Roland, toll, 408.

To-night we strive to read, as we may best, 71.
'T was a grand display was the prince's ball, 382.
'T was a wonderful brave fight, 407.

'T was Captain Church, bescarred and brown, 88.
'T was Friday morn: the train drew near, 414.
'T was hurry and scurry at Monmouth town, 213.
'T was in the reign of George the Third, 135.
'T was Juet spoke the Half Moon's mate, 50.
"T was June on the face of the earth, June with the
rose's breath, 161.

"T was May upon the mountains, and on the airy
wing, 157.

'T was midsummer; cooling breezes all the languid
forests fanned, 349.

'T was night upon the Darro, 15.

'T was November the fourth, in the year of ninety-
one, 332.

'T was on a pleasant mountain, 251.

'T was on board the sloop of war, Wasp, boys, 293.
'T was on the glorious day, 299.

'Twas on the twelfth of April, 405.

'T was out upon mid-ocean that the San Jacinto
hailed, 429.

"T was the dead of the night. By the pine-knot's
red light, 148.

'T was the heart of the murky night, and the low-
est ebb of the tide, 230.

'T was the proud Sir Peter Parker came sailing in
from the sea, 181.

"T was the very verge of May, 615.

'Twas the year of the famine in Plymouth of old, 62.
'Twixt clouded heights Spain hurls to doom, 636.
Two fleets have sailed from Spain. The one would
seek, 622.

Two hours, or more, beyond the prime of a blithe
April day, 507.

Unconquer'd captive! -

close thine eye, 523.
Under the great hill sloping bare, 80.
Under the walls of Monterey, 364.
Unhappy Boston! see thy sons deplore, 134.
Untrammelled Giant of the West, 609.
Up from the meadows rich with corn, 444.
Up from the South, at break of day, 521.
Up the hillside, down the glen, 358.
Up through a cloudy sky, the sun, 195.
Upon the barren sand, 39.

Vain Britons, boast no longer with proud indig-
nity, 170.

Warden at ocean's gate, 595.

Was there ever message sweeter, 440.

Wave, wave your glorious battle-flags, brave sol-
diers of the North, 489.

We are coming, Cuba, — coming; our starry ban-
ner shines, 629.

We are coming, Father Abraham, three hundred
thousand more, 440.

We are the troop that ne'er will stoop, 142.

We could not pause, while yet the noontide air,
519.

We cross the prairie as of old, 389.

695

We do accept thee, heavenly Peace, 547.
We follow where the Swamp Fox guides, 247.
We have an old mother that peevish is grown, 142.
We have sent him seeds of the melon's core, 562.
We lay in the Trenches we'd dug in the Ground,
162.

We loved the wild clamor of battle, 655.

We mustered at midnight, in darkness we formed,

417.

We sailed to and fro in Erie's broad lake, 303.
We were not many, we who stood, 363.

We were ordered to Samoa from the coast of
Panama, 598.

Weak-winged is song, 550.

Wearied arm and broken sword, 38.

"Well, General Grant, have you heard the news,"
524.

Well worthy to be magnified are they, 66.

Well, yes, I've lived in Texas since the spring of
'61, 402.

Were there no crowns on earth, 538.

What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast,
486.

What are you waiting for, George, I pray, 433.
What distant thunders rend the skies, 220.

What heavy-hoofed coursers the wilderness roam,
305.

What heroes from the woodland sprung, 191.
What is that a-billowing there, 291.

What is the voice I hear, 654.

What mean these peals from every tower, 523.
What! shall the sudden blade, 583.

What! soar'd the old eagle to die at the sun, 353.
What time the Lord drew back the sea, 652.
What time the noble Lovewell came, 108.
When a certain great King, whose initial is G., 258.
When arms and numbers both have failed, 645.
When brave Van Rensselaer cross'd the stream,.
292.

When Britain, with envy and malice inflamed, 298.
When British troops first landed here, 256.
When Carolina's hope grew pale, 250.
When Congress sent great Washington, 169.
When darkness prevail'd and aloud on the air, 339..
When fair Columbia was a child, 140.

When Faction, in league with the treacherous<
Gaul, 241.

When first I saw our banner wave, 478.
When Freedom, fair Freedom, her banner dis-
play'd, 279.

When Freedom from her mountain height, 192.
When George the King would punish folk, 138.
When Jack the King's commander, 202.

When Johnny comes marching home again, 549.
When life hath run its largest round, 377.
When North first began, 204.

When ruthful time the South's memorial places,
564.

When shall the Island Queen of Ocean lay, 318.
When tempest winnowed grain from bran, 445.
When the British fleet lay, 215.

When the dying flame of day, 245.

When the Norn-Mother saw the Whirlwind Hour,
399.

When the vengeance wakes, when the battle
breaks, 613

When the war-cry of Liberty rang through the
land, 166.

When you speak of the dauntless deeds, 644.
Where may the wearied eye repose, 276.
Where murdered Mumford lies, 476.
Where nowadays the Battery lies, 54.

Where shall we seek for a hero, and where shall we
find a story, 132.

Where the dews and the rains of heaven have their
fountain, 506.

Where the remote Bermudas ride, 39.
Where the short-legged Esquimaux, 566.

Where the wild wave, from ocean proudly swell-
ing, 323.

Whereas the rebels hereabout, 160.

While far along the eastern sky, 571.

While Sherman stood beneath the hottest fire, 499.
Whilst in peaceful quarters lying, 210.

Who are you, dusky woman, so ancient hardly
human, 514.

Who cries that the days of daring are those that
are faded far, 630.

Who has not heard of the dauntless Varuna, 474.
Who is this ye say is slain, 416.

Who now dare longer trust thy mother hand, 657.
Who with the soldiers was stanch danger-sharer,
462.

Whoop! the Doodles have broken loose, 412.
"Who've ye got there?" - "Only a dying bro-
ther," 485.

Why come ye hither, stranger, 193.
Why do I sleep amid the snows, 72.

'Wide o'er the valley the pennons are fluttering,
371.

Wide open and unguarded stand our gates, 659.
Will you hear of a bloody Battle, 48.

Winds that sweep the southern mountains, 512.
With half the Western world at stake, 328.
With restless step of discontent, 23.

With sharpened pen and wit, one tunes his lays,

52.

With shot and shell, like a loosened hell, 630.
Women are timid, cower and shrink, 216.

Yankee Doodle sent to Town, 376.
Yankee Doodle went to war, 425.

Ye brave Columbian bands! a long farewell, 262.
Ye brave sons of Freedom, come join in the chorus,
285.

Ye Columbians so bold, attend while I sing, 2.
Ye elms that wave on Malvern Hill, 439.

Ye gentlemen and ladies fair, 326.

Ye jolly Yankee gentlemen, who live at home in
ease, 428.

Ye jovial throng, come join the song, 337.
Ye parliament of England, 318.

Ye say they all have passed away, 587.

Ye sons of Columbia, unite in the cause, 278.
Ye sons of Columbia, who bravely have fought,
276.

Ye sons of Massachusetts, all who love that hon-
ored name, 85.

Ye sons of Sedition, how comes it to pass, 140.
Yes, we'll rally round the flag, boys, we'll rally
once again, 500.

Yes, yes, my boy, there's no mistake, 639.
Yet had his sun not risen; from his lips, 11.
You are looking now on old Tom Moore, 345.
You brave heroic minds, 42.

You know that day at Peach Tree Creek, 510.
You know there goes a tale, 232.

You lay a wreath on murdered Lincoln's bier, 543.
You that crossed the ocean old, 22.

Your threats how vain, Corregidor, 618.
You're a traitor convicted, you know very well,
401.

Zounds! how the price went flashing through, 567.

INDEX OF TITLES

Aaron Burr's Wooing, E. C. Stedman, 231.
About Savannah, Unknown, 245.
Abraham Lincoln, W. C. Bryant, 540.
Abraham Lincoln, E. C. Stedman, 538.
Abraham Lincoln, R. H. Stoddard, 540.
Abraham Lincoln, Tom Taylor, 543.
Acceptation, M. J. Preston, 547.
Across the Delaware, Will Carleton, 188.
Ad Patriam, Clinton Scollard, 660.
Adams and Liberty, R. T. Paine, 276.

Additional Verses to Hail Columbia, O. W. Holmes,
596.

Adrian Block's Song, E. E. Hale, 51.
After the Centennial, C. P. Cranch, 578.
After the Comanches, Unknown, 579.
After the Fire, O. W. Holmes, 571.
Aguinaldo, Bertrand Shadwell, 645.
Alabama, The, Maurice Bell, 527.
Alamance, S. W. Whiting, 135.
Alaska, Joaquin Miller, 567.

[blocks in formation]

American Flag, The, J. R. Drake, 192.
American Independence, Francis Hopkinson, 178.
American Patriot's Prayer, The, Unknown, 180.
American Soldier's Hymn, The, Unknown, 264.
Ancient Prophecy, An, Philip Freneau, 258.
André, C. F. Bates, 239.

André's Request to Washington, N. P. Willis, 238.
Angels of Buena Vista, The, J. G. Whittier, 366.
Anne Hutchinson's Exile, E. E. Hale, 73.
Apostrophe to the Island of Cuba, J. G. Percival,
606.

Arctic Vision, An, Bret Harte, 566.
Arizona, S. M. Hall, 655.

Armstrong at Fayal, The, Wallace Rice, 321.
Arnold at Stillwater, T. D. English, 200.
Arnold the Vile Traitor, Unknown, 238.
Assault on the Fortress, The, Timothy Dwight, 70.
Assunpink and Princeton, T. D. English, 189.
Astræa at the Capitol, J. G. Whittier, 478.
At Fredericksburg, J. B. O'Reilly, 447.
At Port Royal, J. G. Whittier, 461.

At the Cannon's Mouth, Herman Melville, 537.
At the President's Grave, R. W. Gilder, 590.
Attack, The, T. B. Read, 463.

Bacon's Epitaph, Unknown, 45.
Balboa, Nora Perry, 23.

Ballad of Bunker Hill, The, Unknown, 162.
Ballad of Chickamauga, The, Maurice Thompson,
501.

Ballad of Ishmael Day, The, Unknown, 487.
Ballad of Manila Bay, A, C. G. D. Roberts, 618.

Ballad of New Orleans, The, G. H. Boker, 472.
Ballad of Paco Town, The, Clinton Scollard, 644.
Ballad of Sweet P, The, V. W. Cloud, 186.
Ballad of the Boston Tea-Party, A, O. W. Holmes,
136.

Ballad of the Conemaugh Flood, A, H. D. Rawns-
ley, 600.

Ballad of the French Fleet, A, H. W. Longfellow,
110.

Ballade of Expansion, Hilda Johnson, 642.
Barbara Frietchie, J. G. Whittier, 444.
Barney's Invitation, Philip Freneau, 226.
Baron Renfrew's Ball, C. G. Halpine, 382.
Bartholdi Statue, The, J. G. Whittier, 595.
Battle Autumn of 1862, The, J. G. Whittier, 460.
Battle Ballad, A, F. O. Ticknor, 424.

Battle Cry, W. H. Venable, 614.

Battle-Cry of Freedom, The, Unknown, 500.
Battle-Field, The, Lloyd Mifflin, 492.

Battle-Hymn of the Republic, The, J. W. Howe,
384.

Battle in the Clouds, The, W. D. Howells, 506.
Battle of Baltimore, The, Unknown, 315.
Battle of Bennington, The, T. P. Rodman, 195.
Battle of Bridgewater, The, Unknown, 308.
Battle of Bunker Hill, The, Unknown, 167.
Battle of Charleston Harbor, The, P. H. Hayne,
507.

Battle of Charlestown, The, H. H. Brownell, 395.
Battle of Erie, The, Unknown, 303.
Battle of Eutaw, The, W. G. Simms, 254..
Battle of King's Mountain, The, Unknown, 251.
Battle of Lake Champlain, The, Philip Freneau,

312.

Battle of La Prairie, The, W. D. S. Lighthall, 101.
Battle of Lookout Mountain, The, G. H. Boker,
505.

Battle of Lovell's Pond, The, H. W. Longfellow,
109.

Battle of Manila, The, Richard Hovey, 619.
Battle of Monmouth, The, Unknown, 210.
Battle of Monmouth, The, T. D. English, 211.
Battle of Morris' Island, The, Unknown, 404.
Battle of Murfreesboro, The, Kinahan Cornwallis,
459.

Battle of Muskingum, The, W. H. Safford, 337.
Battle of New Orleans, The, T. D. English, 323.
Battle of Oriskany, The, C D. Helmer, 198.
Battle of Plattsburg, The, Unknown, 314.
Battle of Plattsburg Bay, The, Clinton Scollard,

313.

Battle of Queenstown, The, William Banker, 292.
Battle of Somerset, C. C. Cullen, 454.

Battle of Stonington, The, Philip Freneau, 309.
Battle of the Cowpens, The, T. D. English, 252.
Battle of the Kegs, The, Francis Hopkinson, 208.
Battle of the King's Mill, T. D. English, 370.
Battle of Tippecanoe, The, Unknown, 339.

Battle of Trenton, The, Unknown, 188.
Battle of Valparaiso, The, Unknown, 307.
Battle Song, R. B. Wilson, 613.

Battle Song of the Oregon, Wallace Rice, 624.
Bay Fight, The, H. H. Brownell, 530.
Beauregard, C. M. Warfield, 457.
Before Vicksburg, G. H. Boker, 499.
Bells at Midnight, The, T. B. Aldrich, 588.
Ben Milam, W. H. Wharton, 355.
Bennington, W. H. Babcock, 196.
Bermudas, Andrew Marvell, 39.
Bethel, A. J. H. Duganne, 417.

Betsy's Battle Flag, Minna Irving, 191.
Betty Jane, T. D. English, 216.

Beyond the Potomac, P. H. Hayne, 443.
Bivouac of the Dead, The, Theodore O'Hara,
368.

Black Regiment, The, G. H. Boker, 500.
Blasted Herb, The, Mesech Weare, 139.
Blennerhassett's Island, T. B. Read, 335.
Blood is Thicker than Water, Wallace Rice, 380.
Blue and the Gray, The, F. M. Finch, 563.
Boasting of Sir Peter Parker, The, Clinton Scollard,
181.

Bob Anderson, my Beau, Unknown, 403.
Bombardment of Bristol, The, Unknown, 171.
Bonhomme Richard and Serapis, The, Philip
Freneau, 225.

Bonnie Blue Flag, The, Annie Ketchum, 413.
Boston, J. B. O'Reilly, 570.

Boston Hymn, R. W. Emerson, 478.

Bower of Peace, The, Robert Southey, 318.

Boy Brittan, Forceythe Willson, 455.
Braddock's Fate, Stephen Tilden, 112.

Brave Paulding and the Spy, Unknown, 237.
Brave Wolfe, Unknown, 122.

Breath on the Oat, J. R. Taylor, 641.

"Brigade must not know, Sir, The," Unknown,
485.

Britannia to Columbia, Alfred Austin, 654.
British Grenadier, The, Unknown, 132.
British Lyon roused, The, Stephen Tilden, 111.
British Valor displayed, Francis Hopkinson, 208.
Brooklyn at Santiago, The, Wallace Rice, 636.
Brooklyn Bridge, C. G. D. Roberts, 593.
Brooklyn Bridge, The, Edna Dean Proctor, 593.
Brother Jonathan's Lament for Sister Caroline,

O. W. Holmes, 400.

Brown of Ossawatomie, J. G. Whittier, 396.
Buena Vista, Albert Pike, 364.

Buffalo, F. E. Coates, 649.

Bunker Hill, G. H. Calvert, 162.

Burial of Barber, J. G. Whittier, 389.

Burial of Latané, The, J. R. Thompson, 437.
Burning of Jamestown, The, T. D. English, 44.
Bury Them, H. H. Brownell, 508.

Butler's Proclamation, P. H. Hayne, 476.
By the Conemaugh, F. E. Coates, 599.
By the Potomac, T. B. Aldrich, 449.

C. S. A. Commissioners, The, Unknown, 428.
Cable Hymn, The, J. G. Whittier, 565.
Caldwell of Springfield, Bret Harte, 232.
California, L. H. Sigourney, 346.
"Call All," Unknown, 412.

Call to the Colors, The, Arthur Guiterman, 627.
Canonicus and Roger Williams, Unknown, 73.

Can't, H. P. Spofford, 519.
Captive's Hymn, The, E. D. Proctor, 123.
Capture of Little York, Unknown, 298.
Carmen Bellicosum, G. H. McMaster, 206.
Carolina, Henry Timrod, 515.

Cassandra Southwick, J. G. Whittier, 77.

Cast Down, but not Destroyed, Unknown, 427.
Cedar Mountain, Annie Fields, 441.

Centennial Hymn, J. G. Whittier, 573.

Centennial Hymn, W. C. Bryant, 574.

Centennial Meditation of Columbia, The, Sidney
Lanier, 573.

Cervera, Bertrand Shadwell, 638.

Charge at Santiago, The, W. H. Hayne, 630.

Charge by the Ford, The, T. D. English, 438.
Charleston, Henry Timrod, 507.

Charleston, P. H. Hayne, 515.
Charleston, R. W. Gilder, 594.

Chesapeake and Shannon, Unknown, 301.
Chicago, Bret Harte, 569.

Chicago, J. B. O'Reilly, 569.

Chicago, J. G. Whittier, 568.

Christopher of the Shenandoah, A, E. M. Thomas,
520.

Church of the Revolution, The, Hezekiah Butter-
worth, 570.

Civil War, C. D. Shanly, 432.

Clerical Oppressors, J. G. Whittier, 385.

Colonel Ellsworth, R. H. Stoddard, 416.

Columbia, Timothy Dwight, 180.

Columbus, E. E. Hale, 18.

Columbus, Joaquin Miller, 14.

Columbus, L. H. Sigourney, 9.

Columbus and the Mayflower, Lord Houghton, 18.
Columbus at the Convent, J. T. Trowbridge, 10.
Columbus Dying, E. D. Proctor, 18.

Columbus in Chains, Philip Freneau, 17.
Columbus to Ferdinand, Philip Freneau, 9.

Come, ye Lads, who wish to shine, Unknown, 287.
Comfort of the Trees, The, R. W. Gilder, 650.
Complaint of New Amsterdam, The, Jacob Steen-
dam, 53.

Comrades, H. R. Dorr, 629.

Conemaugh, E. S. P. Ward, 601.

Conquered Banner, The, A. J. Ryan, 547.

Constellation and the Insurgente, The, Unknown,
280.

Constitution and the Guerrière, The, Unknown,
288.

Constitution's Last Fight, The, J. J. Roche, 327.

Convention Song, Unknown, 271.

Cornwallis's Surrender, Unknown, 256.

Cow-Chace, The, John André, 233.

Craven, Henry Newbolt, 527.

Crisis, The, J. G. Whittier, 372.

Crispus Attucks, J. B. O'Reilly, 132.

Crossing at Fredericksburg, The, G. H. Boker,
446.

Cruise of the Fair American, The, Unknown, 219.
Cruise of the Monitor, The, G. H. Boker, 467.

Cry to Arms, A, Henry Timrod, 411.

Cuba, E. C. Stedman, 607.

Cuba, Harvey Rice, 608.

Cuba Libre, Joaquin Miller, 609.

Cuba to Columbia, Will Carleton, 608.
Cumberland, The, H. W. Longfellow, 464.
Cumberland, The, Herman Melville, 466.

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