Renascence: A Book of Verse

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CONTENTS

PART I. EARLIER POEMS

INVOCATION

-THE-CITY-OF-LOVE-

THE-HOVSE-OF-DREAMS

LOVE'S-LABYRINTH

-THE-DIVIDING-GULF-

THE-VALLEY-of-DELIVERANCE

THE-UNKNOWN-SHORE-

THE-WEST-WIND

-THE-NEW-LIGHT-

HYMN OF FREE PEOPLES

TWELVE-SONNETS-of-LOVE

-PART-II-LATER-POEMS-

A-HERALD-of-SPRING

THOUGHTS-IN-A-HAMMOCK

THE-SIRENS-THREE

THE SIRENS THREE DEDICATORY SONNET TO WILLIAM MORRIS

-FLORA'S-FEAST- -A-MASQVE-OF-FLOWERS

-FROM-HELLAS-HOMEWARD-

RONDEAUS-RONDELS- and TRIOLET-

SONNETS

This Edition on Large Paper is limited to Sixty-five copies for England and Thirty-five for America. This copy is No. 45 of the English Edition.

·RENASCENCE·
·A·BOOK·of·
·VERSE·


BY
·WALTER·CRANE·


·London: ELKIN·
·MATHEWS·AT·THE·
·SIGN·OF·THE·BODLEY
·HEAD·IN·VIGO·ST·1891·

To ·M·F·C·
THIS sheaf that I have bound, of mingled grain,
Beneath the noon to give a spot of shade,
Where might we sit and mark, before they fade,
The fleeting lights across life’s dappled plain;
Ere with its treasured had Time’s rolling wain—
Piled up with memories, and thoughts unsaid,
With hopes and fears in trembling leaf and blade—
Turns sun-ward, where the harvest-home is made.
Perchance the tangled stems some flowers enfold,
Not all unmeet the brows of her to wreath,
Who with me bore the burden of the morn.
If yet the scarlet please not, on the corn,
Love’s blue is stedfast, and thy name in gold
Is writ by love’s wing-feather underneath.
decoration

OF the poems in this book, the whole of those included in Part I. are now printed for the first time.

Of the rest, “The Sirens Three,” “Thoughts in a Hammock,” “A Herald of Spring,” and the Rondeau—“Across the Fields,” all appeared with designs of mine, as decorative pages, in “The English Illustrated Magazine,” “The Sirens Three” being afterwards issued, with the illustrations, in book-form, by Messrs. Macmillan and Co., whom I have to thank for permission to reprint it with the others here.

“Flora’s Feast,” with coloured designs of the flowers to each couplet, has been published as a Christmas book by Messrs. Cassell and Co., at whose consent it re-appears.

I regret there should have been any delay in the appearance of the book, which has been owing to the illness of the engraver who had charge of some of the blocks.

Walter Crane.
April, 1891.

Pandora opening large box
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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