yv>»iK)WiriWt!)?y:tKKr.»w>r.ft!>;i!>:i! ^'fiif jpire 'P1I ECITM !''-Ali,MISR l-n.i"f'!'S Miiiii^^-^^^ FROM THE PRAIRIE, A COLLECTION OF VERSE BY EDITH PALMER PjrNAM. "The book is completed. And closed like the day; And the hand that has written it Lays it away. "Dim grow its fancies, Forgotten they lie; Like coals in the ashes. They darken and die," — Longfellow. BIGELOW, MINX. E. E. CLOWEB, PUBLISHER. THt LibKAKY OF CONGRESS, Two Copies Received FEB 16 1903 Copyright CUSS c^ Entry XXc. No 7- 7.-b COPY -7 ^ B. To My Husband. OQ IliTRODUGTION, Th^re is nothing' poet,ie in liu; hceiiery and snrrouiidiii fj-s of Rii^h more, ;i small rui-ai tovvo in Minnesota, unless it is in the fnr-extenh- ing' prairie lands, laug-hing- in frnitfulness and beauty- Yet there resides in this c^uiet town one whose poetic writing's should have a wider circulation than they have hitherto attained. Mrs. A. A. Pit- iiatn was born in Vernon, Mich., Nov. 23 1878, where she was known as Edith Marie Palmer. When verj* yountr she moved willi her pir.^n s to Corunna, Mich., wliere she resided for some years. There she little poem was H-iven the p aee of honor in the Temple Builders, a paper used on Children's Diiy of lliis year in some of the churches. In the years of 180(1-7 she wrote a Sf- rial poem under the caption of "A Modern Mag^ialen" whicli appeai-- ed in the columns of "The Volunteer Gazette." of New Yorlf. This poem is I'eally a work of art. It is too long- to find a place in iliis volume. Dryden says that "A poet is a maker, as the word signifies; and he who cannot make, that is invent, hath the name for nothing," The reader of this volume will see that its author has more than the name, — that she is truly a maker and p osesses in large measure the poetic genius, — one who, as she herself declares, "writes because she cannot help it," — one in whose heart dwells some etliaence of wisdom some tone of the "eternal melodies." RusiLMoRE, Minn. November, 1901. I?ev. A. F. Thomson, Presbyterian Pastor. ©tMflMfl. Poems I IMy Homt» 3 On the Prairie «• iSince HaHy Came 7 A r.ullMby U A Gift 11 Visions 13 The Story of Life. .• 14 The Other vSide . 18 The Poets License 19 To My First Love 21 By the Shiawassee 22 Our Martyred President 25 My J u ne i 27 Loves Young' Dream 37 For Thee 39 You II nd 1 . . . . I 40 Forj^et You 44 COTTTENTS. One Wo'.nans L isl Woi-J 45 A Word of ThaiikF 47 The Kat.v-Di(i 49 Oomle limed 5:i The End of the Phiy o3 T^ivided 5o My Kin>r 58 Scicritire 59 A ISonsr of Fume GO Not Deiui 62 Earihs Eden (iH A Woman'-s Answer 65 The Ohi Oaken Rule- 71 Lifes School 7;i A Tale of the Kanarauzi 75 The Sonl of Authocslup 79 :SIy Heritasje 87 The Hammock on the Lawn . 89 Isabel 91 Jlappme^s. 95 Changes 96 Au E^rotist .. 99 Tell 101 Forget Yon 106 The Shooting of The Well 108 The Fire.. Whistle Ill I\ly Cve^4 115 How Th;e)V Grow i;iU The Light of Tlie World 121 Three Christinas Eve's 124 An Angel Visitant 130 ]Molher Thoughts 131 A Song for the Living 132 A Song of Cheer i;i3 In Prairie Skies 131 The Holy Sliadow 136 CONTENTS, En Masque 138 The Man of Galilee 140 A Tale of The Christ 14r> Trust 14 3 I.iolatiy 144 Glad Tiding-s 14