SAVAGE ;:^>; MMi^m- tm LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. I P.S..2.7.13 J i.^- s. UNITED STATES OP AMERICA.! (^ POEMS LYRICAL, DRAMATIC, AND ROMANTIC. BY JOHN SAVAGE SECOND COLLECTED EDITION. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS. N E W YO R K : T. W. STRONG, LATE EDWARD DUNIGAN & BRO., CATHOLIC PUBLISHING HOUSE, 599 BROADWAY. 1870. v^'"""^ ^^f^^" Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by JOHN SAVAGE, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southeru District of New York. \\-l%lloi PREFACE In acceding to tlie Publishers desire to embrace in one volume the works which form this collection, the author deems it a fitting opportunity to acknowledge that a para- mount inducement to his doing so was found in a perusal of the reviews and criticisms called forth by these productions on their original appearance. Of the thirty-seven pieces comprised in Faith and Fancy, thirty-two have been variously distinguished by " honorable mention" and commendator}'- criticism, Sybil has met a lavorable hearing in the study as well as upon the stage ; Lnd Eva, the latest published, if not so well known, is said by sufficiently high authority to be worthy of extended acquaintance. In a second edition of the first-named (1864) some changes and corrections were introduced. In the present collection several verbal revisions are made. FoRDHAM, November 21st, 1866, PREFACE TO SECOND COLLECTED EDITION. # The previous edition of this volume ran early out of print, and the issue of a second was frustrated by the demise of my lamented friend and Publisher. The settlement of his affairs, and the absence of the author in France, still further pos'u poned the appearance of the book, for which I am informed, by the present i^ublisher — successor to the old house of DuNiGAN & Brother (J. B. Kirker) — there has been an encouraging demand. In preparing this edition the mechanical appearance of the work has been improved. The illustrations are fac-similes by the recently invented photo-lithographic process of pen-and-ink sketches by the author. It is a befitting occasion to make my sincere acknowl- edgments for the favor bestowed upon the contents of this volume. J. S. April 23cl, 1870. MRS. ELIZABETH A. SAVAGE, WHOSE rOETITUDE UNDER SEVERE TRIALS, SmPLIOITT OF OHABAOTER AND STRENGTH OT AEFECTION, HATE MADE HEE A GOOD MOTHER AND A CHEERING COMPANIO^j SDl^b €alUtixan la BESPEOTrULLY AND AFFEOTIONATELT DEDICATED BT HBB SON, TSE AUTHOR. CONTENTS. FAITH AND FANCY. TAGS Dedication 11 Tiie Starry Flag 13 The Muster of the North 16 The Patriot Mother 26 Soldier's Song 27 God preserve the Union 30 A Battle Prayer 3S Kequiem for the Dead of the Irish Brigade 35 Redemption 37 Flowers on my Desk 38 A Phantasy 42 Mina 44 " Remember we are Friends" 46 To an Artist 48 Lilla 51 Haunted 53 Love's Imagination 55 " May God bless us" 57 Celia's Tea 57 A New Life 58 The God-Child of July 61 Breasting the World 64 At Niagara : The Rapids 65 The Falls 66 Shane's Head 6^ 8 CONTENTS. PAGE St. Anne's Well 72 Winter Thoughts : i. TheDeadYear 76 11. A Frosty Night 77 III. Snow on the Ground 78 IV. Summer always 79 V. Faces in the Fire 80 Washington 81 The Plaint of the Wild-flower 84 Game Laws 87 Dreaming by Moonlight 89 Effie Gray Ill The Parting of the Sun 113 He Writes for Bread 116 Notes 119 Sybil. A Tragedy, in Five Acts 123 Dedication 125 Eva. a Goblin Romance in, Five Parts 221 Dedication 223 Notes 314 FAITH AND FANCY. TO THE HON. CHARLES P. DALY, LL.D., irniST JUDGE OF THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS, NEW YORK, ETC.. ETC., ETC. My dear Friend: Witli great esteem for your many virtues and accomplislimeats, I dedicate this book of " Faitli and Fancy" to you, and sincerely regret my inability to make it more worthy of your acceptance. While, however, I am thus proudly eager to let my readers know how I value private worth and public mtegrity ; how in your person I honor purity of feeling, up- rightness of character, and steadfast devotion to principle ; and admire the variety of talent and intellectual resources wliich illustrate the unceasing promptings of your heart to generous efforts in behalf of Letters, Science, Humanity, and Justice ;— while I thus take advantage of this Publication to boast sincere affection and respect for one so widely useful and so generally beloved, let me, under cover of the indulgence your public services will command, add a very few words touching the vol- ume I offer you. Prefaces, it would seem, are not so much the fashion now as in days gone by, though I am glad to see that some of our best and most powerful writers do not ignore the good old sociable custom. I confess to a feeling of self-respect which would com- pel me to raise my hat, by way of prefatory courtesy, to the person who, either at his own or my desire, was going to be the confidant of my hopes, woes, experiences, or sensations. Every person who writes poetry, is in such a position of self- exposure. If he aspire at all to transcribe or embody the feel- ings which evoke or prompt human action, he cannot help 12 DEDICATION. writing largely from his own lieart's blood, and in the hues it has taken by contact with Men, Faith, and Nature. Hence, I desire to appropriate a paragraph of this dedicatory epistle tc briefly convey to my kind readers what otherwise might be stated in a Preface. With few exceptions, the pieces herein collected have been published — some anonymously and a few as translations — in various periodicals, during the past thirteen years ; and in many instances received a degree of popular, and in some cases critical attention, I did not anticipate. After reproduction in various presses, some have found their way into collections ; others have been read by professional readers to large and ap- proving audiences ; and others again — in the earlier portion of the volume — have been quoted by eminent and popular speakers on both sides of the Atlantic. The song at the opening of the Book, is placed there out of respect, not only to the subject which should be first in our hearts, but also to the gallant soldiers who gave it its first eclat on the historical occasion de- scribed in the note. However undue and unmerited the kind approbation referred to, / cannot overlook it ; and in deeply appreciating it, feel some justification in collecting the scattered links of years between the Press, the Public, and myself; and — with the addition of a few others — welding all into a chain which, I trust, will bind me still more pleasantly and serviceably to them. Begging you to receive this dedication as an humble though earnest tribute to good nature and great services, I have the honor to be Your friend and servant, John Savage. December 13, 18^. FAITH AND FANCY. THE STARRY FLAG/ A.IR— " Dixie's Landy—Bedlative. Oh, the starry flag is the flag for me ! 'Tis the flag of life ! the flag of the free ! Then hurrah ! hurrah ! For the flag of the Union ! Oh, the starry flag, &c. We'll raise that starry banner, boys, Hurrah I hurrah! We'll raise that starry banner, boys, Where no power in wrath can face it ! On town and field. The people's shield, No treason can erase it ! O'er all the land. That flag must stand, Where the people's might shall place it. 14 FAITH AND FANCY. II. That flag was won through gloom and woe I It has blessed the brave and awed the foe ! . Then hurrah ! hurrah I For the flag of the Union ! That flag was won,