Various

Poems Every Child Should Know


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Musical Instrument.

       The Brides of Enderby.

       The Lye.

       L'Envoi.

       Contentment

       The Harp That Once Through Tara's Halls.

       The Old Oaken Bucket

       The Raven.

       Arnold von Winkleried.

       Life, I Know Not What Thou Art.

       Mercy.

       Polonius' Advice.

       A Fragment from Mark Antony's Speech.

       The Skylark.

       The Choir Invisible.

       The World Is Too Much With Us.

       On His Blindness.

       She Was a Phantom of Delight.

       Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard.

       Rabbi Ben Ezra

       Prospice.

       Recessional.

       Ozymandias of Egypt.

       Mortality.

       On First Looking Into Chapman's "Homer."

       Hervé Riel.

       The Problem.

       To America.

       The English Flag.

       The Man With the Hoe.

       WRITTEN AFTER SEEING THE PAINTING BY MILLET.

       Song of Myself.

       INDEX

      When the shadows are long

POEMS Every Child Should KnowTable of Contents EDITED BY Mary E. Burt
THE WHAT-EVERY-CHILD-SHOULD-KNOW-LIBRARY Published by DOUBLEDAY, DORAN & CO., INC., for THE PARENTS' INSTITUTE, INC. Publishers of "The Parents' Magazine" 9 EAST 40th STREET, NEW YORK

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      COPYRIGHT. 1904, BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

      PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES AT THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.

       Table of Contents

      It sometimes happens that there are people who do not know that authors are protected by copyright laws. A publisher once cited to me an instance of a teacher who innocently put forth a little volume of poems that she loved and admired, without asking permission of any one. Her annoyance was boundless when she found that she had no right to the poems.

      Special permission has been obtained for each copyrighted poem in this volume, and the right to publish has been purchased of the author or publisher, except in those cases where the author or the publisher has, for reasons of courtesy and friendship, given the permission.

      In addition to the business arrangements which have been made, we wish to extend our thanks and acknowledgments to those firms which have so kindly allowed us to use their material.

      To Houghton, Mifflin & Company, of Boston, we are indebted for the use of the following poems: From the copyrighted works of Longfellow—"The Arrow and the Song," "A Fragment of Hiawatha's Childhood," "The Skeleton in Armour," "The Wreck of the Hesperus," "The Ship of State," "The Psalm of Life," "The Village Blacksmith." From Whittier—"Barbara Frietchie" and "The Three Bells of Glasgow." From Emerson—"The Problem." From Burroughs—"My Own Shall Come to Me." From Lowell—"The Finding of the Lyre," "The Shepherd of King Admetus," and a fragment of "The Vision of Sir Launfal," From Holmes—"The