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timrod

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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1908) 7 (2): 177–179.
Published: 01 April 1908
...James E. Routh, Jr. An Unpublished Poem of Timrod By James E. Rotjth, Jr. Professor of English in Washington University, Missouri A few years ago (January, 1903,) there appeared in the South Atlantic Quarterly a short article by the present writer entitled Some Fugitive Poems of Timrod...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1938) 37 (3): 263–269.
Published: 01 July 1938
...G. P. Voigt Copyright © 1938 by Duke University Press 1938 TIMROD IN THE LIGHT OF NEWLY REVEALED LETTERS G. P. VOIGT ARTLY THROUGH purchase and partly through the gift of Mrs. G. M. Goodwin, grandniece of Henry Timrod, the library of the University of South Carolina has come into possession...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1910) 9 (3): 267–274.
Published: 01 July 1910
...James E. Routh, Jr. Copyright © 1910 by Duke University Press 1910 The Poetry of Henry Timrod. By James E. Routh, Je., Adjunct Professor of English in the University of Virginia. America has produced many writers but few schools of letters, few abiding traditions handed down from writer...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1903) 2 (1): 74–77.
Published: 01 January 1903
...James E. Routh, Jr. Copyright © 1903 by Duke University Press 1903 Some Fugitive Poems of Timrod By James E. Routh, Jr. It is one of the redeeming features of the scrap-book that in its wide versatility, ranging from recipes for plum puddings to lyric poems, it sometimes preserves bits...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1949) 48 (4): 584–588.
Published: 01 October 1949
...Edd Winfield Parks Copyright © 1949 by Duke University Press 1949 TIMROD S CONCEPT OF DREAMS EDD WINFIELD PARKS S A CRITIC, Henry Timrod believed that a poet should be as much concerned with truth as with beauty. Although he admitted pure poetry, poetry without ulterior purpose...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1903) 2 (1): 35–50.
Published: 01 January 1903
... appeal to us with special interest, Paul Hamilton Hayne and Henry Timrod. Warm friends from their school days, the one a son of a mechanic, the other a representa­ tive of one of the oldest families in the South, they were mutually drawn together by the affinity of noble purposes and lofty ideals, lofty...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1919) 18 (2): 125–144.
Published: 01 April 1919
... to call it, can never be permanently maintained. . . . The lost means and labor expended upon this Monthly I have always looked upon as counterbalanced by the facilities for publication it afforded our gifted local authors, especially to Timrod, some of whose most charming and characteristic poems were...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1910) 9 (4): 327–333.
Published: 01 October 1910
...James E. Routh, Jr. Copyright © 1910 by Duke University Press 1910 Some Fugitive Poems of Paul Hamilton Hayne By James B. Routh, Jr., Adjunct Professor of English in the University of Virginia. A few years ago I found in an old collection of newspaper clippings a few poems by Timrod...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1904) 3 (2): 182–185.
Published: 01 April 1904
... is kept in mind, and when one remembers his treatment of other authors, it is not a matter of surprise that Lanier is dismissed with a sentence, Hayne and Timrod with clauses, and that Cable and Harris are not alluded to. He compares Timrod to the whippoorwill a thin, pathetic twilight note. He would...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1949) 48 (3): 452–467.
Published: 01 July 1949
... reviews and once refers to the Southern Review when he is actually writing about the Southern Quarterly Review. He makes Hayne one year Timrod s junior, overlooking the article in which Guy A. Cardwell in 1935 showed that Timrod was actually born in 1828 and not in 1829, the date engraved on his tombstone...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1903) 2 (4): 393–398.
Published: 01 October 1903
... to the History of Western Europe, Review of, 93. Robinson, Maurice H., 197. Roosevelt, Theodore, His Life of Cromwell, 34. Roper, Daniel C., Census Office Report and the Significant Devel­ opment of the Cottonseed-Oil Industry, 237. Routh, James E., Jr., Some Fugi­ tive Poems of Timrod, 74. Ruffner, W. H...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1949) 48 (3): 472–475.
Published: 01 July 1949
.... Consider a few. Paul Hamilton Hayne was the nephew, not the son, of Senator Robert Y. Hayne. Until South Carolina left the Union, Timrod was opposed to secession. In quot­ ing some stanzas from Timrod s Carolina, Dr. Osterweis failed to catch a ludicrous misprint of shirts for skirts which completely...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1905) 4 (1): 1–12.
Published: 01 January 1905
... as he is; nothing extenuate nor aught set down in malice. For us of the South to do this in the case of poets like Timrod and Lanier, for example, and a novelist like Simms, is exceedingly difficult. They were all so lovely and pleasant in their lives, made such heroic efforts against tremendous odds...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1917) 16 (2): 133–143.
Published: 01 April 1917
... to lifting the battle cry. The battle songs of the South are more numerous. Albert Pike set worthy words to the quickening strains of Dixie. Timrod, poet and man of love that he was, in The Cotton Boll and Charleston voiced the Southern sense of wrong and the Southern determination: 138 The South...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1961) 60 (1): 121–122.
Published: 01 January 1961
... of the South as a distinctive region is doomed by the incessant and irresistible novelty of the Age of Technology. Our atten­ tion today, we may be reminded, is often focused on that far southern community known as Cape Canaveral, where close to that vast gulf which lips our Southern strand (as Henry Timrod...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1964) 63 (2): 250–251.
Published: 01 April 1964
... possessed by a concept of poetry as the crystalline revelation of the Divine Idea, Timrod was integrally a part of the romantic movement, and Hayne was an eclecticist who was much attracted to contemporary poetry but found Whitman objectionable for his free verse and for his frankness. Among the prose...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1964) 63 (2): 251–252.
Published: 01 April 1964
... who loved the fever-fits of composition, Chivers was a romantic mystic possessed by a concept of poetry as the crystalline revelation of the Divine Idea, Timrod was integrally a part of the romantic movement, and Hayne was an eclecticist who was much attracted to contemporary poetry but found...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1904) 3 (2): 186–197.
Published: 01 April 1904
... Pendleton Corde, Theodore O Hara, Francis O. Ticknor, John R. Thompson, and Margaret J. Preston. The remaining five chapters are devoted to Poe, Hayne, Timrod, Eanier, and Ryan. The book is completed by 107 pages of carefully annotated selections from the authors treated. Two false attitudes toward Southern...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1961) 60 (1): 119–121.
Published: 01 January 1961
... lips our Southern strand (as Henry Timrod put it in his poetic address to the infant Confederacy a short one hundred years ago) the giant rockets brood on their launching pads while the count down methodically proceeds with, to wrest a well-known phrase out of con­ text, all deliberate speed...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1970) 69 (3): 422–424.
Published: 01 July 1970
... is available. Many readers of Professor Allen s collection will be surprised at the quantity and variety of work that Cooke pro­ duced between 1846 and his death in 1850. He published Froissart Ballads and Other Poems, which was highly praised by both Poe and Timrod, as well as five critical essays...