Toronto: Dundern, Parker, George L. Eugene Benson and William Toye. Toronto: Oxford UP, Roberts, Charles G.
Stephens, Donald. Vol Detroit: Gale Research Inc. Stewart, Margaret A. Bliss Carman: Poet, Philosopher, Teacher. Halifax: Dalhousie U, Whalen, Terry. Toronto: ECW Press, Find an entry.
Browse by letter. William Bliss Carman. Bliss Carman Photo: Public Commons. Kelsey Allan, Fall St. Bibliography of Primary Sources Carman, Bliss. Ballads and Lyrics. London: Bullen, By the Aurelian Wall: and Other Elegies.
Echoes From Vagabondia. Far Horizons. The rest of his life was dogged by financial difficulties. Bliss Carman produced a number of collections of his poetry including The Rough Rider and Other Poems, in , and Wild Garden which came out in , the year of his death. He had almost died in when he caught tuberculosis but a brain haemorrhage finally killed him. William Bliss Carman.
Poems Bio Galllery. William Bliss Carman died on the 8 th June at the age of Gallery Display all. Privacy Contact Us. There light of heart and footfree, I would go Up to my home among the lasting hills.
Nearing the day's end, I would leave the road, Turn to the left and take the steeper trail That climbs among the hemlocks, and at last In my own cabin doorway sit me down, Companioned in that leafy solitude By the wood ghosts of twilight and of peace, While evening passes to absolve the day And leave the tranquil mountains to the stars.
And in that sweet seclusion I should hear, Among the cool-leafed beeches in the dusk, The calm-voiced thrushes at their twilight hymn. So undistraught, so rapturous, so pure, They well might be, in wisdom and in joy, The seraphs singing at the birth of time The unworn ritual of eternal things.
In the golden shimmer Of the burning noon, When the birds are silent And the poppies swoon, Once more I behold her Smile and turn her face, With its infinite regard, Its immortal grace.
When the twilight silvers Every nodding flower, When the new moon hallows The first evening hour, Is it not her footfall Down the garden walks, Where the drowsy blossoms Slumber on their stalks? In the starry quiet, When the soul is free, And a vernal message Stirs the lilac tree, Surely I have felt her Pass and brush my cheek, With the eloquence of love That does not need to speak!
The trailing shadows rest on plain and hill; The bannered hosts are still, While over forest crown and mountain head The azure tent is spread. The song is hushed in every woodland throat; Moveless the lilies float; Even the ancient ever-murmuring sea Sighs only fitfully; The cattle drowse in the field-corner's shade; Peace on the world is laid. It is the hour when Nature's caravan, That bears the pilgrim Man Across the desert of uncharted time To his far hope sublime, Rests in the green oasis of the year, As if the end drew near.
Ah, traveller, hast thou naught of thanks or praise For these fleet halcyon days? No courage to uplift thee from despair Born with the breath of prayer? Then turn thee to the lilied field once more! God stands in His tent door. Her garments float and gather And swirl along the plain, Her headgear is the golden sun, Her cloak the silver rain.
With colour and with music, With perfumes and with pomp, By meadowland and upland, Through pasture, wood, and swamp, With promise and enchantment Leading her mystic mime, She comes to lure the world anew With joy as old as time. Quick lifts the marshy chorus To transport, trill on trill; There's not a rod of stony ground Unanswering on the hill. The brooks and little rivers Dance down their wild ravines, And children in the city squares Keep time, to tambourines.
The blue bird in the orchard Is lyrical for her, The starling with his meadow pipe Sets all the wood astir, The hooded white spring-beauties Are curtsying in the breeze, The blue hepaticas are out Under the chestnut trees.
The maple buds make glamour Vibernum waves its bloom, The daffodils and tulips Are risen from the tomb. The lances of narcissus Have pierced the wintry mold; The commonplace seems paradise To veils of greening gold. O hark, hear thou the summons, Put every grief away, When all the motley masques of earth Are glad upon a day.
It was a combination of these concerns and the discipline of the Sapphic fragments that produced his finest volume of poetry, Sappho: one hundred lyrics Outside the country, however, he was widely regarded not merely as a typical Canadian poet, but also as one of the most prominent American poets of the generation that was coming to maturity in the s and s. It was during the first of his Canadian tours that he was unofficially dubbed the poet laureate of Canada.
Four volumes of poems published in the s, most notably Later poems and Far horizons , reflect his spiritual and patriotic awakenings, as do Talks on poetry and life. With another book of poetry Wild garden recently published and another Sanctuary: Sunshine House sonnets in preparation, Carman died of a brain haemorrhage on 8 June at New Canaan, where he had spent at least part of every year since in order to be near Mrs King.
His ashes were buried in Forest Hill Cemetery, Fredericton, and a national memorial service was held at the Anglican cathedral there. The continuing underestimation of Carman is to be regretted, for at his best he is one of the finest lyricists that Canada has produced and several aspects of his thought, not least his belief in personal harmony and his reverence for external nature, will always have much to recommend them.
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