A DOME OF MANY-COLOURED GLASS

by Amy Lowell

[American (Massachusetts) poet and critic — 1874-1925.]

[This etext has been transcribed from the 3rd printing (1916),
of the
1912 (original) edition.]

“Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,
Stains the white radiance
of Eternity.”

Shelley, “Adonais”.


CONTENTS

LYRICAL POEMS

Before the Altar

Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats’s
Poems

Apples of Hesperides

Azure and Gold

Petals

Venetian Glass

Fatigue

A Japanese Wood-Carving

A Little Song

Behind a Wall

A Winter Ride

A Coloured Print by Shokei

Song

The Fool Errant

The Green Bowl

Hora Stellatrix

Fragment

Loon Point

Summer

“To-morrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New”

The Way

Diya {original title is Greek,
Delta-iota-psi-alpha}

Roads

Teatro Bambino. Dublin, N. H.

The Road to Avignon

New York at Night

A Fairy Tale

Crowned

To Elizabeth Ward Perkins

The Promise of the Morning Star

J—K. Huysmans

March Evening

SONNETS

Leisure

On Carpaccio’s Picture: The Dream of St.
Ursula

The Matrix

Monadnock in Early Spring

The Little Garden

To an Early Daffodil

Listening

The Lamp of Life

Hero-Worship

In Darkness

Before Dawn

The Poet

At Night

The Fruit Garden Path

Mirage

To a Friend

A Fixed Idea

Dreams

Frankincense and Myrrh

From One Who Stays

Crepuscule du Matin

Aftermath

The End

The Starling

Market Day

Epitaph in a Church-Yard in Charleston, South
Carolina

Francis II, King of Naples

To John Keats

THE BOSTON ATHENAEUM

VERSES FOR CHILDREN

Sea Shell

Fringed Gentians

The Painted Ceiling

The Crescent Moon

Climbing

The Trout

Wind

The Pleiades



LYRICAL POEMS


Before the Altar


Suggested by the Cover of a Volume of Keats’s Poems


Apples of Hesperides


Azure and Gold


Petals


Venetian Glass


Fatigue


A Japanese Wood-Carving


A Little Song


Behind a Wall


A Winter Ride


A Coloured Print by Shokei


Song


The Fool Errant


The Green Bowl


Hora Stellatrix


Fragment


Loon Point


Summer


“To-morrow to Fresh Woods and Pastures New”


The Way


Diya {original title is Greek, Delta-iota-psi-alpha}


Roads


Teatro Bambino. Dublin, N. H.


The Road to Avignon


New York at Night


A Fairy Tale


Crowned


To Elizabeth Ward Perkins


The Promise of the Morning Star


J—K. Huysmans


March Evening


SONNETS


Leisure


On Carpaccio’s Picture: The Dream of St. Ursula


The Matrix


Monadnock in Early Spring


The Little Garden


To an Early Daffodil


Listening


The Lamp of Life


Hero-Worship


In Darkness


Before Dawn


The Poet


At Night


The Fruit Garden Path


Mirage


To a Friend


A Fixed Idea


Dreams


Frankincense and Myrrh


From One Who Stays


Crepuscule du Matin


Aftermath


The End


The Starling


Market Day


Epitaph in a Church-Yard in Charleston, South Carolina


Francis II, King of Naples

Written after reading Trevelyan’s “Garibaldi and the making of Italy”


To John Keats


THE BOSTON ATHENAEUM


VERSES FOR CHILDREN


Sea Shell


Fringed Gentians


The Painted Ceiling


The Crescent Moon


Climbing


The Trout


Wind


The Pleiades

THE END

| Advertisements of books by the same author |

(These are taken from the back of the 1916 printing.)

A Dome of Many-Coloured Glass

By AMY LOWELL New edition, cloth, $1.25

PRESS NOTICES

“These poems arouse interest, and justify it by the result. Miss Lowell is
the sister of President Lowell of Harvard. Her art, however, needs no
reflection from such distinguished influence to make apparent its
distinction. Such verse as this is delightful, has a sort of personal
flavour, a loyalty to the fundamentals of life and nationality. . . . The
child poems are particularly graceful.” — ‘Boston Evening
Transcript’, Boston, Mass.

“Miss Lowell has given expression in exquisite form to many beautiful
thoughts, inspired by a variety of subjects and based on some of the
loftiest ideals. . . .

“The verses are grouped under the captions ‘Lyrical Poems’, ‘Sonnets’, and
‘Verses for Children’. . . .

“It is difficult to say which of these are the most successful. Indeed,
all reveal Miss Lowell’s powers of observation from the view-point of a
lover of nature. Moreover, Miss Lowell writes with a gentle philosophy and
a deep knowledge of humanity. . . .

“The sonnets are especially appealing and touch the heart strings so
tenderly that there comes immediate response in the same spirit. . . .

“That she knows the workings of the juvenile mind is plainly indicated by
her verses written for their reading.” — ‘Boston Sunday Globe’,
Boston, Mass.

“A quite delightful little collection of verses.” — ‘Toronto Globe’,
Toronto, Canada.

“The Lyrics are true to the old definition; they would sing well to the
accompaniment of the strings. We should like to hear “Hora Stellatrix”
rendered by an artist.” — ‘Hartford Courant’, Hartford, Conn.

“Verses that show delicate appreciation of the beautiful, and imaginative
quality. A sonnet entitled ‘Dreams’ is peculiarly full of sympathy and
feeling.” — ‘The Sun’, Baltimore, Md.

—————

By the same author Sword Blades and Poppy Seed Price, $1.25

Opinions of Leading Reviewers

“Against the multitudinous array of daily verse our times produce this
volume utters itself with a range and brilliancy wholly remarkable. I
cannot see that Miss Lowell’s use of unrhymed ‘vers libre’ has been
surpassed in English. Read ‘The Captured Goddess’, ‘Music’, and ‘The
Precinct. Rochester’, a piece of mastercraft in this kind. A wealth of
subtleties and sympathies, gorgeously wrought, full of macabre effects (as
many of the poems are) and brilliantly worked out. The things of splendor
she has made she will hardly outdo in their kind.” — Josephine
Preston Peabody, ‘The Boston Herald’.

“For quaint pictorial exactitude and bizarrerie of color these poems
remind one of Flemish masters and Dutch tulip gardens; again, they are
fine and fantastic, like Venetian glass; and they are all curiously
flooded with the moonlight of dreams. . . . Miss Lowell has a remarkable
gift of what one might call the dramatic-decorative. Her decorative
imagery is intensely dramatic, and her dramatic pictures are in themselves
vivid and fantastic decorations.” — Richard Le Gallienne, ‘New York
Times Book Review’.

“The book as a whole is notable for the organic relation it bears to life
and to art. Miss Lowell can find authentic inspiration equally in the
lapidarian stanzas of Henri de Regnier and in the color effects produced
by the flicking of the tail of the great northern pike. Her work is always
vivid, sincere, poetically energetic. Throughout it run, in the quaint
phrase of an old poet, ‘bright shoots of everlastingnesse’.” —
Ferris Greenslet, in the ‘New Republic’.

“Such poems as ‘A Lady’, ‘Music’, ‘White and Green’, are well-nigh
flawless in their beauty — perfect ‘images’.” — Harriet
Monroe, ‘Poetry’.

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