A Biography of Sidney Lanier by Edwin Mims
page 57 of 60 (95%)
page 57 of 60 (95%)
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cause for so earnest self-gratulation as was afforded by this one feature
in our recent political convulsion."* -- * `Retrospects and Prospects', p. 29. -- Many Southerners were ready, like Lee, to forget the bitterness and prejudice of the war -- all but the hallowed memories. Lanier, at the close of a fanciful passage on the blood-red flower of war which blossomed in 1861, said: -- "It is supposed by some that the seed of this American specimen (now dead) yet remain in the land; but as for this author (who, with many friends, suffered from the unhealthy odors of the plant), he could find it in his heart to wish fervently that these seed, if there be verily any, might perish in the germ, utterly out of sight and life and memory and out of the remote hope of resurrection, forever and forever, no matter in whose granary they are cherished!"* -- * `Tiger Lilies', p. 116. -- In this spirit Lanier began his work in Montgomery, Ala. As has been seen, he had extended the hand of fellowship to his Northern friend, thus laying the basis for the spirit of reconciliation afterwards so dominant in his poetry. Uncongenial as was his work, he went about it with a new sense of the "dignity of labor". His aunt, Mrs. Watt, who had in the more prosperous times before the war |
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