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1922 Poem on US Trade

THE romance of unfamiliar place names has been felt and exprest by many poets. Here is a lyric that dedicates it to the supposedly unpoetical theme of export trade. The Public Ledger (Philadelphia) gave it currency first, but our curtailed version comes from The World’s Markets (New York):
MERCHANDISE
By MILTON HAYES
Merchandise! Merchandise! Tortoise-shell, spices,
Carpets and indigo—sent [...]

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A Poem from 1921 - The Flying Fish Sailor

THE salt spray drips from every line of these verses which Punch, forgetting Irish troubles and Washington conferences, regales himself with, perhaps, after the manner of the old Greeks in their exile, to remind himself that he is still John Bull:
THE FLYING-FISH SAILOR
(Old Style)
BY C. F. S.
“The Western Ocean rolls and roars
From Sandy Hook to [...]

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Star Spangled Banner 1921

“LET US ALL SING THE LAST VERSE”
SO MANY COMPLAINTS have been raised against the “Star-Spangled Banner” as a national anthem that a new suggestion for its use is always welcome. A writer to the New York Herald points out that the last verse of the hymn, rather than the first, expresses American feeling and is [...]

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Nathalia Crane Child Poet 1925

A POET AT TWELVE
NATHALIA CRANE IS CALLED “the twelve-year-old poet of Brooklyn.” Of course she can’t hold that title long, but her present guaranty is found in two volumes of verse and an election to the British Society of Authors, Playwrights and Composers, of which Thomas Hardy is president. Her first volume, called “The Janitor’s [...]

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Edith Thomas Woman Poet 1925

WHILE ONE STAR IN THE CONSTELLATION of women poets is rising, as noted elsewhere in this department, another went to its setting.
Miss Edith M. Thomas, whose verse appeared on occasions in our poetry page, died September 12 at the age of 71. Miss Thomas had for some years been connected with Harper’s Magazine, and she [...]

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