The best poems of Poe and Lanier may be found in Page's
_The Chief American Poets_.
POETRY
POE.--His best poems are short, and may soon be read. They are _Annabel
Lee_, _To One in Paradise_, _The Raven_, _The Haunted Palace_, _The
Conqueror Worm_, _Ulalume_, _Israfel_, _Lenore_, and _The Bells_.
HAYNE.--_A Dream of the South Winds_, _Aspects of the Pines_, _The Woodland
Phases_, and _A Storm in the Distance_.
TIMROD.--_Spring_, _The Lily Confidante_, _An Exotic_, _The Cotton Boll_,
and _Carolina_.
LANIER.--_The Marshes of Glynn_, _Sunrise_, _The Song of the
Chattahoochee_, _Tampa Robins_, _Love and Song_, _The Stirrup Cup_, and
_The Symphony_.
RYAN.--_The Conquered Banner_, and _The Sword of Robert Lee_.
TABB.--Fourteen of his complete poems may be found on two pages (489 and
490) of Stedman's _An American Anthology_. Much of Tabb's best work is
contained in his little volume entitled _Poems_ (1894).
CAWEIN.--_The Whippoorwill_, _There are Fairies_, _The Shadow Garden_, _One
Day and Another_, _In Solitary Places_, _A Twilight Moth_, _To a Wind
Flower_, _Beauty and Art_, _A Prayer for Old Age_.
The best two volumes of general selections from Cawein's verse have been
published in England and given the titles, _Kentucky Poems_ (1902), 264
pages, edited with an excellent _Introduction_ by Edmund Gosse, and _New
Poems_ (1909), 248 pages.
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