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COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS BRET HARTE He began trying his pen in The Golden Era of San Francisco where he was working as a compositor; and when The Californian edited by Charles Henry Webb was started in 1864 as a literary newspaper he was one of a group of brilliant young fellows--Mark Twain Charles Warren Stoddard Webb himself and Prentice Mulford--who gave at once a new interest in California beside what mining and agriculture caused. Here in an early number appeared "The Ballad of the Emeu" and he contributed many poems grave and gay as well as prose in a great variety of form. At the same time he was appointed Secretary of the United States Branch Mint at San Francisco holding the office till 1870. But Bret Harte's great opportunity came when The Overland Monthly was established in 1868 by Anton Roman. This magazine was the outgrowth of the racy exuberant literary spirit which had already found free expression in the journals named. An eager ambition to lift all the new life of the Pacific into a recognized place in the world of letters made the young men we have named put their wits together in a monthly magazine which should rival the Atlantic in Boston and Blackwood in Edinburgh. The name was easily had and for a sign manual on the cover some one drew a grizzly bear that formidable exemplar of Californian wildness. But the design did not quite satisfy until Bret Harte with a felicitous stroke drew two parallel lines just before the feet of the halting brute. Now it was the grizzly of the wilderness drawing back before the railway of civilization and the picture was complete as an emblem. Bret Harte became by the common urgency of his companions the first editor of the Overland and at once his own tales and poems began and in the second number appeared "The Luck of Roaring Camp" which instantly brought him wide fame. In a few months he found himself besought for poems and articles sketches and stories in influential magazines and in 1871 he turned away from the Pacific coast and took up his residence first in New York afterward in Boston. "No one" says his old friend Mr. Stoddard "who knows Mr. Harte and knew the California of his day wonders that he left it as he did. Eastern editors were crying for his work. Cities vied with one another in the offer of tempting bait. When he turned his back on San Francisco and started for Boston he began a tour that the greatest author of any age might have been proud of. It was a veritable ovation that swelled from sea to sea: the classic sheep was sacrificed all along the route. I have often thought that if Bret Harte had met with a fatal accident during that transcontinental journey the world would have declared with one voice that the greatest genius of his time was lost to it." In Boston he entered into an arrangement with the predecessors of the publishers of this volume and his contributions appeared in their periodicals and were gathered into volumes. The arrangement in one form or another continued to the time of his death and has for witness a stately array of comely volumes; but the prose has far outstripped the poetry. There are few writers of Mr. Harte's prodigality of nature who have used with so much fine reserve their faculty for melodious verse and the present volume contains the entire body of his poetical work growing by minute accretions during thirty odd years. In 1878 he was appointed United States Consul at Crefeld Germany and after that date he resided with little interruption on the Continent or in England. He was transferred to Glasgow in March 1880 and remained there until July 1885. During the rest of his life he made his home in London. His foreign residence is disclosed in a number of prose sketches and tales and in one or two poems; but life abroad never dimmed the vividness of the impressions made on him by the experience of his early manhood when he partook of the elixir vitae of California and the stories which from year to year flowed from an apparently inexhaustible fountain glittered with the gold washed down from the mountain slopes of that country which through his imagination he had made so peculiarly his own. Mr. Harte died suddenly at Camberley England May 6 1902. CONTENTS
I. NATIONAL. JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG "HOW ARE YOU SANITARY?" BATTLE BUNNY THE REVEILLE OUR PRIVILEGE RELIEVING GUARD THE GODDESS ON A PEN OF THOMAS STARR KING A SECOND REVIEW OF THE GRAND ARMY THE COPPERHEAD A SANITARY MESSAGE THE OLD MAJOR EXPLAINS CALIFORNIA'S GREETING TO SEWARD THE AGED STRANGER THE IDYL OP BATTLE HOLLOW CALDWELL OF SPRINGFIELD POEM DELIVERED ON THE FOURTEENTH ANNIVERSARY OF CALIFORNIA'S ADMISSION INTO THE UNION MISS BLANCHE SAYS AN ARCTIC VISION ST. THOMAS OFF SCARBOROUGH CADET GREY II. SPANISH IDYLS AND LEGENDS. THE MIRACLE OF PADRE JUNIPERO THE WONDERFUL SPRING OF SAN JOAQUIN THE ANGELUS CONCEPCION DE ARGUELLO "FOR THE KING" RAMON DON DIEGO OF THE SOUTH AT THE HACIENDA FRIAR PEDRO'S RIDE IN THE MISSION GARDEN THE LOST GALLEON III. IN DIALECT. "JIM" CHIQUITA DOW'S FLAT IN THE TUNNEL "CICELY" PENELOPE PLAIN LANGUAGE FROM TRUTHFUL JAMES THE SOCIETY UPON THE STANISLAUS LUKE "THE BABES IN THE WOODS" THE LATEST CHINESE OUTRAGE TRUTHFUL JAMES TO THE EDITOR AN IDYL OF THE ROAD THOMPSON OF ANGELS THE HAWK'S NEST HER LETTER HIS ANSWER TO "HER LETTER" "THE RETURN OF BELISARIUS" FURTHER LANGUAGE FROM TRUTHFUL JAMES AFTER THE ACCIDENT THE GHOST THAT JIM SAW "SEVENTY-NINE" THE STAGE-DRIVER'S STORY A QUESTION OF PRIVILEGE THE THOUGHT-READER OF ANGELS THE SPELLING BEE AT ANGELS ARTEMIS IN SIERRA ...
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