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American Antiquarian Society

Manuscript Collections

NAME OF COLLECTION : LOCATION :

Moulton, Louise Chandler, Papers, ca. 1855-1909 Mss. boxes "M"

SIZE OF COLLECTION :

2 manuscript boxes

SOURCES OF INFORMATION ON COLLECTION :

For information on Moulton, see Notable American Women , vol. II, p. 595-596; see also Whiting, Lilian, Louise Chandler Moulton Poet and Friend (: Little, Brown, and Company, 1910).

SOURCE OF COLLECTION :

Donated to the Society by Moulton's son-in-law, William H. Schaefer, from the manuscripts that remained in the family after the bulk of her papers were given to the Library of Congress, 1932.

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION :

Louise Chandler Moulton (1835-1908), named Ellen Louise at birth, was the only child of Lucius Lemuel and Louisa Rebecca Clarke Chandler of Pomfret, Conn. She attended school in Pomfret, having as some of her classmates James McNeill Whistler (1834- 1903) and (1833-1908), both of whom became lifelong friends. She also attended the Troy (N.Y.) Female Seminary for a year, graduating in June 1855, where she delivered one of her poems. Ellen Louise married, on 27 August 1855, William Upham Moulton ( -1898) and settled in Boston, Mass. They had two children; Florence (1859- ), who married William H. Schaefer ( - ); and William C. (1861-1861).

Mrs. Moulton was a poet and active social figure in Boston and . As a literary critic, she took pride in introducing American readers to new poets and authors, and she gained recognition in this country for many of the English "late Romantics."

This collection is made up largely of Moulton's poems, some printed copies, but mostly in her hand. Herbert Edwin Clarke (1852- ), the English poet and literary critic, graded some of the poems (written on the poems in pencil). Someone with the initials "L. [I.?] G. (Louise Imogen Guiney (1861-1920)?) also graded a few of the poems. The collection contains a folder of her early literary efforts (poems signed: Ellen Louise; Ellen Louise Chandler; Ellen Louise Chandler Moulton; or E.L.C.M.). There are other literary efforts, including a short story entitled "A Rose and A Ring: A Story For Valentine's Day;" an incomplete account of a trip to Spain in 1883, along with poems written in 1884; a printed essay about Arthur O'Shaughnessy (1844- ); and other miscellaneous writings. There is a "List of Books", written in 1899, which seems to be notes regarding her published works, as well as a list of her books along with the dates they were published. There is also a list of her "New Year's ."

The collection also contains poems by other authors. Some of the authors have been identified, while others have not, and some are in Moulton's hand, while others are not. (cont.) American Antiquarian Society

Manuscript Collections

NAME OF COLLECTION :

Moulton, Louise Chandler, Papers, ca. 1855-1909

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION (cont.) :

The collection contains correspondence to Moulton from a variety of correspondents, including A. J. Warner Browne, Horace P. Chandler, Herbert E. Clarke, Lucy Lane Clifford ( -1929), Charles Gibson, Florence Henniker ( -1923), Peter La Rose, Whitelaw Reid (1837-1912), (1855-1905), George Snyder (1820?- ), Edward Stanwood (1841-1923), E. C. Stedman, William Watson (1858-1935), Leroy Titus Weeks, , and (1836-1917). Moulton was careful to note on the envelope the correspondent, subject of the letter, and whether it had been answered.

The collection contains correspondence from Moulton; recipients include Financial Directory Association, H. Rider Haggard (1856-1925), Frederic Henry Hedge (1805- 1890), Minot Judson Savage (1841-1918), and (1847-1942), author of the biography Louise Chandler Moulton, Poet and Friend .

There is a folder of miscellaneous correspondence including a letter from Shan F. Bullock (1865-1935) to Coulson Kernahan (1858-1943), the English author; a letter from Julian Hawthorne (1846-1934) to Robert Edward Francillon (1841-1919); letters from William Sharp to Herbert E. Clarke; and letters to Lilian Whiting regarding Mrs. Moulton.

There is a folder of correspondence to Moulton written for her and placed in a "Mid Ocean Post Bag" for her amusement while she sailed to Europe in 1887. The collection also includes correspondence from John Miller Dow Meiklejohn (1830-1902), the Scottish educator, who wrote criticisms of some of Moulton's poetry.

The remainder of the collection includes newspaper clippings; a brief essay on Moulton by Kernahan; a pamphlet, published by the Trustees of the Boston Public Library in 1909, listing the books in Moulton's gift to the Library; and a few notes found in the collection.

See Contents List.

13 April 1976 retyped 8 April 1996 revised 26 February 2010

American Antiquarian Society

Manuscript Collections

Louise Chandler Moulton, Papers, ca. 1855-1909

Contents List

Box 1 Poems

Folder 1 Early Literary Efforts, ca. 1855 --contains eleven poems signed: Ellen Louise; Ellen Louise Chandler; Ellen Louise Chandler Moulton; or E.L.C.M.

Folder 2 Poems ("A Birthday Wish" to "A Lost Eden")

Folder 3 Poems ("A Madonna" to "A Rondel—To Queen Mary's Ghost")

Folder 4 Poems ("A Silent Voice" to "A Woman's Way")

Folder 5 Poems ("Abe[?] Larthia" to "Aspiration")

Folder 6 Poems ("At Dawn" to "Autumn Days")

Folder 7 Poems ("Belated Summer" to "By Way of Valentine")

Folder 8 Poems ("Chanticleer's Love" to "Easter Sunday")

Folder 9 Poems ("Fain Would I Climb" to "Future Forgiveness")

Folder 10 Poems ("Genius" to "How Could I Tell")

Folder 11 Poems ("I Dreamed I Was a Rose" to "Inter Manes")

Folder 12 Poems ("" to "Love's Humility")

Folder 13 Poems ("March" to "My Mourner")

Folder 14 Poems ("Now" to "One Little Boat")

Folder 15 Poems ("Plighted" to "Spring's Wedding Day")

Folder 16 Poems ("That One" to "The Hungry Heart")

Folder 17 Poems ("The King Dethroned" to "The Moon of Spring")

Folder 18 Poems ("The New Day" to "The Summer's Queen")

Folder 19 Poems ("The Two Cities" to "Time's Prisoner: Heloise to Abelard")

Folder 20 Poems ("To" to "To Frances E. Willard")

Folder 21 Poems ("To Gen. Crawford" to "To Justine Ingersol")

Folder 22 Poems ("To Lady Henry Somerset" to "To Ruth Henderson")

Folder 23 Poems ("To Sarah Louise Guild" to "Voices on the Wind")

Folder 24 Poems ("Warning" to "When You Were Here")

Folder 25 Poems ("Where the Night's Pale Roses Blow" to "You Bade Me Write")

Folder 26 Poems, Untitled (1)

Folder 27 Poems, Untitled (2)

Folder 28 Poems, Untitled (3)

Folder 29 Poems, Printed, n.d.; 1890-1908

Folder 30 Poems by Other Authors, Identified (1)

Folder 31 Poems by Other Authors, Identified (2)

Folder 32 Poems by Other Authors, Identified (3)

Folder 33 Poems by Other Authors, Identified (4)

Folder 34 Poems by Other Authors, Identified (5)

Folder 35 Poems by Other Authors, Unidentified (1)

Folder 36 Poems by Other Authors, Unidentified (2)

Folder 37 Poems by Other Authors, Unidentified (3)

Box 2 Correspondence; Miscellaneous Papers

Folder 1 "A Rose and a Ring: A Story for Valentine's Day.," n.d.

Folder 2 Account of a trip to Spain (incomplete), 1883 Poems, 1884

Folder 3 "Arthur O'Shaughnessy: His Life and His Works," 1888

Folder 4 Miscellaneous Writings (1), n.d.

Folder 5 Miscellaneous Writings (2), n.d.; 1899-1901

Folder 6 Correspondence to Moulton (1) --from "Browne" to "Henniker"

Folder 7 Correspondence to Moulton (2) --from "La Rose" to "Stanwood

Folder 8 Correspondence to Moulton (3) --from "Stedman" to "Wynford"

Folder 9 Correspondence from Moulton, n.d.; 1867-1906

Folder 10 Miscellaneous Correspondence, n.d.; 1877-1909

Folder 11 "Mid-Ocean Post Bag," 1887

Folder 12 Meiklejohn, Correspondence and Notes, 1900 October 15 –1901 February 26

Folder 13 Meiklejohn, Correspondence and Notes, 1901 June 30 – July 13

Folder 14 Newspapers Clippings, n.d.; 1873; 1909

Folder 15 Kernahan, Essay on Moulton, written after 1888

Folder 16 A List of the Books Forming the Gift of Louise Chandler Moulton to the Public Library of the City of Boston (Boston: Published by the Trustees, 1909)

Folder 17 Miscellaneous Notes from the Collection about the Collection

"From the country where you lived ..." [b1,f21] (see "To Jack Quinn") "How glad I was of old ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "How I love her, Gretchen knows ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "I dreamed I saw a rose, that Helen loved to wear ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "I saw a flower in the garden ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "Sinner and penitent, beloved of God thou art ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "The lily bends to mine her man-like face ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "The mist and the dark have past ..." [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") "Thou cravest fond embraces sweet & long ..." [b1,f14] (see "Now I Am on the Earth") A Birth-day Wish [b1,f2] A Birth-day Wish: For a Fortunate Girl [b1,f2] (written on a "Durham House" envelope) A Cry from Below [b1,f2] A Cry from the Dark [b1,f2] A Dead Poet [b1, f2] (two copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") A Door [b1,f2] A Dream in the Night: To My Mother [b1,f2] (two copies) A Fallen House [b1,f2] (two copies) A June Song: For Rosalys [b1,f2] A Long-Closed Door [b1,f2] A Lost Eden [b1,f2] A Madonna [b1,f3]; [b1, f8] (see "Chanticleer's Love) A Man Remembers [b1,f3] A Memory: He Muses [b1,f3] A New Year's Letter [b1,f3] (two copies) A Pair of Brown Eyes. A Rondel [b1,f10] (see "Heart, Sad Heart") A Parable [b1,f3] (two copies) A Poet's Loves [b1,f3] A Poet's Second Love. A Sequence [b1,f3] A Poet's Second Love. Her Moods [b1,f3] A Question [b1,f29] A Question: At Sea [b1,f3] A Rondel for February [b1,f3] A Rondel to a Fair Lady [b1,f3] A Rondel to Henriette [b1,f3] A Rondel—To Queen Mary's Ghost [b1,f3] A Silent Voice [b1,f4] (three copies) A Summer's Dream [b1,f4] (five copies) A Triolet [b1,f4] A Tryst [b1,f4]; [b1,f29] A Violet Speaks [b1,f4] A Wish [b1,f4] A Woman's Way[b1,f4] Abe(?) Larthia—(In Etruscan—I, the Great Lady) [b1,f5] Across Strange Waters [b1,f5] (two copies) Across the Room [b1,f5] Afar [b1,f5] After Seeing Lord Byron's "Werner" Played at the Lyceum [b1,f5] After Supping With a Poet [b1,f5] All In One [b1,f5]; [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") An Interview [b1,f21] (see "To Jack [illegible]") And Yet [b1,f5] (two copies) As Little Children [b1,f5] Aspiration [b1,f5] At Dawn [b1,f6] At Death's Postern [b1,f6] At His Lady's Feet [b1,f6] At Midsummer [b1,f6] (three copies) At Night's High Noon [b1,f6] At Nuremberg [b1,f6] (written on the back of a German laundry bill) At Rest [b1,f6] (four copies--one written on the back of a letter dated 1892?, from Edward W. Markens, editor, Columbus Memorial to Moulton) At Sea [b1,f6] At the End [b1,f6] At the Play [b1,f6] At the Tomb of Ferdinand & Isabella [b1,f6] At the Wind's Will [b1,f6] [b1, f11] (see "In the Mirror of Life (or Time)") At War [b1,f6] Autumn Days [b1,f6]; [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") Belated Summer [b1,f7] Bend Low and Hark [b1,f7] (four copies—one written on "The Abbey Hotel" stationery) Between the Worlds [b1,f7] (three copies); [b1,f29] Beyond [b1,f7] (four copies); [b1,f29]

Buried Love [b1,f1] By March Wind Led [b1,f7] By Way of Valentine [b1,f7] Chanticleer's Love [b1,f8] Come Unto Me [b1,f8] Could It But Be [b1,f8] Day's Mockery [b1, f8] (two copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") Dead at Eighty [b1,f8] (two copies) Death's Adventure [b1,f8] (written on half of a letter, dated 18 November 1893, from Henry Romeike to Moulton) Dedications [b1,f8] Divided [b1,f8] Do You Miss Me Where You Are? [b1,f8] (two copies—one has "Scribner's" stamped on it); [b1,f29] Do You Remember? [b1,f8] (two copies); [b1,f29] Easter Sunday [b1,f8] (written on the back of a letter, dated 26 January 1889, from the editor of The Independent to Moulton) Fain Would I Climb [b1,f9] Faith After Doubt [b1,f9] (two copies) Far Yet Near [b1,f9] Farewell [b1,f1] [b1,f9] (two copies) February [b1,f9] Following Her [b1,f9] For Easter Morning [b1,f9] (two copies—one written on the back of "Connelly's Theatre Ticket Office and Book Counters" stationery) For Fidelio's Dinner [b1,f9] For Forefathers' Day: [To the Omaha Congregational Club] [b1,f9] For Grace Henderson [b1,f9] For Lazy Tours [b1,f9] (written on the back of "Hotel Bellevue" stationery) For Miss Dyer [b1,f9] For Queen Anne [b1,f9] For Tryphosa [b1,f9] (written on the back of "Cunard Royal Mail Steamship 'Cephalonia'" stationery) From a Window in Chamonni [b1,f9] Future Forgiveness [b1,f9] Genius [b1,f10] Grandfather's House [b1,f10] Grandmamma's Warning [b1,f11] (see "In the Black Country") Great Love [b1,f10] (three copies) Have I Not Learned to Live Without Thee Yet? [b1,f10] He Loved [b1,f10] Heart Longings [b1,f1] Heart, Sad Heart [b1,f10] Her Answer [b1,f10] Her Magic [b1,f10] (two copies) Her Majesty [b1,f10] Her Picture [b1,f10] Her Portrait [b1,f10] Her Presence [b1,f10] Hereafter [b1,f10] Hic Jacet [b1,f3] (see "A Parable") Hidden Sins [b1,f10] How Could I Tell? [b1,f10] I Dreamed I Was a Rose [b1,f11] I Have Called Thee Many a Night [b1,f11] (two copies) I Heard a Cry in the Night [b1,f11] I Studied Life [b1,f11] (three copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") I Wonder—From the German [b1,f10] (see "For Tryphosa") If Love Could Last [b1,f24] (see "When Love was Young") If Once, Just Once [b1,f29] If There Were Dreams to Sell [b1,f11] (written on the back of a letter, dated 26 November 1888, from Brown Brothers & Co., to Moulton); [b1,f29] In a Library [b1,f11] (three copies) In April: A Rondel [b1,f11] (written on the back of a letter, dated 9 March 1893, from Alexander Martin, agent for The Cunard Steamship Company) In Childhood's Country [b1,f22] (see "To Lucy Wadsworth") In Memoriam [b1,f11] In Mid Ocean [b1,f11] In Pace [b1,f11] In Response to a Gay Greeting [b1,f11] In Solitude [b1,f11] (two copies—one written on the back of a letter, dated 24 October 1888, from ? Hosford to Moulton) In the Black Country [b1,f11] (two copies) In the Court of the Lions—By Moonlight [b1,f11] (written on the back of a postcard of "Granada ...") In the Mirror of Life (or Time) [b1,f11] (written on the back of a "Select Millinery Opening ... J.J. Grace ... Boston," 1895) In Venice Once [b1,f11] Inter Manes [b1,f11] Invocation—To the Spirit of Poesy [b1,f1] John Greenleaf Whittier [b1,f12] June's Daughter [b1,f12] La Vie [b1,f12] (two copies) Lachrymae Florum [b1,f12] (written on the back of "North Western Hotel, Liverpool" stationery) Land of My Dream [b1,f12] Legend of the Lost Pleiad [b1,f1] Lenora to Tasso [b1,f1] Lethe [b1,f12] (three copies) Life's Day [b1,f12] Life's Seasons [b1,f12] Long is the Way [b1,f12 Looking Into the Well [b1,f12] (two copies) Love Comes Not Back [b1,f18] (see "The Spring is Here") Love is Dead [b1,f8] Love Wakes the Spring—A Roldeau [b1,f12] (three copies) Love's Empty House [b1,f12] Love's Humility [b1,f12] Love's Triumph [b1,f29] Madeline [b1,f1] Mamma [b1,f13] (see "Margaret's Flowers") March [b1,f13] Margaret's Flowers [b1,f13] (two copies) Midnight at Sea: "Twelve O'Clock & All is Well!" [b1,f13] (two copies) Monk and Maid [b1,f13] My Birth-day [b1,f13] My Castle [b1,f13] (two copies) My Father's House [b1,f13] My Good Friend Death [b1,f13] My Husband's Cousin [b1,f13] (two copies) My Love [b1,f24] (see "When The Christmas Bells Are Ringing") My Masters [b1,f13] (three copies) My Mourner [b1,f13] Nova [b1,f1] Now [b1,f14] Now and Then [b1,f14] Now I Am on the Earth [b1,f14] O Sweetest Maid [b1,f14] Oh My Love, Whom My Soul Loves So! [b1,f14] Oliver Wendell Holmes [b1,f14] On Homeward Wing [b1,f14] (three copies) On the Shore [b1,f14] (two copies) Once More [b1,f14] (two copies); [b1,f29] One Afternoon [b1,f14] (two copies) One Day [b1,f14] (two copies—one written on "R.M.S. 'Saxonia.'" letterhead) One Elizabethan Lingers [b1,f14] (written on the back of a letter, dated 10 October 1893, from C. E. L. Wingate, Managing Editor, Boston Journal, to Moulton) One Little Boast [b1,f13] (see "Margaret's Flowers"); [b1,f14] Plighted [b1,f15] Post Scriptum [b1,f22] (see "To My White Lily") 's Star [b1,f15] (two copies) Rosamond's Rose [b1,f15] (written on "Hotel Des Deux Mondes" stationery) Rose Gathering [b1,f15] Roses [b1,f15] (two copies) Seventy and Seventeen [b1,f29] Shall I Complain [b1,f15] Silent [b1,f15] Silent Sorrow [b1,f15] Silent the Stealthy Guest [b1,f15] (written on the back of an advertisement for "A Dramatic Recital by Mis Saidee Vere Milne ...") So Long, Beloved [b1,f15] (two copies) Some Day or Other [b1,f15] Spring's Wedding Day [b1,f15] That One [b1,f16] (two copies) The Autocrat: In Memoriam [b1,f16] The Ballad of Emma Jane [b1,f16] The Bold Ghost [b1,f29] The Castle of Adair [b1,f16] The Closed Gate [b1,f16] The Cry of Bird & Beast [b1,f16] The Day of Days [b1,f16] The Doll's Decline [b1,f16] The Gentle Ghost of Joy [b1,f16] The Gipsey's [illegible] Bohemian [b1,f1] The Golden Owl [b1,f1] The Green Sand of Erin [b1,f1] The Happiest Folks [b1,f13] (see "Margaret's Flowers") The Hungry Heart [b1,f16] The Joyance of the Spring [b1,f29] The King Dethroned [b1,f17] (two copies—one written on the back of a partial letter) The Last Rose of Summer [b1,f17] The Light of God [b1,f17] (two copies) The Lost Room [b1,f17] (two copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") The Lure [b1,f17] The Mirror [b1,f17] The Moon of Spring [b1,f17] The Name on a Door [b1,f29] The New Day [b1,f18] The New Year Dawns [b1,f18] (two copies) The Ocean Hymn [b1,f18] The Peaceful Dead [b1,f18] The Pomp of Day and Night [b1,f18] The Prodigal [b1,f18] (three copies) The Robin's Funeral [b1,f13] (see "Margaret's Flowers"); [b1,f18] The Roses of La Garraye [b1,f18] The Slave Girl's Lament [b1,f1] The Slumberers of the Castle [b1,f1] The Song of Sixteen [b1,f18] (two copies); [b1,f29] The Song of the Stars [b1,f18] The Spring is Here [b1,f18] The Summer's Queen [b1,f18] (two copies) The Two Cities [b1,f19] The Vigil of Queen Juana [b1,f29] (two copies) The Waiting Knight: Legend of a Tomb in Florence [b1,f19] (two copies) Then [b1,f19] Then and Now [b1,f19] (written on the back of a partial letter) Theoline [b1,f19] Thou [b1,f19] Thou Reignest Still [b1,f19] Though We Repent [b1,f24] (see "Were But My Spirit Loosed Upon the Air") Though We Were Dust [b1,f19] Time's Prisoner: Heloise to Abelard [b1,f19] To [b1,f20] (written on the back of a partial letter, dated 27 June 1899, from A.B. Turner & Bro. to Moulton) To _____ [b1,f20] To a Contemner of Modern Verse [b1,f20] To a Picture [b1,f20] To A.B. Webb [b1,f20] To an Early May Flower [b1,f20] To April: A Rondel of Salutation [b1,f20] (written on the back of a letter, dated 5 December 1892, from F.H.D) To Capt. Warr [b1,f20] (written on "R.M.S. 'Saxonia.'" stationery) To Certain Guests [b1,f20] To Charles Molloy—A Rondel [b1,f20] To E.N.H.—The Re-discoverer of Norumbega [b1,f20] To F.F. with the Poems of P.B.M. [b1,f20] To Fanny Field [b1,f20] To Florence [b1,f20] To Francis E. Willard [b1,f20]; [b1,f22] (see "To Lady Henry Somerset") To G[illegible] G. Perry [b1,f21] (see "To Judith Andrews(1)") To Gen. Crawford [b1,f21] To Grace: For her Ninth Birthday [b1,f21] To Her Who Knows [b1,f21] To His Lady [b1,f21] To Jack [illegible] [b1,f21] To Jack Quinn [b1,f21] (written on a letter, dated 17 December 1896, from J.F. Gilder to Moulton) To Jeanne Palmer [b1,f21] To John Greenleaf Whittier: For His Eighty-Fourth Birthday [b1,f21] To John Greenleaf Whittier—With 's "Garden Secrets" [b1,f21] To Judith Andrews(1) [b1,f21] To Judith Andrews(2) [b1,f21] (written on the back of a letter, dated 23 April 1901, from Clarence A Hight, clerk, to the Stockholders of the United States Mining Company) To —27 May 1899 [b1,f21] To Julia Ward Howe—27 May 1905 [b1,f21] (two copies) To Julia Ward Howe—27 May 1907 [b1,f21] (written on the back of a partial letter from John Wanamaker) To Justine Ingersol [b1,f21] To Katy Manion [b1,f21] (see "To Jack Quinn") To Lady Henry Somerset [b1,f22] (two copies) To Lucy Wadsworth [b1,f22] To Marie Blake [b1,f22] To Maud at Sea [b1,f22] To Mistress Rose [b1,f22] (two copies) To Mrs. Farwell [b1,f21] (see "To Jack Quinn") To Mrs. Stillman B. Allen—for Tuesday, March 25 th , 1902 [b1,f22] To My White Lily [b1,f22] To Nathan Allen Farwell [b1,f21] (see "To Judith Andrews(1)") To Norumbega's Re-Discoverer [b1,f22] To One In Heaven [b1,f22] To Prince Oric [b1,f22] To R.H. February of 1906 [b1,f22] To Rosalys [b1,f21] (see "To Jack Quinn") To Ruth Henderson [b1,f22] To Sarah Louisa Guild [b1,f23] To Sir Bruce and Lady Seton [b1,f23] To Sleep [b1,f23] (two copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") To Sophie Eichberg [b1,f23] (written on the back of a partial letter, dated 16 December 1896, from William Basset to Moulton) To Wish Them Joy—Rondeau for a Silver Wedding [b1,f23] To-Night [b1,f23] Two Queens [b1,f23] (two copies—one written on the back of a "'The Parents' Association of America.'" flyer); [b1,f29] Two Thrushes Met [b1,f23] (two copies) Two-Years-Old Emsie [b1,f23] Under the Moon [b1,f1] Vain Freedom [b1,f23] (two copies) Vain Pleading [b1,f23] Vain Waiting [b1,f23] Venus, After Burne Jones [b1,f23] Voices on the Wind [b1,f23] Warning [b1,f24] (two copies) Were But My Spirit Loosed Upon the Air [b1,f24] (two copies) When Day Was Done [b1,f24] When I Wonder Away With Death [b1,f24] (two copies—one written on a letter, dated 28 June 1893, from H. to Moulton); [b1,f29] (two copies) When Love is King [b1,f24] When Love was Young [b1,f24] When The Christmas Bells Are Ringing [b1,f24] When The Night's Pale Roses Blow [b1,f25] (three copies) When You Are Dead My Dainty Dear [b1,f24] (written on "Cunard Royal Steamship 'Cephalonia'" stationery) When You Were Here [b1,f24] (two copies); [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") Who Knows? [b1,f25] (four copies) Why [b1,f25] (three copies) Why Do I Never See You In My Dreams [b1,f25] With A Book [b1,f25] (two copies) With Those Clear Eyes [b1,f25] Yes, Strangely Beautiful Your Face I Find [b1,f25] You [b1,f25]; [b1,f25] (see "When The Night's Pale Roses Blow") You Bade Me Write [b1,f25]