Title: A silver pool
Author: Beulah Field
Release date: October 20, 2025 [eBook #77093]
Language: English
Original publication: New York: Moffat, Yard and company, 1922
Credits: Aaron Adrignola, Terry Jeffress, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
This ebook was created in honor of Distributed Proofreaders’ 25th Anniversary.
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A SILVER
POOL
NEW YORK
MOFFAT, YARD AND COMPANY
1922
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Copyright, 1922, by
MOFFAT, YARD AND COMPANY
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PAGE | |
Inspiration | 9 |
“Beggar-man, Thief” | 10 |
Carnival | 11 |
Branded | 12 |
For an Elizabethan Garland | 13 |
When I Remember | 14 |
The Wayfarer | 15 |
Pierrot | 16 |
To Ly-y-Hane | 17–18 |
Wind of the Sea | 19 |
Perhaps | 20 |
In the Street of Painted Flowers | 21–22 |
Mystery | 23 |
Watch-Fires | 24 |
Tokens | 25 |
Cameo | 26 |
Blue Flames and Flowers | 27 |
The Law | 28 |
Miracle | 29 |
Values | 30 |
Fame | 31 |
Rainbow | 32 |
Glass Beads | 33 |
Willows | 34 |
The Dead Lover | 35 |
Little White Gate | 36 |
Immortal | 37 |
My Communion | 38 |
Stars | 39 |
Disappointments | 40 |
Interlude | 41 |
To My Father | 42 |
Confessional | 43 |
Recompense | 44 |
Mockery | 45 |
Rebellion | 46 |
The Messenger | 47 |
“Needles and Pins” | 48 |
To June | 49 |
To Congdon | 50 |
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Chinese Poetess, 12th Century A. D.[1]
LY-Y-HANE
Ly-y-Hane lived during the Song Dynasty, in the 12th century of our era. She is admired, not only as a clever and graceful composer of verses, but as a superior intellect and a true scholar, accustomed to all the minutiae and intricacies of the art of poetry.
The incurable wound of her heart, bleeding in solitude, is practically the only subject with which she deals.
As far as can be known, the love that devours this Chinese Sappho is ignored by him who inspires it.
One might say she was a flower become enamoured of a bird. The changing seasons are the only events, the objects that adorn her home the only evidences of a life consecrated to the expression of a single sentiment.
She lived entombed with her suffering, hoping never to be deprived of it or cured, and she named in advance the volume that posterity would perhaps collect of all her scattered verses: “The Debris of My Heart.”
From The Book of Jade.
(Translated by James Whittall.)
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