Survivals

(0 User reviews)   64
By Listen TheBook Posted on Dec 14, 2024
In Category - Single author
Lewis V. F. Randolph 1900
English
  • Apology
  • Survivals
  • December
  • May
  • Apostrophe
  • Tahawus
  • Sabbath at Beach Lake
  • Boating up the Oswegatchie
  • The Lily of the Lake
  • The Brook
  • Chazy
  • The Delaware Water Gap, 1859
  • Invocation
  • We Walk by Faith; Not by Sight
  • The Peace of God
  • Master! Where Dwellest Thou?
  • 1865
  • Trenton Falls
  • Laughing Eyes
  • Hellas
  • The Glory of Athens
  • Mine
  • Born on the Wedding Day
  • A Wedding Anniversary
  • The Magi
  • Lines Written for the Opening of a Hall devoted to Music, Oratory, Social Functions, and the Drama
  • Welcome to the Delegates at the National Sunday-School Convention
  • Sung at the Twelfth Anniversary of the Newark Philomathic Society, May, 1866
  • Christmas Hymn, 1868
  • Song for Mercantile Library Dinner, November, 1868
  • Sung at the Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of a Faithful Ministry
  • The Colorado and Its Cañon
  • On Lake Huron
  • Two Sublimities
  • Adorning the Doctrine
  • Thanksgiving
  • Peace
  • Now
  • The Man with the Hoe
  • Easter
  • Epitaph
The unique poetry of Lewis V.F. Randolph is brilliantly brought to life in this wide-ranging collection of some of his best work. A businessman by profession and poet by avocation, Randolph developed his unique perspective on life from both the practicality of an entrepreneur and the creativity of a writer. This perspective is skillfully enhanced and deftly interpreted in these poems, which illustrate both the poet's quest for meaning, "Ah, life is all so like this turbid stream! / And frowning walls hem our imperilled path", and his carefully considered assertions of worldly sagacity, "But, from its source, each drop bears wisest scheme: / Peace wakes at last from fitful dreams of wrath". Randolph writes of the wonders of nature, the glory of God's creation, and our place in a perplexing but uplifting universe. In keeping with the overall theme of the book, Randolph acknowledges the ephemeral nature of this life and the common journey on which we find ourselves, suggesting, "Live in the present; for 't is all thou hast;" and counselling us to "Use every moment as it were thy last!". - Summary by Bruce Kachuk

There are no reviews for this eBook.

0
0 out of 5 (0 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *
There are no comments for this eBook.
You must log in to post a comment.
Log in

Related eBooks