Author: Richard and Carman, Bliss Hovey
Cites
- Richard and Carman, Bliss Hovey (3)
- IN: More Songs from Vagabondia (1901) Poetry, American
EPIGRAPH: And ever with the vanguard
The vagrant singers come
The gamins of the city
Who dance before the drum
FROM: More Songs from Vagabondia, (1894), Author, US
- IN: Songs from Vagabondia (1902) Poetry, American
EPIGRAPH: Have little care that life is brief
And less that art is long
Success is in the silences
Though fame is in the song
FROM: Songs from Vagabondia, (1894), Fictional, US
- Bliss Carman (1)
- IN: Last Songs from Vagabondia (1901) Poetry, American
EPIGRAPH: I came to a roadside dwelling,
With great eaves low and wide,
Asking my way to the village,
And they bade me step inside.
Welcome and cheer they gave me,--
Were comrades loving and strong;
And they bade me wait for supper,
But I could not stay so long.
FROM: The Poor Traveller, (None), Poem, Canada
Cited by
- Richard and Carman, Bliss Hovey (3)
- IN: More Songs from Vagabondia (1901) Poetry, American
EPIGRAPH: And ever with the vanguard
The vagrant singers come
The gamins of the city
Who dance before the drum
FROM: More Songs from Vagabondia, (1894), Author, US
- IN: Songs from Vagabondia (1902) Poetry, American
EPIGRAPH: Have little care that life is brief
And less that art is long
Success is in the silences
Though fame is in the song
FROM: Songs from Vagabondia, (1894), Fictional, US