Title: Chants for the Boer
Author: Joaquin Miller
Release date: October 16, 2023 [eBook #71889]
Language: English
Original publication: United States: The Whitaker & Ray Company
Credits: Tim Lindell, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
By
JOAQUIN MILLER
“And whether on the scaffold high,
Or in the battle’s van,
The fittest place for man to die
Is where he dies for man.”
San Francisco
The Whitaker & Ray Company
(Incorporated)
1900
Copyright, 1900
by
The Whitaker & Ray Company
(Incorporated)
Find here not one ill word for brave old England; my first, best friends were English. But for her policy, her politicians, her speculators, what man with a heart in him can but hate and abhor them? England’s best friends to-day are those who deplore this assault on the farmer Boers, so like ourselves a century back. Could any man be found strong enough to stay her hand with sword or pen in this mad hour? That man would deserve her lasting gratitude. This feeling of abhorrence holds in England as well as here. Take for example the following from her ablest thinker to a friend in Philadelphia:
“I rejoice that you and others are bent on showing that there are some among us who think the national honor is not being enhanced by putting down the weak. Would that age and ill health did not prevent me from aiding.
“No one can deny that at the time of the Jameson Raid the aim of the Outlanders and the raiders was to usurp the Transvaal Government, and he must be willfully blind who does not see what the Outlanders failed to do by bullets they hope presently to do by votes, and only those who, while jealous of their own independence, regard but little the independence of people who stand in their way, can fail to sympathize with the Boers in their resistance to political extinction.
[6]“It is sad to see our Government backing those whose avowed policy is expansion, which, less politely expressed, means aggression, for which there is a still less polite word readily guessed. On behalf of these, the big British Empire, weapon in hand, growls out to the little Boer Republic, ‘Do as I bid you.’
“I have always thought that nobleness is shown in treating tenderly those who are relatively feeble and even sacrificing on their behalf something to which there is a just claim. But, if current opinion is right, I must have been wrong.”
Herbert Spencer.
CHANTS
FOR THE BOER
BY
JOAQUIN MILLER
CHRISTMAS MORNING, 1899.
“The equipment of the Maine hospital ship by our American cousins warrants us in saying at least that they wish us well.”
[A] Note.—“I thank God there is not a drop of Saxon blood in my veins. I am a Dutchman; Boer, if you please.”—Rough-rider Roosevelt, Governor of New York and heir apparent to the Presidency of Us.
Dedicated to England on her invasion of North Africa.
England’s Colonial Secretary, who must bear a great part of the blame and shame of this Boer war, has said publicly that there is something like alliance between England and the United States. Our Secretary of State says there is nothing of the sort, and we know there is not, nor can be, until “We, the People,” choose to have it, and that will not be until this crime against the Boer is forgotten, as well as Bunker Hill and the Fourth of July.
The Boers are a sober, industrious and most hospitable body of peasantry.—Dr. Livingstone.
[B] See report of Julian Hawthorne, sent by a New York magazine to photograph and give details of the starving in India, about the time of the Jubilee. He does not give these figures, but his facts and photographs warrant a fearful estimate. As for the subjugation of India and the wanton destruction, not only of life, but the very means of life, this is history. And now, again, is despoiled India starving,—starving, dying of hunger as before; even more fearfully, even while England is trying to despoil the Boers. And when her speculators and politicians have beaten them and despoiled them of their gold and diamonds and herds, what then? Why, leave them to starve as in India, or struggle on in the wilderness as best they can.
ON HIS SEVENTY-FIFTH BIRTHDAY.
[C] It is a waste of ink and energy to write “United States of America” always. All our property is marked Us. Then why not Usland? And why should we always say American? The Canadian, the Mexican, the Brazilian and so on are as entirely entitled to the name American as we. Why not say Usman, as Frenchman, German, and so on?
Anent the boundary line—“Lest we forget, lest we forget.”
MILLER, C. H. (Joaquin)
(The Poet of the Sierras)
Complete Poetical Works
In One Volume
This volume completes the life work of this “Sweet Singer by the Sunset Sea.” In it are included all the best poems formerly published under the following titles: “Songs of the Sierras”—“Songs of Sunland”—“Songs of Summerlands”—“Songs of Italy”—“Songs of the Mexican Seas”—“Classic Shades”—“Songs of the Soul”—“Olive Leaves”—“Joaquin,” and others. The book contains 330 pages of double column matter, printed from new type on laid paper. Each of the longer poems is followed by extensive foot notes written by the poet himself, also a most interesting, reminiscent preface and appendix narrating incidents and scenes in his eventful life, never published before. It has several illustrations showing the poet at different ages, also a beautiful scene from his present home on “The Hights.”
PRICE. | |
Beautifully Bound in Silk Cloth, side and back stamp in gilt, gilt top | $2 50 |
Gift Edition, bound in three-quarter Levant | 4 50 |
Limited Autograph Edition, bound in full Morocco | 7 50 |
WHAT TWO GREAT POPULAR POETS SAY:
Edwin Arnold recently said: “Joaquin Miller is one of the two greatest American poets.”
James Whitcomb Riley said of Joaquin Miller’s singing: “It is the truest American voice that has yet thrilled the echoes of our wild, free land, and awakened the admiration and acclaim of the Old World. No marvel that our Country is proud of this proud child of hers, who in all lands has sung her dawning glory and his own changeless loyalty to her.”
Songs of the Soul
This volume contains this well known poet’s latest, and as pronounced by all critics, best poetic productions. The longest poem, entitled “Sappho and Phaon,” occupies seventy-three pages of the book, and is destined to become a classic. Besides this there are several of his older and most popular poems, such as “Columbus,” “Passing of Tennyson,” “Sunset and Dawn at San Diego,” etc., making a 12 mo. volume of 163 pages, with author’s latest portrait.
PRICE. | |
Bound in Fine Silk Cloth, design on cover, Library Edition | $1 00 |
Author’s Autograph Gift Edition, bound in full padded Leather | 3 50 |
Paper Edition, printed in Gilt | 25 |
“If Joaquin Miller had written nothing else, this one poem (Sappho and Phaon) would make a place for him among immortals.”—The Wave.
The Critic, in a recent article, places him among the world’s greatest poets.
The London Athenæum gives “Columbus” first place among all the poems written by Americans as to power, workmanship and feeling.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
The Table of Contents was created by the transcriber for the convenience of the reader and is granted to the public domain.