Boy,” “Ballads of the Busy Days,” “Sonnets of a Chorus Girl,” “The
Whole Glad Year,” and “The Land of Little Care.” A Little Prayer;
December 31; Faith; It May Be; My Creed; The Fighter; Unsubdued.
KNOX, J. MASON. Co-operation.
L
LONGFELLOW, HENRY WADSWORTH. Born at Portland,
Me., Feb. 27, 1807; died
at Cambridge, Mass., Mar. 24, 1882.
Graduated from Bowdoin College
1825; traveled in Europe 1826-9; professor
of modern languages at
Bowdoin 1829-34; again visited Europe
1835-6; professor of modern
languages and belles lettres at Harvard
College 1836-54; European
travel 1868-9. Some of his best-known
poems are “A Psalm of Life,”
“The Village Blacksmith,”
“The Wreck of the Hesperus,” “The
Skeleton
in Armor,” “The Bridge,”
“Evangeline,” “The Building of the
Ship,”
“Hiawatha,” “The Courtship
of Miles Standish,” and “Tales of a Wayside
Inn”; author of two novels, “Hyperion”
and “Kavanagh”; translator of
Dante’s “Divine Comedy.”
A Psalm of Life; The Arrow and the Song.
LOVELACE, RICHARD. Born in Kent, 1618; died at
London, 1658. Educated
at Oxford; imprisoned for support of the
royalist cause 1642 and 1648;
released from prison after the execution
of King Charles I, but his
estate had been ruined and he died in
poverty. To Althea from
Prison.
M
MACKAY, CHARLES. Born at Perth, Eng., Mar. 27,
1814; died at London,
Dec. 24, 1889. Editor of the Glasgow
Argus 1844-47 and of the
Illustrated London News 1852-59;
New York correspondent of the
London Times during the Civil War.
Clear the Way; Cleon and I.
M’LEAN, JANE. Slogan.
MALLOCH, DOUGLAS. Born at Muskegon, Mich., May
5, 1877. Common school
education; reporter on the Muskegon Daily
Chronicle 1886-1903;
member of the editorial staff of the American
Lumberman from 1903;
associate editor from 1910; contributes
verse relating to the forest
and lumber camps to various magazines;
is called “The Poet of the
Woods,” He is author of “In
Forest Land,” “Resawed Fables,” “The
Woods,” “The Enchanted Garden,”
and “Tote-Road and Trail.” Be the
Best of Whatever You Are; To-Day.
MALONE, WALTER. Born in De Soto Co., Miss., Feb.
10, 1866; died May 18,
1915. Received the degree of Ph.B.
from the University of Mississippi
1887; practised law at Memphis, Tenn.,
1887-97; literary work in New
York City 1897-1900; then resumed law
practice at Memphis; became
Judge of second Circuit Court, Shelby
Co., Tenn., 1905, and served
till his death. Annual exercises
held in the Capleville schools in his
honor. An excellent edition of his
poems, issued under the direction
of his sister, Mrs. Ella Malone Watson
of Capleville, Tenn., is
published by the John P. Morton Co., of
Louisville, Ky. Opportunity.