A WREATH OF VIRGINIA BAY LEAVES.
POEMS OF JAMES BARRON HOPE.
JANEY HOPE MARR (EDITOR)
To the memory of the gallant little lad who bore his grandfather's name and image--to the dear remembrance of:
_Barron Hope Marr_
His mother dedicates whatsoever there may be of worth in her effort to show James Barron Hope, the Poet, as Virginia's Laureate, and James Barron Hope, the Man, as he was loved and reverenced by his household and his friends.
INTRODUCTION.
It has been claimed for James Barron Hope that he was "Virginia's Laureate." He did not deal in "abstractions, or generalized arguments," or vague mysticisms. He fired the imagination purely, he awoke lofty thoughts and presented, through his noble odes that which is the soul of "every true poem, a living succession of concrete images and pictures."
James Barron, the elder, organized the Virginia Colonial Navy, of which he was commander-in-chief during the Revolution, and his sons, Samuel and James, served gallantly in the United States Navy. It was from these ancestors that James Barron Hope derived that unswerving devotion to his native state for which he was remarkable, and it was at the residence of his grandfather, Commodore James Barron, the younger, who then commanded the Gosport Navy-yard, that he was born the 23d of March, 1829.
His mother, Jane Barron, was the eldest daughter of the Commodore and most near to his regard. An attractive gentlewoman of the old school, generous, of quick and lively sympathies, she wielded a clever, ready pen, and the brush and embroiderer's needle in a manner not to be scorned in those days, and was a personage in her family.
Her child was the child not only of her material, but of her spiritual being, and the two were closely knit as the years passed, in mutual affection and confidence, in tastes and aspirations.
His father was Wilton Hope of "Bethel," Elizabeth City County, a handsome, talented man, a landed proprietor, of a family whose acres bordered the picturesque waters of Hampton River.
He gained his early education at Germantown, Pennsylvania, and at the "Academy" in Hampton, Virginia, under his venerated master, John B. Cary, Esq.,--the master who declares himself proud to say, "I taught him"--the invaluable friend of all his after years.
In 1847 he graduated from William and Mary College with the degree of A.B.
From the "Pennsylvania," upon which man-of-war he was secretary to his uncle, Captain Samuel Barron, he was transferred to the "Cyane," and in 1852 made a cruise to the West Indies.
In 1856 he was elected Commonwealth's attorney to the "game-cock town of Virginia," historic and picturesque old Hampton, which was the centre of a charming and cultivated society and which had already claimed him as her "bard." For as Henry Ellen he had contributed to various southern publications, his poems in "The Southern Literary Messenger" attracting much gratifying attention.
In 1857 Lippincott brought out "Leoni di Monota and Other Poems." The volume was cordially noticed by the southern critics of the time, not only for its central poem, but also for several of its minor ones, notably, "The Charge at Balaklava," which G.P.R. James--as have others since--declared unsurpassed by Tennyson's "Charge of the Light Brigade."
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Wreath of Virginia Bay Leaves by Hope
- 2: And delivered among various masterly addresses
- 3: Despite its lack of entire congeniality
- 4: I have said that in his early years Old Hampton claimed him
- 5: In the van rides Captain Nolan
- 6: Upturn'd towards the blushing roses
- 7: Stands a Posada stern and grey
- 8: Brought dreamy tones from soft guitars
- 9: Above the turrets tall did flow
- 10: Will he the yawning rift refrain
- 11: With many a bleat and many a plaintive low
- 12: Thunders beneath the Union's mighty arch
- 13: Bids stern defiance to the iron plough
- 14: Beside its base her mighty chart displays
- 15: Shall we prove a race of Cains
- 16: And seized upon her crimson mouth
- 17: Each action smiled With Christian charity
- 18: Yet though they never couched the knightly lance
- 19: Erected by the ladies of Warren county
- 20: Who died in their tattered grey
- 21: Shall shine the glory of Mahone's Brigade
- 22: Yours be full laurels in Mahone's Brigade
- 23: Once proudly trodden by Mahone's Brigade
- 24: Types were they of valiant soldiers
- 25: Illustration MONUMENT AT YORKTOWN
- 26: Through life great Winthrop stands
- 27: Through wild and stormy brine they ran
- 28: Fate's falcon soared aloft full strong and free
- 29: Full many a tale of wild romance
- 30: Welcome to all within the land
- 31: Virginia's sturdy yeomen stood
- 32: And waves amain Far fell grim Ruin's furious rain
- 33: Long live the Gallic Army and long live splendid France
- 34: Never shines 'Mid War's majestic few
- 35: Von Steuben always far above the salt
- 36: But here defeat at kindred hands he found
- 37: The war horse draws the plough
- 38: Achilles came from Homer's Jove like brain
- 39: From Freedom's burnished lance
- 40: Dreamt out beside Italia's streams
- 41: He had soared upon a lofty wing
- 42: Two glitter like the burnished heads of spears
- 43: And the dreamers smile In answer
- 44: Under that sombre thicket's lee
- 45: We are rich in names and blood
- 46: May boast in sight of all men That you followed Robert Lee
