∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
This poem is clearly a companion piece to “The Divine Right of Kings” and the reasons for its ascription to Poe are discussed in the comment on that poem. Whitty said that Frances Sargent Osgood, in her own copy of Graham's Magazine for December 1845, expanded the signature “P.” to “E. A. Poe” and added “To F. S. O.” to the title.
The lady's “Echo Song,” beginning “I know a noble heart that beats / For one it loves how ‘wildly well,’ ” had appeared in the Broadway Journal of September 6, 1845, and may have called forth Poe's lines. Mrs. Osgood's “To ——,” beginning “Oh, they never can know that heart of thine, / Who dare accuse thee of flirtation,” published in the Broadway Journal for November 22, may — or may not — be her reply to Poe's “Stanzas,” which had appeared about November 15. These pieces of Mrs. Osgood's were collected in her Poems (1850), pp. 464 and 364 respectively.
TEXTS
(A) Graham's Magazine for December 1845 (27:251), issued in mid-November; (B) Complete Poems, edited by Whitty (second edition, 1917), p. 148.
The original published text (A) has been followed, but Mrs. Osgood's subtitle has been added.
STANZAS [A]
[To F. S. O.]
Lady! I would that verse of mine
Could fling, all lavishly and free,
Prophetic tones from every line,
Of health, joy, peace, in store for thee.
5
Thine should be length of happy days,
Enduring joys and fleeting cares, [page 386:]
Virtues that challenge envy's praise,
By rivals loved, and mourned by heirs.
Thy life's free course should ever roam
10
Beyond this bounded earthly clime,
Upon the rock-girt shore of Time.
The gladness of a gentle heart,
Pure as the wishes breathed in prayer,
15
Which has in others’ joys a part,
While in its own all others share.
The fullness of a cultured mind,
Stored with the wealth of bard and sage,
Which Error's glitter cannot blind,
20
Lustrous in youth, undimmed in age;
The grandeur of a guileless soul,
With wisdom, virtue, feeling fraught,
Beneath the eternal sky of Thought; —
25
These should be thine, to guard and shield,
And this the life thy spirit live,
Blest with all bliss that earth can yield,
Bright with all hopes that Heaven can give.
[1845]
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Notes:
None.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
[S:1 - TOM1P, 1969] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Editions-The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe (T. O. Mabbott) (Stanzas [To F. S. O.])