Title: Near Nature's Heart; A Volume of Verse
Author: Crawford Jackson
Release date: June 8, 2021 [eBook #65571]
Language: English
Credits: Charlene Taylor 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.)
THE AUTHOR IN HIS RETREAT.
Note the string connecting with the camera outside,
which captures the birds and little animals on their well-filled table.
(See pages 22 and 23.)
A VOLUME OF VERSE
BY
CRAWFORD JACKSON
ATLANTA, GA.
and
GUILFORD, N. C.
FOOTE & DAVIES COMPANY, PRINTERS, ATLANTA
GULBENK ENGRAVING COMPANY, ENGRAVERS, ATLANTA
COPYRIGHT 1923
BY
CRAWFORD JACKSON
(ALL RIGHTS RESERVED)
DEDICATED
TO
EVERY CHILD
The great artist is one whose whole body becomes a living soul; whose eye gets glimpses into the heart of Nature, with visions of the Supernatural; whose ear hears their inner music, and whose hand produces ecstatic expression of their central force in some revelation of Beauty. And to make his art more real, more nearly perfect, Beauty more beautiful, such artist by contrast often depicts or suggests the deadly but doomed discords of life.
Any inspiring touch I have with Nature makes me less than half content with the best I can say of her. Beyond my increasing love for the rich, old Mother—yet eternally young and myriad formed—I am deeply indebted to F. Schuyler Mathews and his charming “Field Book of Wild Birds and Their Music,” especially in suggestions and some illustrations for the “Birds’ Orchestra.” Other acknowledgements are made elsewhere in this little volume of verse, which chances to be my first, and therefore subject to the severer criticism.
Page | |
The Birds’ Orchestra | 7 |
My Prayer To Truth | 14 |
A Scene in Washington, N. C. | 16 |
Little Naples by the Sea | 17 |
The Family of My Friend Jones | 17 |
The King’s Marriage | 19 |
The Hermit Thrush | 19 |
My Retreat | 23 |
The Mocking-Bird | 24 |
The Jay and I—A Dialogue | 26 |
Nature’s Heart | 27 |
A Nigger and a Mule | 28 |
Virginia’s Natural Bridge | 30 |
The Might of Matutinal Music | 30 |
A Perpetual King | 31 |
The Cotton Gin | 32 |
The Cotton Mill | 32 |
My Own Little Girl | 32 |
My Butterfly | 33 |
Was That Somebody I? | 34 |
My Sabbath Sermon | 35 |
Pilot Mountain | 36 |
Her Prison Life | 37 |
Aurelius Augustinus | 38 |
O, That Income Tax! | 40 |
In Florida | 41 |
Two Little Orphans | 42 |
Trouble and Play | 43 |
Some Small Surprises | 43 |
The Rhythm Universal | 44 |
The Stone Crosses and the Fairies | 45 |
The Sun Flower | 46 |
Colonel Diamond and Grand-daughter | 47 |
The Wild Wood | 48 |
The Beginning of Things | 49 |
The End of Things | 49 |
When the Junco Comes | 50 |
James Bradley Jackson | 51 |
A Story of Colonial Times | 53 |
“Come on wid yer Money fur Me” | 55 |
Good Out of Evil | 56 |
Christmas | 57 |
Mrs. Josephine F. Hamill | 58 |
A Chick’s Cry | 59 |
The Kid and the Cop | 59 |
The Over Favored and The Chanceless Child | 61 |
The Slanderer | 61 |
The World’s Greatest Egotist | 62 |
Little River Royal | 63 |
Give Me Both | 64 |
Manifold Beauty and the Man | 64 |
Chimney Rock | 66 |
The Elephant Dance | 67 |
Least Yet Greatest | 67 |
Old Ship Church | 67 |
A Little Toast to the Men of the Press | 68 |
Mother Indeed | 68 |
Nathan O’Berry | 68 |
The Bishop’s Garden | 69 |
My Triolet | 70 |
Ye Bonny Boys | 71 |
A Ballade to the Girls | 71 |
A Mountain Top View | 72 |
One Aged John Smith and His Youthful Confessions | 73 |
Ode on Woodrow Wilson and the League of Nations | 74 |
Another Birthday | 77 |
Oh, Baby Mine | 77 |
The Snake That’s King | 78 |
The Heart of France | 79 |
The Red Maple | 81 |
A Sonnet to Mrs. O. C. Bullock | 81 |
The Strikers | 81 |
November Gloom | 82 |
James Mitchell Rogers | 83 |
Erwin Holt | 83 |
Just an Introduction | 83 |
Judge Franklin Chase Hoyt | 84 |
A Little Index of the Coming Day | 85 |
Winged Tourists | 86 |
How My Easter Dawned | 86 |
Helen Keller | 88 |
The Dancing Tassel | 89 |
Walter Malone | 91 |
The Dutiful Flower | 92 |
My Holiday | 92 |
The Aeolian Harp | 92 |
The God-Man and Myself | 93 |
Death’s Doom | 94 |
The Dying Year | 96 |
Page | |
The Author in his Retreat | Frontispiece |
Bob-White in Colors | 6 |
Cat Bird | 7 |
Young Screech Owl | 8 |
Humming Bird | 8 |
White Throated Sparrows | 9 |
Blue-Bird and Family | 10 |
Young Male Cardinal | 11 |
Thrasher’s Admiration | 12 |
Cardinal in Colors | 12 |
A Scene in Washington, N. C. | 16 |
Baby Ambitious to Rise | 18 |
Veery Celebrating the King’s Marriage | 19 |
Hermit Thrush in Colors | 21 |
Dove and Bluebirds, Swan, Zebra and Colt, | |
Macaw, Chipmunk, Young Pet Thrasher | 22 |
The Author’s Retreat in the Wild Wood | 23 |
Young Green Heron | 23 |
The Mocking-Bird in Colors | 25 |
The Jay Bird and I | 26 |
A Nigger and a Mule | 29 |
Virginia’s Natural Bridge | 30 |
A Perpetual King, Cotton Gin, A Cotton Mill | 31 |
My Own Little Girl | 33 |
My Butterfly | 33 |
A Babe, Later an Imprisoned Boy | 34 |
Feeding Young Mocking-Bird | 35 |
Big Pinnacle on Pilot Mountain | 36 |
Aurelius Augustinus | 38 |
Two Little Orphans | 42 |
Trouble and Play | 43 |
Nature’s Fairy Crosses | 46 |
Col. Diamond and Grand-daughter | 47 |
The Wild Wood | 48 |
A Pre-Revolutionary Stone Mansion, | |
7 Years Being Built | 53 |
“Rock Ribbed Pen” in which Miss Martin was placed | |
by the Tories | 54 |
Blind Negro | 56 |
Mistletoe | 57 |
The Kid and the Cop | 59-60 |
New River, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. | 63 |
Water Fall Near Tories’ Den, and Beach Scene | 64 |
Chimney Rock in North Carolina | 66 |
The Elephant Dance and Old Ship Church | 67 |
The Bishop’s Garden | 69 |
My Triolet | 70 |
Lookout Mountain | 72 |
Woodrow Wilson | 75 |
O Baby Mine | 77 |
The Snake That’s King | 78 |
Notre Dame | 79 |
Miss Cameron and Billy | 83 |
Judge Franklin Chase Hoyt | 84 |
Ann Gray and Pet Macaw | 85 |
The Tots That Turned the Tide | 87 |
Walter Malone | 90 |
BOB-WHITE.
By F. Schuyler Matthews.
[Pg 7]
Cat Bird.
Photo by the Author.
YOUNG SCREECH OWL.
Photo by Rev. Wallace Rogers.
HUMMING BIRD.
By F. Schuyler Matthews.
WHITE THROATED SPARROWS.
Photo by the Author.
[Pg 10]
BLUEBIRD AND FAMILY.
Photo by the Author.
[Pg 11]
YOUNG MALE CARDINAL TRYING TO
LIGHT ON BOUQUET OF FLOWERS.
Snapped by the Author.
THRASHER’S ADMIRATION.
Photo by Author.
Cardinal
By courtesy of G. P. Putnam Sons, Publishers, and P. Schuyler Matthews, Author of “Book of Birds For Young People.”
[Pg 13]
ONE OF THE NINE AMBITIONS TO RISE.
Veery celebrating the King’s Marriage.
The original, with male and female Veery, furnished by courtesy National Association Audubon Societies, with changes by the Author’s Artist.
[Pg 19]
(Published in the Methodist Review, July, 1919).
THE HERMIT THRUSH.
[Pg 21]
Turtle Dove and Bluebirds.
Chipmunk—Note his pockets
well-filled with grain to be
carried to his granary.
“Brownie,” a young pet Thrasher, raised by Artena.
At Lunch—Snapped at the Memphis Zoo.
Pet Macaw. See p. 84.
His Majesty,
The Swan.
Photos by the Author.
[Pg 23]
Young Green Heron.
[Pg 24] Photos by the author.
Mocking-bird
By courtesy of G. P. Putnam Sons, Publishers, and F. Schuyler Matthews,
Author of “Book of Birds For Young People.”
Sketched originally for
this volume.
[Pg 26]
[Pg 30]
Photo by The Author.
Photos by the Author.
[Pg 35]
A View of “Big Pinnacle” on Pilot Mountain, in Surrey County, N. C.
Picture by the Author.
Photograph of a rare old painting by the Spanish artist, Herrera, and owned by Dr. Andrew Anderson of St. Augustine, Fla.
By the Author.
By Courtesy of Briscoe and Arnold.
(In Patrick County, Virginia, little stone crosses have been found and are yet obtainable. Jewelers of Roanoke and Martinsville, Va., assure inquirers that the Virginia “Fairy” or “Lucky” stones, discovered nowhere else in the world, have been a puzzle to scientists, and are being worn by some of the crowned heads of Europe. A bulletin of the U. S. Geological Survey speaks of them as “the most curious mineral found in the United States,” and calls them Staurolite or Fairy Stones.)
Note the crosses in this clod of earth.
Photographed in Patrick County, Va.
Photograph taken when he was
82 years of age.
[Pg 49]
(Written beside his grave in Lake City, Fla., where he was buried after a tragic death, February 8, 1868, by railroad accident.
Dr. Lovick Pierce, when in his prime, once facetiously remarked to several opposing preachers: “My brethren, you had better let brother Jackson alone. He has the most metaphysical mind of any man in Georgia, myself only excepted.”
Rev. W. J. Scott, D. D., in “Biographic Etchings” says of contemporary ministers: “Not one of them was his equal as a theologian or logician.”
The late Dr. W. J. Cotter, of Newnan, Ga., wrote: “Your father was a great and good man.”)
This old mansion in Stokes County, N. C., was seven
years in being built by its owner, Col. John Martin, who was the
great-grandfather of Judge W. P. Bynum of Greensboro, N. C.
Photo by
the Author.
(With a historical basis never before published.)
The “rock ribbed pen” in which Miss Martin was placed by
the Tories.
Photograph by author.
Snapped by the Author in Tampa, Fla.
MISTLETOE.
Photo by the Author.
[Pg 58]
NEW RIVER, FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA.
Snap Shot by the Author.
The nearest water supply to the Tories’ Den.
(See pages 53-55).
Photo by Author.
Photo by the Author.
Old Ship Church, (First Parish), Hingham, Mass., built in 1681, said to be the oldest church in the United States, where continuous services have been held.
Photo by T. P. Robinson, Orlando, Fla.
(Based on what was seen around the home of Bishop Cameron Mann, Orlando, Fla.)
Photo by the Author.
[Pg 71]
Part of Chattanooga and Lookout Mountain.
Congressman Upshaw, after a personal appeal to Mr. Wilson on February 17, 1923, wired the author: “Hard to overcome fixed rule of former President,” in refusing his photograph and autograph for publication; but we have the pleasure of presenting both to his friends.
Snap shot by
the Author.
Picture of a King Snake nearly five feet long, swallowing a somewhat shorter Rattler, after a struggle which lasted for two hours.
Photograph by Mr. Alfred Austell near Atlanta, Ga.
[Pg 79]
NOTRE DAME.
Photo by the Author.
[Pg 84]
JUDGE FRANKLIN CHASE HOYT,
Presiding Over the Children’s Court, New York City.
Snapped by the Author at the Home of Paul R. Gray
on Belle Isle, Miami, Fla., March 17, 1920.
The Tots that Turned the Tide.
Photo by the Author.
WALTER MALONE.
Poet, Jurist and Philosopher.
(Inscribed to C. L. Anderson, H. C. Bagley, S. R. Belk, J. N. McEachern and A. R. Holderby.)
(Written the last of 1922, a dark day with continuous rain, and published in the Atlanta Constitution, January 1st, a day of sunshine and life.)
Footnotes:
[1] Aristotle’s Physics.
[2] As heard by John Burroughs.
[3] This repeated paraphrase is from F. Schuyler Mathews, ornithologist and musician.
[4] The words suggested to John Burroughs by the variations of the Song Sparrow.
[5] Toxaway, the Indian’s name for the Cardinal.
[6] There were only seven children in this family when the first two stanzas were written three years ago.—C. J.
[7] If anyone thinks the author has overdrawn the artistic merits of the bird, he is referred to the expert opinion of F. Schuyler Mathews in his “Field Book of Wild Birds and Their Music,” pages 234-246, wherein this musician and lover of birds convincingly compares and contrasts, by musical scales and other data, the powers of the Hermit and Nightingale in favor of the former.—C. J.
[8] With slight change the interpretation by Mathews of the song of the Olive Back Thrush.
[9] After the author had written this line he was glad to learn that the late John Burroughs in his “Birds and Poets,” page 17, spoke of the Mocking-bird as “both Lark and Nightingale in one.”
[10] A tradition with some says that the Jay goes to the lower regions every Friday, and carries a grain of sand.
[11] This particular butterfly was first seen clinging, about three feet above the pavement, to the large masonic temple in Charlotte, N. C., and was gently enticed by the author into his hand, later crawling up his arm and remaining with his new companion for over an hour.
[12] Based on a newspaper story of “Aunt” Sarah Wycoff in the North Carolina Penitentiary.
[13] The title of one of his works.
[14] Struggling with that simple passage—“This is the heir; come, let us kill him”—he rendered it, “This is the hair-comb, let us kill him;” and hence reached his logical interpretation, which is left to the imagination of the reader.
[15] This beautiful character and other proven friends described in these pages measure up to the standard now, as the author sees it and them—yet the coveted ideal rises ever higher as we press on toward the Highest. C. J.
[16] The illustrations by courtesy of Kodakery.
[17] In the mountains of North Carolina.
[18] The title of his most famous poem.
Transcriber’s Notes:
The illustrations have been moved so that they do not break up paragraphs and so that they are next to the text they illustrate.
Typographical and punctuation errors have been silently corrected.