Verses on Various Occasions
John Henry Newman

Contents
Background
Dedication
Title Page

Revised July, 2002.
Contributions of Paul Zadik are gratefully acknowledged—NR.

Works | Home


Contents

{ix} Title Page
1. Solitude 3.
2. My Birthday 5.
7. Snapdragon 21.
10. A Picture 29.
12. Opusculum 38.
14. The Hidden Ones 42.
15. A Thanksgiving 45.
16. Monks 48.
17. Epiphany-Eve 52.
{x}
21. The Pilgrim 61.
22. Home 62.
24. Zeal and Love 64.
25. Persecution 65.
26. Zeal and Purity 67.
29. Bondage 70.
33. Wanderings 75.
36. The Watchman 80.
38. Absolution 83.
39. Memory 85.
40. The Haven 86.
42. Fair Words 88.
43. England 89.
44. Moses 91.
46. Jeremiah 94.
47. Penance 95.
{xi}
50. Sleeplessness 100.
51. Abraham 101.
53. The Witness 104.
55. Melchizedek 108.
56. Corcyra 109.
57. Transfiguration 110.
58. Behind the Veil 111.
59. Judgment 112.
60. Sensitiveness 113.
62. Humiliation 117.
64. A Blight 121.
65. Joseph 122.
66. Superstition 123.
67. Isaac 124.
68. Reverses 125.
69. Hope 127.
71. Messina 129.
72. Warnings 130.
73. Dreams 131.
74. Temptation 132.
75. Our Future 133.
76. Heathenism 134.
77. Taormini 135.
78. Sympathy 136.
{xii}
79. Relics of Saints 138.
80. Day-Labourers 139.
81. Warfare 141.
82. Sacrilege 143.
83. Liberalism 144.
84. Declension 146.
85. The Age to Come 148.
89. Reverence 155.
90. The Pillar of the Cloud [Lead, Kindly Light] 156.
91. Samaria 158.
92. Jonah 159.
94. Desolation 162.
97. St. Paul 168.
100. Vexations 171.
102. The Wrath to Come 175.
103. Pusillanimity 176.
104. James and John 177.
105. Hora Novissima 179.
107. Consolation 182.
{xiii}
111. Semita Justorum 187.
112. The Elements 188.
113. Apostasy 190.
114. Judaism 192.
117. Morning 198.
118. Evening 199.
119. A Hermitage 200.
{xiv}
139. Hymn for Prime 243.
140. Hymn for Terce 245.
141. Hymn for Sext 246.
142. Hymn for None 247.
150. Hymn for Compline 261.
156. Hymn for a Martyr 272.
158. Ethelwald 276.
159. Candlemas 279.
160. The Pilgrim Queen 281.
161. The Month of Mary 284.
{xv}
167. Guardian Angel 300.
168. The Golden Prison 303.
169. Heathen Greece 305.
170. A Martyr Convert 307.
173. For the Dead 315.
174. To Edward Caswall 317.
175. The Two Worlds 319.
176. St. Michael 321.


Appendix I.

1. Ad Vesperas 371.
2. Ad Laudes 373.


Appendix II.


Index of first lines (under Guides)
Index of Titles (under Guides)

Top | Works | Home


Background

Dublin Review, April 1868

Top | Works | Home


Dedication

TO EDWARD BADELEY, ESQ.

MY DEAR BADELEY,
{v} I have not been without apprehension lest in dedicating to you a number of poetical compositions, I should hardly be making a suitable offering to a member of a grave profession, which is especially employed in rubbing off the gloss with which imagination and sentiment invest matters of everyday life, and in reducing statements of fact to their legitimate dimensions. And, besides this, misgivings have not unnaturally come over me on the previous question; viz., whether, after all, the contents of the volume are of sufficient importance to make it an acceptable offering to any friend whatever.

And I must frankly confess, as to the latter difficulty, that certainly it never would have occurred to me thus formally to bring together {vi} under one title effusions which I have ever considered ephemeral, had I not lately found from publications of the day, what I never suspected before, that there are critics, and they strangers to me, who think well both of some of my compositions and of my power of composing. It is this commendation, bestowed on me to my surprise as well as to my gratification, which has encouraged me just now to republish what I have from time to time written; and if, in doing so, I shall be found, as is not unlikely, to have formed a volume of unequal merit, my excuse must be, that I despair of discovering any standard by which to discriminate aright between one poetical attempt and another. Accordingly, I am thrown, from the nature of the case, whether I will or no, upon my own judgment, which, biassed by the associations of memory and by personal feelings, and measuring, perhaps, by the pleasure of verse-making, the worth of the verse, is disposed either to preserve them all, or to put them all aside.

Here another contrast presents itself between the poetical art and the science of law. Your profession has its definitive authorities, its prescriptions, {vii} its precedents, and its principles, by which to determine the claim of its authors on public attention; but what philosopher will undertake to rule matters of taste, or to bring under one idea or method works so different from each other as those of Homer, ニschylus, and Pindar; of Terence, Ovid, Juvenal, and Martial? What court is sitting, and what code is received, for the satisfactory determination of the poetical pretensions of writers of the day? Whence can we hope to gain a verdict upon them, except from the unscientific tribunals of Public Opinion and of Time? In Poetry, as in Metaphysics, a book is of necessity a venture.

And now, coming to the suitableness of my offering, I know well, my dear Badeley, how little you will be disposed to criticize what comes to you from me, whatever be its intrinsic value. Less still in this case, considering that a chief portion of the volume grew out of that Religious Movement which you yourself, as well as I, so faithfully followed from first to last. And least of all, when I tell you that I wish it to be the poor expression, long-delayed, of my gratitude, never {viii} intermitted, for the great services which you rendered to me years ago, by your legal skill and affectionate zeal, in a serious matter in which I found myself in collision with the law of the land. Those services I have ever desired in some public, however inadequate, way to record; and now, as time hurries on and opportunities are few, I am forced to ask you to let me acknowledge my debt to you as I can, since I cannot as I would [See Ward's Life of Cardinal Newman, chapter 10NR.].

We are now, both of us, in the decline of life: may that warm attachment which has lasted between us inviolate for so many years, be continued, by the mercy of God, to the end of our earthly course, and beyond it!

I am, my dear Badeley,
Affectionately yours,
J. H. N.

THE ORATORY,
December 21, 1867.

Top | Works | Home


Title Page

VERSES

ON VARIOUS OCCASIONS

BY

JOHN HENRY CARDINAL NEWMAN

"cui pauca relicti
Jugera ruris erant; nec fertilis illa juvencis
Nec pecori opportuna seges, nec commoda Baccho..
Hic rarum tamen in dumis olus, albaque circum
Lilia, verbenasque premens, vescumque papaver,
Regum 誨uabat opes animis."

NEW IMPRESSION

LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
NEW YORK AND BOMBAY

1903

All rights reserved

Top | Works | Home


Newman Reader — Works of John Henry Newman
Copyright ゥ 2007 by The National Institute for Newman Studies. All rights reserved.

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /