Poems, 1852-1890.

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Poems, 1852-1890.

Manuscript poems by O'Connor (many of which are signed), including: [1] At Sunset (2 versions); Poem; [2] The Bird (2 versions); [3] The Brazen Android, with illustration and envelope; [4] The Cake; [5] France; The Bacchic Procession; [6] The Frogs; [7] Begins: He Stood Against the Jail Door...; [8] Helen (2 versions); [9] Begins: Lo! Like a troop... (to E. A. L.); [10] Begins: Mary sure has...; To Daisy; [11] Resurgamus; [12] The Ringlet (translated from the German of Rudolph Gleim); [13] Storm; [14] Begins: Think, in your after years (to G. A. B.); [15] The Tournay; [16] To Gloriana (2 versions); [17] Begins: Wild wood nymph...; [18] With a Lamp; [19] envelope addressed toMrs. E. M. O'Connor (pstm 1890, Feb 2); fragment of envelope addressed to Sarah Helen Whitman.

23 items.

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SNAC Resource ID: 6758065

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O'Connor, William Douglas, 1832-1889

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6pr7wv7 (person)

Government official. Author of Harrington, an abolitionist novel. Reporter for the Boston Commonwealth and for the Saturday Evening Post. Friend of Walt Whitamn. Apologist for Edgar Allan Poe. From the description of Edgar A. Poe Manuscript Notes : scrapbook of clippings, 1875-1905. (Brown University). WorldCat record id: 122648053 William Douglas O'Connor was an American novelist, essayist, editor, and journalist. From the description of William Douglas O'Connor...