. The poets' Lincoln : tributes in verse to the martyred President. edral at Davenport, Iowa, under the lateBishop Perry. He began his rectorship at Trentonin February, 1900. Has written extensively for journalsand periodicals. Among the bound publications whichbear his name as author are A Fisher of Men, a biog-raphy of the late Churchill Satterlee, priest and mis-sionary, son of the first Bishop of Washington; Studiesin English Church History; The Intellectual CrisisConfronting Christianity; and A History of TrinityChurch, Trenton. In 1900 his poem, The Incapable, wona prize of two hundred d


. The poets' Lincoln : tributes in verse to the martyred President. edral at Davenport, Iowa, under the lateBishop Perry. He began his rectorship at Trentonin February, 1900. Has written extensively for journalsand periodicals. Among the bound publications whichbear his name as author are A Fisher of Men, a biog-raphy of the late Churchill Satterlee, priest and mis-sionary, son of the first Bishop of Washington; Studiesin English Church History; The Intellectual CrisisConfronting Christianity; and A History of TrinityChurch, Trenton. In 1900 his poem, The Incapable, wona prize of two hundred dollars offered by the lateCollis P. Huntington through the New York Sun, for thebest poems antithetical to Edwin Markhams ManWith the Hoe. A volume of Mr. Schuylers verses,under the title Within the Cloisters Shadow, was pub-lished in 1914. A CHARACTERIZATION OF LINCOLN From Lincoln Centenary Ode TALL, ungainly, gaunt of limb,Rudely Nature molded form and homely face,Owing naught to outward grace;Yet, behind the rugged mienWere a mind and soul serene,. PRESIDENT LINCOLNPhotograph by Gardner, Washington THE POETS LINCOLN And in deep-set eyes there shoneGenius that was all his quaint with pathos blentTo his speech attraction lent;Telling phrase and homely quipFalling lightly from his of tongue, and clear,Logical, devoid of fear,Making plain whateer was denseBy the light of common as the bravest be,Pitiful in high degree,Wrathful only where offenceLed to grievous consequence;Hating sham and empty show;Chivalrous to beaten foe;Ever patient in his ways;Cheerful in the darkest days;Not a demi-god or saintSuch as fancy loves to paint,But a truly human manBuilt on the heroic plan. *s BF**-^ Kv Wm^ ?^s H*~ 1 y>-v/ ^ ^ dfei H^^^ ? i»v,y%,Vy.,*y % i^jM EMANCIPATION GROUP MOSES KIMBALL, a citizen of Boston, presentedto the city a duplicate of the Freedmans Memo-rial Statue erected in Lincoln Park, Washington,D. C, after a design by T


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidpoetslincoln, bookyear1915