Love Letters of the Bachelor Poet, James Whitcomb Riley to Miss Elizabeth Kahle, Now First Printed From the Originals With Numerous Facsimiles

Cover Love Letters of the Bachelor Poet, James Whitcomb Riley to Miss Elizabeth Kahle, Now First Printed From the Originals With Numerous Facsimiles
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That was a baby-dream of long ago.
My fate is fanged with frost, and tongued with flame : My woman-soul, chased naked through the snow.
Stumbles and staggers on without an aim.
And yet, here in my agony, sometimes A faint voice reaches down from some far height.
And whispers through a glamoring of rhymes, — "What makes my Uttle girl so sad to-night?" J. W. R.
*This poem, in Riley's handwriting, appears on a long sheet, above the prose note that here follows it.
[80] September 18, 1879.
Here is
...a little poem that wrote itself. I hardly know if I fully comprehend it, but something tells me you will like it, for all its strangeness, and I trust you will.
Soon I will answer your last note and gal- lant letter that made me laugh and cry.
You mustn't be so queer! I'm growing envious — or jealous, rather. I've been without a rival in that line for so long I can't be reconciled to any competition. I know the letter like a prayer, and I do breathe it quite as fervently.
Don't think that I suspect you of duplicity in any way.


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