Robert F. Murray (Author of the Scarlet Gown): His Poems; with a Memoir
Transcribed from the 1894 Longmans, Green, and Co. edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
by ANDREW LANG
london LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. new york: 15 east 16th street
1894
Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable, Printers to Her Majesty
the volume is dedicated to J. M. D. MEIKLEJOHN, ESQ. most indulgent of masters and kindest of friends
Much is written about success and failure in the career of literature, about the reasons which enable one man to reach the front, and another to earn his livelihood, while a third, in appearance as likely as either of them, fails and, perhaps, faints by the way. Mr. R. F. Murray, the author of The Scarlet Gown , was among those who do not attain success, in spite of qualities which seem destined to ensure it, and who fall out of the ranks. To him, indeed, success and the rewards of this world, money, and praise, did by no means seem things to be snatched at. To him success meant earning by his pen the very modest sum which sufficed for his wants, and the leisure necessary for serious essays in poetry. Fate denied him even this, in spite of his charming natural endowment of humour, of tenderness, of delight in good letters, and in nature. He died young; he was one of those whose talent matures slowly, and he died before he came into the full possession of his intellectual kingdom. He had the ambition to excel, αίεν αριστευειν, as the Homeric motto of his University runs, and he was on the way to excellence when his health broke down. He lingered for two years and passed away.
It is a familiar story, the story of lettered youth; of an ambition, or rather of an ideal; of poverty; of struggles in the ‘dusty and stony ways’; of intellectual task-work; of a true love consoling the last months of weakness and pain. The tale is not repeated here because it is novel, nor even because in its hero we have to regret an ‘inheritor of unfulfilled renown.’ It is not the genius so much as the character of this St. Andrews student which has won the sympathy of his biographer, and may win, he hopes, the sympathy of others. In Mr. Murray I feel that I have lost that rare thing, a friend; a friend whom the chances of life threw in my way, and withdrew again ere we had time and opportunity for perfect recognition. Those who read his Letters and Remains may also feel this emotion of sympathy and regret.
R. F. Murray
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R. F. MURRAY—1863-1893
TO NUMBER 27x.
THE WASTER’S PRESENTIMENT
A DECEMBER DAY
IMITATED FROM WORDSWORTH
A TENNYSONIAN FRAGMENT
MOONLIGHT NORTH AND SOUTH
WINTER AT ST. ANDREWS
PATRIOTISM
SLEEP FLIES ME
LOVE’S PHANTOM
COME BACK TO ST. ANDREWS
THE SOLITARY
TO ALFRED TENNYSON—1883
ICHABOD
AT A HIGH CEREMONY
THE WASTED DAY
INDOLENCE
DAWN SONG
CAIRNSMILL DEN—TUNE: ‘A ROVING’
A LOST OPPORTUNITY
THE CAGED THRUSH
MIDNIGHT
WHERE’S THE USE
A MAY-DAY MADRIGAL
SONG IS NOT DEAD
A SONG OF TRUCE
ONE TEAR
A LOVER’S CONFESSION
TRAFALGAR SQUARE
A SUMMER MORNING
WELCOME HOME
AN INVITATION
FICKLE SUMMER
SORROW’S TREACHERY
THE CROWN OF YEARS
HOPE DEFERRED
THE LIFE OF EARTH
GOLDEN DREAM
TEARS
THE HOUSE OF SLEEP
THE OUTCAST’S FAREWELL
YET A LITTLE SLEEP
LOST LIBERTY
AN AFTERTHOUGHT
TO J. R.
THE TEMPTED SOUL
YOUTH RENEWED
VANITY OF VANITIES
LOVE’S WORSHIP RESTORED
BELOW HER WINDOW
REQUIEM
THOU ART QUEEN
IN TIME OF DOUBT
THE GARDEN OF SIN
URSULA
UNDESIRED REVENGE
POETS
A PRESENTIMENT
A BIRTHDAY GIFT
CYCLAMEN
LOVE RECALLED IN SLEEP
FOOTSTEPS IN THE STREET
FOR A PRESENT OF ROSES
IN TIME OF SORROW
A NEW SONG TO AN OLD TUNE—FROM VICTOR HUGO
THE FIDDLER
THE FIRST MEETING
A CRITICISM OF CRITICS
MY LADY
PARTNERSHIP IN FAME
A CHRISTMAS FANCY
THE BURIAL OF WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR
THE DEATH OF WILLIAM RUFUS
AFTER WATERLOO
DEATH AT THE WINDOW
MAKE-BELIEVES
A COINCIDENCE
ART’S DISCIPLINE
THE TRUE LIBERAL
A LATE GOOD NIGHT
AN EXILE’S SONG
FOR SCOTLAND
THE HAUNTED CHAMBER
NIGHTFALL
IN TIME OF SICKNESS
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