V.—CANADA

[CXC]

Poems (Toronto: Dudley & Burns, 1888). By permission of the author. The Nile Expeditionary Force for the relief of General Gordon was conveyed up the river in flat-bottomed boats navigated by Canadian Indians (voyageurs).

[CXCI]

Lays of Canada (Montreal: John Lovell & Son, 1890). By permission of the author.

[CXCII]

Laura Second and Other Poems (Toronto, 1887). By permission of the author’s representatives.

[CXCII]

A Treasury of Canadian Verse (J. M. Dent & Co., 1900). By permission of the author’s representatives.

[CXCIV]

Toronto Daily Mail (July 23, 1885). By permission of the author. The call for volunteers was occasioned by the ‘Half-Breed Rebellion’ in North-West Canada (1884–5).

[CXCV]

Published separately (McCorquodale & Co., 1900), and sold for the benefit of the Canadian Patriotic Fund. By permission of the author.

[CXCVI]

In Divers Tones (Boston: Small, Maynard & Co., 1887). By permission of the author.

[CXCVII][CXCVIII]

Beyond the Hills of Dream (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1899). By permission of author and publishers. The first had previously appeared in The Westminster Gazette (August, 1897), and the second in The Toronto Globe (Christmas Number, 1899).

[CXCIX][CC]

The first is from Poems Old and New (Toronto: William Briggs, 1900), and the second from The Soul’s Quest and Other Poems (London: Kegan Paul & Co., 1888). By permission of the author.

[CCI]

Canadian Monthly (August, 1897). By permission of the author.

[CCII]

Watchers of Twilight (Montreal: T. H. Warren, 1894). By permission of the author. Line 2 is a quotation from William Watson’s Last Words to the Colonies.

[CCIII]

In Various Moods (Toronto: William Briggs, 1894). By permission of the author.