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Mr. Brannan is well known, to the people of the West especially, as an artist, and an occasional contributor of poetry to the Press. His "Harp of a Thousand Strings," a burlesque sermon, has been long recognized as the best of its class. The present volume is one of superior merit for the wit and humor of the Autobiography, the pathos, imagination and smooth versification of the Occasional Pieces scattered in profusion throughout. This work is destined to place Mr. Brannan high in the rank of American Poets, and to give him position as a leader among the Bards of the West.


NOTICES OF THE PRESS.

"The breezy freshness of the prairie pervades his thought, and breathes in many of his lines."—Portland Daily Press.

"The collection of Poems does honor to the author, whose name is so familiar to Western people, that the mere announcement of the work will be sufficient to secure a host of readers."—Cincinnati Gazette.

"This autobiographic verse is made to link together a number of fugitive poems which have the true gold of poetry, without alloy."—Cincinnati Commercial.