Page's The Page Story Book.

SUGGESTED READINGS

Selections (not always the ones indicated below) from all the authors mentioned in this chapter may be found in Trent's Southern Writers, 524 pages, and Mims and Payne's Southern Prose and Poetry for Schools, 440 pages. Selections from the majority of the poets are given in Painter's Poets of the South, 237 pages, and Weber's Selections from the Southern Poets, 221 pages. The best poems of Poe and Lanier may be found in Page's The Chief American Poets.

POETRY

POE.—His best poems are short, and may soon be read. They are Annabel
Lee
, To One in Paradise, The Raven, The Haunted Palace, The
Conqueror Worm
, Ulalume, Israfel, Lenore, and The Bells.

HAYNE.—A Dream of the South Winds, Aspects of the Pines, The Woodland
Phases
, and A Storm in the Distance.

TIMROD.—Spring, The Lily Confidante, An Exotic, The Cotton Boll, and Carolina.

LANIER.—The Marshes of Glynn, Sunrise, The Song of the Chattahoochee, Tampa Robins, Love and Song, The Stirrup Cup, and The Symphony.

RYAN.—The Conquered Banner, and The Sword of Robert Lee.

TABB.—Fourteen of his complete poems may be found on two pages (489 and 490) of Stedman's An American Anthology. Much of Tabb's best work is contained in his little volume entitled Poems (1894).