Sarah Helen Whitman
Appearance
Sarah Helen Power Whitman (January 19, 1803 – June 27, 1878) was a poet, essayist, transcendentalist, Spiritualist and a romantic interest of Edgar Allan Poe.
Quotes
[edit]- Poems (Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Company, 1879)
- When summer gathers up her robes of glory,
And, like a dream of beauty, glides away.- "A Still Day in Autumn", line 3, p. 3.
- Warm lights are on the sleepy uplands waning
Beneath dark clouds along the horizon rolled,
Till the slant sunbeams, through the fringes raining,
Bathe all the hills in melancholy gold.- "A Still Day in Autumn, line 13, p. 4.
- Beside the brook and on the umbered meadow,
Where yellow fern-tufts fleck the faded ground,
With folded lids beneath their palmy shadow,
The gentian nods, in dewy slumbers bound.- "A Still Day in Autumn", line 21, p. 4.
- Enchantress of the stormy seas,
Priestess of Night's high mysteries!- "Moonrise in May", line 45, p. 11.
- The shy little may-flower weaves her nest;
But the south wind blows o'er the fragrant loam,
And betrays the path to her woodland home.- "Wood-Walks in Spring", line 26, p. 16.
- The summer skies are darkly blue,
The days are still and bright,
And Evening trails her robes of gold
Through the dim halls of Night.- "Summer's Call to the Little Orphan", line 1, p. 38.
- Compare: "I heard the trailing garments of the Night / Sweep through her marble halls", Longfellow.
- And still the aster greets us, as we pass,
With her faint smile,—among the withered grass.- "A Day of the Indian Summer", line 35, p. 54.
- Again the fair azalea bows
Beneath her snowy crest.- "She Blooms No More", line 5, p. 67.
- Raven from the dim dominions
On the Night's Plutonian shore,
Oft I hear thy dusky pinions
Wave and flutter round my door—
See the shadow of thy pinions
Float along the moonlit floor.- "The Raven", line 1, p. 72. (written as a counterpart to Poe's poem by the same name).
- Tell him I lingered alone on the shore,
Where we parted, in sorrow, to meet nevermore;
The night-wind blew cold on my desolate heart
But colder those wild words of doom,—“Ye must part.”- "Our Island of Dreams", line 1, p. 76.
- Star of resplendent front! Thy glorious eye
Shines on me still from out yon clouded sky.- "Arcturus" (To Edgar Allan Poe, October 1849), line 1, p. 86.
- The sweet imperious mouth, whose haughty valor
Defied all portents of impending doom.- "The Portrait" (Of Poe), line 7, p. 195.
External links
[edit]- Sarah Helen Power Whitman on about.com
- Whitman's letters to and from Poe at the Edgar Allan Poe Society online