FOOTNOTES

FOOTNOTES

1SeeWar Poetry of the South, ed. by W. Gilmore Simms, Preface, pp. v and vi.2SeeAn American Anthology, Introduction, p. xxii.3SeeAn American Anthology, Introduction, p. xxii.4Noted in the Editor’s Table of The Southern Literary Messenger for January, 1862.5SeeBiographical and Critical Studies of Southern Authors, “Irwin Russell,” p. 97.6See The Creed of the Old South, pp. 24 and 25.7See The Creed of the Old South, p. 38.8SeeSouthern Prose and Poetry, p. 15.9SeeBiographical and Critical Studies of Southern Authors, “Irwin Russell,” pp. 97 and 98.10See “To the South,” stanza V, by James Maurice Thompson.11SeeSouth Songs, p. vii.12SeePhotographic History of the Civil War, vol. 9, pp. 86 and 88.13SeeWar Poets of the South: Singers on Fire, S. A. Link, p. 382.14“Butler’s Proclamation” by Paul H. Hayne, occasioned by Butler’s order to the effect: “It is ordered that hereafter when any female shall by word, gesture or movement insult or show contempt for any officer or soldier of the United States,she shall be regarded and held liable lo be treated as a woman of the town, plying her vocation.”15SeeThe Creed of the Old South, by Basil L. Gildersleeve, p. 13.16See “Shermanized” by L. Virginia French.17“Prayer for Peace,” by S. Teackle Wallis of Maryland.18In the present collection, eighty-one poems are definitely concerned with the immediate circumstances of defeat.19“Virginia Capta” by Mrs. Margaret J. Preston.20SeeSouth Songs, edited by T. C. de Leon, note 11, p. 149.21SeeThe South in History and Literature, by Mildred Lewis Rutherford, p. 254.22SeeThree Centuries of Southern Poetry, by Carl Holliday, p. 112.23This was probably due to the fact that the Southern slopes of the river were wooded as compared with the rather bare Northern side.24In the present collection there are seventeen sonnets.

1SeeWar Poetry of the South, ed. by W. Gilmore Simms, Preface, pp. v and vi.

2SeeAn American Anthology, Introduction, p. xxii.

3SeeAn American Anthology, Introduction, p. xxii.

4Noted in the Editor’s Table of The Southern Literary Messenger for January, 1862.

5SeeBiographical and Critical Studies of Southern Authors, “Irwin Russell,” p. 97.

6See The Creed of the Old South, pp. 24 and 25.

7See The Creed of the Old South, p. 38.

8SeeSouthern Prose and Poetry, p. 15.

9SeeBiographical and Critical Studies of Southern Authors, “Irwin Russell,” pp. 97 and 98.

10See “To the South,” stanza V, by James Maurice Thompson.

11SeeSouth Songs, p. vii.

12SeePhotographic History of the Civil War, vol. 9, pp. 86 and 88.

13SeeWar Poets of the South: Singers on Fire, S. A. Link, p. 382.

14“Butler’s Proclamation” by Paul H. Hayne, occasioned by Butler’s order to the effect: “It is ordered that hereafter when any female shall by word, gesture or movement insult or show contempt for any officer or soldier of the United States,she shall be regarded and held liable lo be treated as a woman of the town, plying her vocation.”

15SeeThe Creed of the Old South, by Basil L. Gildersleeve, p. 13.

16See “Shermanized” by L. Virginia French.

17“Prayer for Peace,” by S. Teackle Wallis of Maryland.

18In the present collection, eighty-one poems are definitely concerned with the immediate circumstances of defeat.

19“Virginia Capta” by Mrs. Margaret J. Preston.

20SeeSouth Songs, edited by T. C. de Leon, note 11, p. 149.

21SeeThe South in History and Literature, by Mildred Lewis Rutherford, p. 254.

22SeeThree Centuries of Southern Poetry, by Carl Holliday, p. 112.

23This was probably due to the fact that the Southern slopes of the river were wooded as compared with the rather bare Northern side.

24In the present collection there are seventeen sonnets.


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