"A Medium in Which I Seek Relief": Manuscripts of American Sailors 1919-1940Main MenuIntroductionPublication IntroductionTranscriptionsThe SailorsBeginning of PathThe ShipsBeginning of PathContext & AnalysisBeginning of PathSources / CitationsBeginning of PathAnnie Tummino3ab49bb2dc491ebce8f162f5757538b6789c8434
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
12020-02-04T13:59:02-08:00Annie Tummino3ab49bb2dc491ebce8f162f5757538b6789c8434331951Portrait of Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Frontispiece from her book of poems "Three Women."plain2020-02-04T13:59:02-08:00Project Gutenberg transcription of "Three Women" http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/27336This is an image that has come from a book or document for which the American copyright has expired and this image is in the public domain in the United States and possibly other countries.Annie Tummino3ab49bb2dc491ebce8f162f5757538b6789c8434
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12019-03-10T20:29:57-07:00Cecil Northrop "Me: With Apologies to R. Haggard," 1923, title page53Transcriptionplain2021-08-26T11:41:40-07:00Below is an image of the title page of Cecil Northrop's 1923-1924 diary (additional pages of this diary are available on Maritime Digital Collections). In 1923 Northrop worked on a freighter, and then got a position as an officer aboard Dollar Line's S.S. President Hayes "Round the World" cruises.
Transcription
"Me" With Apologies to R. Haggard
"But to thine ownself be true" Shakespear[e]
I hold it true that thoughts are things, Endowed with bodies, breath, and wings; And after you have quite forgot Or all outgrown some vanished thought. Back to your mind to make its home A doe or raven it will come.
Notes
Northrop's title is a play on H. Rider Haggard's She: A History of Adventure (1887). Rider (1856 – 14 May 1925) was an English writer of Adventure fiction and a pioneer of the "Lost World" subgenre. The novel was adapted for the screen in 1917 (the version Cecil Northrop presumably could have seen), 1935, and 1965. The reference to Haggard signals Northrop's interest in adventure and travel as motivating factors for his career choices and writing.
"I hold it true..." lines of poetry are by American poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox (November 5, 1850 – October 30, 1919), a popular poet in the late 19th century. According to A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-Seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (1893), she "had the satisfaction of being a widely read author and of receiving a good price and ready sale for all she produces."