on Cawein — to mention but half a dozen distinguished names out of a larger company — and to suggest that James Whitcomb Riley, more completely than any American poet since Longfellow, succeeded in expressing the actual poetic feelings of the men and women who composed his immense audience.
Riley, like Aldrich, went to school to Herrick, Keats, Tennyson, and Longfellow, but when he began writing newspaper verse in his native Indiana he was guided by two impulses which gave individuality to heory of speech tones as the basis of verse, as well as a revival of the bardic practice of reciting one's own poems.
For Riley had much of the actor and platform-artist in him, and comprehended that poetry might be made again a spoken art, directedmental traditions of our American literature and its frank appeal to the emotions of juvenility, actual and recollected.
Riley's best holt as a poet was his memory of his own boyhood and his perception that the childmind lingers in every adult rea
New York at beginning of 18th century, 44
New York Tribune, 140, 218
Newburyport free Press, 90, 159
Newspapers, in colonies, 60-61; in 20th century, 263-64
North American review, 88, 103, 104, 112, 170
North Carolina in 1724, 44
North of Boston, Frost 261
Norwood, Colonel, 27
Oake, Urian, 41
Old Creole days, Cable 246
Old homestead, the, Thompson 248
Old Ironsides, Holmes 166
Old Manse, 119-20, 145
Old Regime, the, Parkman 185
Old Swimmina Hole, the, Riley 247
Oldtown fireside stories, Stowe 223
Oldtown Folks, Stowe 223
Olmsted, F. L., 246
On a certain Condescension in Foreigners, Lowell 174
Oratory in America, 208 et seq.
Oregon Trail, the, Parkman 184
Otis, James, 72, 73
Our hundred days, Holmes 168
Outcast of Poker Flat, the, Harte 242
Outre-mer, Longfellow 152
Overland monthly, 240
Page, T. N., 246, 247
Paine, Thomas, 74-76
Parker, Theodore, 115, 119, 141, 206
Parkman, Francis, 143-44, 176, 182-86
Passa