Page:The poems of Emma Lazarus volume 1.djvu/16

2 with those around her. Books were her world from her earliest years; in them she literally lost and found herself. She was eleven years old when the War of Secession broke out, which inspired her first lyric outbursts. Her poems and translations written between the ages of fourteen and seventeen were collected, and constituted her first published volume. Crude and immature as these productions naturally were, and utterly condemned by the writer’s later judgment, they are, nevertheless, highly interesting and characteristic, giving, as they do, the keynote of much that afterwards unfolded itself in her life. One cannot fail to be rather pain fully impressed by the profound melancholy pervading the book. The opening poem is &quot;In Memoriam,&quot;—on the death of a school friend and companion; and the two following poems also have death for theme. &quot;On a Lock of my Mother's Hair &quot; gives us reflections on growing old. These are the four poems written at the age of fourteen. There is not a wholly glad and joyous strain in the volume, and we might smile at the recurrence of broken vows, broken hearts, and broken lives in the experience of this maiden just entered upon her teens, were it not that the innocent child herself is in such deadly earnest. The two long narrative poems, &quot;Bertha&quot; and &quot;Elfrida,&quot; are also tragic in the extreme. Both are dashed off apparently at white heat: &quot;Elfrida,&quot;