Hannah Flagg Gould

Hannah Flagg Gould

03.09.1789 - 05.09.1865

American poet

A Hymn at Sea
A Mother's grief and joy
A Name in the Sand
A Sabbath at Nahant
A Sage Hath Departed
A Voice from Mount Auburn
A Voice from the Wine Press
Address to an Infant
Address to the Automaton Chess Player
American Hymn
Apprehension
Blowing Bubbles
Captain Kidd
Changes on the deep
Childhood's Dream
Columbia's Birth-Day
Cupid's Warning
Dame Biddy
David and Goliath
Death of Sir Walter Scott
Dirge for Felicia Hemans
Echo
Edward and Charles
Epistle to a Friend
Evening at Andover Seminary-Hill
Father, Hear!
Folly Made Left-Handed
Forest Music
Fragments from "Esther" - A Poem
Funeral Dirge
Funeral Hymn for President Harrison
Gone in her Beauty
Greetin Mary
Hymn of the Parting Class
Hymn of the Reapers
Hymn to Solitude
I caught a Bird
I shall be Satisfied
Infant Faith
It Snows
Jemmy String
Kit with the Rose
Lexington's dead
Liberty
Mary Dow
McLellan's tomb
Mount Olivet
Music
Music of the Crickets
My Father
My Head
My Own Wild Bower
My Portrait
My Rose Tree
Native Attachment
Our Father's Well
Patty Proud
Pocahontas
Recollections
Requiem for Lafayette
Sarah
She Died, as Dawned Her Natal Day
Sisera
Song of the Bees
Sunrise to the Slave
Teachings of God
The Broken Pipe
The Seaman's Hymn
The Alabaster Box
The Anemone
The Autumn Rose-Bud
The Bed on the Beach
The Bee and the Child
The Bee, Clover, and Thistle
The Believer's Mountains
The Bellwort
The Benefactor
The Bible in the Fields
The Bird Uncaged
The Bird's Home
The Bird's Maternal Care
The Black at Church
The Blind Man
The Bridemaid
The Broken Hearted
The Burial of Schiller
The Caged Lion
The Captive Butterfly
The Caterpillar
The Child of a Year and a Day
The Child on the Beach
The Conqueror
The Consignment
The Coronation
The Cross
The Death of Sapphira
The Deer stricken by Torch-Light
The Departing Spirit
The Departure
The Dying Exile
The Dying Storm
The Empaled Butterfly
The Empty Bird's Nest
The Entangled Fly
The Envious Lobster
The Fall of the Statue
The Flower of Shells and Silver Wire
The Frost
The Frozen Dove
The Fruit-Tree Blossom
The half Apple
The Hebrew Captives
The Herald's Cry in the Desert
The Hoary Head
The Horticulturist's Table-Hymn
The Humming-Bird's Anger
The Infant Baptist
The inner Self
The Lake of Killarney
The Lily
The Little Blind Boy
The Little Foot
The little Traveller
The lock of hair
The Loose Feather
The Maniac
The Mariner's Song of Departure
The Meteor
The Mocking Bird
The Moon of a wintry Night
The Mother's Dream
The Mushroom's Soliloquy
The Musical Box
The Night and the Morning
The Nun
The Peach Blossoms
The Penitential Tear
The Pilgrim's Way Song
The Playthings
The Plymouth Apple declined
The Quaker Flower
The Rising Monument
The Robe
The Sabbath
The Sale of the Water-Lily
The Sea-Eagle's Fall
The Silver Birdsnest
The Soul's Farewell
The Sovereign of Babylon
The Speckled One
The Spirit and the Mountain
The Star
The Storm
The Storm in the Forest
The Sun-Dial's Matins
The Traveller at the Red Sea
The Trunk from Sea
The Uprooted Elm
The Voice of the Eagle
The War-Spirit on Bunker's Height
The Weeper
The Wheat Field
The Whip-Poor-Will
The White Cloud
The White Moth.
The Widow's only Son
The Young Mother
Thoughts
Through the Clouds
Time
To A ******
To L. A. E. on her Wedding-day
To Mrs. H. F. L.
To my Watch
To the Mourner
Tom Tar
Trees for the Pilgrim's Wreath
Vivy Vain
What is This?
Who is my Neighbour?
William at Sea
Written in an Album

Hannah Flagg Gould (September 3, 1789 – September 5, 1865) was an American poet.

Life

Gould was born in Lancaster, Massachusetts, but while yet a child her father moved to Newburyport, Massachusetts. Her father, Benjamin Gould (1751-1841), had been a soldier in the American Revolutionary War, and after her mother's death, she became his constant companion, which accounts for the patriotism of her earlier verses.

Home of Hannah Flagg Gould in Newburyport, Massachusetts
Early in her career, she wrote for several periodicals, and in 1832 her poetical pieces were collected in a volume. In 1835 and in 1841 second and third volumes appeared, each titled simply Poems, and in 1846 she collected a volume of her prose compositions, titled Gathered Leaves. Of her poetry, a writer in the Christian Examiner remarked that it was "impossible to find fault. It is so sweet and unpretending, so pure in purpose and so gentle in expression that criticism is disarmed of all severity and engaged to say nothing of it but good. It is poetry for a sober, quiet, kindly-affectioned Christian heart. It is poetry for a united family circle in their hours of peace and leisure. For such companionship it was made, and into such it will find, and has found, its way". One of her more popular verses, A Name in the Sand, was often misattributed to better-known authors, such as Charles Dickens and George D. Prentice.

She led a quiet life in the homestead where she resided for half a century — a life that would have been as secluded as it was unostentatious but for her genial hospitality and the many visitors and distinguished authors who sought her acquaintance. Her nephew was the noted astronomer Benjamin Apthorp Gould. She died at Newburyport, September 5, 1865.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Hannah Flagg Gould, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. ( view authors).