This anthology assembles the verse of Henry van Dyke Jr. , drawn from a lifetime of output that stretched from the 1870s into the 1920s. His poems capture the breadth of his existence—both the outward man and the inner one—shifting seamlessly from odes to the raw beauty of the American wilderness to meditations steeped in unyielding Christian conviction. A substantial portion of the collection comprises the rousing patriotic pieces he penned while serving as a U.S. envoy in Europe, as the guns of the Great War began to thunder. Born in 1852 and gone by 1933, van Dyke cut a towering figure in American letters and public life: a bestselling novelist, a steadfast Presbyterian minister, a Princeton professor, and a diplomat who rubbed shoulders with kings and presidents. While readers still cherish his heartwarming Christmas tales, like "The Other Wise Man," it was his poetry that left his enduring mark on the world. This collection includes his crowning achievement, "Hymn of Joy" (better known by its first line "Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee"), as well as the poem "For Katrina's Sun-Dial" (also known as "Time Is"), lines from which echoed through Westminster Abbey at the funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales. Henry van Dyke Jr. was a significant literary figure whose work has stood the test of time. This public domain edition preserves the original text in its entirety, making it accessible to modern readers and scholars alike. Poetry has always been the most concentrated and powerful form of literary expression. The verse collected in Poetry represents a high point of the poetic tradition, offering language of beauty and precision that speaks to the deepest levels of human experience.











