ai tlje^ittlîgrsttg of TorontoMrs. Harold HunterI^.IRÈ 1M 0.^'TVyM IRE I O.PROVENÇAL PA OEM,BYFRÉDÉRIC MISTRAL.ITRANSLÀTED BV HARRIET W. PRESTON.BOSTON:ROBERTS BROTHERS.1885.285according to Act of Congress, in the year 1872, by£nteredROBKRTS BROTHBRS,Librarian of Congress at Washington.In the Ofl&îe of theLIBRARY7S7715KnibetBîtg îJrcsg:John Wilson and Cambridge.Son,VTO LAMARTINE.TE CONSECEE MIRÈIO: ES MOON COR E MOUN AMO,ES LA FLOUK DE MIS AN.ES UN KAISIN DE CRAU QU'EMÉ TOUTO SA RAMO,TE PORGE UN PAÏSAN.I OFPEB THES MIRÈIO: IT 13 MY HEART AND SPIRIT,THE BLOSSOM OF MY YEARS.A Ol^STER OF CRAU GRAPES, WITH ALL THE GREEN LEAVES KEAB IT,TO THEE A PEASANT BEABS.^v^PREFACE."nr^HE words, Translated from the Provençal,"only confusedsuggest to the ordinary reader aimage of mediceval life amid southemand dazzling—scenery, troubadours and courts of love, knights,ladies, and toumaments. Few of us hâve even beenlong-buried root of Romance poetry hasaware that thelate sent up a green and graceful shoot, and thatofliteraryone of the most charming épisodes of récentin France as the Pro-history concerns what is knownvençal revival. The story is thus told by Saint-RenéMondes," forTaillandier, in the "Revue des Deux—October, 1859:"This new Provençal poetry, which has created aandcertain sensation of late, had a very simple touch-ing origin. The son of a gardener of Saint-Rémy,in our French schools, wrote verses at the âgeteducated—to ...
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