Robert Underwood Johnson

Robert Underwood Johnson Poems

What is there wanting in the Spring?
The air is soft as yesteryear;
The happy-nested green is here,
...

Here in the dark what ghostly figures press!—
No phantom of the Past, or grim or sad;
No wailing spirit of woe; no spectre, clad
...

THOU half-unfolded flower
With fragrance-laden heart,
What is the secret power
...

It was the time of our despair,
When lion-hearted Washington --
That man of patience and of prayer --
Looked sadly at each rising sun.
...

AS a bell in a chime
Sets its twin-note a-ringing,
As one poet’s rhyme
Wakes another to singing,
...

THIS is the loggia Browning loved,
High on the flank of the friendly town;
These are the hills that his keen eye roved,
...

SILENCE was envious of the only voice
That mightier seemed than she. So, cloaked as Death,
With potion borrowed from Oblivion,
...

Land of the Martyrs-of the martyred dead
And martyred living-now of noble fame!
Long wert thou saddest of the nations, wed
...

Robert Underwood Johnson Biography

Robert Underwood Johnson (January 12, 1853 – October 14, 1937) was a U.S. writer and diplomat. His wife was Katharine Johnson. A native of Washington, D.C., Johnson joined the staff of the The Century Magazine in 1873. He became the magazine's associate editor in 1881, and in 1909, on the death of Richard Watson Gilder, succeeded to the editorial chair, which he occupied until May 1913. Johnson was also a longtime writer and editor for Scribner's Monthly. Using the influence of The Century Magazine, Underwood, in conjunction with famed naturalist John Muir, was one of the driving forces behind the creation of Yosemite National Park in the California in 1890. In 1889, Johnson also encouraged Muir to "start an association" to help protect the Sierra Nevada, inspiring the formation of the Sierra Club in 1892. In the 1890s, he and his wife Katharine became very close friends with the inventor Nikola Tesla. Underwood became noted early for his work on international copyright. As secretary of the American Copyright League, he helped get the Law of 1891 passed, for which he was decorated by the French and Italian governments. He had a hand in many important publishing undertakings, and it was on his persuasion that Ulysses S. Grant wrote his Memoirs. He became permanent secretary of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He was a driving force for the effort to acquire and preserve as a museum the rooms in Rome where the poet John Keats and his friend Joseph Severn spent Keats's final months in 1821. You can visit this Keats Shelley Memorial in Rome today, where its windows look out over the Spanish Steps. In 1916 he acted as pallbearer for the funeral of Alexander Wilson Drake. In 1917 he organized and was chairman of the American Poets' Ambulance in Italy. This organization presented 112 ambulances to the Italian army in four months. In 1918-19 he was president of the New York Committee of the Italian War Relief Fund of America. He served as the U.S. Ambassador to Italy from April 1920 to July 1921, and represented the United States as observer at the San Remo conference of the Supreme Council of the League. He was decorated by the Italian government in recognition of his work in behalf of good relations between Italy and the United States.)

The Best Poem Of Robert Underwood Johnson

The Wistful Days

What is there wanting in the Spring?
The air is soft as yesteryear;
The happy-nested green is here,
And half the world is on the wing.
The morning beckons, and like balm
Are westward waters blue and calm.
Yet something’s wanting in the Spring.

What is it wanting in the Spring?
O April, lover to us all,
What is so poignant in thy thrall
When children’s merry voices ring?
What haunts us in the cooing dove
More subtle than the speech of Love,
What nameless lack or loss of Spring?

Let Youth go dally with the Spring,
Call her the dear, the fair, the young;
And all her graces ever sung
Let him, once more rehearsing, sing.
They know, who keep a broken tryst,
Till something from the Spring be missed
We have not truly known the Spring.

Robert Underwood Johnson Comments

Everett Taylor 16 March 2019

While birth mother of Robert Underwood Johnson visited her parents in Washington DC, she gave birth to him. Wife of Judge Nimrod Johnson, she returned with baby boy (Robert Underwood Johnson) to their Centerville, Indiana home. Their son (Robert U.) grew, educated, benefiting from small town advantage of Centerville, Indiana. Stimulated by his brilliant father, surrounding of nature (poetry) , limitless experiences.

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