
THE LAST WEST - ——AND——
G. B. WARREN
CONTENTS
A SPRING PHANTASY
SCENE I. - SEASHORE AT THE MOUTH OF A CREEK
A vivid tapestry of verse, this collection captures the raw grandeur of the Pacific Northwest at the turn of the twentieth century. From the first light spilling over Boundary Bay to the icy cliffs of the Cascade Range, each poem paints a distinct landscape—storm‑swept peaks, mist‑cloaked fjords, and bustling coastal towns—while the speaker’s voice carries the awe of an alpinist confronting nature’s edge. The rhythm of soaring birds, the crack of distant avalanches, and the hush of sunrise invite listeners to feel the wind and hear the echo of distant rivers.
Interwoven with the mountain reveries is “Paolo’s Virginia,” a spring‑time fantasia that shifts the focus to softer, meadow‑filled scenes and quiet introspection. Together the pieces offer a lyrical journey through wild wilderness, early settlements, and the timeless pull of horizons yet to be explored, all rendered in language that balances rugged adventure with gentle reflection.
Language
en
Duration
~35 minutes (34K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A little-known early 20th-century writer whose surviving work pairs lyric poetry with a dramatic story set against western landscapes. The available record is thin, but the book that remains suggests a strong interest in scenery, mood, and romantic storytelling.
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