Hesperia (poem)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hesperia: A Poem is a lengthy verse volume by Richard Henry Wilde (1789–1847), an Irish-American lawyer, and first edited and published by his son in 1867.[1] The title work is described as "a nationalistic poem in four cantos", named as "Florida", "Virginia", "Acadia", and "Louisiana";[2] and as "one of the few full-length poems by early southern writers".[3]
The Oxford Companion to American Literature, fourth edition, described Hesperia as "a long poem in Tom Moore's vein."[4] The Encyclopedia of American Poetry: The Nineteenth Century calls it "part epic, part Byronesque narrative in the manner of Childe Harold, part autobiography and part philosophic essay." It is written in ottava rima.[5]