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{{Infobox writer
{{in use}}
] | image = Madge Morris Wagner (The Lure of the Desert Land And Other Poems, 1917).png
| alt =
'''Madge Morris Wagner''' ({{nee}} '''Morris'''; 1862-1924) was an American poet and journalist associated with '']''. She was a contemporary and friend of ] and ].<ref name="Overland1924">{{cite journal |last1=Wait Colburn |first1=Frona Eunice |title=A California Poetess - As I Knew Her |journal=Overland Monthly and The Out West Magazine |date=May 1924 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CXjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA205 |access-date=13 January 2025 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>
| caption = Wagner in ''The Lure of the Desert'', 1917
| birth_name = Madge Morris
| birth_date = April 25, 1862
| birth_place = ], U.S.
| death_date = February 27, 1924
| death_place = ], ], U.S.
| occupation = {{hlist|journalist|newspaper editor|poet|writer}}
| genre = {{hlist|poetry|novels}}
| notable_works = "Liberty Bell"
| spouse = Harr Wagner
| children = 2
| signature = Madge Morris signature (Poems, 1885).png
}}
'''Madge Morris Wagner''' ({{nee}} '''Morris'''; 1862–1924) was an American poet and journalist associated with '']''. She was a contemporary and friend of ] and ].<ref name="Overland1924">{{cite journal |last1=Wait Colburn |first1=Frona Eunice |title=A California Poetess - As I Knew Her |journal=Overland Monthly and the Out West Magazine |date=May 1924 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CXjPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA205 |access-date=13 January 2025 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> Some of Wagner's poems were known around the world.<ref name="Overland1928" />


==Early life and education==
Madge Morris was born April 25, 1862, on the ] when her parents were enroute to ]. She was a descendant of Capt. Morris, who built Fort Morris, in ] <ref name="Appleton1901">{{cite book |last1=Wilson |first1=James Grant |last2=Fiske |first2=John |title=Appleton's Cyclopædia of American Biography |date=1901 |publisher=D. Appleton |page=273 |url=https://en.wikisource.org/Appletons%27_Cyclop%C3%A6dia_of_American_Biography/Wagner,_Madge_Morris |via=Wikisource |access-date=13 January 2025 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> Madge Morris was born April 25, 1862, in ],<ref name="Overland1924" /> on the plains when her parents were en route to ]. She was a descendant of Capt. Morris, who built Fort Morris, in ].<ref name="Appleton1901">{{cite book |last1=Wilson |first1=James Grant |last2=Fiske |first2=John |title=Appleton's Cyclopædia of American Biography |date=1901 |publisher=D. Appleton |page=273 |url=https://en.wikisource.org/Appletons%27_Cyclop%C3%A6dia_of_American_Biography/Wagner,_Madge_Morris |via=Wikisource |access-date=13 January 2025 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>


She was educated in the common schools.<ref name="Appleton1901" /> She was educated in the common schools.<ref name="Appleton1901" />


==Career==
Early on, Wagner became a journalist and poet.<ref name="Appleton1901" /> Her early work in verse was begun in ]. There she served as reporter and special writer on J. J. Owen's ''Daily Mercury'', with many of her stanzas appearing there, too. Her notability dates to an order given her, half in jest, by Owen to go to the top of the {{convert|180|feet}} electric tower at Market and Santa Clara streets, and write a poem on the panorama of ] to be seen from that dangerous height. Madge took the order seriously. In those days, there was a big bucket run with a windlass which took the electrician up to inspect the lanterns on top. Climbing into this bucket, she was hauled up the tower. Here, unfazed by the dizzy height, she wrote:<ref name="Bland1924" /> Early on, Wagner became a journalist and poet.<ref name="Appleton1901" /> Her early work in verse was begun in ], where she lived in the 1880s.<ref name="PacificShort1917">{{cite journal |title=Two New Western Books |journal=Pacific Short Story Club Magazine |date=August 1917 |volume=10 |issue=2 |page=30 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BrAVAQAAIAAJ&pg=RA7-PA30 |access-date=14 January 2025 |publisher=Pacific Short Story Club |language=en}}</ref> There she served as reporter and special writer on J. J. Owen's ''Daily Mercury'', with many of her stanzas appearing there, too. Her notability dates to an order given her, half in jest, by Owen to go to the top of the {{convert|180|feet}} electric tower at Market and Santa Clara streets, and write a poem on the panorama of ] to be seen from that dangerous height. Madge took the order seriously. In those days, there was a big bucket run with a windlass which took the electrician up to inspect the lanterns on top. Climbing into this bucket, she was hauled up the tower. Here, unfazed by the dizzy height, she wrote:<ref name="Bland1924" />


<poem> <poem>
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</poem> </poem>


Her patriotic poem "Liberty Bell" led to the construction of the ].<ref name="Appleton1901" /> With this, Wagner reached the acme of her notability when, in 1893, because of her poem, she and William McDowell, who conceived a great bell for the ], were voted by the ] authorities the freedom of the city.<ref name="Bland1924" /> Her patriotic poem "Liberty Bell" led to the construction of the ].<ref name="Appleton1901" /> With this, Wagner reached the acme of her notability when, in 1893, because of her poem, she and ], who conceived a great bell for the ], were voted by the ] authorities the freedom of the city.<ref name="Bland1924" /> Wagner's husband received a letter from McDowell, stating that his wife was appointed honorary member of the committee to create and direct the use of the Columbian Liberty Bell to be rung at the World's Fair. The bell was to be made up of slaves' chains from all parts of the world and contributions of silver, gold and copper money. It was to be cast at ]. The idea, expressed in one of Wagner's poems, was adopted as the fundamental motive in the casting of the bell, hence her appointment to an honorary position on the committee having the work in charge.<ref name="Mighels1893" /> One of the most notable receptions at the Exposition was that tendered by the women of the California Building, July 6, 1893, to Wagner, of San Diego, the object being to give special recognition to the fact that it was a California woman whose poem prompted the making of the new Liberty Bell.<ref name="Final1894">{{cite book |author1=California World's Fair Commission |title=Final Report of the California World's Fair Commission: Including a Description of All Exhibits from the State of California, Collected and Maintained Under Legislative Enactments, at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893 |date=1894 |publisher=State Office, A.J. Johnston, Superintendent State Printing |page=84 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QBYLAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA84 |access-date=14 January 2025 |language=en |chapter=Receptions, meetings, etc.}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>


Wagner's verse may be divided into two kinds—one is that which contains the pathetic note, the other the suppressed fire. "The Little Brown Bird" is typical of the former, the "Mystery of Carmel" the latter. Many of her poems were well adapted to recitation, such as "My Ships at Sea", "The Liberty Bell", and "Rocking the Baby".<ref name="Mighels1893" />
From 1885 to 1895, she was the editor of ''The Golden Era'', to which ], ], and ] were constant contributors. Wagner is the author of ''Débris, a Book of Poems'' (], 1881); ''Mystery of Carmel, and other Poems'' (1885); and a novel, ''The Titled Plebeian'' (1890).<ref name="Appleton1901" />


From 1885 to 1895, she was the editor of ''The Golden Era'', to which ], ], and ] were constant contributors.<ref name="Appleton1901" /> When the magazine was transplanted to ], Wagner became assistant editor.<ref name="Mighels1924">Mighels, Ella Sterling (May 1924), Her Pen Is Stilled, ''Overland Magazine'', p. 206</ref> While serving as editor of ''The Golden Era'', every edition contained some felicitous quatrain or longer poem, or entertaining story written by her. Her style was characterized by originality and suppressed fire. She wrote prose as well as verse. Her most ambitious work was a patriotic novel, entitled ''A Titled Plebeian''. Her shorter stories were intense and strong in local color, such as "Buzzard's Roost" and a "Memory of Adamsville".<ref name="Mighels1893">{{cite book |last1=Mighels |first1=Ella Sterling |title=The Story of the Files: A Review of California Writers and Literature |date=1893 |publisher=Cooperative Printing Company |pages=277–84 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BMduZ2-RtaUC&pg=PA277 |access-date=14 January 2025 |language=en |chapter=Later Golden Era, 1882-1893. Editors, Harr Wagner, E. T. Bunyan, Madge Morris Wagner.}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>
A quest for health and a love for western arid lands took Wagner to the Colorado desert where she wrote deeply emotional sons. Her lyrics caught the attention of the editor of ''Lippincott's Magazine'', and she was persuaded to write for this periodical. Among her contributions was "The Colorado Desert". In technique "The Colorado Desert" is not conventional verse - it has no symmetry of either line or rhyme, nor is it free verse. In construction, there is a single-alternate rhymed quatrain, then a rhymed couplet. But this scheme is not continued in the succeeding six lines. A blank couplet follows after this. Here, a line shortens to four accents; there, another draws itself out to six. The whole is was characterized as weird and broken, yet beautifully poetic.<ref name="Bland1924" /> Wait characterized it as "the best poem ever written by a California woman".<ref name="Overland1924" />


Wagner was the author of ''Débris, a Book of Poems'' (], 1881); ''Mystery of Carmel, and other Poems'' (1885); and a novel, ''The Titled Plebeian'' (1890).<ref name="Appleton1901" />
In the prime of her life, she lived in a cottage in ], later named the Madge Morris Wagner Lodge.<ref name="Bland1924">Bland, Henry Meade (May 1924), Madge Morris Wagner, ''Overland Monthly and The Out West Magazine'', p. 204</ref>

A quest to improve her health and a love for western arid lands took Wagner to the ] desert where she wrote deeply emotional songs. Her lyrics caught the attention of the editor of ''Lippincott's Magazine'', and she was persuaded to write for this periodical. Among her contributions was "The Colorado Desert". In technique "The Colorado Desert" is not conventional verse - it has no symmetry of either line or rhyme, nor is it free verse. In construction, there is a single-alternate rhymed quatrain, then a rhymed couplet. But this scheme is not continued in the succeeding six lines. A blank couplet follows after this. Here, a line shortens to four accents; there, another draws itself out to six. The whole is was characterized as weird and broken, yet beautifully poetic.<ref name="Bland1924" /> Wait characterized it as "the best poem ever written by a California woman".<ref name="Overland1924" />

], in his ''Course of Lectures on California Literature and its Spirit'' included Wagner with the "Poets of San Jose", for it was there that she first became known as a contributor to the press.<ref name="Mighels1924" />

==Personal life==
]
She married Harr Wagner, editor of ''The Golden Era''. They had two daughters.<ref name="Overland1924" />

For many years, they resided in San Francisco.<ref name="Overland1928">{{cite journal |last1=Field |first1=Ben |title=Literary Magazines of the Western World |journal=Overland Monthly |date=October 1928 |volume=86 |page=342 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U8fD4Xl8-lMC&pg=PA342 |access-date=14 January 2025 |publisher=Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref> In the prime of her life, Wagner lived in a cottage in ], later named the Madge Morris Wagner Lodge.<ref name="Bland1924">Bland, Henry Meade (May 1924), Madge Morris Wagner, ''Overland Monthly and The Out West Magazine'', p. 204</ref> In retirement, for many years, she was a resident of San Diego, California.<ref name="Godey1897">{{cite journal |last1=Vore |first1=Elizabeth A. |last2=Connor |first2=J. Torrey |title=California poets at home |journal=Godey's Magazine |date=July 1897 |volume=135 |issue=805 |page=77 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Fd4RAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA77 |access-date=14 January 2025 |publisher=Godey Company |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>

Her literary work was impeded by poor health, and for long periods, she wrote little.<ref name="Munsey1896">{{cite journal |last1=Flesher |first1=Helen Gregory |title=Literary Workers of the Pacific Coast |journal=Munsey's Magazine |date=1896 |volume=15 |page=102 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fBRFAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA102 |access-date=14 January 2025 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>

Self-effacing to a marked degree, Wagner thought more of the welfare and interests of others than of herself. She was singularly susceptible to surroundings and the moods of her associates. This trait was her greatest weakness, and was the source of her shyness and retiring disposition.<ref name="Overland1924" />

Madge Morris Wagner died at her home in San Francisco, February 27, 1924.<ref name="SFJournal1924">{{cite news |title=Funeral services for California poetess |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-san-francisco-journal-and-daily-jour/162991016/ |access-date=14 January 2025 |work=The San Francisco Journal and Daily Journal of Commerce |via=] |date=1 March 1924 |page=7 |language=en}} {{Source-attribution}}</ref>

==Selected works==
* ''Debris'' (Sacramento, 1881) ()
* ''Poems'' (San Francisco, 1885) ()
* ''A Titled Plebeian'' (San Francisco, 1890)
* ''The Lure of the Desert and Other Poems'' (San Francisco, 1917) ()
* ''Autobiography of a Tame Coyote'', illustrations by James A. Holden (San Francisco, 1921) ()
* ''Metric, a novel''


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}

==External links==
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Madge Morris Wagner}}
* at allpoetry.com


{{authority control}} {{authority control}}
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Latest revision as of 01:06, 15 January 2025

Madge Morris Wagner
Wagner in The Lure of the Desert, 1917Wagner in The Lure of the Desert, 1917
BornMadge Morris
April 25, 1862
Oregon, U.S.
DiedFebruary 27, 1924
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Occupation
  • journalist
  • newspaper editor
  • poet
  • writer
Genre
  • poetry
  • novels
Notable works"Liberty Bell"
SpouseHarr Wagner
Children2
Signature

Madge Morris Wagner (née Morris; 1862–1924) was an American poet and journalist associated with The Golden Era. She was a contemporary and friend of Clara Shortridge Foltz and Frona Eunice Wait. Some of Wagner's poems were known around the world.

Early life and education

Madge Morris was born April 25, 1862, in Oregon, on the plains when her parents were en route to California. She was a descendant of Capt. Morris, who built Fort Morris, in Virginia.

She was educated in the common schools.

Career

Early on, Wagner became a journalist and poet. Her early work in verse was begun in San Jose, California, where she lived in the 1880s. There she served as reporter and special writer on J. J. Owen's Daily Mercury, with many of her stanzas appearing there, too. Her notability dates to an order given her, half in jest, by Owen to go to the top of the 180 feet (55 m) electric tower at Market and Santa Clara streets, and write a poem on the panorama of Santa Clara Valley to be seen from that dangerous height. Madge took the order seriously. In those days, there was a big bucket run with a windlass which took the electrician up to inspect the lanterns on top. Climbing into this bucket, she was hauled up the tower. Here, unfazed by the dizzy height, she wrote:

"I stood on the topmost tower,
And never again till I die,
Shall I glimpse such a wondrous dower
As came in that vision high."

Her patriotic poem "Liberty Bell" led to the construction of the Columbian Liberty Bell. With this, Wagner reached the acme of her notability when, in 1893, because of her poem, she and William Osborne McDowell, who conceived a great bell for the World's Columbian Exposition, were voted by the Chicago authorities the freedom of the city. Wagner's husband received a letter from McDowell, stating that his wife was appointed honorary member of the committee to create and direct the use of the Columbian Liberty Bell to be rung at the World's Fair. The bell was to be made up of slaves' chains from all parts of the world and contributions of silver, gold and copper money. It was to be cast at Troy, New York. The idea, expressed in one of Wagner's poems, was adopted as the fundamental motive in the casting of the bell, hence her appointment to an honorary position on the committee having the work in charge. One of the most notable receptions at the Exposition was that tendered by the women of the California Building, July 6, 1893, to Wagner, of San Diego, the object being to give special recognition to the fact that it was a California woman whose poem prompted the making of the new Liberty Bell.

Wagner's verse may be divided into two kinds—one is that which contains the pathetic note, the other the suppressed fire. "The Little Brown Bird" is typical of the former, the "Mystery of Carmel" the latter. Many of her poems were well adapted to recitation, such as "My Ships at Sea", "The Liberty Bell", and "Rocking the Baby".

From 1885 to 1895, she was the editor of The Golden Era, to which Bret Harte, Joaquin Miller, and Mark Twain were constant contributors. When the magazine was transplanted to San Diego, California, Wagner became assistant editor. While serving as editor of The Golden Era, every edition contained some felicitous quatrain or longer poem, or entertaining story written by her. Her style was characterized by originality and suppressed fire. She wrote prose as well as verse. Her most ambitious work was a patriotic novel, entitled A Titled Plebeian. Her shorter stories were intense and strong in local color, such as "Buzzard's Roost" and a "Memory of Adamsville".

Wagner was the author of Débris, a Book of Poems (San Francisco, 1881); Mystery of Carmel, and other Poems (1885); and a novel, The Titled Plebeian (1890).

A quest to improve her health and a love for western arid lands took Wagner to the Colorado desert where she wrote deeply emotional songs. Her lyrics caught the attention of the editor of Lippincott's Magazine, and she was persuaded to write for this periodical. Among her contributions was "The Colorado Desert". In technique "The Colorado Desert" is not conventional verse - it has no symmetry of either line or rhyme, nor is it free verse. In construction, there is a single-alternate rhymed quatrain, then a rhymed couplet. But this scheme is not continued in the succeeding six lines. A blank couplet follows after this. Here, a line shortens to four accents; there, another draws itself out to six. The whole is was characterized as weird and broken, yet beautifully poetic. Wait characterized it as "the best poem ever written by a California woman".

George Wharton James, in his Course of Lectures on California Literature and its Spirit included Wagner with the "Poets of San Jose", for it was there that she first became known as a contributor to the press.

Personal life

Wagner in Overland Magazine, 1924

She married Harr Wagner, editor of The Golden Era. They had two daughters.

For many years, they resided in San Francisco. In the prime of her life, Wagner lived in a cottage in Joaquin Miller Park, later named the Madge Morris Wagner Lodge. In retirement, for many years, she was a resident of San Diego, California.

Her literary work was impeded by poor health, and for long periods, she wrote little.

Self-effacing to a marked degree, Wagner thought more of the welfare and interests of others than of herself. She was singularly susceptible to surroundings and the moods of her associates. This trait was her greatest weakness, and was the source of her shyness and retiring disposition.

Madge Morris Wagner died at her home in San Francisco, February 27, 1924.

Selected works

  • Debris (Sacramento, 1881) (text)
  • Poems (San Francisco, 1885) (text)
  • A Titled Plebeian (San Francisco, 1890)
  • The Lure of the Desert and Other Poems (San Francisco, 1917) (text)
  • Autobiography of a Tame Coyote, illustrations by James A. Holden (San Francisco, 1921) (text)
  • Metric, a novel

References

  1. ^ Wait Colburn, Frona Eunice (May 1924). "A California Poetess - As I Knew Her". Overland Monthly and the Out West Magazine. Retrieved 13 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ Field, Ben (October 1928). "Literary Magazines of the Western World". Overland Monthly. 86. Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine: 342. Retrieved 14 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John (1901). Appleton's Cyclopædia of American Biography. D. Appleton. p. 273. Retrieved 13 January 2025 – via Wikisource. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  4. "Two New Western Books". Pacific Short Story Club Magazine. 10 (2). Pacific Short Story Club: 30. August 1917. Retrieved 14 January 2025.
  5. ^ Bland, Henry Meade (May 1924), Madge Morris Wagner, Overland Monthly and The Out West Magazine, p. 204
  6. ^ Mighels, Ella Sterling (1893). "Later Golden Era, 1882-1893. Editors, Harr Wagner, E. T. Bunyan, Madge Morris Wagner.". The Story of the Files: A Review of California Writers and Literature. Cooperative Printing Company. pp. 277–84. Retrieved 14 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  7. California World's Fair Commission (1894). "Receptions, meetings, etc.". Final Report of the California World's Fair Commission: Including a Description of All Exhibits from the State of California, Collected and Maintained Under Legislative Enactments, at the World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893. State Office, A.J. Johnston, Superintendent State Printing. p. 84. Retrieved 14 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. ^ Mighels, Ella Sterling (May 1924), Her Pen Is Stilled, Overland Magazine, p. 206
  9. Vore, Elizabeth A.; Connor, J. Torrey (July 1897). "California poets at home". Godey's Magazine. 135 (805). Godey Company: 77. Retrieved 14 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  10. Flesher, Helen Gregory (1896). "Literary Workers of the Pacific Coast". Munsey's Magazine. 15: 102. Retrieved 14 January 2025. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  11. "Funeral services for California poetess". The San Francisco Journal and Daily Journal of Commerce. 1 March 1924. p. 7. Retrieved 14 January 2025 – via Newspapers.com. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

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