Poems by Jean Ingelow, In Two Volumes, Volume II. by Jean Ingelow
So, it's time to talk about Jean Ingelow and her Poems, Volume II. I'll be honest: I found this dusty old set in a corner of an antique store, and the cover was so faded I almost walked past. But boy, am I glad I didn't. This isn't the showy, dramatic poetry you'd expect from the big names of the era. This is something quieter and somehow braver.
The Story
Let's clear something up: this isn't one long story. It's a collection of poems. But here's the thing—they tell a kind of story through nature, grief, faith, and everyday life. Ingelow writes about ships coming home, children lost, love that's steady as dirt. She watches a lily grow, describes a sunset that feels holy, and captures the way a mourner walks through their day pretending to be okay. The "plot" is really her storytelling magic: she turns snapshots of 19th-century life into moments that still feel fresh. You'll meet soldiers, old women, foolish youths, and silent cats. It's poetry like a window into another time—only that window is cleaner than you might think.
Why You Should Read It
This is the kind of reading experience that sneaks up on you. I went in skeptical, thinking "old lady poetry." But Ingelow's voice is so warm and wise that you feel like she's in the room with you. Her poems wrestle with big, quiet questions: What does it mean to hope when your heart is broken? How do you keep loving people after they're gone? She's not dark and heavy about it—more like she's holding your hand through a very still night. I found myself re-reading lines just to get the full feeling of them. There's a poem about flowers changing color that wrecked me in the best way. Her images cling to you—a frost on the window, a bird in a storm, a girl at a spinning wheel. This volume meant something because it made me slow down in a way that modern shininess doesn't.
Final Verdict
Who is this book for? Honestly, if you love Emily Dickinson, Christina Rossetti, or even Anne of Green Gables (there's a dreaminess that matches), then Ingelow will feel like an old friend. Yes, she's Victorian—some of her rhymes might feel old-fashioned at first, but they learn you quickly. This will speak to romantics, nature lovers, people facing grief, parents of little ones, and anyone who wonders why older books feel 'special.' Not for speed readers or cynics. But settle in with tea on a rainy afternoon? Yes. It sounds gentle while being surprisingly tough. Give her a try, I'm absolutely deep-diving into more Ingelow. Her words stick around—so let me know which lines follow you to sleep tonight.
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