Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Augustine Joseph Hickey Duganne

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Name
  
Augustine Hickey


Role
  
Poet

Died
  
1884, New York City, New York, United States

Books
  
Parnassus in Pillory: A Satire, Camps and Prisons: Twenty M, Camps and Prisons Twenty M, Camps and Prisons - Twenty M, Injuresoul: A Satire for Science

Augustine Joseph Hickey Duganne (1823–1884) was a Civil War era American poet, playwright, and dime novelist. He is the author of Camps and Prison (1865), a vivid account of his Civil War experiences as a Union officer.

Contents

Quote

"Pleasure which must be enjoyed at the expense of another's pain, can never be enjoyed by a worthy mind. Pleasure's couch is virtue's grave."

Poetical Works

Duganne's lyrics were published in a number of labor papers in the 1840s. He kept the notion that the poet must write for and in the interests of the working class, his mission is clear in the poem, "The Song of Toil". In 1897, the Birmingham Labor Advocate published an edited version of his soulful poem, "Keep It Before the People." The poem exalts the strength, freedom, and natural equality of all humankind, and concludes with the rallying cry: Keep it before the people:/ That the laborer claims his need:/ The right of soil,/ And the right of toil,/ From spur and bridle freed;/ The right to bear,/ And the right to share,/ With you and me, my brother!/ What is given,/ By God from heaven,/ To one as well as another!

References

Augustine Joseph Hickey Duganne Wikipedia