I spend an enormous amount of time ferreting through old tomes and philatelic journals looking for material, which may of interest to our readers.

I recently acquired some copies of The Eastern Philatelist for 1889 (published by W. H. Goodrich, Fitchburg, Massachusetts) and in the February edition found this rather charming and evocative poem entitled “Their Designs.”

It reads as follows:

 

As I glance in my haste o’er the pages,

My album presents to my view,

I think of the various symbols

Impressed upon stamps, old and new.

 

Fair France with her anchor and virgins,

Old Turkey with crescent and star,

Denmark with crown, shield and lions,

Then Baden with griffins and bar.

 

Proud Austria comes with her eagles,

And Hungary’s horn, wreath and crown

Are followed by Spain’s oblong framings,

From which her dead rulers look down.

 

While Barbadoes, Cyprus and Fiji,

Tobago and fair Trinidad,

Together with Queensland and Natal,

Do honor to England’s brave head.

 

At last but not least in my rev’rence,

Our nation among them appears

With her presidents, gen’rals and statesmen,

Who’ve flourished and lived in past years.

 

The figures confuse and commingle.

Bewildered, I turn me away,

And leave all my fancies and dreaming,

For tasks that await me today.

 

It was written by Guy W. Green.

 

Do any of our readers know anything about Guy Green? We would be interested to hear from you…