"The Land Where We Were Dreaming" was first published in the
Montreal Gazette and was reprinted widely in the United States and England. It was dated "Chambly, June 1865". In 1869, he published a collection called
The Wreath of Eglantine. The book's first part contains poetry by his sister, Virginia Bedinger Lucas, who had died young (she was born in 1838 and died at age 27) but had published some poems in various Southern journals under the pen name "Eglantine"; this first section is called "The Wreath of Eglantine". The second part of the volume is his own work, in three sections: "Patriotic and National Poems" (poetry inspired by the
Lost Cause), "Tintographic Melodies" (lyrical and meditative poems, including an elegy on his sister), and "Saint Agnes of Guienne" (a long poem based on the life of
Agnes of Poitou). His poems from that book, and his published and unpublished poetry, were edited and republished by
Charles W. Kent, then of the University of Virginia, in 1913. His work on this theme resulted in frequent requests for memorial poems for dedications, such as the consecration of the Stonewall Cemetery in
Winchester, Virginia in 1866, and the dedication of the Confederate Monument in
Charlestown, West Virginia in 1871. Further works included such poems as ''Jackson's Grave
and A.P.Hill''. •
The Wreath of Eglantine, and Other Poems (Baltimore: Kelly, Piet & Company, 1869) •
The Maid of Northumberland: A Dramatic Poem (New York: G.P. Putman's Sons, 1879) •
Ballads and Madrigals (New York: Pollard & Moss, 1884) •
The Land Where We Were Dreaming (Boston: Roger G. Badger/Gorham Press, 1913) == Prose ==