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Eyes of Youth
A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton
Eyes of Youth
A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton
Eyes of Youth
A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton
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Eyes of Youth A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton

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Release dateNov 27, 2013
Eyes of Youth
A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton

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    Eyes of Youth A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, Viola Meynell, Ruth Lindsay, Hugh Austin, Judith Lytton, Olivia Meynell, Maurice Healy, Monica Saleeby & Francis Meynell. With four early poems by Francis Thompson & a foreword by Gilbert K. Chesterton - Various Various

    The Project Gutenberg EBook of Eyes of Youth, by Various

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    Title: Eyes of Youth

    A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum, Shane Leslie, A.O.

    Author: Various

    Release Date: February 9, 2006 [EBook #17735]

    Language: English

    *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EYES OF YOUTH ***

    Produced by Marc D'Hooghe.

    EYES OF YOUTH


    A Book of Verse by Padraic Colum—Shane

    Leslie—Viola Meynell—Ruth Lindsay—

    Hugh Austin—Judith Lytton—Olivia

    Meynell—Maurice Healy—Monica

    Saleeby—Francis Meynell—With

    four early Poems by Francis

    Thompson, & a Foreword by

    Gilbert K. Chesterton.


    He has eyes of youth, he writes verses

    The Merry Wives of Windsor.


    The four early poems of Francis

    Thompson are here published,

    for the first time in book form, by the

    permission of his Literary Executor.

    We have also to thank the Editors

    of The Station, The Tablet, The Outlook,

    The New Age, The Westminster

    Gazette, The Evening Standard, The

    Irish Rosary and The Lamp, for permission

    to re-publish other Verses.


    CONTENTS

    G.K. CHESTERTON

    Foreword

    FRANCIS THOMPSON

    Threatened Tears

    Arab Love Song

    Buona Notte

    The Passion of Mary

    PADRAIC COLUM

    I shall not die for you

    An Idyll

    Christ the Comrade

    Arab Songs (I)

    Arab Songs (II)

    SHANE LESLIE

    A Dead Friend (J.S. 1905)

    Forest Song

    The Bee

    Outside the Carlton

    The Pater of the Cannon

    Fleet Street

    Nightmare

    To a Nobleman becoming Socialist

    St. George-in-the-East

    VIOLA MEYNELL

    The Ruin

    The Dream

    The Wanderer

    Nature is the living mantle of God

    Secret Prayer

    The Unheeded

    Dream of Death

    THE HON. MRS. LINDSAY

    Mater Salvatoris

    To Choose

    The Hunters

    HUGH AUSTIN

    The Astronomer's Prayer

    The Moon

    To Yvonne

    The Burial of Scald

    THE HON. MRS. LYTTON

    A Day Remembered

    Childhood

    Love in Idleness

    Love's Counterfeit

    OLIVIA MEYNELL

    A Grief without Christ

    The Crowning

    MAURICE HEALY

    In Memoriam

    A Ballad of Friendship

    In the Midst of Them

    Sic Transit

    MONICA SALEEBY

    Retrospect

    FRANCIS MEYNELL

    Any Stone

    Lux in Tenebris

    Mater Inviolata

    Song-burden

    Gifts

    Wraith

    A Dedication


    FOREWORD

    My office on this occasion is one which I may well carry as lightly as possible. In our society, I am told, one needs an introduction to a beautiful woman; but I have never heard of men needing an introduction to a beautiful song. Prose before poetry is an unmeaning interruption; for poetry is perhaps the one thing in the world that explains itself. The only possible prelude for songs is silence; and I shall endeavour here to imitate the brevity of the silence as well as its stillness.

    This collection contains four new poems by one whom all serious critics now class with Shelley and Keats and those other great ones cut down with their work unfinished. Yet I would not speak specially of him, lest modern critics should run away with their mad notion of a one-man influence; and call this a school of Francis Thompson. Francis Thompson was not a schoolmaster. He would have said as freely as Whitman (and with a far more consistent philosophy), "I charge you to leave all free, as

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