Georgian Poetry 1911-1912
This volume is issued in the belief that English poetry is now once again putting on a new strength and beauty.
Few readers have the leisure or the zeal to investigate each volume as it appears; and the process of recognition is often slow. This collection, drawn entirely from the publications of the past two years, may if it is fortunate help the lovers of poetry to realize that we are at the beginning of another Georgian period which may take rank in due time with the several great poetic ages of the past.
It has no pretension to cover the field. Every reader will notice the absence of poets whose work would be a necessary ornament of any anthology not limited by a definite aim. Two years ago some of the writers represented had published nothing; and only a very few of the others were known except to the eagerest watchers of the skies. Those few are here because within the chosen period their work seemed to have gained some accession of power.
My grateful thanks are due to the writers who have lent me their poems, and to the publishers (Messrs Elkin Mathews, Sidgwick and Jackson, Methuen, Fifield, Constable, Nutt, Dent, Duckworth, Longmans, and Maunsel, and the Editors of
Basileon, Rhythm
, and the
English Review
) under whose imprint they have appeared.
E.M.
Oct. 1912.
A quay with vessels moored
Thomas:
Unknown
---
The End of the World
Babel: the Gate of the God
The Old Vicarage, Grantchester
Dust
The Fish
Town and Country
Dining-Room Tea
The Song of Elf
The Child and the Mariner
Days Too Short
In May
The Heap of Rags
The Kingfisher
Arabia
The Sleeper
Winter Dusk
Miss Loo
The Listeners
The Fires of God
Joseph and Mary
The Queen's Song
The Hare
Geraniums
Devil's Edge
Snap-dragon
Biography
Child of Dawn
Lake Leman
A Sicilian Idyll
Hesperus
The Cuckoo Wood
In the Poppy Field
In the Cool of the Evening
The Lonely God
Dirge