Title: Poems
Author: Elinor Jenkins
Release date: February 3, 2013 [eBook #41985]
                Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David E. Brown, Bryan Ness and the Online
        Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
        file was produced from images generously made available
        by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)

Copyright, 1915, by Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd.
All rights reserved
| FAIN had I given precious things and sweet, | 
| PAGE | |
| H. S. T.—Requiescat | 11 | 
| The Dead Comrade | 12 | 
| The Choice | 14 | 
| The House by the Highway | 15 | 
| Night in the Suburbs, August, 1914 | 17 | 
| Autumn Wind | 19 | 
| The Battle of the Rivers | 20 | 
| A Legend of Ypres | 21 | 
| Ecce Homo! | 22 | 
| April Nights | 23 | 
| Rupert Brooke. April, 1915 | 24 | 
| The Last Evening | 25 | 
| The Letter | 27 | 
| Frigga. (Up to date) | 28 | 
| Farewells à la Mode | 29 | 
| Sunset | 30 | 
| Sursum Corda | 31 | 
| Lying in State | 32 | 
| Wind-pedlars | 33 | 
| Dulce et Decorum? | 35 | 
| Succory | 36 | 
| Dreams Trespassing | 37 | 
| "What shall be done with all these tears of ours?" | 38 | 
| In Hereford Cathedral | 39 | 
| Poppyfields | 40[Pg 8] | 
| Artificial Light | 43 | 
| Epitaph on a Child left Buried Abroad | 46 | 
| Veronica | 47 | 
| Moonlight | 48 | 
| Waking | 49 | 
| Feather Boats | 50 | 
| The Lovers' Walk | 52 | 
| WE were bereft ere we were well aware | 
| "COURAGE, invention, mirth we ill can spare | 
| TOO well they saw the road where they must tread | 
| ALL night, from the quiet street | 
| THE misty night broods o'er this peopled place, | 
| A MONTH ago they marched to fight | 
| FOR fifteen hundred valiant men and tried, | 
| BEFORE the throne the spirits of the slain | 
| HE hung upon a wayside Calvary, | 
| WHEN the night watches slowly downwards creep, | 
| YOUNG and great hearted, went he forth to dare | 
| ROUND a bright isle, set in a sea of gloom, | 
| SHE read the words of him that was her own: | 
| FOR the last time I kissed | 
| THE limbs she bore and cherished tenderly, | 
| DEAR is young morning's tender-hued attire: | 
| OH faint and feeble hearted, comfort ye! | 
| IF with his fathers he had fallen asleep, | 
| PURPLE and grey the vacant moor lies spread | 
| WE buried of our dead the dearest one— | 
| IN a strange burial ground | 
| OF all the spectres feared and then forgot | 
| THE poor proud mother in the sad old tale, | 
| WHILE the noonday prayers were said, | 
| A WILDERNESS were better than this place | 
| WARM and golden and dear | 
| FATHER, forget not, now that we must go, | 
| SHE lifted up her eyes and looked at me;— | 
| EVEN as walk on middle earth | 
| SO fair a dream last night my heart had kissed, | 
| WHILE the wind low o'er the green pool creeps | 
| TWO lovers walked in a green garden way | 
PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN BY
WM. BRENDON AND SON, LTD.,
PLYMOUTH.
| Rupert Brooke | |
| POEMS (originally issued in 1911). Eighth Impression. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| 1914 AND OTHER POEMS. With Portrait. Ninth Impression. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| John Drinkwater | |
| SWORDS AND PLOUGHSHARES. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| Gerald Gould | |
| POEMS. Second Impression. | 1s. 6d. net. | 
| MY LADY'S BOOK. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| Laurence Housman | |
| SELECTED POEMS. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| Rose Macaulay | |
| THE TWO BLIND COUNTRIES. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| John Masefield | |
| THE EVERLASTING MERCY. Sixteenth Impression. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| Also in leather, 5s. net and 6s. net. | |
| THE WIDOW IN THE BYE STREET. Fifth Impression. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| R. C. Phillimore | |
| POEMS (With an Introduction by John Masefield). | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| Max Plowman | |
| FIRST POEMS. | 2s. 6d. net. | 
| Katharine Tynan | |
| INNOCENCIES. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| NEW POEMS. Second Impression. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| IRISH POEMS. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| FLOWER OF YOUTH: Poems in War-Time. | 3s. 6d. net. | 
| ————————— | |
| POEMS OF TO-DAY. An Anthology. Second Impression. | 2s. net. |