Many novels: Dance of the Months; Sketches of Dartmoor and Poems
(Gowans & Gray), 1911; The Iscariot, a Poem (Murray), 1912; Up-Along
and Down-Along (Methuen), 1905; Wild Fruit (John Lane), 1911.
A Devon Courting 84
A Litany to Pan 85
Swinburne 87
DORA SIGERSON SHORTER:
Verses, 1894; The Fairy Changeling, and other Poems, 1897; My Lady's
Slipper and other Poems, 1898; Ballads and Poems, 1899; The Father
Confessor, 1900; The Woman who went to Hell, 1902; As the Sparks fly
Upward, 1904; The Story and Song of Earl Roderick, 1906; Collected
Poems, 1909; The Troubadour, 1910; New Poems, 1912; Madge Linsey and
other Poems (Maunsel, Dublin), 1913.
The Watcher in the Wood 88
The Nameless One 89
When I shall Rise 91
ARTHUR SYMONS:
Images of Good and Evil, 1900; Poems, 1901; The Fool of the World
and other Poems, 1906; The Knave of Hearts (Heinemann), 1913; Cities
of Italy, 1908; The Romantic Movement in English Poetry, 1909.
Tanagra 92
Giovanni Malatesta at Rimini 93
La Melinite: Moulin Rouge 95
EVELYN UNDERHILL:
Immanence, A Book of Verses (J. M. Dent & Sons), 1912; Mysticism;
The Mystic Way.
Immanence 97
Introversion 99
Ichthus 100
MARGARET L. WOODS:
Poems, Collected Edition (John Lane), 1913.
Songs 102
The Changeling 103
AE
RECONCILIATION
I begin through the grass once again to be bound to the Lord;
I can see, through a face that has faded, the face full of rest
Of the earth, of the mother, my heart with her heart in accord,
As I lie mid the cool green tresses that mantle her breast
I begin with the grass once again to be bound to the Lord.
By the hand of a child I am led to the throne of the King
For a touch that now fevers me not is forgo
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