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Francis Thompson (1) (1857–1907)

Author of The Hound of Heaven

For other authors named Francis Thompson, see the disambiguation page.

44+ Works 909 Members 5 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Francis Thompson (1859-1907) at the age of 19. Image from The Poets' Chantry (1912) by Katherine Brégy

Works by Francis Thompson

The Hound of Heaven (1893) 345 copies, 5 reviews
Saint Ignatius Loyola (2001) 44 copies
Poems (1893) 27 copies
Shelley (1999) 19 copies
New Poems (2010) 10 copies
Sister Songs (2007) 7 copies
Francis Thompson (1947) 6 copies
Collected Poems (1992) 6 copies
Health & holiness (1908) 3 copies
Poetical works (1965) 2 copies
Literary criticisms (1948) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Nation's Favourite Poems (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 687 copies, 8 reviews
A Treasury of the World's Best Loved Poems (1961) — Contributor — 570 copies, 4 reviews
Modern American and Modern British Poetry (1919) — Contributor — 333 copies, 4 reviews
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributor — 269 copies, 1 review
The Standard Book of British and American Verse (1932) — Contributor — 130 copies, 1 review
Great Modern Reading (1943) — Contributor — 115 copies, 3 reviews
Prose and Poetry for Appreciation (1934) — Contributor — 45 copies
Poems of To-day: An Anthology (1915) — Contributor — 45 copies
The Victorian age: prose, poetry, and drama (1938) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
The Religion of Beauty: Selections from the Aesthetes (1950) — Contributor — 11 copies
Men and Women: The Poetry of Love (1970) — Contributor — 9 copies
British Poetry and Prose 1870-1905 (Oxford Authors) (1987) — Contributor — 9 copies
Thames: An Anthology of River Poems (1999) — Contributor — 6 copies
La poesía inglesa románticos y victorianos — Contributor — 4 copies, 1 review

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OT: Works of Francis Thompson in Folio Society Devotees (January 2023)

Reviews

6 reviews
Three stars for the writing (on a first reading, possibly to be revised), with an extra half-star for the woodcut illustrations, though it may well end up at four stars eventually.

I spotted this one on the shelf of Great Grandfather's Bookshop in Leyland, Lancashire, struck by the front cover illustration, then half remembering the title, then fully remembering the opening lines, though I can't quite place from where: the introduction to another book of poetry, I'm sure, but which one I show more can't recall. The disappointment of the slightly torn dust jacket and internal staining were ameliorated by the £1.50 price mark penciled in the front, so it ended up coming home with me.

I recognised the author's name, too, and looking him up I was pleasantly surprised to discover that he was born in Winkley Street in Preston, a street I walk down each week, and his name I recognise from the plaque hung there to commemorate his birth in the city. I'll pay more attention to it on my next visit.

As for the poem itself, it's written in a highly wrought Romantic style. I'm not entirely adverse to that, but at times it feels like it was laid on a bit thick. However, in the vastly more important opinion of J.R.R. Tolkien, Thompson is to be "ranked amongst the very greatest of poets" (The J.R.R. Tolkien Companion and Guide, Volume 1: Chronology, page 51), so there's that to recommend him.

Tolkien would, I'm sure, be drawn to the Catholic sentiment of The Hound of Heaven, in which the Hound is Christ, who lovingly hunts the lost soul of the poem's narrator, a biographical theme given Thompson's loss of faith, destitution, drug-addiction and ultimate return to the Christian fold. For myself, if I'm to get anything from the poem beyond the poetic imagery, and the rhythm and rhyme, it will be as symbolic of the finding of the Self in a psychological sense. I didn't find it in this, my first, reading, but I strongly suspect it's lying in wait for me in there, somewhere.
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½
One of the great odes in the English language, written while the author was addicted to opiates. Thompson was born in 1859 into the middle classes of England, in that vein of gold romanticism. But through the same little casement which laudanum opened and through which DeQuincey ("Confessions of an Opium Eater") and Coleridge had crawled, clearly Thompson toppled head-first.
Other than in the title, little is said of the Hound. It is only a relentless pursuer -- I love this image of God as a show more dog! We pray to the God who pursues the soul-prey. The soul is dogged to ground; by grace, it is love's Heaven that is found. show less
This is the first poem I ever remember reading. I don't think I really understood it that well, despite my Year 9 teacher's attempts to explain it. But it captured my imagination and drew me into another world.
Favourite: “In no strange land” (“O world invisible, we view thee…”)

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Works
44
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16
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Rating
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Reviews
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ISBNs
129
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Favorited
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