The legend of the blemished king, and other poems

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CONTENTS.

EDITOR'S NOTE.

Prologue: At Scrabo, Co. Down.

The Legend of the Blemished King.

The Legend of St. Mahee of Endrim.

The Legend of Saint Mahee of Endrim.

Miscellaneous Poems. Song of Decadence.

The Railway Arch.

Schakhe.

In the Giant's Ring, Belfast.

The Blind Father. I. So, my son, you came this morning at the

Sundry Songs and Sonnets.

The Southern Cross.

On the Death of William Morris. I. Mine eyes beheld thee but

Copernicus.

To Algernon Charles Swinburne.

Heaven and Earth.

On Some Twentieth Century forecasts.

Ireland.

THE LEGEND

OF THE

BLEMISHED KING

AND OTHER POEMS.

 


A FEW COPIES REMAINING.


The Little Library—Vol. I.

IDYLLS

By LAURA JEAN DOUGLAS.

MODERATOR says:—“Some of the most exquisite prose we have read for many a day.”

IRISH NEWS (Belfast) says:—“In the ten ‘Idylls’ which Miss Douglas contributes, we have a group of the sweetest prose poetry possible.... A gallery of lovely pictures.... A thing of beauty and a joy for ever.... The turn-out of the book is equal to anything of the same kind produced in London.”

MRS. ALICE A. PITMAN, author of “TALES FROM LONDON LIFE,” says:—“The pictures are beautifully conceived, and elegantly portrayed.”

IRISH FIGARO says:—“I am grateful to all who essay in a sincere spirit the difficult task of making Dublin a book-producing place. In ‘The Little Library,’ author, editor, publisher, and draughtsman have combined in an honest endeavour to attain that desirable end. The writer of ‘Idylls’ gives us ten short prose-poems, of which I take the liberty to give the first in its entirety as a specimen. It is entitled, ‘A Rose Garden.’... This is a beautiful picture.”

JAMES H. COUSINS says:—“Beautiful prose fancies.”

IRISH DAILY INDEPENDENT says:—“The book is beautifully produced, and a credit to Dublin.”

SCOTTISH SOCIETY says:—“The weirdly-covered little book with the strange frontispiece which comes to us under the title of ‘Idylls,’ will be read with great enjoyment by all whose sense of literary quality is sufficiently educated to appreciate the extreme delicacy of word-painting in water-colours, if it may be so expressed.... In every sense of the word, they are perfect representations of the idyll in its purest form,... impossible to criticise, and difficult properly to praise.


THE LITTLE LIBRARY.—VOL. 2.

EDITED BY M. J. KEATS.

The Legend of the Blemished King And Other Poems.

BY
JAMES H. COUSINS.

WITH COVER DRAWN BY LOUIS H. VICTORY.

Dublin:
BERNARD DOYLE, FRANKLIN PRINTING WORKS,
9 Upper Ormond Quay.
——
1897.

 

 


AND

TO THE COMPANION OF MY WANDERINGS

AMONG MOST

OF THE SCENES HEREIN MENTIONED,

WHOSE PRESENCE

GILDED THE SUN THAT SHINES UPON,

AND PAINTED THE FLOWERS THAT BEDECK

THE

“FAIR HILLS OF HOLY IRELAND.”

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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