Part 4
“I read it (_In Exile_) aloud last night to my wife. We think that it is by far the most splendid poem of modern times. It is magnificent. It moved us both very deeply. I know nothing like it. . . . I am very proud to have my name in the preface of a book that seems to me the only living book of poems published in this land in my generation. Your ‘Philosophies’ will, I feel sure, alter the direction of intellectual energy throughout the land. They are full of the most wise and splendid poetry.”—MR. JOHN MASEFIELD.
=Fables= (_250 copies privately printed_) =5/-= _net._
“He is a poet and not a mere satirist.”—SIR EDWARD RUSSELL.
“It is distinguished, it is deft, it is always rich, it is often beautiful, and the veins of its orthodox figures are filled with colours so fine that they become wholly vital and romantic.”—The late MR. DIXON SCOTT.
=The Setting Sun= =1/6= _net._
A satire on the state of Britain before the war.
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LONDON: JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE ST., W.1
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PRINTED BY HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD., LONDON AND AYLESBURY, ENGLAND.
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=Transcriber’s Notes:=
Punctuation has been corrected without note. Other errors have been corrected as noted below:
Page 18, As venemous-narrow’d as a ==> As venomous-narrow’d as a Page 19, You are at tremble. ==> You are atremble. Page 70, is by ar the most ==> is by far the most