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_Westminster Review._--We write under the conviction that Mr. Mackereth is destined to compel the admiration not only of a few critics but also of the general public.
_Times Literary Supplement._--He has a note of his own; one can always enjoy the rich exuberance of his fancy and of his diction.
_Daily Telegraph._--A true singer whom no reader with a taste for contemporary poetry should overlook.
_Yorks.h.i.+re Daily Observer._--... We cannot afford to neglect such poetry--it is vital... Alive with the spirit of the new century.
_Aberdeen Free Press._--The "Ode on the Pa.s.sing of Autumn"... a really splendid poem... Mr. Mackereth is undoubtedly a poet of considerable power and originality.
_The Literary World._--There is a strength about his work which is very rare in English verse.... Mr. Mackereth's name deserves to stand very high among the poets of to-day.
_The Star._--"A Son of Cain"... is a good goad for the withered imagination.... Why does Mr. Mackereth's poem "The Lion" flash the light on our sickly glazed eyeb.a.l.l.s? Its symbolism makes the soul wince and tremble and ache.... The virtue in the poem sounds a spiritual tocsin.
_Irish Times._--... A note of his own, a pa.s.sionate, vibrant note, but true and strong.
_Glasgow Evening Times._--... A volume of singular insight and power.
_Dundee Advertiser._--... The t.i.tle poem has the same haunting effect upon the reader as "The Ancient Mariner." The "Ode on the Pa.s.sing of Autumn" is a fine achievement.... We congratulate Mr. Mackereth on his undoubted powers of sustainment.
_The Daily Chronicle._--His work is virile. His verse goes with a ring and a tang.
_The Scotsman._--The t.i.tle poem is a grim and powerful ballad.... The book will be read with interest and admiration by all who value the cla.s.sic traditions of English poetry.
_The Yorks.h.i.+re Post._--... He has the right to a place among those who are creating the distinctive poetry of our time. In the two pieces, the splendid "Ode on the Pa.s.sing of Autumn," and "The G.o.ds that Pa.s.s and Die Not," Mr. Mackereth attains a height where splendid promise enlarges into great performance.
_The Bookman._--... It proves him to be the possessor of a quick eye for beauty, of imagination and sensitiveness. It repeatedly echoes great work, yet still remains undeniably his own.
_The Nation._--What he has to say is vigorous and virile. He is not for dealing in the vagueness of dissatisfaction, but endeavours to make his writing an affirmation of joy.
_The Glasgow Herald._--To pa.s.s to his poems is to pa.s.s into mountain air where sane thought dwells.... His heart is in poetry, and his own pleasure in it merely as a word movement is manifest in every line of such poems as "Mad Moll" and "Pan Alive."
_The New York Times._--A virile and hopeful singer ... resonant as a trumpet-call to those who build the palace of life.
_The Dial_ (Chicago).--Clearly the work of a poet.... The volume will well reward him who ventures into its pages.
_Literary Digest._--... The longer poems have a deep Atlantic roll....
In all his thought one can feel the lift of a tide.
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
IN THE WAKE OF THE PHOENIX
POEMS
By
JAMES A. MACKERETH
_F'cap 8vo. 3/6 net._
_Glasgow Herald._--"Always poetry--poetry vital with energy and clothed with beauty and at times with splendour."
_Literary World._--"Deserves attention from those who can enjoy one of the finest pleasures of the mind--namely, that process by which the spirit of an age becomes articulate.... Full of power, of ecstasy, of a fury of joy."
_Pall Mall Gazette._--"A signature which has come to be watched with the greatest attention, and welcome wherever it appears."
_The Athenaeum._--"We quail before his thunderous broadsides of language... as we read him he suggests stupendous phenomena."
_The Times._--"Vigour of thought and imagination and remarkable wealth of poetic diction."
_The Scotsman._--"Will be read with especial interest and sympathy by readers who like modern poetry that keeps alive the traditions of a spiritualised nature-wors.h.i.+p."
_The Academy._--"We have nothing but admiration for the work."
_Westminster Review._--"A poet of exceptionally fine calibre."
_Aberdeen Free Press._--"Possesses great poetic merit.... The magnificent 'Hymn to the Midnight.'"
_The Morning Post._--"Power, originality, insight.... His work is above all things virile... real pa.s.sion and true imagination."
_The Yorks.h.i.+re Post._--"His imaginative insight into life's realities is powerfully displayed in such pieces as 'Dreams,' and 'The Splendid Mistake.' In 'The Seer in the Doomed City' he has achieved a vision starkly impressive in its symbolism, haunting in its imaginative conception, and n.o.ble in its moral."
_T.P.'s Weekly._--"... breathing virility and strong kindness in every line."
_The Yorks.h.i.+re Observer._--"Places the writer among the true poets of his time."
_The Irish Times._--"Here is verse which really sings, ideas which are fresh and strong, language which is in the highest sense poetical."
_The Baltimore News._--"Two unforgettable poems, 'A Hymn to Midnight,'
and 'At Moonrise.'"
_Boston Transcript._--"Sincerity and vivid imagination.... Verse of uncommon distinction."
LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
39, Paternoster Row, London, E.C.