Selected Poems of James Elroy Flecker is a collection of poems with an introduction by Jean Cantlie Stewart. She read Byron at a very early age, influenced by her elder brother. Consequently, poetry became a lifelong passion for Jean. One of her favourite authors was James Elroy Flecker, whose life was sadly cut short in 1915 when he died as a result of tuberculosis. His father had been ordained in the Church of England but Flecker explored the tenets of Islam which informed his later work. As a result of Jean’s passion for the poetry of James Elroy Flecker, she compiled this delightful anthology with a detailed introduction. As Jean writes in her introduction, his poetry is “alive with colour, light, sound and music…to Flecker, poetry was a combination of acute perception and intellectual and emotional activity and, in order to develop these creative gifts, the poet needed an enthusiasm for the world in every detail – a world that was always ‘passionately interesting’ and filled with human kindness.”
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These poems by James Elroy Flecker are selected by Editor Jean Cantlie Stewart. In her introduction she quotes Flecker "To my mind a passion for beautiful things is the possession of the wise and thoughtful". His poetry is alive with colour, light, sound and music. He spanned the Cristian and Moslem worlds but sadly died of tuberculosis aged 30.
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Product details

ISBN
9781999326913
Published
2018-11-30
Edition
2. edition
Publisher
Rowan Books; Rowan Books
Age
UF, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Biographical note

Jean Cantlie Stewart was born in Edinburgh in 1927, the daughter of the equally feisty Admiral Sir Colin Cantlie who ran Rosyth naval dockyard during the war.  Jean was also the granddaughter of Sir James Cantlie who was a pioneer of first aid and influential in the study of tropical diseases. Some say she was expelled from her school after squirting a tray-carrying chamber maid with a water pistol. This was a charge she always denied but perhaps so as not to encourage her son into rebellious ways.  Bright and passionately focused, she matriculated into St Andrews aged only 16.  Her early career was in teaching and in the Red Cross.  She married a retired Army officer in 1952 but shortly after the birth of their son, Hugh, they divorced. Being a single, divorced mother was not easy in the early fifties.  Jean buckled down to earn a living as a freelance journalist in gentlemanly magazines while living in a remote and primitive cottage in the Highlands without electricity. Determined to improve her lot, she moved to Oxford to read for a diploma in teaching.  Jean was a traditional, one-nation Conservative.  She decided to study law, as much as a way to enter politics, and qualified as a barrister.  Jean then stood for the Conservatives in Kirkcaldy (it later became Gordon Brown’s seat).  Though she failed to win the seat, she did increase the Conservative vote substantially.  She then devoted herself to writing full time.