Heart of Spring
| Author | Shaw Neilson |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Genre | Poetry collection |
| Publisher | Bookfellow |
Publication date | 1919 |
| Publication place | Australia |
| Media type | |
| Pages | 93 pp. |
Heart of Spring is the debut collection of poetry by Australian author Shaw Neilson, published by The Bookfellow Publishers in Sydney, New South Wales, in 1919.[1]
The collection contains 57 poems from a variety of sources, with a preface by A. G. Stephens.[2] It was also issued as 25 copy limited and numbered edition in 1919.[2]
Contents
- "Heart of Spring"
- "The Green Singer"
- "Song Be Delicate"
- "Petticoat Green"
- "Greeting"
- "The Land Where I Was Born"
- "The Sun is Up"
- "The Pale Neighbour"
- "To a Blue Flower"
- "Old Nell Dickerson"
- "Bush Scene"
- "Julie Callaway"
- "Lowan's Nest"
- "Old Granny Sullivan"
- "May"
- "Maggie Tulliver"
- "The Break of Day"
- "Little Dead Milliner"
- "'The Day is Thine'"
- "Sheedy Was Dying"
- "The Eyes of Little Charlotte"
- "The Meeting of Sighs"
- "Old Violin"
- "Love's Coming"
- "The Lover Sings"
- "The Girl with the Black Hair"
- "'Twas in the Early Summer Time"
- "As Far as My Heart Can Go"
- "Her Eyes"
- "The Heart Longs"
- "The Hour Is Lost"
- "Surely God Was a Lover"
- "You, and Yellow Air"
- "The Dear Little Cottage"
- "Roses Three"
- "The Sacrifice"
- "Little White Girl"
- "In the Street"
- "The Child of Tears"
- "The Petticoat Plays"
- "The Loving Tree"
- "Inland Born"
- "The Child We Lost"
- "Under a Kurrajong"
- "The Luckless Bard to the Flying Blossom"
- "From a Coffin"
- "All the World's a Lolly Shop"
- "It is the Last"
- "The White Flowers Came"
- "The Wedding in September"
- "The Hour of the Parting"
- "O Lady of the Dazzling Flowers"
- "The Song and the Bird"
- "The Scent o' the Lover"
- "At the End of Spring"
- "For a Child"
- "The Dream is Deep"
Critical reception
A reviewer in The Bulletin described the book as being "full of delicate charm." They continued: "His is not the strong, clear note of a master singer; his themes are often of the slightest and his craftsmanship enables him to miss the commonplace by a very narrow margin; but the work will please the literary reader, while, by a certain gentle force which it possesses, it may reach many to whom much modern poetry is a thing strange and incomprehensible."[3]
The Queenslander noted that the "great merit of the poems...lies in their exquisite refinement, their impeccable simplicity, and rapid flow of rich lyric laughter."[4]
See also
References
- ^ "Heart of Spring by Shaw Neilson". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
- ^ a b "Austlit — Heart of Spring by Shaw Neilson". Austlit. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
- ^ ""Neilson"". The Bulletin, 6 November 1919, p2. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
- ^ ""Australian Poetry"". The Queenslander. 23 August 1919. Retrieved 21 February 2026.