About the Author:
Louise Imogen Guiney (1861 – 1920) was an American poet, essayist and editor, born in Roxbury, Massachusetts. In 1901, Guiney moved to Oxford, England, to focus on her poetry and essay writing. She soon began to suffer from ill health and was no longer able to write poetry and instead concentrated on critical and biographical studies of English Catholic poets and writers. Guiney died of a stroke near Gloucestershire, England, at age 59, leaving much of her work unfinished. Bibliography: Songs at the Start (1884, poetry) Goose-Quill Papers (1885, essays) The White Sail and Other Poems (1887, poetry) Brownies and Bogles (1888, poetry) Monsieur Henri: A Foot-Note to French History (1892, essays) A Roadside Harp (1893, poetry) A Little English Gallery (1895, essays) Robert Louis Stevenson (1895, biography, with Alice Brown) Lovers' Saint Ruth's and Three Other Tales (1895, short stories) Nine Sonnets Written at Oxford (1895, poetry) Patrins (1897, essays) England and Yesterday (1898, poetry) The Martyrs' Idyl and Shorter Poems (1899, poetry) Robert Emmet (1904) The Princess of the Tower (1906, poetry) Blessed Edmund Campion (1908) Happy Ending (1909, poetry, her collected verse) Letters (1926, letters) (posthumously) Recusant Poets (1939, ed., with Geoffrey Bliss) (posthumously)
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