FROM A LONDON GARDEN
FROM A
LONDON GARDEN
BY
A. ST. JOHN ADCOCK
LONDON: DAVID NUTT
57–59 LONG ACRE
1903
A collected series of lyrical poems moves between urban and rural imagery to reflect on love, mortality, time, memory, and moral growth. The poet uses concise, imagistic language and varied meters to meditate on human experience: longing and loss, pride and humility, the rhythms of city life and quiet country scenes, the passage of days and seasons, death and consolation. Voices range from personal confession to philosophical observation, with elegiac tones, religious reflection, and celebration of steadfastness. Recurring motifs—light and shadow, dawn and evening, gardens and streets—bind individual pieces into a contemplative portrait of inner life amid modern surroundings.
FROM A
LONDON GARDEN
BY
A. ST. JOHN ADCOCK
LONDON: DAVID NUTT
57–59 LONG ACRE
1903