Andrew Young (poet)
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- This page is not about the poet Andrew Young (1823 - 1901)
Andrew John Young (29 April 1885 – November 25, 1971) was a Scottish poet and writer on botanical subjects, and a Presbyterian minister who later became an Anglican clergyman. He was born in Elgin, and educated in Edinburgh, where he went to school, then Edinburgh University and New College for theological training. He was ordained in the United Free Church of Scotland in 1912.
Later, in 1920, he moved to Hove in Sussex. He joined the Church of England and became a parish priest as vicar of Stonegate, also in Sussex. He was made a canon of Chichester Cathedral. He retired in 1959.
His status as a poet was recognised quite late, in the 1950s.
[edit] Works
- Songs of Night (1910)
- Boaz and Ruth (1920)
- The Death of Eli (1921)
- Thirty One Poems (1922)
- The Cuckoo Clock (1922)
- The Adversary (1923)
- The Bird Cage (1926)
- The New Shepherd (1931)
- Winter Harvest (1933)
- The White Blackbird (1935)
- Collected Poems (1936, Cape)
- Nicodemus (1937) verse play
- Speak to the Earth (1939)
- A Prospect of Flowers (1944)
- The Green Man (1947)
- A Retrospect of Flowers (1950)
- Collected Poems (1950, Cape))
- Into Hades (1952)
- A Prospect of Britain (1956)
- Out of the World and Back (1958)
- Quiet as Moss (1959)
- Collected Poems (1960, Hart-Davis)
- The Poet and the Landscape (1962)
- Burning as Light (1967)
- Quiet as Moss (1967)
- Complete Poems (1974)
- Poetical Works (1985)