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William Ernest Henley [1849-1902] ENG
Ranked #75 in the top 380 poets
Votes 90%: 691 up, 79 down

Inner strength and perseverance.

William Ernest Henley  was an English schoolmaster who became a successful poet, critic and editor. He is probably best known for his poem `Invictus` and for the fact his daughter first coined the name Wendy to describe J. M. Barrie who used it in Peter Pan.Henley was born in  Gloucester and educated at the Crypt Grammar School. The school was a poor relation of the Cathedral School, and Henley indicated its shortcomings in his article (Pall Mall Magazine, Nov. 1900) on T. E. Brown the poet, who was headmaster there for a brief period. Brown`s appointment was a stroke of luck for Henley, for whom it represented a first acquaintance with a man of genius. "He was singularly kind to me at a moment when I needed kindness even more than I needed encouragement." Brown did him the essential service of lending him books. Henley was no classical scholar, but his knowledge and love of literature were vital.

After suffering tuberculosis as a boy, he found himself, in 1874, aged twenty-five, an inmate of the hospital at Edinburgh. From there he sent to the Cornhill Magazine  where he wrote poems in irregular rhythms, describing with poignant force his experiences in hospital. Leslie Stephen, then editor, visited his contributor in hospital and took Robert Louis Stevenson, another recruit of the Cornhill, with him. The meeting between Stevenson and Henley, and the friendship of which it was the beginning, form one of the best-known episodes in English literature (see Stevenson`s letter to Mrs Sitwell, Jan. 1875, and Henley`s poems "An Apparition" and "Envoy to Charles Baxter").

In 1877 Henley went to London and began his editorial career by editing London, a journal written for the sake of its contributors rather than the public. Among other distinctions it first gave to the world The New Arabian Nights of Stevenson. Henley himself contributed a series of verses chiefly in old French forms. He had been writing poetry since 1872, but (so he told the world in his “ advertisement” to his collected Poems, 1898) he “found himself about 1877 so utterly unmarketable that he had to own himself beaten in art and to addict himself to journalism for the next ten years.” When London folded, he edited the Magazine of Art from 1882 to 1886. At the end of that period he came into the public eye as a poet. In 1887 Gleeson White made for the popular series of Canterbury Poets (edited by William Sharp) a selection of poems in old French forms. In his selection Gleeson White included many pieces from London, and only after completing the selection did he discover that the verses were all by Henley. In the following year, HB Donkin in his volume Voluntaries, written for an East End hospital, included Henley`s unrhymed rhythms quintessentializing the poet`s memories of the old Edinburgh Infirmary. Alfred Nutt read these, and asked for more; and in 1888 his firm published A Book of Verse.

Henley was by this time well known within a restricted literary circle, and the publication of this volume determined his fame as a poet, which rapidly outgrew these limits, two new editions of the volume being printed within three years. In this same year (1888) Fitzroy Bell started the Scots Observer in Edinburgh, with Henley as literary editor, and early in 1889 Bell left the conduct of the paper to him. It was a weekly review on the lines of the old Saturday Review, but inspired in every paragraph by the vigorous and combative personality of the editor. It was transferred to London as the National Observer, and remained under Henley`s editorship until 1893. Though, as Henley confessed, the paper had almost as many writers as readers, and its fame was mainly confined to the literary class, it was a lively and influential feature of the literary life of its time. Henley had the editor`s great gift of discerning promise, and the "Men of the Scots Observer," as Henley affectionately and characteristically called his band of contributors, in most instances justified his insight. The paper found utterance for the growing imperialism of its day, and among other services to literature gave to the world Rudyard Kipling`s Barrack-Room Ballads.

Victorian

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1865-1936
ENG
Rudyard Kipling
→ friend of William Ernest Henley
1879-1955
USA
Wallace Stevens
→ friend of William Ernest Henley
1431-1463
FRA
Francois Villon
← translated by William Ernest Henley


WorkLangRating
Invictus: The Unconquerable
eng
154
Out Of The Night That Covers Me
eng
25
Between The Dusk Of A Summer Night
eng
3
Bring Her Again, O Western Wind
eng
3
When You Are Old
eng
3
A Late Lark Twitters From The Quiet Skies
eng
2
A Love By The Sea
eng
2
In Rotten Row
eng
2
The Ways Of Death Are Soothing And Serene
eng
2
"With Strawberries"
eng
1
Ballade Of Dead Actors
eng
1
Ballade Of Truisms
eng
1
Double Ballade On The Nothingness Of Things
eng
1
London Types: Barmaid
eng
1
O, Gather Me The Rose
eng
1
Pro Rege Nostro
eng
1
Staff Nurse:Old Style
eng
1
The Chief
eng
1
There`s A Regret
eng
1
Unconquerable
eng
1
A Dainty Thing`s The Villanelle
eng
0
Anterotics
eng
0
A Bowl Of Roses
eng
0
A Child
eng
0
A Desolate Shore
eng
0
A New Song to an Old Tune
eng
0
A Thanksgiving
eng
0
A Wink From Hesper
eng
0
After
eng
0
Allegro Maestoso
eng
0
Andante Con Moto
eng
0
Anterotics
eng
0
Apparition
eng
0
Arabian Night`s Entertainments
eng
0
As Like The Woman As You Can
eng
0
At Queensferry
eng
0
Attadale, West Highlands
eng
0
Ave, Caesar!
eng
0
Back-View
eng
0
Ballade Made In The Hot Weather
eng
0
Ballade Of A Toyokuni Colour-Print
eng
0
Ballade Of Midsummer Days And Nights
eng
0
Ballade Of Youth And Age
eng
0
Barmaid
eng
0
Before
eng
0
Beside The Idle Summer Sea
eng
0
Blithe Dreams Arise To Greet Us
eng
0
Casualty
eng
0
Children: Private Ward
eng
0
Clinical
eng
0
Croquis
eng
0
Crosses And Troubles
eng
0
Dedication--To My Wife
eng
0
Discharged
eng
0
Double Ballad Of Life And Death
eng
0
Easy is the Triolet
eng
0
England, My England
eng
0
Enter Patient
eng
0
Envoy--To Charles Baxter
eng
0
Epilogue
eng
0
Etching
eng
0
Fill A Glass With Golden Wine
eng
0
Fresh From His Fastnesses
eng
0
Friends.... Old Friends.....
eng
0
From A Window In Princes Street
eng
0
From The Break The Nightingale
eng
0
Grave
eng
0
Gull In An Aery Morrice
eng
0
Here They Trysted, And Here They Strayed
eng
0
House-Surgeo
eng
0
I Am The Reaper
eng
0
I Gave My Heart To A Woman
eng
0
If I Were King
eng
0
If It Should Come To Be
eng
0
In Fisherrow
eng
0
In The Dials
eng
0
In The Placid Summer Midnight
eng
0
In The Waste Hour
eng
0
In The Year That`s Come and Gone
eng
0
Interior
eng
0
Interlude
eng
0
It Came With The Threat Of A Waning Moon
eng
0
Kate-A-Whims
eng
0
Lady Probationer
eng
0
Largo E Mesto
eng
0
Last Post
eng
0
Let Us Be Drunk
eng
0
Life In Her Creaking Shoes
eng
0
Life Is Bitter
eng
0
London Types: "Lady"
eng
0
London Types: Beef-Eater
eng
0
London Types: Bluecoat Boy
eng
0
London Types: Bus Driver
eng
0
London Types: Drum-Major
eng
0
London Types: Flower-Girl
eng
0
London Types: Hawker
eng
0
London Types: Mounted Police
eng
0
London Types: News Boy
eng
0
London Types: Sandwich-Man
eng
0
London Types: The Artist Muses At His Ease
eng
0
London Types: `Liza
eng
0
London Types:Life-G
eng
0
Madam Life`s A Piece In Bloom
eng
0
Margaritae Sorori
eng
0
Midsummer Midnight Skies
eng
0
Music
eng
0
Nocturn
eng
0
Not To The Staring Day
eng
0
O, Falmouth Is a Fine Town
eng
0
O, Have You Blessed, Behind The Stars
eng
0
O, Time And Change, They Range And Range
eng
0
On The Way To Kew
eng
0
One With The Ruined Sunset
eng
0
Operation
eng
0
Orientale
eng
0
Over the Hills and Far Away
eng
0
Pastoral
eng
0
Praise The Generous Gods
eng
0
Prologue
eng
0
Romance
eng
0
Scherzando
eng
0
Scrubber
eng
0
She Saunters By The Swinging Seas
eng
0
Some Starlit Garden Grey With Dew
eng
0
Space And Dread and The Dark
eng
0
Staff Nurse: New Style
eng
0
Suicide
eng
0
The Blackbird
eng
0
The Full Sea Rolls And Thunders
eng
0
The Gods Are Dead
eng
0
The Nightingale Has A Lyre Of Gold
eng
0
The Past Was Goodly Once
eng
0
The Rain And The Wind
eng
0
The Sands Are Alive With Sunshine
eng
0
The Sea Is Full Of Wandering Foam
eng
0
The Shadow Of Dawn
eng
0
The Skies Are Strown With Stars
eng
0
The Song Of The Sword--To Rudyard Kipling
eng
0
The Spirit Of Wine
eng
0
The Spring, My Dear
eng
0
The Surges Gushed And Sounded
eng
0
The Wan Sun Westers, Faint And Slow
eng
0
The Ways Are Green
eng
0
The West A Glimmering Lake Of Light
eng
0
There Is A Wheel Inside My Head
eng
0
Thick Is The Darkness
eng
0
Time And The Earth
eng
0
To Me At My Fifth-Floor Window
eng
0
To My Mother
eng
0
To My Wife
eng
0
To: W A
eng
0
Tree, Old Tree Of The Triple Crook
eng
0
Trees And The Menace Of Night
eng
0
Unconquered
eng
0
Under A Stagnant Sky
eng
0
Vigil
eng
0
Villanelle
eng
0
Villon`s Straight Tip To All Cross Coves
eng
0
Visitor
eng
0
Waiting
eng
0
We Are The Choice Of The Will
eng
0
We Flash Across The Level
eng
0
We Shall Surely Die
eng
0
We`ll go No More A-Roving
eng
0
What Have I Done For You
eng
0
What Is To Come
eng
0
When The Wind Storms By With A Shout
eng
0
When You Wake In Your Crib
eng
0
Where Forlorn Sunsets Flare And Fade
eng
0
While The West Is Paling
eng
0
Why, My Heart, Do We Love Her So?
eng
0
You Played And Sang A Snatch Of Song
eng
0
Your Heart Has Trembled To My Tongue
eng
0

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