Fragmentary Thoughts Explained

Fragmentary Thoughts
Author:Henry Parkes
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Poetry collection
Publisher:Samuel E. Lees
Release Date:1889
Media Type:Print
Pages:208 pp
Preceded By:The Beauteous Terrorist and Other Poems
Followed By:Sonnets and Other Verses

Fragmentary Thoughts is a poetry collection by Australian poet, politician and writer Henry Parkes, published by Samuel E. Lees, in 1889.[1]

The first edition contains 73 poems which had all been published previously.

Dedication

Contents

Contents:

Critical reception

A reviewer in The Evening News (Sydney) was rather ambivalent: The 'thoughts' belong to various and far-removed periods of the Premier's career. Some of them are the result of very recent laborings of his muse; others date back to between fifty and sixty years ago. The special interest claimed for them in the preface is that they reveal something of the inner life and higher aspirations of their author, while, at the same time, shedding additional light on his character as a public man. It would, perhaps, be ungracious to hint that, whatever may be their value as contributions to the general stock of knowledge respecting our foremost politician, they leave a good deal to be desired on the score of poetry."[2]

Publication history

After the initial publication of the collection by Samuel E. Lees in 1889,[3] it has not been reprinted.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Austlit — Fragmentary Thoughts by Henry Parkes. Austlit. 24 February 2024.
  2. Web site: "Poems by Sir Henry Parkes" . Evening News . 16 December 1889 . The Evening News, 16 December 1889, p7. 24 February 2024.
  3. Web site: Fragmentary Thoughts (1889) . National Library of Australia. 24 February 2024.