“Father, please try to understand. I cannot go back to medical school. I’m not well-suited to be a doctor.” Francis looked hopefully into his father’s eyes. Perhaps this discussion would finally convince Father to let him follow his heart’s desire: to become a writer.
“Son, you’ve spent six years in training,” began his father, a physician himself. “It would be foolish to throw away all that time and effort. Besides, think of the security provided by a position in the medical field. If you pursue this notion of becoming a writer, there is no guarantee of success or even a steady income.”
Once again, father and son had reached an impasse. And so, with only a few coins in his pocket, Francis set out on his own. He traveled more than 220 miles to London, found a job as a bookseller, and wrote in earnest as time permitted. The year was 1885.
Francis’ health began to suffer and he lost one job after another until he ended up selling matches in the Whitechapel slums of London’s East End.
That barely provided food much less rent. Soon Francis was homeless. To make matters worse, he found himself addicted to the opium he had first taken for relief of neuralgia pain. At one point he attempted suicide.
In 1887 Francis sent some of his poems, “scribbled on sugar paper,”[1] to Wilfred Meynell, the editor of a journal, Merrie England. Meynell was highly impressed, in spite of the humble presentation, and agreed to publish them. But the proceeds were meager.
The following year Jack the Ripper stalked the streets of Whitechapel. Francis did what he could to protect the murderer’s would-be victims, the prostitutes of the make-shift brothels. Perhaps it was one of these women who saw Francis collapse in the street one day. She allowed him to stay with her and even cared for him for a while. (Francis later referred to her as his “savior,” though he never revealed her identity.)
When the publisher Meynell discovered Francis’ dire circumstances, he arranged for the young poet to live at a monastery where he could regain his health and overcome his addiction. The process took five years. As Francis began to heal physically, Meynell and his wife helped Francis renew his faith in God. Sometimes as he walked the peaceful grounds of the monastery, Francis would become overwhelmed by God’s grace to save him, and he’d break out into songs of praise.
During this time Francis continued to write—poetry, essays, and short stories—including his most famous work, “The Hound of Heaven.” The autobiographical poem recounts his experience of being lost and God’s persistent pursuit of him.
“Hound of Heaven” begins:
I fled Him down the nights and down the days
I fled Him down the arches of the years
I fled Him down the labyrinthine ways
Of my own mind, and in the midst of tears.
Later in the poem Francis described God’s pursuit:
From those strong Feet that followed, followed after
But with unhurrying chase and unperturbed pace,
Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
They beat–and a Voice beat
More instant than the Feet–
‘All things betray thee who betrayest Me.’
Another section provides God’s explanation for removing certain pleasures from the speaker’s life, because they were leading him in the wrong direction. God’s purpose was to guide him toward choosing the right path.
In the end God tells the speaker that “the happiness he sought by running away was following him all the time” (Cummings).[2] And the darkness of deprivation had been but “the shadow of the Divine hand stretched over him in love” (Blamires).[3]
Once Francis had regained his health in 1893, the Meynells invited him to stay with them. That same year Meynell helped Francis publish his first book of poems. “Hound of Heaven” was included.
“It was immediately recognized as a masterpiece.”[4] One critic called it “one of the great odes of which the English language can boast.”[5]
Over the ensuing years, “Hound of Heaven” was praised by such respected authors as Oscar Wilde, G. K. Chesterton, Eugene O’Neill, and J. R. R. Tolkien. O’Neill showed his high respect for the poem by memorizing it—all 182 lines. Chesterton said, “it is the most magnificent poem ever written in English,” to which Tolkien responded that Chesterton wasn’t giving the poem the credit it deserved.[6]
Francis Thompson subsequently became a well-known, respected poet, essayist, and spiritual writer. But his health suffered due to the hardship of those years in Whitechapel, and he succumbed to tuberculosis in 1907 at the age of 47.
Across the decades since his homegoing to heaven, Francis would surely have us remember these words of the apostle Paul:
Notes:
[1] https://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1901-2000/heavens-hound-got-francis-thompson-11630688.html
[2] https://www.cummingsstudyguides.net/Guides3/hound.html
[3] Harry Blamires as quoted in Oxley, The Hound of Heaven: A Modern Adaptation, 81, as quoted by
[4] http://houndofheaven.com/product/the-hound-of-heaven-the-story-of-francis-thompson/
[5] https://www.patheos.com/catholic/hound-of-heaven-pat-mcnamara-07-10-2012
[6] https://reasonsforhopejesus.com/is-hound-of-heaven-a-name-for-god/
Additional Sources:
- https://www.americamagazine.org/issue/601/faith-focus/poet-return-god
- https://www.christiantoday.com/article/opium-addict-and-derelict-the-extraordinary-life-of-francis-thompson-christian-poet/130930.htm
- http://www.teleiaphilia.com/a-modern-adaptation-of-thompsons-hound-of-heaven/
- https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/arts/english/currentstudents/undergraduate/modules/fulllist/second/en227/texts/thompson-hound.pdf
Art & photo credits: http://www.wikimedia.org; http://www.geograph.org.uk; http://www.pixabay.com (2); http://www.canva.com.
Wow, thank you for introducing me to this poem! Lovely.
Thank you, Sheila. God certainly did grant Francis Thompson the gift of poetry! I’m so glad you found loveliness here.
Encouraging indeed and strengthening the spirit due to how it presents God’s love for us
Thank you CSFG. It is always my prayer that these posts offer encouragement and strength of spirit to those who read!
Amen
I knew the poem but didn’t know the poets story, Thanks Nancy!
You’re welcome, Jean! I was not even aware the phrase “Hound of Heaven” came from a poem! But I have heard it used time and again over the decades and finally decided to find out its origin. So glad I did! My appreciation for its meaning has grown now that I’m a bit familiar with the poem and poet.
Wow, I had never heard of Francis Thompson, nor ‘The Hound of Heaven’! Thanks so much for introducing me to this touching story of his life. The way that the Lord takes the tattered pieces of a person’s meandering ways and weaves them into a magnificent quilt that touches lives down through the centuries is nothing short of beautiful.
Cheri, I Iove your metaphor of a magnificent quilt created from a person’s meandering ways. Francis Thompson’s life is certainly an example of tatters-become- beauty!
wow … an absolutely fascinating story! truth is often more powerful than fiction. thank God for the people He sends to us on our sometimes heartbreaking journies.
AMEN to your observation, Linda. You brought to mind such people in my own life who blessed me greatly during difficult times. Thanking God with you!
What a remarkable story, Nancy. I anticipated the reveal of the name of a well-known author at the end (or perhaps, St. Francis!) but I wasn’t disappointed to not recognize Francis Thompson. Instead, his persistence and passion to live – truly live – is what speaks so powerfully in his story. I so admire anyone who can claim their life’s work as their passion.
Francis Thompson’s name might still be well known today except Victorian poetry, with its flowery language, is less appreciated. There are paraphrases available, however. I agree with you, Dave: It IS his story that still speaks powerfully. For me, it’s how Frances’ life was transformed when he returned to faith in God.
Thanks Nancy, for introducing me to Francis Thompson whom I’d never heard of. What an amazing story!
I’m so glad you found Francis’ story to be amazing, Sheila. So did I!