Francis Thompson: poet, addict, and Jack the Ripper?

Daisy

Where the thistle lifts a purple crown
Six foot out of the turf,
And the harebell shakes on the windy hill–
O breath of the distant surf!–

The hills look over on the South,
And southward dreams the sea;
And with the sea-breeze hand in hand
Came innocence and she.

Where ‘mid the gorse the raspberry
Red for the gatherer springs;
Two children did we stray and talk
Wise, idle, childish things.

She listened with big-lipped surprise,
Breast-deep ‘mid flower and spine:
Her skin was like a grape whose veins
Run snow instead of wine.

She knew not those sweet words she spake,
Nor knew her own sweet way;
But there’s never a bird, so sweet a song
Thronged in whose throat all day.

Oh, there were flowers in Storrington
On the turf and on the spray;
But the sweetest flower on Sussex hills
Was the Daisy-flower that day!

Her beauty smoothed earth’s furrowed face.
She gave me tokens three:–
A look, a word of her winsome mouth,
And a wild raspberry.

A berry red, a guileless look,
A still word,–strings of sand!
And yet they made my wild, wild heart
Fly down to her little hand.

For standing artless as the air,
And candid as the skies,
She took the berries with her hand,
And the love with her sweet eyes.

The fairest things have fleetest end,
Their scent survives their close:
But the rose’s scent is bitterness
To him that loved the rose.

She looked a little wistfully,
Then went her sunshine way–
The sea’s eye had a mist on it,
And the leaves fell from the day.

She went her unremembering way,
She went and left in me
The pang of all he partings gone,
And partings yet to be.

She left me marvelling why my soul
Was sad that she was glad;
At all the sadness in the sweet,
The sweetness in the sad.

Still, still I seemed to see her, still
Look up with soft replies,
And take the berries with her hand,
And the love with her lovely eyes.

Nothing begins, and nothing ends,
That is not paid with moan,
For we are born in other’s pain,
And perish in our own.

Francis Thompson (16 December 1859 – 13 November 1907)
I have been doing some research for a Heritage Walk that I will be joining later today; Francis Thompson was a late Victorian poet who spent time in West Sussex, on the South Coast of England.
He was, and remains a little known poet and yet his work influenced some of the greatest writers:
G K Chesterton said shortly after his death that “with Francis Thompson we lost the greatest poetic energy since Browning.   Among Thompson’s devotees was the young J R R Tolkien, who purchased a volume of Thompson’s works in 1913-1914, and later said that it was an important influence on his own writing. 
Thompson lead an extremely troubled life; he trained as a doctor but never practised.  His life took him on a journey through homelessness and opium addictions, leading to attempted suicide.  After some success writing poetry, he was sent to live in Storrington, West Sussex at Our Lady of England Priory.  But his health was poor and he died, aged 47 of tuberculosis.
In recent times, Australian writer Richard Patterson named Thompson as the serial killer Jack the Ripper who murdered and dismembered the bodies of his victims in the 1880s but this remains unproven.

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