Poetry Ledwidge was writing poetry from childhood, and from age 14, he would routinely send poetry to a number of newspapers in Ireland. Selected items were published, notably between 1909 and 1914; later some UK publication was added. The newspaper publications were largely unpaid, though the Irish Weekly Independent would pay a small reward to the first-printed poem each week. The only work published in book form during Ledwidge's lifetime was the original volume
Songs of the Fields (1915), containing fifty poems, which was very well received. The poems in this volume were reviewed by Lord Dunsany, and selected by Dunsany and Ledwidge working together. Dunsany helped Lediwdge secure a publisher, Herbert Jenkins. The critic
Edward Marsh printed three of the poems in the
Georgian Poetry series, and remained a correspondent for the remainder of Ledwidge's life. A second volume,
Songs of Peace, had its 39 poems selected and was fully drafted when Ledwidge died; patron and friend
Lord Dunsany wrote the introduction while both were in Derry in September 1916 and arranged for its publication in September 1917, with an additional foreword. Following the war, Dunsany arranged for more of Ledwidge's work to be published, selecting 33 poems for a third and final volume,
Last Songs. The 122 poems from the three volumes were assembled into a collection,
The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge, released in 1919, which went through at least three editions. Dunsany commented on the work with words such as: "[I was]
astonished by the brilliance of that eye and that had looked at the fields of Meath and seen there all the simple birds and flowers, with a vividness which made those pages like a magnifying glass, through which one looked at familiar things for the first time." Posthumous publication In 1974, Alice Curtayne assembled a new collection of Ledwidge's poems,
Francis Ledwidge : Complete Poems adding 44 pieces from various sources, many of the newly-collected items having had newspaper appearances. Curtayne organised the poems into thematic groups. The collection was reprinted. In mid-1997, Liam O'Meara and the Inchicore Ledwidge Society published a new collection,
Francis Ledwidge : The Poems Complete, with 66 poems added to the Curtayne selection, many found in the archives at Dunsany Castle; around 20 of the poems had not previously been published. A Ledwidge enthusiast, retired British judge
Hubert Dunn, who had spoken of Ledwidge at commemorative events, and had contact with the Ledwidge and Dunsany families, and interest groups, secured permission to review some materials at Dunsany Castle. Working with the literary curator at Dunsany, Dunn located some unpublished poems, and in 2006, he released a narrative of Ledwidge's life and influences, with dozens of poems incorporated, including a small number of previously unpublished works. The Ledwidge Cottage Museum and the
Gallery Press of
Loughcrew, County Meath, led by
Peter Fallon, with support from Randal, the 21st Lord Dunsany, and the Dunsany archivist, Joe Doyle, jointly issued a new collection,
Poems, in 2022. Containing 140 works, one not previously seen, the book was launched at an event at
Slane Castle on 7 August 2022. The launch, in the castle’s famous Georgian ballroom, was attended by local activists, politicians, librarians, the
21st Lord Dunsany and the Dunsany literary curator, among many others.
Prose and drama Ledwidge's submissions to the Drogheda Independent in 1913 were done with the eventual aim of publishing a book:
Legends and Stories of the Boyne Side. The book was unfinished, having reached the entry for Slane, but some material was drafted, typeset, and some copies of this partial work printed, but it was then "shelved", and the early print material was dumped in the 1970s, except for one set, which was recovered, and published as
Legends and Stories of the Boyne Side. A further edition, expanded to include some short stories, a war record, and the full text of an autobiographical letter to Lewis Chase, was released in 2006:
Legends of the Boyne and Selected Prose. Researched and edited by Liam O'Meara, it was launched by Senator
David Norris at Liberty Hall in 2006. Ledwidge also wrote of working on a play,
The Crock of Gold, but no Ledwidge drama has yet been published or performed. There are also references to other writing, but none has been published.
Bibliography •
Songs of the Fields (1915; 50 poems; full text at the
Internet Archive) •
Songs of Peace (1917; 39 poems; full text at the Internet Archive) •
Last Songs (1918; 33 poems; full text at the Internet Archive) •
The complete poems of Francis Ledwidge; with introductions by Lord Dunsany (1919; 122 poems; full text at the Internet Archive) •
Legends of the Boyne and Selected Prose (ed. Liam O'Meara, Riposte Books with the Inchicore Ledwidge Society, 2006, , from Drogheda Independent material plus a short story, letter and war record) •
Legends and Stories of the Boyne Side (Excel Printing, Navan, 2017 - a facsimile reproduction of the book-in-progress that the Drogheda Independent was compiling) Later collections gathering more of the poetry: •
The Complete Poems of Francis Ledwidge (1974, Alice Curtayne [editor], who also wrote a comprehensive biography of the poet - 166 poems, including previously unpublished and uncollected work) •
Francis Ledwidge : The Poems Complete (1997, ed. Liam O'Meara, Goldsmith Press, ISBN 9781870491471) - 232 poems, including 20 unpublished, and 46 additional uncollected - and 7 pieces of juvenile work - primarily from the archives of Dunsany Castle, alongside Ledwidge family and other holdings •
Poems (2022, ed. Peter Fallon, Gallery Press, Loughcrew, County Meath, ISBN 9781911338383) - 140 poems, the 122 of the 1919 edition, 17 from the Curtayne 1949 collection, and 1 previously unseen work from the Dunsany archives) A study of the poet and his literary milieu, with a few previously unpublished works: •
The Minstrel Boy by
Hubert Dunn (Booklink, 2006) - selected poems within a narrative, in a commemorative volume, with illustrating photographs from the private art collection of a senior UK judge Selections from the body of Ledwidge's work: •
The Best of Francis Ledwidge (ed. Liam O'Meara, , introduction by
Ulick O'Connor) • ''The Dead Men's Dreams'' (ed. Liam O'Meara, Kilmainham Tales, ) - a collection of Ledwidge poems inspired by the
1916 Rising •
Selected Poems of Francis Ledwidge - (ed.
Dermot Bolger, Dublin poet, expanding on the 1919
Complete Poems). Reissued, with an introduction by Seamus Heaney and an extensive biographical afterword by Dermot Bolger, as
The Ledwidge Treasury. Reissued again in 2017, by New Island Books, using the original title of
Selected Poems, to mark the centenary of Ledwidge's death.
Settings and adaptations Some of Ledwidge's poetry was set to music by the British composer and songwriter
Michael Head, most notably in the song cycle published in 1920, "Over the rim of the moon". This includes the song, "The Ships of Arcady". There were also further musical settings, and compact discs and audiobooks of readings of his work, sometimes to music, have also been released.
Studies of Ledwidge and his work A substantial biography was written by Alice Curtayne, and published in 1972. In 2020, a short book, ''Soldier's Heart: Francis Ledwidge at war'' , a biographical account of his military service years, was published by his grand-nephew, Frank Ledwidge. Liam O'Meara, chairman of the Inchicore Ledwidge Society, published
To One Dead, a play based on the life & writings of Francis Ledwidge (), and
Francis Ledwidge Poet Activist & Soldier (Riposte Books/Inchicore Ledwidge Society, ). In 2012, Miriam O'Gara-Kilmurry was awarded a Masters in Literature from the
Open University with a thesis on Ledwidge titled, "A defence of Francis Ledwidge as a War Poet through an exploration of War Imagery, Nationalism and Canonical Revisions." She asserted that until 2011, Ledwidge had no 'WWI War Poet' presence online, and that no searches containing the specific words 'Irish WWI war poets' turned up any results, and that Ledwidge's poems written from the front-lines received little if no attention as examples of unique nationalist 'hybrid' war poems. On the eve of All-Ireland Poetry Day', 2 October 2013, O'Gara-Kilmurry was invited by the National Library of Ireland to deliver a lecture on "Francis Ledwidge: WWI Irish Nationalist War Poet." In 2016, the thesis was published as a book, ''Eire's WWI War Poet: F. E. Ledwidge''. According to O'Gara-Kilmurry: ==Politics==