While he was a student at Chase School, Richards met poet
Nicholas Vachel Lindsay. The two were roommates in New York and became lifelong friends. Vachel described Richards as looking, "cold, sleek,...panther-like" and like "Prince Regent of China." He was also described as being well-read and interested in the
Middle Ages, often drawing pictures of ladies and
knights. Later in life, Vachel would write to a friend that Richards was his "heart's best brother for [his] four years (1905-1908)." Richards illustrated a few of Lindsay's poetry books including,
Johnny Appleseed and Other Poems (1928),
Every Soul is a Circus (1929), and the cover of
The Golden Book of Springfield (1920). Richards' drawings even influenced Lindsay's poems, "The Queen of Butterflies" and "The Mysterious Cat." Vachel's "Art of the Moving Picture" is dedicated to Richards with the inscription, "Dedicated to George Mather Richards in memory of the art student days we spent together when the Metropolitan Museum was our picture-drama." Vachel would go on to write a poem for Richards' daughter, Elisabet "Betsy," titled, "Some Balloons Grow on Trees." ==References==