In the decades following Gordon's death, his work continued to draw increasing praise from literary figures and the public at large, and especially in Melbourne, he was exalted as a genius and a national poet.
Arthur Conan Doyle and
Oscar Wilde counted among his admirers, the latter hailing him as "one of the finest poetic singers the English race has ever known". Gordon's reputation peaked in the 1930s, during which time statues and monuments to his memory were erected throughout Australia and Britain. On 30 October 1932, a statue of Gordon by
Paul Montford was unveiled near Parliament House, Melbourne, in a garden now known as Gordon Reserve; and in May 1934, his bust was placed in
Poets' Corner,
Westminster Abbey, and he remains the only Australian poet commemorated there. Over time, the praise he received resulted in a backlash.
George Bernard Shaw jokes about Gordon's verse in his 1949 play
Shakes versus Shav, a dialogue between Shakespeare and himself during which Shakespeare laughs at a line attributed to Gordon. Critics dismissed some of Gordon's poetry as careless and banal. His life was dramatised in the 1947 radio drama
A Horseman in Arcadia and 1948 radio drama
Adam Lindsay Gordon in which
Peter Finch played the title role. 's
Above Us the Great Grave Sky (1890) Gordon's works have inspired numerous works in other artistic mediums. The
Australian impressionists of the 1880s and 1890s were said to fuel the "Gordon craze", titling a number of their landscapes after lines from Gordon, including
The Dawn Faintly Dappled (
Charles Conder),
Above Us the Great Grave Sky (
Arthur Streeton) and
Whisperings in Wattle Boughs (
Frederick McCubbin). In 1886, inspired by a paper titled "The Open Air Elements in Gordon's Poems", members of the Melbourne bohemian artists' society the
Buonarotti Club illustrated studies of his poetry. as Gordon in the 1916 biopic ''
The Life's Romance of Adam Lindsay Gordon'' Film director
W. J. Lincoln based two films on poems by Gordon:
The Wreck (1913) and
The Sick Stockrider (1915). He also directed the 1916 biopic ''
The Life's Romance of Adam Lindsay Gordon'', starring
Hugh McCrae in the title role. Unlike many other early Australian silent films, much of the film survives today. One of Gordon's poems, "
The Swimmer", forms the libretto for the fifth movement of English composer Sir
Edward Elgar's song cycle
Sea Pictures, and Elgar also set to music another of his poems, "
A Song of Autumn". Composer
Varney Monk set three of her songs to Gordon's poems. After a
particularly trying year for the British Royal Family,
Elizabeth II quoted from one of Gordon's more famous poems in her Christmas Message of 1992, "Kindness in another's trouble, courage in one's own..", but did not mention the poet's name. The same, full poem was also quoted by
Diana, Princess of Wales during a speech in
Washington, D.C. in 1996. Dingley Dell, Gordon's property and home from 1862 to 1866, are preserved as a
conservation park and as a
museum. The museum houses early volumes of his work, personal effects, and a display of his horse-riding equipment. In 1970, Gordon was honoured on a postage stamp bearing his portrait issued by
Australia Post. On 20 September 2014, Gordon was inducted in the Australian Jumps Racing Association's Gallery of Champions. The suburb
Gordon in Canberra, Australia's capital, is named after Gordon. == Poetry collections ==