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Christian History Institute
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Christian History Institute November 13, 1907 • Heaven's Hound Got Thompson ©2007 |
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![]() Francis Thompson as sketched by his friend Meynell.
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Out
of the Night. Stephen Arrington never intended to trash his life. Discharged from the Navy for selling marijuana, he became a pilot for a major cocaine transporter. Charged as codefendant in the famous John DeLorean drug trial, he pled guilty. In prison his life was transformed when he found the Lord.
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hompson was running, running. He was running from his father, from his failure as a medical student, from God himself. Thousands have read "The Hound of Heaven" with tears, for it is the story of God's pursuit of all, who, like Thompson, reject Him, and try to flee from Him. I fled Him, down the nights and down the days; The poet knew that: "All things betray thee, who betrayest Me." But still he ran--into the slums of London, into starvation, dirt, drug addiction and disease. But why? ...For, though I knew His love Who follow'd, Thompson need never have starved. In 1859, he was born into a well-to-do Roman Catholic home. But his parents wanted him to become a physician, a career he detested. He failed his exams three times and then fled to London. He failed every occupation he tried. Although his father sent a little money to him in care of a library, he was refused admission because he was so shabby. When he collapsed in the street, a prostitute rescued him. Some poems he scribbled on sugar paper were printed by Wilfred Meynell who finally rescued Thompson. Under the care of a Franciscan community, Thompson escaped his drug addiction, but his health was permanently injured. The author of what has been called "the greatest ode in the English language" died on this day, November 13, 1907. Had the "Hound of Heaven" cornered him for keeps? Bibliography:
Last updated April, 2007. |