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John Frederick Freeman (29 January 1880 – 23 September 1929) was an English poet and essayist, who gave up a successful career in insurance to write full-time.

He was born in London, and started as an office boy aged 13. He was a close friend of Walter de la Mare from 1907, who lobbied hard with Edward Marsh to get Freeman into the Georgian Poetry series; with eventual success. De la Mare's biographer Theresa Whistler describes him as "tall, gangling, ugly, solemn, punctilious".

He won the Hawthornden Prize in 1920 with Poems 1909-1920. His Last Hours was set to music by Ivor Gurney.

Works

  • Fifty Poems (1911)
  • Happy is England (1914)
  • Presage of Victory (1916)
  • Stone Trees (1916)
  • The Moderns: Essays in Literary Criticism (1917); essays on George Bernard Shaw, H. G. Wells, Thomas Hardy, Maurice Maeterlinck, Henry James, Joseph Conrad, Coventry Patmore, Francis Thompson, and Robert Bridges.
  • Memories of Childhood and other Poems (1919)
  • Poems 1909-1920 (1920)
  • Music (1921)
  • The Red Path, A Narrative, And The Wounded Bird (1921)
  • A Portrait of George Moore in a Study of his Work (1922)
  • The Grove and Other Poems (1925)
  • Prince Absalom (1925)
  • Solomon and Balkis (1926)
  • Collected Poems (1928)
  • Last Poems (1930)
  • John Freeman's Letters (1936) posthumous; edited by Gertrude Freeman & Sir John Squire