James Henry Cousins (22 July 1873 – 20 February 1956) was an Anglo-Irish writer, playwright, actor, critic, editor, teacher and poet. He used several pseudonyms, including Mac Oisín and the Hindu name Jayaram.
Cousins and wife Margaret were interested in anti-vivisection, theosophy, vegetarianism and women’s suffrage.
They were both strict vegetarians and in 1905 founded the Irish Vegetarian Society.
Cousins lectured on “The Cruelties and Diseases Connected with Flesh-Eating” which was awarded first prize at the Vegetarian Federal Union in June 1907.
POEMS BY JAMES H. COUSINS
The Oxford Book of English Mystical Verse. Ed. Nicholson & Lee. Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1917.
Padraic Colum (1881–1972).
Anthology of Irish Verse. 1922.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The Legend of the Blemished King and Other Poems (1897)
The Quest (1906)
The Bell-Branch (1908)
The Wisdom of the West (1912)
Etain the Beloved and Other Poems (1912)
The Bases of Theosophy (1913)
The Renaissance in India (1918)
The King’s Wife (1919)
Sea-Change (1920)
The Cultural Unity of Asia (1922)
Work and Worship: Essays on Culture and Creative Art (1922)
The New Japan: Impressions and Reflections (with 74 illustrations) (1923)
Heathen Essays (1925)
A Tibetan Banner (1926)
Above the Rainbow and Other Poems (1926)
A Wandering Harp: Selected Poems (1932)
A Bardic Pilgrimage (1934)
Collected Poems (1940)
The Faith Of The Artist. (1941)
The Work Promethean (1970)
BIOGRAPHIES/CRITICISM
A Wandering Harp: James H. Cousins, a Study. C.N. Mangala. (B.R. Publishing, 1995).
James Henry Cousins: A Study of His Works in the Light of Theosophical Movement. Dilip Kumar Chatterjee. (South Asia Books, 1994).
James Cousins. William A. Dumbleton. (Twayne Publishing, 1980).