I've heard of Ina Boyle but can't quite think under what circumstances just at the moment.
As for Maurice Jacobson, he was an examiner for a piano class I competed in at a music festival when I was at school. I won the first prize but the competition wasn't up to much !
Jacobson set Francis Thompson's Hound of Heaven as a choral/orchestral work and I heard it broadcast many years ago. I wonder if recorded copies of the broadcast survive anywhere ?
Yes indeed he did, Jeffrey - he set at least fifteen of her poems to music, and Ina Boyle, Charles Wood, Ivor Gurney (under the pseudonym Michael (Raphoe) Flood), Maurice Jacobson, C. Alison Compton, Rhoda Coghill, Edward Bairstow, Haldane Campbell Stewart, Dorothy Parke and Christopher à Becket Williams also did settings of her poems - now I add M G Truman to that list. Although Stanford seems to get most of the credit, Ina Boyle (an almost-forgotten-until-recently Irish composer) set 'A Soft Day, Thank God' to music in 1912 ahead of Stanford's 'A Soft Day'.
Forgive me if you already know this but the prolific Charles Villiers Stanford set some of her poetry as solo songs.
IMSLP has one set, "A Sheaf of Songs from Leinster" op.140, online:
https://imslp.org/wiki/Category:Stanford%2C_Charles_Villiers
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