The FictionMags Index
Index by Date: Page 603
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de la Bere, S(tephen) B(aghot) (1877-1927) (about) (items)
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine June 1907
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm July 1907
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm August 1907
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm January 1908
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm March 1908
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm May 1908
- How I Illustrate, (sy) Pearson’s Magazine June 1908
- Traffic, (il) The Flag ed. Major H. F. Trippel, Daily Mail, 1908
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Windsor Magazine #173, May 1909
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine October 1910
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine January 1911
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Royal Magazine June 1911
Delacroix, Reina (fl. 1990s-2000s) (items)
- Courtship Rites, (nv) Feline Fetishes ed. corwin, Circlet Press, May 1993
- Burning at the Stake, (ss) SexMagick ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, August 1993
- Wilderland, (nv) The Beast Within ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, December 1994
- Truth or Dare?, (nv) S/M Pasts ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, December 1995
- All Things Ripen in Their Own Time, (ss) Fetish Fantastic ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, July 1999
- Wise Woman, Wild Woman, (ss) Stars Inside Her ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, November 1999
- Blue Sky, (ss) Sextopia ed. Cecilia Tan, Circlet Press, June 2001
de la Croix, Sukie (fl. 1980s-1990s) (items)
- Just Desserts (with Daniel Shapiro), (ss) Gay Life Magazine December 1988
- Dinner Party, or All’s Well That Ends Well, (nv) Midsummer Night’s Dreams: One Story, Many Tales ed. M. Christian, Rhinoceros, September 1998
- Who Was Jane Dalotz?, (ss) The Kiss of Death, Design Image Group, November 1998
- I Fuck the Dead, (pm) Twilight Tales Presents Book of Dead Things ed. Tina L. Jens, 11th Hour Productions, October 1999
de Lacy, Charles J(ohn) (1856-1929) (about) (items)
- [illustration(s)] (with Matt Stretch), (il) The Windsor Magazine #10, October 1895
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine January 1896
- Leaving Port, (il) The Pall Mall Magazine July 1896
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine May 1897
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Pall Mall Magazine August 1898
- [illustration(s)], (il) The English Illustrated Magazine January 1899
- Launch of a Leviathan, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 9 1899
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper July 21 1900
- After the Fight.—Time 1703, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper November 24 1900
- [illustration(s)], (il) Cassell’s Magazine December 1900
- Where Breakers Roar, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper February 2 1901
- Now Boys!, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper April 27 1901
- A Dutch Squall, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper August 10 1901
- The Light in the Haunted Wing, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper January 18 1902
- Ice-Boat Sport in Canada, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper February 22 1902
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper February 22 1902
- The Channel Mail Boats, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper July 5 1902
- Getting out of Port, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper July 5 1902
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper July 5 1902
- A Yacht Race, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 13 1902
- Early Autumn in the Solent, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 20 1902
- Southward Bound, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper November 15 1902
- A Call for the Ramsgate Lifeboat, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper March 14 1903
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper March 14 1903
- After the Armada, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper June 20 1903
- A Relic of the Armada, (ms) The Boy’s Own Paper June 20 1903
- When Stormy Winds Do Blow?, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper November 7 1903
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper November 28 1903
- A Call to Service, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper January 30 1904
- The Boat Race, 1903, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper March 26 1904
- Largest Vessels of the Russian and Japanese Fleets, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper June 11 1904
- Scouting, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper June 18 1904
- Fuji of Japan: Built in England, at Thames Ironworks, Blackwall, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper July 23 1904
- A Yacht Race.—Getting Into Position for the Start, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper July 23 1904
- Ironclad in Action, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 10 1904
- A Parting Shot!, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper December 10 1904
- Christmas Eve on the Fatal Sands, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper December 24 1904
- The Fastnet Light, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper February 18 1905
- After the Gale, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper May 27 1905
- Thames Sailing-barge Match, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper August 5 1905
- Race off Spithead.—Getting out the Spinakers, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 16 1905
- Summer, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 16 1905
- Yachting and Yacht-Racing, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper September 16 1905
- Old England’s Memorable Victory, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper December 16 1905
- The New Style of Tobogganing in Switzerland, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper April 7 1906
- To the Rescue, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper February 16 1907
- The Thames Fire Brigade Going Into Action, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper April 20 1907
- Our Navy—Past and Present, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper September 14 1907
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 14 1907
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper October 19 1907
- The Cost of Placing a Battleship in the Water, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper February 15 1908
- The Making of One of His Majesty’s Ships, (ar) The Boy’s Own Paper August 15 1908
- [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper August 15 1908
- Target Practice, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper May 27 1911
- The Interior of a Dreadnought, (il) Chums March 18 1916
- Testing a Big Naval Gun, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper December 1920
Delafield, E. M.; pseudonym of Edmée Elizabeth Monica Dashwood (1890-1943) (about) (items)
- Time Works Wonders, (ss) Hutchinson’s Magazine October 1921
- The Bond of Union, (ss) The Sketch February 14 1923
- The Gallant Little Lady, (ss) Cassell’s Weekly #2, March 30 1923
- The Appeal, (ss) Eve April 9 1924
- Impasse, (ss) Nash’s and Pall Mall Magazine April 1924
- The Round Hole, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) July 1924
- The Entertainment, (ss) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine January 1925
- Reparation, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) March 1925
- Blairgowrie, (ss) The Story-teller April 1925
- Incidental, (ss) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine June 1925
- The Threshold of Eternity, (ss) The Sovereign and Regent Magazine June 1925
- The Tortoise, (ss) Pearson’s Magazine August 1925
- The Waiting Lady, (ss) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine August 1925
- O Tempora! O Mores!, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) November 1925
- The Philistine, (ss) Harper’s Magazine May 1926
- This Is One Way Round, (ss) The Home Magazine (UK) June 1926
- The Luggage in the Hall, (ss) The Story-teller July/August 1926
- Time and the Woman, (ss) The Windsor Magazine #382, October 1926
- The Step-Daughter, (ss) The London Magazine November 1926
- Devoted Cousin Winnie, (ss) The Windsor Magazine #386, February 1927
- The Lady from the Provinces, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) February 1927
- The Hotel Child, (ss) Best-Story Magazine #10, May 1927
- The Torch of Tradition, (ss) The Home Magazine (UK) May 1927
- Terms of Reference, (ss) Nash’s Magazine September 1927
- The Beginning of Wisdom, (ss) The Royal Magazine December 1927
- These Things Pass, (ss) The Royal Magazine March 1928
- Flight, (ss) Nash’s Magazine June 1928
- The Second Kiss, (ss) The Royal Magazine September 1928
- The Indispensable Woman, (ss) The Royal Magazine November 1928
- But if It Had Been a Fine Day, (ss) The Windsor Magazine #408, December 1928
- Then Changes Her Mind, (ss) Modern Home #4, January 1929
- The Breaking Point, (ss) Nash’s Magazine February 1929
- An Expensive Lunch, (ss) Pall Mall Magazine July 1929
- Bitter-Sweet Phrase, (ss) Harper’s Bazaar November 1929
- A Tale of the Times, (ss) The Strand Magazine March 1930
- One Glorious Summer Day, (ss) Woman’s Home Companion September 1930
- The Idea, (ss) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine October 1930
- The Opportunity, (ss) Pearson’s Magazine October 1930
- Victims, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) October 1930
- The Young Are in Earnest, (ss) The Grand Magazine October 1930
- When the Green Becomes Blue, (ss) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine November 1930
- Sophy Mason Comes Back, (ss) Time and Tide 1930
- Squirrel in a Cage, (ss) Women Are Like That by E. M. Delafield, Harper, 1930
- Answer to Prayer, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) October 1931
- The Way We Lived Then, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) April 1932
- Make Up Your Mind, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) August 1932
- General Impression of a Christmas Shopping Centre, (ss) General Impressions by E. M. Delafield, Macmillan, 1933
- [unknown story], (ss) Modern Stories October 1934
- The Fisherman and His Wife, (nv) The Fairies Return, Peter Davies, November 1934
- Men in Fiction, (ar) A Century of Humour ed. P. G. Wodehouse, Hutchinson, December 1934
- Christmas Conversations, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine December 1935
- Cocktail Conversation, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine February 1936
- Conversation in a Book-Shop, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine March 1936
- Some Stormy Conversation, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine July 1936
- Conversation Amongst Travellers, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine August 1936
- The Sporting Spirit, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine November 1936
- “O.K. for Story”, (ss) The Radio Times December 20 1936
- Christmas Fun, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine December 1936
- “My Son Had Nothing on His Mind”, (nv) Missing from Their Homes, Hutchinson, 1936
- Conversation Concerning a Fog, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine January 1937
- Convalescence, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine February 1937
- Old-Timers, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine March 1937
- The Girl Who Told the Truth, (ss) The Evening Standard April 1 1937
- At the Theatre, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine April 1937
- Indispensability, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine May 1937
- The Victim, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine June 1937
- Radio Reaction, (vi) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine July 1937
- Morning Without Cloud, (sl) Woman’s Journal October 1938
- But They Don’t Wear Labels, (ss) The Daily Mail April 10 1939
- It’s All Too Difficult, (ss) Harper’s Bazaar #2722, April 1939
- Femina’s Supplement, (hu) unknown date
- Holiday Group, (ss) unknown date
- It All Came Right in the End, (ss) unknown date
- The Mistake, (ss) unknown date
de la Force, Charlotte-Rose Caumont (1650-1724) (items)
- The Good Woman, (ss) Beauties, Beasts and Enchantments ed. Jack Zipes, NAL, October 1989; translated by Jack Zipes
- Parslinette, (ss) Spells of Enchantment ed. Jack Zipes, Viking, December 1991; translated by Jack Zipes
- More Beautiful Than a Fay, (ss) The Land of Delights by Charlotte-Rose Caumont de La Force, tr. Brian Stableford, Black Coat Press, July 2018; translated by Brian M. Stableford
- A Good Woman, (ss) unknown date, uncredited.
de la Luz, Rios (fl. 2010s) (about) (items)
- El Puente, (ss) Protectors 2: Heroes ed. Thomas Pluck, Goombah Gumbo Press, September 2015
- Orchids by the Sea, (ss) Eternal Frankenstein ed. Ross E. Lockhart, Word Horde, October 2016
- Sadako, Mitsuko, and Sleep Paralysis, (ar) Nightmare #54, March 2017
- The Hitch, (vi) Forbidden Futures #3, Winter 2018
de la Mare, Walter (John) (1873-1956); used pseudonym Walter Ramal (about) (books) (items)
- Kismet, (ss) The Sketch August 7 1895
- The Hangman Luck, (ss) Pall Mall Gazette November 4 1895
- A Mote, (ss) The Cornhill Magazine August 1896, as by Walter Ramal
- The Village of Old Age, (ss) The Cornhill Magazine September 1896, as by Walter Ramal
- The Moon’s Miracle, (ss) The Cornhill Magazine April 1897, as by Walter Ramal
- Slumber-Song, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1900, as by Walter Ramal
- The Giant, (ss) The Pall Mall Magazine June 1901, as by Walter Ramal
- The Rejection of the Rector, (ss) Black & White October 5 1901
- De Mortuis, (ss) The Pall Mall Magazine December 1901, as by Walter Ramal
- De Mortuis, (ss) The Pall Mall Magazine 1901, as by Walter Ramal
- Songs of Childhood, (co) Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Songs of Childhood, (oc) Longmans, Green, and Co. (hc), January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Alulvan, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- As Lucy Went A-Walking, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Bluebells, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Buckle, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Bunches of Grapes, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Captain Lean, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Cecil, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Child in the Story Awakes, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Child in the Story Goes to Bed, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Christening, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Dame Hickory, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Down-Adown-Derry, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Dwarf, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Englishman, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Envoy (“There clung three roses to a stem”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Fairies Dancing, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Fly (“How large unto the tiny fly”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Gage, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Gnomies, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Grey Wolf, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Hare, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Haunted (“From out the wood I watched them shine”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Horn, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- I Met at Eve, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- I Saw Three Witches, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Isle of Lone, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- John Mouldy, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Lamplighter, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Lovelocks, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Lullaby (“Sleep, baby, sleep!”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Miller and His Son, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Mother Bird, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Night-Swans, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- O Dear Me!, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Ogre, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Pedlar, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Phantom (“Swiftly the hours of light have sped”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Pilgrim, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Portrait of a Warrior, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Raven’s Tomb, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Reverie (“When slim Sophia mounts her horse”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Silver Penny, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Sleeping Beauty, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Song (“O for a Moon to Light Me Home!”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Supper (“A wolf he pricks with eyes of fire”), (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Tartary, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Three Beggars, (pm) Songs of Childhood by Walter Ramal, Longmans, Green, and Co., January 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- Desdemona, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Falstaff, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Hamlet, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Iago, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Juliet, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Juliet’s Nurse, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Macbeth, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Mercutio, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Ophelia, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Polonius, (pm) The Monthly Review May 1902
- Labyrinth, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine September 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- The Companion, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1902, as by Walter Ramal
- In Deep Sleep, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine January 1903, as by R. W.
- The Riddle, (ss) The Monthly Review February 1903
- All Sweet Flowers, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Cold to Bosom, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Ditty, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Follow the World, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Julia, Electra, Dianeme, (ex) John Murray, March 1904
- Nick Bottom, (ex) John Murray, March 1904
- Pilgrim Forget, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Sighs Have No Skill, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Whither?, (ex) John Murray, March 1904
- You Take My Heart with Tears, (pm) John Murray, March 1904
- Bright Life, (pm) The Monthly Review July 1904
- Ev’n in the Grave, (pm) The Monthly Review July 1904
- The Happy Encounter, (pm) The Monthly Review July 1904
- Humanity, (pm) The Monthly Review July 1904
- In the Forest, (ss) Black & White August 27 1904
- Lullaby (“Shut now those slumber-haunted eyes”), (pm) The Living Age January 28 1905
- Age and Childhood, (pm) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine February 1905
- The Lady of Sleep, (pm) Temple Bar April 1905
- An Ideal Craftsman, (ss) The Monthly Review June 1905
- Snow (“There blooms no bud in May”), (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine February 1906
- Poems, (co) John Murray (hc), September 1906
- Age, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Anatomy, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- April, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Autumn, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Banquo, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Birthnight, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Casca, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Children of Stare, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Come! (“From an island of the sea”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Coup de Grâce, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Death-Dream, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Echo (“Who called?, I said, and the words”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- England (“No lovelier hills than thine have laid”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Evening (“When twilight darkens, and one by one”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Even Rosemary, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Fear, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Foreboding (“Thou canst not see him standing by”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Glimpse, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- “Gloria Mundi”, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Goliath, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Idleness, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Imogen, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- In Vain, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Irrevocable (“I sometimes wonder what my life doth mean”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- “Keep Innocency!”, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Market-Place, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Massacre, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Mermaids (“Sand, sand; hills of sand”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Messengers, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Miracle, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Myself, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Napoleon, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Night (“All from the light of the sweet moon”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Omniscience, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Phantom (“Wilt thou never come again”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Poems, (co) John Murray, September 1906
- “Portrait of a Boy”, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Remembrance, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Reverie (“Bring not bright candles”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Sea-Magic, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Seas of England, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Shadow (“Even the beauty of the rose doth cast”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Sorcery, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Tears, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Thule (“If thou art sweet as they are sad”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- To My Mother, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Treachery, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Truce, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Universe, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Unpausing, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Unregarding, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Vain Finding, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Virtue, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Voice of Melancholy, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Voices (“Who is calling by the darkened river”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- “Where Is Thy Victory?”, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- The Winter-Boy, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Winter Coming, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Winter (“Green Mistletoe!”), (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Youth, (pm) Poems, Murray, September 1906
- Benighted, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1906
- Benighted, (ss) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1906
- Benighted, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine November 1906
- Childhood, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine December 1906
- The Match-Makers, (ss) The Lady’s Realm December 1906
- The Quincunx, (ss) The Lady’s Realm January 1907
- The Talisman of Weisshausen, (ss) The Lady’s Realm March 1907
- A Farewell (“Why art thou weeping”), (pm) The Lady’s Realm April 1907
- Reunion (“When twilight broods o’er Acheron”), (pm) The Nation May 11 1907
- The Budget, (ss) The Lady’s Realm June 1907, uncredited.
- The Count’s Courtship, (ss) The Lady’s Realm July 1907
- The Pear-Tree, (ss) The Lady’s Realm July 1907, uncredited.
- Lichen, (pm) The Lady’s Realm September 1907
- Lichen, (nv) The Lady’s Realm September 1907
- Lichen, (pm) The Lady’s Realm September 1907
- untitled (“If you’d not been so sweet”), (pm) The Lady’s Realm October 1907
- untitled (“I waited till nine”), (pm) The Lady’s Realm October 1907
- The Dutch Cheese, (ss) The Lady’s Realm May 1908
- Leap Year, (ss) The Lady’s Realm May 1908, as by W. D. L. M.
- Rachel Sings, (pm) The Lady’s Realm September 1908
- The Bird of Travel, (ss) The Lady’s Realm October 1908
- The Question, (pm) The Lady’s Realm November 1908
- Alone (“No sound over the deep”), (pm) The English Review February 1909
- The Almond Tree, (nv) The English Review August 1909
- The Almond Tree, (ex) The English Review August 1909
- All That’s Past, (pm) The Thrush January 1910
- Unforgotten, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine February 1910
- The Dark Château, (pm) The Thrush May 1910
- Andy Battle, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Andy Battle’s Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Andy’s Love Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Envoy (“Long—long is Time”), (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- A Few Chapters, (ex) Duckworth, November 1910
- Gar Mulgar Dusangee, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Marching Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Midden’s Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Mulgar Journey-Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Mulgars’ Farewell, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Mulla-Mulgars’ Journey-Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Nod’s Old English Song: “Poor Ben, Old Ben!”, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- She’s Me Forgot, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Song of the Water-Midden, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Water Midden’s Song, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- Wi’decks Awas’, (pm) Duckworth, November 1910
- The Return, (n.) Edward Arnold, 1910
- Stranger, a Moment Pause, and Stay, (pm) Edward Arnold, 1910
- The Listeners, (pm) The Living Age April 29 1911
- Off the Ground, (pm) The New Fry’s Magazine May 1911
- The Listeners and Other Poems, (co) Constable (hc), February 1912
- Ages Ago, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Alone (“A very old woman”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Arabia, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Be Angry Now No More, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Bells, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Beware!, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Bindweed, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Dreams, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Dwelling-Place, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- An Epitaph (“Here lies a most beautiful lady”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Estranged, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Exile (“Had the gods loved me I had lain”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Faithless, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Ghost (“Peace in thy hands”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Haunted (“The rabbit in his burrow keeps”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- “The Hawthorn Hath a Deathly Smell”, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Home, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Journey (“Heart-sick of his journey was the Wanderer”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Keys of Morning, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Martha, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Miss Loo, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Mountains, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Music Unheard, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Never More, Sailor, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Never-to-Be, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Nod, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Noon and Night Flower, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Old Ben, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Old Susan, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Queen Djenira, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Rachel, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Scarecrow (“All winter through I bow my head”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Shade, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Silence, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Sleep, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Sleeper, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Spring (“Once when my life was young”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Stranger (“Half-hidden in a graveyard”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Tailor, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Three Cherry Trees, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Time Passes, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Tired Cupid, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- When the Rose Is Faded, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Where? (“Where is my love”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Winter (“Clouded with snow”), (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- Winter Dusk, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- The Witch, (pm) The Listeners and Other Poems, Constable, February 1912
- A Child’s Day:, (oc) Constable and Company, Limited (hc), October 1912
- And There She Is (on the Other Side), (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- As Soon as Ever Twilight Comes, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- But as When April Showers Are Gone, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- But Now, Dear Me!, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- But Now, My Dear, for Gracious Sake, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- A Child’s Day: A Book of Rhymes, (oc) Constable, October 1912
- England Over, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Here All We See, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- I Sang a Song to Rosamond Rose, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- The King in Slumber When He Lies Down, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Little Birds Bathe, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Lob Lie by the Fire, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Lullay O, Lullaby, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Now, Through the Dusk, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Now Twelve Above, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- The Queen of Arabia, Uanjinee, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Sadly, O, Sadly, the Sweet Bells of Baddeley, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Softly, Drowsily, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Soon After in Her Garden, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- There Was an Old Woman Who Lived in the Fens, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- This Little Morsel of Morsels Here, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- Thousands of Years Ago, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- When Safe Into the Fields Ann Got, (pm) A Child’s Day:, Constable and Company, Limited, October 1912
- The Three Friends, (ss) The Saturday Westminster Gazette April 19 1913
- The Song of the Mad Prince, (pm) The Blue Review May 1913
- Peacock Pie, (co) Constable and Company Ltd. (hc), June 1913
- Alas, Alack!, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- All but Blind, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- At the Keyhole, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Bandog, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Barber’s, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Bees’ Song, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Berries, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Bewitched, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Bookworm, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Bread and Cherries, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Cake and Sack, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Changeling (“Ahoy, and ahoy!”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Chicken, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Cupboard, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Dream-Song, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Dunce (“Why does he still keep ticking?”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Earth Folk, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Five Eyes, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Full Moon, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Grim, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Hapless, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Hide and Seek, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Honey Robbers, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Horseman (“I heard a horseman”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Huntsmen, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- I Can’t Abear, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Jim Jay, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- King David, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Little Bird, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Little Green Orchard, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Little Old Cupid, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Longlegs, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Lost Shoe, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Many a Mickle, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Melmillo, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Mima, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Miss T., (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Mistletoe, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Mocking Fairy, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Mrs. Earth, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Mrs. MacQueen, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Nicholas Nye, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Nobody Knows, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Old House, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Old Shellover, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Old Soldier, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Old Stone House, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Peak and Puke, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Picture, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Pigs and the Charcoal-Burner, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Poor Henry, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Poor “Miss 7”, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Quartette, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Ride-by-Nights, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Ruin, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Sam, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Ship of Rio, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Silver, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Some One, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- A Song of Enchantment, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Song of Finis, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Song of Shadows, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Song of Soldiers, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Song of the Secret, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- “Sooeep!”, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Summer Evening, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Then, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Thief at Robin’s Castle, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Tillie, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Tired Tim, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Tit for Tat, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Trees, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Truants (“Ere my heart beats too coldly and faintly”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Unstooping, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Up and Down, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Wanderers (“Wide are the meadows of night”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- A Widow’s Weeds, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- Will Ever?, (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Window (“Behind the blinds I sit and watch”), (pm) Peacock Pie, Constable, June 1913
- The Enchanted Hill, (pm) Poetry and Drama December 1913
- The Old Men, (pm) Sign of the Flying Fame, 1913
- I Went to Pluck a Flow’r, (pm) The Westminster Gazette May 18 1914
- To a Child, (pm) The Pall Mall Magazine May 1914
- A True-Blue Broadside of ’14, (pm) The Saturday Westminster Gazette August 22 1914
- The Empty House, (pm) The Weekly Tale-Teller #348, January 1 1916
- A-Tishoo, (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- Envoy (“Child, do you love the flower”), (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- The Fiddlers, (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- The Funeral, (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- Note, (ms) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916, etc.
- The Phantom (“Upstairs in the large closet, child”), (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- The Rainbow (“I saw the lovely arch”), (pm) Songs of Childhood, Longmans, Green, and Co., 1916
- The Vats, (ss) The Saturday Westminster Gazette June 16 1917
- The Tryst (“North and South and East and West”), (pm) To-Day August 1917
- The Lady Godiva (“The Lady Godiva, all tender and fair”), (pm) The New Statesman September 8 1917
- Sunken Garden and Other Poems, (co) Beaumont Press (hc), 1917
- Alexander, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Clear Eyes, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Dreamer (“O thou who giving helm and sword”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Exile (“I am that Adam who”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Eyes, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Farewell (“When I lie where shades of darkness”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Flight, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Fool’s Song, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- For All the Grief, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- In a Churchyard, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Little Salamander, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Mistress Fell, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Motley, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Mrs. Grundy, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Music (“When music sounds”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Remonstrance, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Riddlers, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Stranger (“In the woods”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Sunken Garden, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- To E.T.: 1917, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- The Tryst (“Why in my heart, O Grief”), (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Two Houses, (pm) Sunken Garden and Other Poems, Beaumont Press, 1917
- Motley and Other Poems, (co) Constable (hc), May 1918
- Alone (“The abode of the nightingale is bare”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- April Moon, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Betrayal, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Blind Boy (“I have no master”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Cage (“Why did you flutter in vain hope”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Dust to Dust, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Ghost (“Who knocks?”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Happy England, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Invocation, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Life, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Linnet, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Marionettes, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Moonlight, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Nightfall, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Nocturne, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Quarry, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Reawakening, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Revenant (“O all ye fair ladies with your colours and your graces”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Scribe, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Three Strangers, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Tryst (“Flee into some forgotten night and be”), (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Unchanging, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- The Vacant Day, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Vain Questioning, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Vigil, (pm) Motley and Other Poems, Constable, May 1918
- Noah’s Ark, (pm) New Paths ed. C. W. Beaumont & M. T. H. Sadler, C.W. Beaumont, 1918
- Sam’s Three Wishes, (pm) Twelve Poets: A Miscellany, Selwyn & Blount, 1918
- The Tryst (“Are you very peaceful there, Thomas Nunn?”), (pm) New Paths ed. C. W. Beaumont & M. T. H. Sadler, C.W. Beaumont, 1918
- The Promise, (ss) The English Review January 1919
- Gamesters, (pm) The Athenaeum May 9 1919
- The Might-Have-Been, (pm) The New Statesman June 28 1919
- Alas (“One moment take they rest”), (pm) The Owl: A Miscellany October 1919
- Alas (“One moment take thy rest”), (pm) The Owl: A Miscellany October 1919
- Selina’s Parable, (ss) The New Statesman November 1 1919
- Flora: A Book of Drawings (with Pamela Bianco), (co) William Heinemann (hc), December 1919
- As I Did Rove, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Bird Set Free, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Bitter Waters, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Comb, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Coquette, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Crazed, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Dear Delight, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Divine Delight, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Five of Us, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Flora: A Book of Drawings (with Pamela Bianco), (oc) Heinemann, December 1919
- Flotsam, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Forgiveness, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Gaze, Now, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- I Go Home, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Innocency, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Listen!, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Master Rabbit, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Mirage, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Misericordia, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Morning Toilet, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Moth, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Mourn’st Thou Now?, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Path, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Sephina, (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- The Snowflake (“See, now, this filigree”), (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Suppose (“Suppose…and suppose that a wild little Horse of Magic”), (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- Thule (“Green-cupped the acorn”), (pm) Flora: A Book of Drawings with Pamela Bianco, William Heinemann, December 1919
- To Some Most Happy Men, (pm) 1919
- The Creatures, (ss) The London Mercury January 1920
- Poems: 1901 to 1918: Volume One, (co) Constable and Company Limited (hc), September 1920
- Poems: 1901 to 1918: Volume Two, (co) Constable and Company Limited (hc), September 1920
- The Penny Owing, (pm) Romance September 1920
- Two Days in Town, (ss) The Sphere November 13 1920
- The Shellfish, (pm) Christian Science Monitor November 15 1920
- Six and Thirty Years Gone, (pm) 1920
- Story and Rhyme, (co) J.M. Dent & Sons (hc), May 1921
- The Double, (pm) Harper’s Magazine September 1921
- Araby, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Beggar’s Song, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- The Fairy-Pedlar’s Song, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- The Flower (“Listen, I who love thee well”), (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Fol Dol Do, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Here To-Day, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Now All the Roads, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Now Silent Falls, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- There Sate Good Queen Bess, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- Tidings, (pm) Beaumont Press, October 1921
- The Veil and Other Poems, (co) Constable and Co. Ltd. (hc), December 1921
- Awake!, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Before Dawn, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Catechism, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Corner Stone, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Decoy, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Drugged, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- An Epitaph (“Last, Stone, a little yet”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Fairy in Winter, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Familiar, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Flower (“Horizon to horizon, lies outspread”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Fog, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Futility, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Galliass, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Gold, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Good-bye (“The last of last words spoken is, Good-bye”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Hospital, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Hostage, (pm) Nash’s and Pall Mall Magazine December 1921
- The Hour-Glass, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Imagination’s Pride, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Imp Within, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- In the Dock, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Last Coachload, (pm) The London Mercury December 1921
- Maerchen, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Monologue, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Music (“O restless fingers”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Not That Way, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Old Angler, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- On the Esplanade, (pm) To-Day December 1921
- The Owl (“What if to edge of dream”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Quiet Enemy, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- A Riddle, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- A Sign, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Son of Melancholy, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Sotto Voce, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Spectre (“In cloudy quiet of the day”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Spirit of Air, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Stranger (“In the nook of a wood”), (pm) The Century Magazine December 1921
- The Suicide, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Sunk Lyonesse, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Titmouse, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Unfinished Dream, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Veil, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Voice (“We are not often alone, we two”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Wanderers (“Within my mind two spirits strayed”), (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Who?, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Who’s That?, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Willow, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- The Wreck, (pm) The Veil and Other Poems, Constable, December 1921
- Ah, Stranger, Breathe a Sigh, (pm) Collins, 1921
- Come All You Woung Men, with Your Wicked Ways, (pm) Collins, 1921
- ’Twas a Cuckoo, Cried “Cuck-oo”, (pm) Collins, 1921
- Seaton’s Aunt, (nv) The London Mercury April 1922
- The Tree, (ss) The Century Magazine August 1922
- Down-Adown-Derry, (co) Constable & Co. (hc), September 1922
- Cumberland, (pm) Down-Adown-Derry, Constable & Co., September 1922
- Down-Adown-Derry: A Book of Fairy Poems, (co) Constable, September 1922
- The Little Creature, (pm) Down-Adown-Derry, Constable & Co., September 1922
- Not I, (pm) Down-Adown-Derry, Constable & Co., September 1922
- Snow (“No breath of wind”), (pm) Down-Adown-Derry, Constable & Co., September 1922
- Lispet, Lispett & Vaine, (ss) The Yale Review January 1923
- Thus Her Tale, (pm) Porpoise Press, April 1923
- The Riddle and Other Stories, (co) Selwyn & Blount (hc), May 1923
- The Bowl, (ss) The Riddle and Other Stories, Selwyn & Blount, May 1923
- The Looking Glass, (ss) The Riddle and Other Stories, Selwyn & Blount, May 1923
- Miss Duveen, (ss) The Riddle and Other Stories, Selwyn & Blount, May 1923
- Out of the Deep, (nv) The Riddle and Other Stories, Selwyn & Blount, May 1923
- Miss Jemima, (nv) Joy Street Number 1, Blackwell, 1923
- Ding Dong Bell, (oc) Selwyn & Blount Ltd. (hc), April 1924
- Winter, (ss) Ding Dong Bell, Selwyn & Blount Ltd., April 1924
- Winter, (pm) Ding Dong Bell, Selwyn & Blount Ltd., April 1924
- Peacock Pie (var. 1), (co) Constable & Company Ltd. (hc), September 1924
- Groat nor Tester, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- The Horseman (“There was a Horseman rode so fast”), (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- Kings and Queens, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- Late, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- Mr. Alacadacca, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- Must and May, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- Peacock Pie: A Book of Rhymes (1913), (co) Constable, September 1924
- The Sea Boy, (pm) Peacock Pie (var. 1), Constable, September 1924
- The Wharf, (ss) The Queen November 1924
- A Ballad of Christmas, (pm) Selwyn & Blount, December 1924
- Lucy, (nv) Number Two Joy Street, Basil Blackwell, 1924
- Prologue (“A good wine needs no bush”), (pm) 1924
- The Thief, (nv) G.K.’s Weekly March 21 1925
- Pretty Poll, (ss) The London Mercury April 1925
- Visitors, (ss) G.K.’s Weekly June 13 1925
- Two Tales, (co) Bookman’s Journal (hc), July 1925
- The Connoisseur, (nv) The Yale Review July 1925
- The Green Room, (nv) Two Tales, Bookman's Journal, July 1925
- The Green Room, (pm) Two Tales, Bookman's Journal, July 1925
- Pigtails, Ltd., (nv) The Atlantic Monthly August 1925
- Maria-Fly, (nv) G.K.’s Weekly September 19 1925
- Broomsticks, (nv) The London Mercury October 1925
- The Three Sleeping Boys of Warwickshire, (nv) The Virginia Quarterly Review October 1925
- Broomsticks & Other Tales, (co) Constable & Company Ltd. (hc), November 1925
- Alice’s Godmother, (nv) Broomsticks & Other Tales, Constable, November 1925
- The Lovely Myfanwy, (nv) Broomsticks & Other Tales, Constable, November 1925
- Mr. Kempe, (nv) The London Mercury November 1925
- A Nose, (nv) Broomsticks & Other Tales, Constable, November 1925
- Jolly Laughter, (pm) Saturday Review (UK) December 5 1925
- Christmas Eve, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine December 1925
- Old Joe, (ss) Number Three Joy Street, 1925
- The Connoisseur and Other Stories, (co) W. Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. (hc), May 1926
- St. Andrews (with Rudyard Kipling), (oc) A & C Black (tp), May 1926
- All Hallows, (nv) The Connoisseur and Other Stories, Collins, May 1926
- Disillusioned, (ss) The Connoisseur and Other Stories, Collins, May 1926
- The Lost Track, (ss) The Connoisseur and Other Stories, Collins, May 1926
- A Memory (“Fickle of choice is memory”), (pm) St. Andrews with Rudyard Kipling, A & C Black, May 1926
- Missing, (nv) The Connoisseur and Other Stories, Collins, May 1926
- The Nap, (ss) The Connoisseur and Other Stories, Collins, May 1926
- Lord Cobbler, (pm) Number Four Joy Street, 1926
- Lord Cobbler, (nv) Number Four Joy Street, 1926
- A Recluse, (nv) The Ghost Book ed. Cynthia Asquith, Hutchinson, 1926
- A Recluse, (pm) The Ghost Book ed. Cynthia Asquith, Hutchinson, 1926
- Stuff and Nonsense and So On, (co) Constable & Co. (hc), June 1927
- The Accompaniment, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Ahkh, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Ah, Momotombo!, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Ann’s Aunt and the Bear, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Bah!, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Bards, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Bishop Winterbourne, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Blackbirds (“There was an old man, in reproof”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Bones, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Bonnet, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Buttons, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Dear Sir, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Duet, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Eel, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Ergo, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Evening (“Happy was Edward in the love”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- False Dawn, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Finis, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Fish, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Foxes, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Freckles, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Green, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Hopping, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
(continued)
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Table-of-Contents