The FictionMags Index
Index by Date: Page 604
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de la Mare, Walter (John) (books) (items) (continued)
- Horses, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Hyssop, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- An Idle Word, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Iron, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Jilt, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- J.J., (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Jollies, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Kant, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Lady Godiva (“The Lady Godiva Godolphin”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Lion-Hunter, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- March Hares, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Meat, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Meddling, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Miss Clegg, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Miss Pheasant, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Moonshine, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- No! (“Full oft I’ve stood at winter dusk alone upon the strand”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Penny, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Ponjoo, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Pretender, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Quack-Hunting, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Quickels, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Ruby, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Said Jane, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Sea-Nymph, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Shubble, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Spectre (“The moment I glanced at the mirk-windowed mansion”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Suppose (“Suppose the year were but a month”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Tank, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Tobago, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Tulip, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Very, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- The Waif, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Wea, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Why? (“Dear Father, tell me, Why are Worms?”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Witchcraft, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Wool, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On, Constable & Co., June 1927
- Alone, (pm) Faber and Gwyer, August 1927
- Wages, (ss) Number Five Joy Street, Basil Blackwell, September 1927
- Told Again, (co) Basil Blackwell (hc), October 1927
- Bluebeard, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Cinderella and the Glass Slipper, (nv) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Clever Grethel, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Dancing Princesses, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Dick Whittington, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Four Brothers, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Hare and the Hedgehog, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Jack and the Beanstalk, (nv) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Little Red Riding-Hood, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Molly Whuppie, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Musicians, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Rapunzel, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Rumplestiltskin, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Sleeping Beauty, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- Snow-White, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Three Sillies, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Turnip, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Twelve Windows, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Wolf and the Fox, (ss) Told Again, Basil Blackwell, October 1927
- The Magic Jacket, (nv) Number Six Joy Street, September 1928
- Self to Self, (pm) Faber and Gwyer, September 1928
- A Memory Rhyme: For the Precious Stones (“untitled (‘Ruby, amethyst, emerald, diamond’)”], (pm) Come Hither: Revised Edition ed. Walter de la Mare, Constable, November 1928
- A Memory Rhyme: For the Stars (“untitled (‘If to the heavens thou blift thine eyes’)”], (pm) Come Hither: Revised Edition ed. Walter de la Mare, Constable, November 1928
- untitled (“If to the heavens thou blift thine eyes”), (pm) Come Hither: Revised Edition ed. Walter de la Mare, Constable, November 1928
- untitled (“Ruby, amethyst, emerald, diamond”), (pm) Come Hither: Revised Edition ed. Walter de la Mare, Constable, November 1928
- Crumbs, (pm) Woman’s Journal December 1928
- The Captive and Other Poems, (oc) The Bowling Green Press (hc), 1928
- At First Sight, (n.) Crosby Gaige, 1928
- The Captive (“I twinked a net”), (pm) The Captive and Other Poems, The Bowling Green Press, 1928
- The Game at Cards, (ss) The Treasure Cave ed. Cynthia Asquith, Jarrolds, 1928
- Reconciliation, (pm) The Captive and Other Poems, The Bowling Green Press, 1928
- The Snail, (pm) The Captive and Other Poems, The Bowling Green Press, 1928
- The Strange Spirit, (pm) The Captive and Other Poems, The Bowling Green Press, 1928
- To Katherine Mansfield, (pm) The Captive and Other Poems, The Bowling Green Press, 1928
- Crewe, (nv) The London Mercury July 1929
- Cape Race, (ss) The Yale Review September 1929
- Willows, (nv) Blackwood’s Magazine September 1929
- The Hunter, (pm) The London Mercury October 1929
- The Snowdrop (“Now—now, as low I stooped”), (pm) Faber and Faber, October 1929
- Twinkum, (pm) The Saturday Review of Literature November 16 1929
- The Glance, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine January 1930
- The Picnic, (ss) The Criterion April 1930
- The Orgy, (nv) Blackwood’s Magazine June 1930
- The Orgy: An Idyll, (nv) The Yale Review June 1930
- Miss Miller, (pm) The Story-teller August 1930
- Miss Miller, (ss) The Story-teller August 1930
- Miss Miller, (pm) The Story-teller August 1930
- On the Edge, (co) Faber & Faber Limited (hc), September 1930
- Poems for Children, (co) Henry Holt and Company (hc), October 1930
- The Apple Charm, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- “As I Went to the Well-Head”, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Babel, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Echoes, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- The Fleeting, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- The Four Brothers, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Hi!, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- The Holly, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Introduction, (in) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930, etc.
- Jennie Wren, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Lone, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Lullaby (“She in thy dreams watch over thee”), (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- News, (pm) Faber and Faber, October 1930
- The O-M-O-R-E, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Puss (“Puss loves man’s winter fire”), (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- The Robin (“As little Bess was walking home”), (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Seeds, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Thames, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- To Bed, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Who Really?, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- Wild Are the Waves, (pm) Poems for Children, Constable, October 1930
- The Round, (pm) The Argosy (UK) January 1931
- To Lucy, (pm) Faber and Faber, October 1931
- Two Poems, (co) R.N. Green-Armytage (ph), 1931
- Come! (“Shrill trills the bird concealed in leaves”), (pm) Two Poems, R.N. Green-Armytage, 1931
- A Robin (“Ghost-grey the fall of night”), (pm) The Argosy (UK) January 1932
- Midnight, (pm) The Silver Ship ed. Lady Cynthia Asquith, Putnam UK, October 1932
- “A Froward Child”, (nv) The Times Weekly Edition November 10 1932
- The House, (ss) The Observer December 25 1932
- Memory (“When summer heat has drowsed the day”), (pm) Good Housekeeping (UK) December 1932
- The Fleeting and Other Poems, (co) Constable (hc), May 1933
- Adieu, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Argument, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Ariel (“This lad, when but a child of six”), (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Beneath a Motionless Yew, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Bottle, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Break of Morning, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Comfort, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Dawn, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Encounter, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- English Downs, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Episodes, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Fat Woman, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Feckless Dinner-Party, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Forests, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Good Company, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Heresy, (pl) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The House (“Mother, it’s such a lovely house”), (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- How Blind!, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- “How Sleep the Brave”, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Image, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- In the Garden, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Jenny Wren, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Karma, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Making a Fire, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Mist, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Omen, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Outskirts, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Peeping Tom, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Railway Junction, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Reflections (“Three Sisters—and the youngest”), (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Rose (“Three centuries now are gone”), (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Slum Child, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Snowing, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Spark, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Speech, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Taciturn, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Thorn, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Tom’s Angel, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Tryst (“Faint now the colours in the West”), (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Twilight, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Visionary, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- What?, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- Which Way?, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- A Young Girl, (pm) The Fleeting and Other Poems, Constable, May 1933
- The Lord Fish, (oc) Faber and Faber (hc), October 1933
- Dick and the Beanstalk, (nv) The Lord Fish, Faber and Faber, October 1933
- The Old Lion, (nv) The Lord Fish, Faber and Faber, October 1933
- Sambo and the Snow Mountains, (nv) The Lord Fish, Faber and Faber, October 1933
- Parleyings, (nv) Lovat Dickson’s Magazine January 1934
- “What Dreams May Come”, (ss) John o’ London’s Weekly December 1 1934
- Winter (“Cold and raw the north wind doth blow”), (pm) Scholastic October 26 1935
- Poems 1919 to 1934, (co) Constable (hc), November 1935
- An Epitaph (“Here lies, but seven years old”), (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- Oh, Yes, My Dear, (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- Poems 1919-1934, (co) Constable, November 1935
- Quack (“What said the drake to his lady-love”), (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- Romance, (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- Seen and Heard, (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- A Stave, (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- Winter (“Mute now the music that made me”), (pm) Poems 1919 to 1934, Constable, November 1935
- The Empty Chariot, (pm) The Saturday Review of Literature December 14 1935
- The Nap and Other Stories, (co) Thomas Nelson & Sons, Ltd. (hc), January 1936
- Fish-Finn, (pm) Story Parade January 1936
- Mr. Bumps and His Monkey, (sl) Story Parade April 1936, etc.
- Strangers and Pilgrims, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine April 1936
- Strangers and Pilgrims, (nv) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine April 1936
- Strangers and Pilgrims, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine April 1936
- The Lynx, (ss) The Star June 22 1936
- Gilbert Keith Chesterton, (pm) G.K.’s Weekly July 23 1936
- Ding Dong Bell (var. 1), (co) Faber and Faber Limited (hc), July 1936
- Physic, (ss) Harper’s Magazine August 1936
- The Wind Blows Over, (co) Faber and Faber Limited (hc), October 1936
- A Revenant, (nv) The Wind Blows Over, Faber and Faber, October 1936
- The Trumpet, (nv) The Virginia Quarterly Review October 1936
- A Sort of Interview, (ss) The London Mercury November 1936
- Doctor William Harvey, (pm) The London Mercury December 1936
- A Prodigal Son, (pm) The London Mercury December 1936
- The “Satire”, (pm) The London Mercury December 1936
- Swallows Flown, (pm) The London Mercury December 1936
- Odd Shop, (ss) The Listener March 31 1937
- Evening (“The little cirque, horizon-wide”), (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine July 1937
- The Old Summer-House, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine July 1937
- A Sunday, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine July 1937
- The Last Arrow, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine August 1937
- The Shocker Shocked, (pm) Night and Day September 2 1937
- If, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine September 1937
- The Last Chapter, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine September 1937
- The Little Book, (pm) The Argosy (UK) October 1937
- Rooks in October, (pm) Good Housekeeping (UK) October 1937
- “All Hot”, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- All the Fun, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Apple-Fall, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Asleep, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Away Go We, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Books (“A boy called Jack”), (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Daybreak (“The curtains of the solemn night”), (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Ducks, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Esmeralda, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Farewell (“Ah me! That pen should be where mine is”), (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Feast, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Garden, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Harvest, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Haymaking, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- High, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Holidays, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Hunt, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Ice, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Little Shop, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Logs, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Mr. Punch, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Nowel, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Oh, Why?, (pm) Good Housekeeping (UK) November 1937
- Over the Downs, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Pantomime, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Picture-Book, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- “Please to Remember”, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Pool in the Rock, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Room, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Santa Claus, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Secret (“Open your eyes!”), (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Snow-Man, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Tent, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- There Was an Old Woman of Bumble Bhosey, (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- This Year: Next Year, (oc) Faber and Faber, November 1937
- The Thrush (“Even earlier yet this listening thrush”), (pm) This Year: Next Year by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, November 1937
- Poems, (co) Corvinus Press (hc), December 1937
- Away, (pm) The Argosy (UK) December 1937
- Brother and Sister, (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- The Cage (“Thou angel face!”), (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- The Dove, (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- Dunce (“Come, child! Say, nine times’ seven!”), (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- Incantation (“Vervain…basil…orison”), (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- The Moment, (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- Reserved, (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- To Thomas Hardy, (pm) Poems, Corvinus Press, December 1937
- The Mandrill, (pm) Good Housekeeping (UK) January 1938
- Voices (“Rapture and sorrow”), (pm) Time and Tide February 19 1938
- I Wonder, (pm) The Observer April 3 1938
- Memory and Other Poems, (co) Constable (hc), May 1938
- An Abandoned Church, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Absalom, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Assignation, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- At Ease, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Bridge, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Brueghel’s Winter, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Captive (“When gloaming droops”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Cherry Trees, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Child Asleep, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Clavichord, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Courage, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Daisy, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Defeat, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Dream, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Dreamer (“The woods were still”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- “Dry August Burned”, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Euphrasy, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Faint Music, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Foreboding (“The sycamore, by the heap of dead”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Hare, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- “Here Sleeps”, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Homesick, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- In Disgrace, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- An Interlude, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Irrevocable (“Weep no more, thou weary one”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Looking Glass, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Martins: September, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Memory (“Ah, Memory—that strange deceiver!”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Night (“That shining moon”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Not Only, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- O Childish Mind!, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- “Of a Son”, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- One in the Public Gallery, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Out of Bounds, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Peace (“Night is o’er England, and the winds are still”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Pollie, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Portrait (“A solemn plain-faced child stands gazing there”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Pot of Musk, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Prayer, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Queen Wasp, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Quiet, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Rose in Candlelight, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- A Rose in Water, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Sallie’s Musical Box, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Shadow (“Beware!—breathes the faint evening wind?”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Snow (“This meal-white snow”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Solitude (“Ghosts there must be with me in this old house”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Stratagem, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Sunrise, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Twice Lovely, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Unforeseen, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- “Unheard Melodies”, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Waiting, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- Which?, (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Widow (“Grief now hath pacified her face”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Window (“Sunlit, the lashes fringe the half-closed eyes”), (pm) Memory and Other Poems, Constable, May 1938
- The Guardian, (ss) John o’ London’s Weekly June 10 1938
- Two Poems (with Arthur Rogers), (oc) self-published (ph), 1938
- In a Library, (pm) Two Poems with Arthur Rogers, self-published, 1938
- “Here Lies…”, (pm) Poetry London February 1939
- Lyrics: Thou Art My Long-Lost Peace, (ar) The Atlantic Monthly March 1939
- Haunted (“The roads are dangerous”), (pm) Linden Press, 1939
- Rarities, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal February 1940
- Joy, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly March 1940
- Not Yet, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly March 1940
- Still Life, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly March 1940
- To Corinna, Frowning, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal March 1940
- Ulysses, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal April 1940
- A Face, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal May 1940
- Books (“Books!”), (pm) Pleasures and Speculations by Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, June 1940
- Antiques, (pm) Poetry August 1940
- Divided, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly August 1940
- The Field, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly August 1940
- Izaak Walton, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly August 1940
- Secret (“A hidden self rebels”), (pm) Poetry August 1940
- She Said, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly August 1940
- Things, (pm) Poetry August 1940
- A Portrait (“Scarf and fillet, chaplet, gem”), (pm) John o’ London’s Weekly September 13 1940
- Tintern Abbey, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal September 1940
- Double Dutch, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly October 1940
- Hic Jacet, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly October 1940
- Incomprehensible, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly October 1940
- Never Again, (pm) Harper’s Bazaar November 1 1940
- Soon, (pm) Harper’s Bazaar November 1 1940
- Hard Labor, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal December 1940
- Passion, (pm) The American Mercury December 1940
- The Old Author, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal January 1941
- The Vision (“O starry face, bound in grave strands of hair”), (pm) Good Housekeeping (UK) January 1941
- Crops, (pm) Poetry June 1941
- Enough, (pm) Poetry June 1941
- John Bull, (pm) Poetry June 1941
- One Swallow, (pm) The Wind and the Rain Summer 1941
- The Stone, (pm) The Virginia Quarterly Review Summer 1941
- The Storm (“First there were two of us”), (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal June 1941
- To a Candle, (pm) The Virginia Quarterly Review Summer 1941
- The Very Self, (pm) Poetry June 1941
- Well, Here’s, (pm) The Virginia Quarterly Review Summer 1941
- “I Dream of a Place”, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal August 1941
- Bells & Grass, (oc) Faber and Faber Limited (hc), October 1941
- A—Apple Pie, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- All the Way, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- At Last, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Bead Mat, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Bells & Grass: A Book of Rhymes, (oc) Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Bird, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Blackbirds (“In April, when these orchards blow”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Blindman’s In, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Bonum Omen, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Border Bird, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Caw!, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Coals, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Come—Gone, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Corner, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Daybreak (“After the dark of night”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Done For, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Dreamland, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Echo (“Seven sweet notes”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Eeka, Neeka, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Feather, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Fire, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- For Mopsa, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Ghost-Chase, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- A Goldfinch, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Gone, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Grace, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Harebell, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Hark!, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The House (“A lane at the end of Old Pilgrim Street”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The House of Dream, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Kiph, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Known of Old, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- A Lantern, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Lob-Lie-by-the-Fire, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Lully, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Magnifying Glass, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Mary, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Me, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Mermaids (“Leagues, leagues, over”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Miller, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Miss Cherry, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Missel Thrush, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Never, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Nicoletta, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- No Bed, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- No Jewel, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Nothing, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Old Sailor, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Old Tailor, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Orchard, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Pigs, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Playmate, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Pooh!, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- “Poor Bird!”, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Prince, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Quack! (“The duck is whiter than whey is”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Rain, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Sallie, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Sambo, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Shadows, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Shadow (“When the last of gloaming’s gone”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Silly Sallie, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Small Phantom, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Snowflake (“Before I melt”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Solitude (“Wish! and it’s thine!”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Somewhere, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Somewhere, (ex) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Song of Seven, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Stranger (“A little after twilight”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Strangers, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Supper (“Her pinched grey body”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Supper (“I supped where bloomed the red red rose”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Then as Now, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Thunder, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Tiny Eenanennika, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Tom’s Little Dog, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Two Deep Clear Eyes, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Under the Rose, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Voice (“As I sat in the gloaming”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Warbler, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Where (“Houses! houses!—Oh, I know”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Where (“Monkeys in a forest”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- White, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Why? (“Ever, ever”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Why? (“Why do you weep, Mother? Why do you weep?”), (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Will-o’-the-Wisp, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- The Wind, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Won’t, (pm) Bells & Grass, Faber and Faber, October 1941
- Bells and Grass, (oc) The Viking Press (hc), March 1942
- The Journey (“When the high road”), (pm) Bells and Grass, The Viking Press, March 1942
- Best Stories of Walter de la Mare, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), June 1942
- The Old Lion and Other Stories, (co) Faber & Faber (hc), January 1943
- The Kiss, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal September 1943
- The Magic Jacket and Other Stories, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), December 1943
- Collected Rhymes and Verses, (co) Faber & Faber (hc), March 1944
- Kings, (pm) Collected Rhymes and Verses, Faber & Faber, March 1944
- Noon, (pm) Collected Rhymes and Verses, Faber & Faber, March 1944
- Leaves, (pm) Sunday Chronicle November 5 1944
- The Scarecrow and Other Stories, (co) Faber and Faber Limited (hc), May 1945
- The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, (oc) Faber & Faber Limited (hc), October 1945
- Absence (“When thou art absent”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- And So to Bed, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Ariel (“Ariel! Ariel!”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Arrogance, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Birds in Winter, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Blind Boy (“A spider her silken gossamer”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Bribe, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Brook, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Burning-Glass, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- But, Oh, My Dear, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Creek, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Cupid Kept In, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Dead Jay, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Ditch, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- A Dull Boy, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Dust, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Edges, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Empty, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Eureka (“Lost in a dream last night was I”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- February, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Frozen Dell, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Gnomon, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Harvest Home, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- In the Local Museum, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- An Island, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Israfel, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Laid Low, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Like Sisters, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Lovers, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Lullay, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Nostalgia, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Not One (“Turn your head sidelong”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Once (“Once would the early sun steal in”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Outcasts (“Grunting, he paused”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Outer Darkness, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Out of a Dream, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Owl (“Owl of the wildwood I”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- “Philip”, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- A Portrait (“Old; yet unchanged”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Rainbow (“Stood twice ten thousand warriors on green grass”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Rapids, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- A Recluse, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Safety First, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- “Said Flores”, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Scarecrow (“In the abandoned orchard—on a pole”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Scholars, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Secret (“I bless the hand that once held mine”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Sheep, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Solitary Bird, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Solitude (“When the high road”), (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Spectacle, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Summons, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Swifts, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- These Solemn Hills, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Thou Art My Long-Lost Peace, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Tomtit, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Treasure, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Two Gardens, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Undercurrent, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Unrent Pattern, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Unutterable, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Visitant, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Whiteness, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- Winter Company, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, October 1945
- The Burning-Glass and Other Poems (var. 1), (co) The Viking Press (hc), November 1945
- Problems, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems (var. 1), The Viking Press, November 1945
- The Traveller, (pm) The Burning-Glass and Other Poems (var. 1), The Viking Press, November 1945
- Paint, (pm) The Listener January 17 1946
- Two Poems, (co) Dropmore Press (ph), July 1946
- Pride, (pm) Two Poems, Dropmore Press, July 1946
- The Truth of Things, (pm) Two Poems, Dropmore Press, July 1946
- Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), (co) Faber and Faber (hc), 1946
- Archery, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- The Bun, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Dusk, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- The Fly (“The was once an old parson named Next”), (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Goat, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- The Lady McTaggart, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- “Look, Here’s the Warrant…”, (pm) The Windmill v1 #3, 1946
- The Monster, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- The Mouse, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Odd Man Out, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Old B., (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- A Pair, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Vendetta, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- The Warmint, (pm) Stuff and Nonsense and So On (var. 1), Faber and Faber, 1946
- Collected Stories for Children, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), April 1947
- My Ghost Book, (ar) The Literary Digest April 1947
- An Angel, (pm) Botteghe Oscure #2, 1948
- Tu Quoque, (pm) Time and Tide December 3 1949
- Kismet, (pm) Everybody’s December 24 1949
- Despise It As I May, (pm) The Observer January 1 1950
- Collected Tales, (co) Knopf (hc), January 1950
- Truants (“This sabbath morning”), (pm) The Spectator February 3 1950
- The Bourne, (pm) Everybody’s April 15 1950
- The Idol of the World, (pm) World Review April 1950
- Incomputable, (pm) World Review April 1950
- “It Was the Last Time He Was Seen Alive”, (pm) World Review April 1950
- The Tower, (pm) World Review April 1950
- Unmeant, (pm) World Review April 1950
- A Storm (after Crabbe), (pm) Countryman Summer 1950
- Vision (“I see no sense in poetry”), (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal July 1950
- Slim Cunning Hands, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal August 1950
- The Winnowing Dream, (pm) The Times Literary Supplement September 1 1950
- Inward Companion, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), October 1950
- All Hallowe’en, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Another Spring, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Another Washington, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Belated, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Benighted, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Beyond, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Blondin, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Blow, Northern Wind, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Bombed House, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Burning Letter, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Celestial Library, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Changeling (“Come in the dark did I—”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Company, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Day, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- A Daydream, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Days and Moments, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Deliverance, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Dunce (“And ‘Science’ said”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Enigmas, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- False Gods, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- February 29, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Flood Water, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Forest, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Frescoes in an Old Church, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Friends, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Fuchsias, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Go Far; Come Near, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Henry Vaughan, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Here, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Here I Sit, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Here Lies a Tailor, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The House (“The rusty gate had been chained and padlocked”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Inward Companion, (oc) Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Jackdaws, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Jonathan Swift, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Last Guest, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Last Swallow, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Lost World, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- “Love”, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Martins, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Mirach, Antares…, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- No (“A drear, wind-weary afternoon”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Occluded, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Others (“Friendly? Perhaps!”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Pale-Face, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Plaster Cast, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Poetry, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Risen Sun, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Rose (“He comes to where a seedling rose”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Ruinous Abbey, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Second-Hand, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- “See, Here’s the Warrant…”, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Sleeping Child, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- A Snowdrop (“Thou break’st from earth”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Solitude (“Space beyond space”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Spotted Flycatcher, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Theologians, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Two Lamps, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Unwitting, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Usury, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Vacant Farmhouse, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Winter Evening, (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- Words (“Were words sole proof of happiness”), (pm) Inward Companion, Faber and Faber, October 1950
- The Face, (ss) World Review #22, December 1950
- Winged Chariot, (pm) Faber and Faber (hc), June 1951
- Jacket, (pm) Modern Reading 20 ed. Reginald Moore, December 1951
- Fey, (pm) Everybody’s January 12 1952
- Song from a Play, (pm) The Spectator April 4 1952
- Music, (ss) The Adelphi April/June 1952
- De Mortuis, (pm) The New Statesman and Nation July 26 1952
- Work, (pm) The New Statesman and Nation July 26 1952
- Points of View, (pm) The Spectator September 19 1952
- Butterflies, (pm) The Spectator October 3 1952
- English Fingerprints, (pm) The Spectator October 3 1952
- Finished With, (pm) Poetry October 1952
- The Princess, (ss) Good Housekeeping (UK) October 1952
- An Anniversary, (nv) The Saturday Book #12, 1952
- Another Tongue, (pm) The Spectator April 24 1953
- Both Barrels, (pm) The Spectator April 24 1953
- How Wayward, (pm) The Spectator April 24 1953
- Went the Mind Clocktime-Wise, (pm) The Spectator April 24 1953
- Aftermath, (pm) The New Statesman and Nation May 16 1953
- Elizabeth Is My Queen, (pm) The Reader’s Digest June 1953
- Arrows, (pm) Time and Tide July 4 1953
- Dilemma, (pm) The New Statesman and Nation October 31 1953
- An Epitaph (“Would’st liefer be alive, or dead?”), (pm) The New Statesman and Nation October 31 1953
- O Lovely England and Other Poems, (oc) Faber and Faber Limited (hc), November 1953
- Absence (“What, autumn, friend!”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- “…All Gone…”, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Are You So Lovely?, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Arithmetic, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Astray, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Author’s Note, (ms) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Birth of Venus, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Candle, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Challenge, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Chinese Pot, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Daughter to Mother, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Deadalive, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- De Profundis, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Disguise (“Dream-haunted face”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Dr. Mole, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Echo (“How like your mother, child!”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The End, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- England (“All that is dearest to me thou didst give”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Enigma, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Epilogue, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- A Fiddler, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- For a Child, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Foreboding (“Ev’n on the tenderest hour of love”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- From Amid the Shadows, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- I Am, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Immanent, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Intermittent Fever, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Intruder, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- It Is a Wraith…, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Jenny, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Lethe, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- “Life Lives on Life”, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Missing Word, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Mourner, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Never Yet, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- No, No, No!, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Now, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- An Old Cannon, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- O Lovely England, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Outcasts (“There broods a hovel by a narrow way”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Owl (“Apart, thank Heaven, from all to do”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Puss (“A sly old Puss that paused to cross the road”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Rats, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Reflection, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Reflections (“So much herself she is that when she is near”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Rejected, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Reunion (“Tyrants—the slaves of intermittent dread”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Second Childhood, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Second Thoughts, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- She, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- So It Would Seem, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Spring (“Now the slim almond tree”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Tarbury Steep, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- “The Thrush” (“That speckled thrush”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- The Tryst (“O whither are you faring to, my sweetheart?”), (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Ulladare, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Uncircumventible, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- We Who Have Watched, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- When Love Flies In, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- “Why, Then Comes In…”, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- Wireless, (pm) O Lovely England and Other Poems, Faber and Faber, November 1953
- [letter] (with Peggy Ashcroft, Kenneth Clark, T. S. Eliot, Graham Greene, Augustus E. John, Louis MacNeice, Edwin Muir, Goronwy Rees, Edith Sitwell, Osbert Sitwell, Vernon Watkins & Emlyn Williams), (lt) The London Magazine February 1954
- Bad Company, (ss) The Listener April 1 1954
- Time, Love and Life, (pm) National and English Review June 1954
- Derelict, (pm) National and English Review July 1954
- The Other Voice, (pm) National and English Review July 1954
- Tares, (pm) National and English Review July 1954
- The Wall, (pm) Saturday Night (Toronto September 4 1954
- The Stranger, (pl) The London Magazine September 1954
- The Sleep-Walker, (pm) Time and Tide December 4 1954
- The Cartouche, (ss) Encounter December 1954
- The Picture, (ss) Argosy (UK) January 1955
- Dr. Browning at Breakfast, (pm) Argosy (UK) August 1955
- The Faces, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- The Faithful Pig, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- The Jolly Huntsman, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- The Little House, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- One, Two, Three, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- The Shadow (“Poor Fanny Thynne was much too lean”), (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- Three, (pm) Bulletin August 1955
- A Beginning and Other Stories, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), October 1955
- A Beginning, (ss) A Beginning and Other Stories, Faber and Faber, October 1955
- Neighbours, (ss) A Beginning and Other Stories, Faber and Faber, October 1955
- The Lost Self, (pm) Time and Tide December 3 1955
- The Miller’s Tale, (ss) Time and Tide December 3 1955
- When One Is a Girl, (pm) Time and Tide December 3 1955
- The Morrow, (pm) R.N. Green-Armytage, 1955
- Not One (“We may, most dear, as bodies meet”), (pm) Time and Tide January 28 1956
- “Analysts”, (pm) Poetry London-New York March/April 1956
- The Others (“How few the human frailities we can never”), (pm) Poetry London-New York March/April 1956
- The Rift, (pm) Poetry London-New York March/April 1956
- The Minstrel, (pm) The Listener April 19 1956
- The Glutton, (pm) Young Elizabethan May 1956
- The Once (“As deep as sand in Egypt”), (pm) Young Elizabethan May 1956
- The Thief, (pm) Young Elizabethan May 1956
- Thoughts, (pm) Young Elizabethan May 1956
- Eureka (“We failed to seem when we began”), (pm) The English Magazine Summer 1956
- By Order, (pm) New Poems: 1956 ed. Stephen Spender, Elizabeth Jennings & Dannie Abse, Michael Joseph, July 1956
- The Last Straw, (pm) New Poems: 1956 ed. Stephen Spender, Elizabeth Jennings & Dannie Abse, Michael Joseph, July 1956
- St. Paul’s Cathedral, (pm) Choristers’ Magazine July 1956
- Shepherd’s Warning, (pm) Poetry Book Society Bulletin July 1956
- Ghost Stories, (co) Folio Society (hc), November 1956
- A Lifetime: Epitaph for William Blake, (pm) The Divine Vision ed. Vivian de Sola Pinto, Gollancz, November 1957
- The Magic Jacket (var. 1), (co) Alfred A. Knopf (hc), February 1962
- Some Stories, (co) Faber and Faber (tp), 1962
- Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, (co) Faber and Faber (hc), 1969
- Alas (“Alas, dear wife”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- An Answer, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Are You Asleep? Then Listen, Dreamer, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- At War, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Before You Came, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Blind, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Buck Buck, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- A Child’s Song, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The China Cat, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Dear Brother Horse, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Even as the Heart, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Father and Son, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- “Gather Ye Roses”, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Gratitude, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Homecoming, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- I, Friend, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Incantation (“Green drowsed the valley”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- In Retrospect, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- In the Public Service, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- In Vain Mine Eyes Thy Beauty Scan, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Le Jeu Est Fait, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Lone Must Every Spirit Be, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Long Ago, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Lost, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Miss Gootz, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- A Modern Gadara, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Not by the Closest Shave, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Peace (“A heart to be at peace with”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Portrait (“Only thy fair small face I see”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Prologue (“Summer is come”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Promenade: 1880, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Revenant (“Thou art, then, come?”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Singing and Dancing, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Snare, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Strange, Is It Not!, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Tat for Tit, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- “Tell Me…”, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- To Rose, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Twelve of the Clock, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Two Birds, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Unloving, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- The Vicar of This Parish, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- When a Great Water Sinks to Peace, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Where? (“Where, Oh, where is Alice Bates?”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Widen Your Calls, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- “Willie!”, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Words (“How I love the rhymes that I can dance to”), (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- You Say You Love, (pm) Complete Poems of Walter de la Mare, Faber and Faber, 1969
- Eight Tales, (co) Arkham House (hc), April 1971
- A:B:O., (ss) Eight Tales, Arkham House, April 1971
- Short Stories 1895-1926, (co) Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd (hc), November 1996
- Short Stories 1927-1956, (co) Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd (hc), June 2001
- Dr Iggatt, (ss) Short Stories 1927-1956, Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd, June 2001
- Late, (ss) Short Stories 1927-1956, Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd, June 2001
- The Orgy: An Idyll, Part II, (ss) Short Stories 1927-1956, Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd, June 2001
- Pig, (ss) Short Stories 1927-1956, Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd, June 2001
- Short Stories for Children, (co) Giles de la Mare Publishers Ltd (hc), April 2006
- Strangers and Pilgrims, (co) Tartarus Press (hc), June 2007
- Out of the Deep and Other Supernatural Tales, (co) The British Library (tp), April 2017
- Desert Islands, (ar) unknown date
- Green Grow the Rushes, O!, (pm) unknown date
- The Sun, (pm) unknown date
- The Tryst, (pm) unknown date
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