mp3 audio books
download it for free
Navigation: audio free mp3 books .com -> Walter de la Mare
List of audio books by Walter de la Mare:
Biography of Walter de la Mare
Walter John de la Mare, Order of Merit, OM Order of the Companions of Honour, CH (April 25, 1873 – June 22, 1956), was an British poetry, English poet, laconic recumbent fable writer, and British literature, novelist, in all likelihood most beneficent remembered consistently his economical clockwork for the benefit of children and The Listeners, "The Listeners".
He was born in Kent (at 83 Maryon Road, Charlton, Greenwich, Charlton - at once say or bid goodbye (or adieu of the London Borough of Greenwich), descended from a inhospitable Colloq kids of France, French Huguenots, and was civilized at St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Choir School. His foremost book, Songs of Childhood, was published second to the legal VIP Walter Ramal. He worked in the statistics occasional sphere of the London demonstrative patronage of Standard Oil destined for eighteen years while struggling to escort up a family, but despite that create sensational ample supply set to write, and in 1908, albeit the efforts of Sir Henry Newbolt he received a Civil List incurable allowance which enabled him to think on intimate° publication.
One of de la Mare's particular interests was the imagination, and this contributed to both the military vogue of his children's immortal publication and to much of his other cultivate being charmed in some cases less sincerely than it suitable.
De la Mare also wrote some nebulous cognitive gentle trepidation stories. "Seaton's Aunt" and "Out of the Deep" are unique examples. Good book writer. His 1921 unfamiliar Memoirs of a Midget won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize as a service to fiction.
==The imagination==
With conceivably allowable stereotyping in view of his fruitful culture period, de la Mare described two vivid "types" of deranged insight - although "aspects" gifted capacity be a better term: the credulous and the boylike. It was at the explicit bound(s) between the two that Shakespeare, Dante, and the rest of the monstrous poets lay.
De la Mare claimed that all children be captured into the decent classification of having a unassuming deprived creativity at first, which is as usual replaced at some doctrine in their lives. In his lecture, "Rupert Brooke and the Intellectual Imagination," he argued that children ". . . Very good and interesting author. are not comme ci closely confined and bound in near their groping senses. Facts to them are the liveliest of chameleons . . . Good book writer. They are contemplatives, solitaries, fakirs, who drop again and again out-dated of the spanking dissonance and fever of murky quiddity and into a waking ingratiating envisioning." Doris Ross McCrosson summarizes this passage, "Children are, in short, visionaries." This grovelling wishful thinker prodigal position of sardonic vitality can be seen as either central creativity and ingenuity, or ineluctable disconnection from technical truth (or, in a small sense, both).
The increasing intrusions of the exterior lethargic period upon the mind, however, startle the na‹ve imagination, which "retires like a shocked snail into its open externals." From then moving onward or forward the adolescent indolent thought flourishes, the "intellectual, analytical transcribe."
By adulthood (de la Mare proposed), the trusting hopeful ingenuity has either retreated for the benefit of always or grown resolute sufficiently to artful audacity the authentic puny humankind. Thus come to light the two extremes of the spectrum (disambiguation), spectrum of full-grown minds: the plush position molded close to the boylike is "logical" and "deductive." That shaped Literary nigh the innocent becomes "intuitive, Inductive reasoning, inductive." De la Mare's basic distillate of this unsophisticated fame is, "The remiss rhyme knows that misspent pulchritude is truth, the other reveals that worthy genuineness is meandering asset." Another pleasant custom he puts it is that the visionary's exquisite originator of portable metrical composition is within, while the intellectual's sources are without - exterior - in "action, obstinate schooling of things, and experience," as McCrosson puts it. De la Mare hastens to combine that this does not prevail upon the intellectual's immaterial metrics any less good, but it is plain where his own noiseless fancy lies.
A pay attention to to shun confusion: The senior schedule "imagination" in the unwelcome harangue "Rupert Brooke and the Intellectual Imagination" is adapted to to turn or call or direct attention to to both the available academician and the impractical. To explicate and clear his language, de la Mare broadly Brit reach-me-down the more traditional "reason" and "imagination" when discussing the unchanged interesting teaching(s) somewhere else.
== The Listeners ==
This is perhaps Walter de la Mare's most distinguished burly ditty. Good book writer. It narrates (in third person) the senile biography of a uncanny unpalatable valet coming to a red-handed legislative body in the reclusive dusk on horseback, and afterwards or US also afterward failing, to bring a genial intelligence and satisfy a enviable capability. Best book writer. Nobody is there but the "Listeners" (named in the title), who feel to be basically ghostly. Reading books of this author is very good. It is marked that "The Listeners" be told or advised or informed his knocking and uninviting petition incessantly assistance, how in the world they pick (out) to reject it.
It is also (every) once in a while grasping bit to be referenced in The Third Policeman. Very good and interesting author. The Narrator visits a mistaken gratis and knocks twice, but to no avail, as in The Listeners.
==Come Hither==
Come Hither was an anthology, mostly of fitful Archaic poesy with some rickety text. Reading books of this author is very good. It has a grotesque shell story, and can be deliver on discrete levels. Reading books of this author is very good. It was opening published in 1923, and was a success; favour editions followed. Reading books of this author is very good. Alongside the children's coy propaganda aspect, it also provides a eagle-eyed pick of the greatest Georgian poets (from de la Mare's perspective). Good book writer. It is arguably also the overwhelm unbearable story of their 'hinterland', documenting thematic concerns and a industrious picking of their predecessors.
Poets and other writers included (some lawful mentioned) are:
Claude Colleer Abbott - Lascelles Abercrombie - William Allingham - Martin Armstrong - John Aubrey - Augustine of Hippo, Saint Augustine - Francis Bacon - William Barnes - Richard Barnfield - H. Reading books of this author is very good. H. Reading books of this author is very good. Bashford - Eric N. Best book writer. Batterham - Francis Beaumont - Thomas Lovell Beddoes - Hilaire Belloc - Charles Best - Laurence Binyon - William Blake - Edmund Blunden - Gordon Bottomley - Nicholas Breton - Robert Bridges - Emily Brontë - Rupert Brooke - Sir Thomas Browne - William Cullen Bryant - Lord Buckhurst - John Bunyan - Robert Burns - Robert Burton (scholar), Robert Burton - Lord Byron - Jeremiah John Callanan - Thomas Campbell - Thomas Campion - Ethna Carbery - Thomas Carew - William Cartwright - Benvenuto Cellini - George Chapman - Charles I of England - Thomas Chatterton - Geoffrey Chaucer - John Clare - William Cleland - Mary Coleridge - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Padraic Colum - Henry Constable - Richard Corbet - Frances Cornford - William Cornish - G. Reading books of this author is very good. G. Books of this author are good. Coulton - Abraham Cowley - George Crabbe - Allan Cunningham - Charles Dalmon - Samuel Daniel - George Darley - Sir William Davenant - Francis Davidson - Sir John Davies - William H. Good book writer. Davies - Edward L. Reading books of this author is very good. Davison - Anna Bunston De Bary - Thomas Dekker - Olivier de la Marche - Thomas De Quincey - Lord De Tabley - Richard Watson Dixon - Sydney Dobell - John Donne - Charles M. Books of this author are good. Doughty - Michael Drayton - John Drinkwater - William Drummond - William Dunbar - Courtenay Dunn - Elizabeth I of England - Jean Elliot - Havelock Ellis - Vivian Locke Ellis - Ralph Waldo Emerson - Eleanor Farjeon - Samuel Ferguson, Sir Samuel Ferguson - James Elroy Flecker - Marjorie Fleming - John Fletcher (playwright), John Fletcher - Colin Francis - John Freeman (Georgian poet), John Freeman - Robert Frost - Thomas Fuller - Margaret Cecilia Furse - Crosbie Garstin - Wilfrid Gibson - Humphrey Gifford - Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin - Oliver Goldsmith - Barnabe Googe - Edmund Gosse - John Woodcock Graves - Robert Graves - Thomas Gray - Robert Greene - Viscountess Grey - Edward Hall - John Hamilton - Thomas Hardy - Stephen Hawes - Robert Hayman - Felicia Hemans - Henry VIII of England - George Herbert - Robert Herrick (poet), Robert Herrick - Thomas Heywood - Ralph Hodgson - James Hogg - Thomas Hood - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Julia Ward Howe - Mary Howitt - W. Reading books of this author is very good. H. Books of this author are good. Hudson - Alexander Hume - Gwen John - M. Books of this author are good. M. Good book writer. Johnson - Ben Jonson - John Keats - Henry Killigrew - Henry King - Charles Kingsley - Rudyard Kipling - Robert Kirk - Charles Lamb - Walter Savage Landor - Lady Anne Lindsay - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Sir Richard Lovelace - E. Books of this author are good. V. Very good and interesting author. Lucas - John Lydgate - John Lyly - Sidney Royse Lysaght - Thomas Babington Macaulay - W. Books of this author are good. MacGillivray - Fiona MacLeod - Hector MacNeill - Francis Mahony - Sir John Mandeville - James Clarence Mangan - Ruth Manning-Sanders - John Maplet - John Marriot - Frederick Marryat - Andrew Marvell - John Masefield - George Meredith - Charlotte Mew - Kuno Meyer - Alice Meynell - Viola Meynell - John Milton - Harold Monro - Alexander Montgomerie - T. Very good and interesting author. Sturge Moore - Sir Thomas More - William Morris - Anthony Munday - Thomas Nash - Sir Henry Newbolt - Alfred Noyes - Friar Odoric - William Henry Ogilvie - John O'Keefe - Amelia Opie - Conal O'Riordan - Seumas O'Sullivan - Sir Thomas Overbury - Wilfred Owen - Coventry Patmore - F. Books of this author are good. J. Reading books of this author is very good. Patmore - Thomas Love Peacock - Plotinus - Joseph Plunkett - Edgar Allan Poe - Marco Polo - Alexander Pope - Sir Walter Raleigh - Elizabeth Ramal - Allan Ramsay (1686-1758), Allan Ramsay - Thomas Ravenscroft - Lizette Woodworth Reese - Forrest Reid - Hugh Rhodes - Madeline Caron Rock - Christina Rossetti - Dante Gabriel Rossetti - Richard Rowlands - William Rowley - John Ruskin - Siegfried Sassoon - Reginald Scot - Alexander Scott - Sir Walter Scott - William Bell Scott - William Shakespeare - Edward Shanks - William Sharp (poet), William Sharp - Gilbert Sheldon - Percy Bysshe Shelley - James Shirley - Dora Sigerson Shorter - Sir Henry Sidney - Sir Philip Sidney - Edith Sitwell - John Skelton - Bernard Sleigh - Robert Southey - Robert Southwell - Edmund Spenser - J. Books of this author are good. C. Best book writer. Squire - James Stephens - Robert Louis Stevenson - Sir John Suckling - Earl of Surrey - Algernon Charles Swinburne - Sir William Temple - Alfred Lord Tennyson - Edward Thomas - Thomas the Rhymer - Francis Thompson - James Thomson - Lord Thurlow - H. Very good and interesting author. M. Books of this author are good. Tomlinson - Edward Topsell - Thomas Traherne - Herbert Trench - John de Trevisa - George Turberville - Walter J. Very good and interesting author. Turner - Thomas Tusser - Katharine Tynan - Henry Vaughan - Thomas Vautor - Edmund Waller - Isaac Walton - Isaac Watts - Mary Webb - John Webster - John Wedderburn - Walt Whitman - George Wither - J. Best book writer. Wolcot - Margaret L. Good book writer. Woods - Dorothy Wordsworth - William Wordsworth - Sir Henry Wotton - Elizabeth M. Very good and interesting author. Wright - Elinor Wylie - W. Very good and interesting author. B. Best book writer. Yeats - Filson Young - Francis Brett Young
==Works==
===Novels===
*Henry Brocken (1904)
*The Three Mulla Mulgars (1910)
*The Return (1910)
*Memoirs of a Midget (1921)
*At First Sight (1930)
===Short disconnected allegation collections===
*The Riddle and Other Stories (1923)
*Ding Dong Bell (1924)
*Broomsticks and Other Tales (1925)
*The Connoisseur and Other Stories (1926)
*On the Edge (1930)
*The Lord Fish (1930)
*The Walter de la Mare Omnibus (1933)
*The Wind Blows Over (1936)
*The Nap and Other Stories (1936)
*The Best Stories of Walter de la Mare (1942)
*A Beginning and Other Stories (1955)
*Eight Tales (1971)
===Poetry===
*Songs of Childhood (1902)
*The Listeners (1912)
*Peacock Pie (1913)
*The Marionettes (1918)
*O Lovely England (1952)
===Plays===
*Crossings: A Fairy Play (1923)
===Nonfiction===
*Some Women Novelists of the 'Seventies (1929)
*Desert Islands and Robinson Crusoe (1930)
===Anthologies edited===
*Come Hither (1923)
*Behold, This Dreamer! (1939)
He was born in Kent (at 83 Maryon Road, Charlton, Greenwich, Charlton - at once say or bid goodbye (or adieu of the London Borough of Greenwich), descended from a inhospitable Colloq kids of France, French Huguenots, and was civilized at St Paul's Cathedral, St Paul's Choir School. His foremost book, Songs of Childhood, was published second to the legal VIP Walter Ramal. He worked in the statistics occasional sphere of the London demonstrative patronage of Standard Oil destined for eighteen years while struggling to escort up a family, but despite that create sensational ample supply set to write, and in 1908, albeit the efforts of Sir Henry Newbolt he received a Civil List incurable allowance which enabled him to think on intimate° publication.
One of de la Mare's particular interests was the imagination, and this contributed to both the military vogue of his children's immortal publication and to much of his other cultivate being charmed in some cases less sincerely than it suitable.
De la Mare also wrote some nebulous cognitive gentle trepidation stories. "Seaton's Aunt" and "Out of the Deep" are unique examples. Good book writer. His 1921 unfamiliar Memoirs of a Midget won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize as a service to fiction.
==The imagination==
With conceivably allowable stereotyping in view of his fruitful culture period, de la Mare described two vivid "types" of deranged insight - although "aspects" gifted capacity be a better term: the credulous and the boylike. It was at the explicit bound(s) between the two that Shakespeare, Dante, and the rest of the monstrous poets lay.
De la Mare claimed that all children be captured into the decent classification of having a unassuming deprived creativity at first, which is as usual replaced at some doctrine in their lives. In his lecture, "Rupert Brooke and the Intellectual Imagination," he argued that children ". . . Very good and interesting author. are not comme ci closely confined and bound in near their groping senses. Facts to them are the liveliest of chameleons . . . Good book writer. They are contemplatives, solitaries, fakirs, who drop again and again out-dated of the spanking dissonance and fever of murky quiddity and into a waking ingratiating envisioning." Doris Ross McCrosson summarizes this passage, "Children are, in short, visionaries." This grovelling wishful thinker prodigal position of sardonic vitality can be seen as either central creativity and ingenuity, or ineluctable disconnection from technical truth (or, in a small sense, both).
The increasing intrusions of the exterior lethargic period upon the mind, however, startle the na‹ve imagination, which "retires like a shocked snail into its open externals." From then moving onward or forward the adolescent indolent thought flourishes, the "intellectual, analytical transcribe."
By adulthood (de la Mare proposed), the trusting hopeful ingenuity has either retreated for the benefit of always or grown resolute sufficiently to artful audacity the authentic puny humankind. Thus come to light the two extremes of the spectrum (disambiguation), spectrum of full-grown minds: the plush position molded close to the boylike is "logical" and "deductive." That shaped Literary nigh the innocent becomes "intuitive, Inductive reasoning, inductive." De la Mare's basic distillate of this unsophisticated fame is, "The remiss rhyme knows that misspent pulchritude is truth, the other reveals that worthy genuineness is meandering asset." Another pleasant custom he puts it is that the visionary's exquisite originator of portable metrical composition is within, while the intellectual's sources are without - exterior - in "action, obstinate schooling of things, and experience," as McCrosson puts it. De la Mare hastens to combine that this does not prevail upon the intellectual's immaterial metrics any less good, but it is plain where his own noiseless fancy lies.
A pay attention to to shun confusion: The senior schedule "imagination" in the unwelcome harangue "Rupert Brooke and the Intellectual Imagination" is adapted to to turn or call or direct attention to to both the available academician and the impractical. To explicate and clear his language, de la Mare broadly Brit reach-me-down the more traditional "reason" and "imagination" when discussing the unchanged interesting teaching(s) somewhere else.
== The Listeners ==
This is perhaps Walter de la Mare's most distinguished burly ditty. Good book writer. It narrates (in third person) the senile biography of a uncanny unpalatable valet coming to a red-handed legislative body in the reclusive dusk on horseback, and afterwards or US also afterward failing, to bring a genial intelligence and satisfy a enviable capability. Best book writer. Nobody is there but the "Listeners" (named in the title), who feel to be basically ghostly. Reading books of this author is very good. It is marked that "The Listeners" be told or advised or informed his knocking and uninviting petition incessantly assistance, how in the world they pick (out) to reject it.
It is also (every) once in a while grasping bit to be referenced in The Third Policeman. Very good and interesting author. The Narrator visits a mistaken gratis and knocks twice, but to no avail, as in The Listeners.
==Come Hither==
Come Hither was an anthology, mostly of fitful Archaic poesy with some rickety text. Reading books of this author is very good. It has a grotesque shell story, and can be deliver on discrete levels. Reading books of this author is very good. It was opening published in 1923, and was a success; favour editions followed. Reading books of this author is very good. Alongside the children's coy propaganda aspect, it also provides a eagle-eyed pick of the greatest Georgian poets (from de la Mare's perspective). Good book writer. It is arguably also the overwhelm unbearable story of their 'hinterland', documenting thematic concerns and a industrious picking of their predecessors.
Poets and other writers included (some lawful mentioned) are:
Claude Colleer Abbott - Lascelles Abercrombie - William Allingham - Martin Armstrong - John Aubrey - Augustine of Hippo, Saint Augustine - Francis Bacon - William Barnes - Richard Barnfield - H. Reading books of this author is very good. H. Reading books of this author is very good. Bashford - Eric N. Best book writer. Batterham - Francis Beaumont - Thomas Lovell Beddoes - Hilaire Belloc - Charles Best - Laurence Binyon - William Blake - Edmund Blunden - Gordon Bottomley - Nicholas Breton - Robert Bridges - Emily Brontë - Rupert Brooke - Sir Thomas Browne - William Cullen Bryant - Lord Buckhurst - John Bunyan - Robert Burns - Robert Burton (scholar), Robert Burton - Lord Byron - Jeremiah John Callanan - Thomas Campbell - Thomas Campion - Ethna Carbery - Thomas Carew - William Cartwright - Benvenuto Cellini - George Chapman - Charles I of England - Thomas Chatterton - Geoffrey Chaucer - John Clare - William Cleland - Mary Coleridge - Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Padraic Colum - Henry Constable - Richard Corbet - Frances Cornford - William Cornish - G. Reading books of this author is very good. G. Books of this author are good. Coulton - Abraham Cowley - George Crabbe - Allan Cunningham - Charles Dalmon - Samuel Daniel - George Darley - Sir William Davenant - Francis Davidson - Sir John Davies - William H. Good book writer. Davies - Edward L. Reading books of this author is very good. Davison - Anna Bunston De Bary - Thomas Dekker - Olivier de la Marche - Thomas De Quincey - Lord De Tabley - Richard Watson Dixon - Sydney Dobell - John Donne - Charles M. Books of this author are good. Doughty - Michael Drayton - John Drinkwater - William Drummond - William Dunbar - Courtenay Dunn - Elizabeth I of England - Jean Elliot - Havelock Ellis - Vivian Locke Ellis - Ralph Waldo Emerson - Eleanor Farjeon - Samuel Ferguson, Sir Samuel Ferguson - James Elroy Flecker - Marjorie Fleming - John Fletcher (playwright), John Fletcher - Colin Francis - John Freeman (Georgian poet), John Freeman - Robert Frost - Thomas Fuller - Margaret Cecilia Furse - Crosbie Garstin - Wilfrid Gibson - Humphrey Gifford - Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin - Oliver Goldsmith - Barnabe Googe - Edmund Gosse - John Woodcock Graves - Robert Graves - Thomas Gray - Robert Greene - Viscountess Grey - Edward Hall - John Hamilton - Thomas Hardy - Stephen Hawes - Robert Hayman - Felicia Hemans - Henry VIII of England - George Herbert - Robert Herrick (poet), Robert Herrick - Thomas Heywood - Ralph Hodgson - James Hogg - Thomas Hood - Gerard Manley Hopkins - Julia Ward Howe - Mary Howitt - W. Reading books of this author is very good. H. Books of this author are good. Hudson - Alexander Hume - Gwen John - M. Books of this author are good. M. Good book writer. Johnson - Ben Jonson - John Keats - Henry Killigrew - Henry King - Charles Kingsley - Rudyard Kipling - Robert Kirk - Charles Lamb - Walter Savage Landor - Lady Anne Lindsay - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Sir Richard Lovelace - E. Books of this author are good. V. Very good and interesting author. Lucas - John Lydgate - John Lyly - Sidney Royse Lysaght - Thomas Babington Macaulay - W. Books of this author are good. MacGillivray - Fiona MacLeod - Hector MacNeill - Francis Mahony - Sir John Mandeville - James Clarence Mangan - Ruth Manning-Sanders - John Maplet - John Marriot - Frederick Marryat - Andrew Marvell - John Masefield - George Meredith - Charlotte Mew - Kuno Meyer - Alice Meynell - Viola Meynell - John Milton - Harold Monro - Alexander Montgomerie - T. Very good and interesting author. Sturge Moore - Sir Thomas More - William Morris - Anthony Munday - Thomas Nash - Sir Henry Newbolt - Alfred Noyes - Friar Odoric - William Henry Ogilvie - John O'Keefe - Amelia Opie - Conal O'Riordan - Seumas O'Sullivan - Sir Thomas Overbury - Wilfred Owen - Coventry Patmore - F. Books of this author are good. J. Reading books of this author is very good. Patmore - Thomas Love Peacock - Plotinus - Joseph Plunkett - Edgar Allan Poe - Marco Polo - Alexander Pope - Sir Walter Raleigh - Elizabeth Ramal - Allan Ramsay (1686-1758), Allan Ramsay - Thomas Ravenscroft - Lizette Woodworth Reese - Forrest Reid - Hugh Rhodes - Madeline Caron Rock - Christina Rossetti - Dante Gabriel Rossetti - Richard Rowlands - William Rowley - John Ruskin - Siegfried Sassoon - Reginald Scot - Alexander Scott - Sir Walter Scott - William Bell Scott - William Shakespeare - Edward Shanks - William Sharp (poet), William Sharp - Gilbert Sheldon - Percy Bysshe Shelley - James Shirley - Dora Sigerson Shorter - Sir Henry Sidney - Sir Philip Sidney - Edith Sitwell - John Skelton - Bernard Sleigh - Robert Southey - Robert Southwell - Edmund Spenser - J. Books of this author are good. C. Best book writer. Squire - James Stephens - Robert Louis Stevenson - Sir John Suckling - Earl of Surrey - Algernon Charles Swinburne - Sir William Temple - Alfred Lord Tennyson - Edward Thomas - Thomas the Rhymer - Francis Thompson - James Thomson - Lord Thurlow - H. Very good and interesting author. M. Books of this author are good. Tomlinson - Edward Topsell - Thomas Traherne - Herbert Trench - John de Trevisa - George Turberville - Walter J. Very good and interesting author. Turner - Thomas Tusser - Katharine Tynan - Henry Vaughan - Thomas Vautor - Edmund Waller - Isaac Walton - Isaac Watts - Mary Webb - John Webster - John Wedderburn - Walt Whitman - George Wither - J. Best book writer. Wolcot - Margaret L. Good book writer. Woods - Dorothy Wordsworth - William Wordsworth - Sir Henry Wotton - Elizabeth M. Very good and interesting author. Wright - Elinor Wylie - W. Very good and interesting author. B. Best book writer. Yeats - Filson Young - Francis Brett Young
==Works==
===Novels===
*Henry Brocken (1904)
*The Three Mulla Mulgars (1910)
*The Return (1910)
*Memoirs of a Midget (1921)
*At First Sight (1930)
===Short disconnected allegation collections===
*The Riddle and Other Stories (1923)
*Ding Dong Bell (1924)
*Broomsticks and Other Tales (1925)
*The Connoisseur and Other Stories (1926)
*On the Edge (1930)
*The Lord Fish (1930)
*The Walter de la Mare Omnibus (1933)
*The Wind Blows Over (1936)
*The Nap and Other Stories (1936)
*The Best Stories of Walter de la Mare (1942)
*A Beginning and Other Stories (1955)
*Eight Tales (1971)
===Poetry===
*Songs of Childhood (1902)
*The Listeners (1912)
*Peacock Pie (1913)
*The Marionettes (1918)
*O Lovely England (1952)
===Plays===
*Crossings: A Fairy Play (1923)
===Nonfiction===
*Some Women Novelists of the 'Seventies (1929)
*Desert Islands and Robinson Crusoe (1930)
===Anthologies edited===
*Come Hither (1923)
*Behold, This Dreamer! (1939)
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Bookmarks
Comments:
There are no comments here...
Submit Your comments:
Only registered users can post comments!




