“A Still Afternoon” (—“Dreams Old and Nascent:” I. “Old,” II. “Nascent;” “Discipline;” “Baby Movements:” I. “Running Barefoot,” II. “‘Trailing Clouds’”). English Review, November, 1909. Included, with the exception of the last, in Amores.
These poems constitute Mr. Lawrence’s first real appearance in print. Before them, he says, “there was a youthful story in the bad grey print of a provincial newspaper—under a nom de plume. But, thank God, that has gone to glory in the absolute sense.”
“Night Songs” (—“Workaday Evenings:” I. “Yesternight,” II. “To-morrow Night;” “Rebuked;” “Wakened;” “At the Window”). English Review, April, 1910. “At the Window” was included in Amores.
“Three Poems” (—I. “Tired of the Boat,” II. “Sigh No More,” III. “Ah, Muriel!”). English Review, October, 1910. “Sigh No More” was included in New Poems.
“Lightning;” “Violets.” Nation (London), November 4, 1911. The first included in Love Poems; the second in New Poems.
“The Schoolmaster” (—I. “Morning,” “Afternoon”). Saturday Westminster Gazette, May 11, 1912.
“The Schoolmaster” (—II. “The Last Lesson”). Saturday Westminster Gazette, May 18, 1912. Included in Love Poems, under the major caption “Afternoon in School.”
“The Schoolmaster” (—III. “Evening,” IV. “The Punisher”). Saturday Westminster Gazette, May 25, 1912. “The Punisher” was included in Amores.
“The Schoolmaster” (—V. “A Snowy Day at School,” VI. “The Best of School”). Saturday Westminster Gazette, June 1, 1912. Included in Love Poems.