“The Horse-Dealer’s Daughter.” English Review, April, 1922. Included in England, My England.

“The Fox.” Four parts. Dial, May, June, July, and August, 1922. Included in The Ladybird (London), and The Captain’s Doll (New York).

“Monkey-Nuts.” Sovereign, August 22, 1922. Included in England, My England.

“A Letter.” Laughing Horse, Number 4 (undated). This epistolary coup de grâce, delivered against Mr. Ben Hecht’s Fantazius Mallare, was held to be contra bonos mores by the authorities of the University of California; and the owners of The Laughing Horse were asked to find another box-stall for their étalon intrepide. Denied campus fodder, the cachinating steed roamed a while the great open spaces of the Southwest, where horses are horses. He is now at Santa Fe, New Mexico. Number four of The Laughing Horse is excessively scarce.

“Certain Americans and an Englishman.” New York Times Magazine, December 24, 1922.

“Indians and an Englishman.” With painting of D. H. Lawrence, by Jan Juta. Dial, February, 1923.

“Taos.” Dial, March, 1923. This and the other unassigned essays, above and below, dealing with the Indians and other aspects of American life, are, of course, still uncollected.

“Surgery for the Novel—or a Bomb.” International Book Review, April, 1923.

“Model Americans.” Review of Stuart P. Sherman’s Americans. Dial, May, 1923. Mr. Lawrence tackles the right and left ends of American criticism.

“Trees and Babies and Papas and Mammas.” Adelphi, June, 1923. From Fantasia of the Unconscious (Chapter iv).