1906Fireside and Sunshine
1907Character and Comedy
1909One Day and Another
1911Old Lamps for New
1913Loiterer’s Harvest
1916Cloud and Silver
1917A Boswell of Baghdad
1918Twixt Eagle and Dove
1919The Phantom Journal
1920Adventures and Enthusiasms
1921Roving East and Roving West
1922Giving and Receiving
1923Luck of the Year

Selected Writings:

1911A Little of Everything
1911Harvest Home
1916Variety Lane
1919Mixed Vintages

Travel:

1904Highways and Byways in Sussex
1905A Wanderer in Holland
1906A Wanderer in London
1909A Wanderer in Paris
1912A Wanderer in Florence
1914A Wanderer in Venice
1916More Wanderings in London
In England: London Revisited
1924A Wanderer Among Pictures: A Guide to the Great Galleries of Europe

And also (Written with C. L. Graves):

1903Wisdom While You Wait

SOURCES ON E. V. LUCAS

“Unless my judgment is much at fault, there has written in English, since the death of R. L. Stevenson, no one so proficient in the pure art of the essayist as Mr. E. V. Lucas,” says Edmund Gosse at the beginning of his “The Essays of Mr. Lucas,” in his volume, Books on the Table. This essay on an essayist should be consulted either in Mr. Gosse’s own volume (page 105) or in F. H. Pritchard’s Essays of To-Day: An Anthology, in which it is included (page 249). No more authoritative or more charmingly stated estimate of Mr. Lucas as an essayist is known to me.

In addition to the sources referred to in the text of the chapter or in footnotes, the reader should consult the Reader’s Guide To Periodical Literature for the years since 1913 and the files of The Bookman (London) for the years since 1908.