Works
- Twenty Chinese poems (1910) with Arthur Bowmar-Porter
- Poems Dramatic and Lyrical (1911) attributed (also to Arnold Bax)
- The Poetasters of Ispahan (1912) play
- Friendship (1913)
- The Marriage of the Soul (1913)
- Shakespeare (1921) play (with Harold F. Rubinstein)
- The Traveller's Tale (1921) poems
- Polly (1922) adapted from John Gay
- The Insect Play (1923) adaptation with Nigel Playfair
- Midsummer Madness (1924) ballad opera
- Inland Far. A book of thoughts and impressions (1925)
- Up Stream (1925)
- Mr. Pepys (1926) ballad opera
- Many a Green Isle (1927) short stories
- Waterloo Leave (1928) play
- Square Pegs: A Polite Satire (1928) One-act plays
- Rasputin (1929)
- Socrates (1930)
- The Immortal Lady (1930)
- The Venetian (1931)
- Twelve Short Plays, serious and comic (1932)
- Leonardo da Vinci (1932)
- Pretty Witty Nell. An account of Nell Gwynn and her environment (1932)
- Farewell, My Muse (1932) collected poems
- The Rose Without a Thorn (1933) play
- April in August (1934)
- Ideas and People (1936)
- The House of Borgia (1937)
- Highways and Byways in Essex (1939)
- The Life of the White Devil (1940) biography of Vittoria Orsini
- Evenings in Albany (1942)
- Time with a Gift of Tears. A modern romance (1943) novel
- Vintage verse; an anthology of poetry in English (1945)
- The Beauty of Women (1946)
- Golden Eagle (1946) play
- The Silver Casket Being love-letters and love poems attributed to Mary Stuart (1946)
- All the world's a stage: theatrical portraits (1946) editor
- The Buddha (1947) radio play
- Day, a Night and a Morrow (1948)
- The Relapse (1950)
- Some I Knew Well (1951) memoirs
- Hemlock for Eight (1946) radio play with L. M. Lion
- Rosemary for Remembrance (1948)
- Circe (1949) muse
- The Distaff Muse. An anthology of poetry written by women (1949) with Meum Stewart
- W. G. Grace (1952)
Read more about this topic: Clifford Bax
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“You are always looking for already-felt emotions, just as you like to get an old pair of trousers back from the cleaners, which seem new when you dont look too closely. Artists are cleaners, dont let yourself be taken in by them. True modern works of art are made not by artists but quite simply by men.”
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