Volumes
- Poems (1938)
- The Laughing Mulatto (1939)
- Over the Mountain (1939)
- Poets of Tomorrow (1939)
- Ten Poems (1940)
- Until Now (1942) Fortune Press, poems
- Life of William Blake by Alexander Gilchrist (1942) editor
- Poems for a Penny (1942)
- The Acreage of the Heart (1943) poems
- The Lost Traveller (1943)
- The Planet in my Hand (1944, Grey Walls Press) poems
- Tracks in the Snow (Grey Walls Press) (1946) criticism of William Blake, Fuseli and John Martin
- Unholy Dying (1945) as R. T. Campbell
- First Animal Book (1946) Thomas Bewick engravings
- Take thee a Sharp Knife (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- Adventure with a Goat (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- Bodies in a Bookshop (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- Death for Madame (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- The Death Cup (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- Swing Low Sweet Death (1946) as R. T. Campbell
- William Blake: America, a prophecy (1947) editor
- William Blake: Poems (1947) editor
- A Century of British Painters (1947) editor, original authors Richard Redgrave and Samuel Redgrave
- Christopher Smart: A Song to David (1947) editor
- In Other Worlds (1951)
- Love Poems for the New Year (1951)
- Space Cat (1952)
- Loser's Choice (1953) as R. T. Campbell
- The Tropical Fish Book (1953)
- Indian Spring (1954)
- A Mantelpiece of Shells (1954)
- Trucks, Tractors, and Trailers (1954)
- Indian Pipe (1955)
- Space Cat Visits Venus (1955)
- Space Cat Meets Mars (1957)
- Space Cat and the Kittens (1958)
- Tan's Fish (1958)
- Selected Poems of William Blake (1960) editor
- Funeral of a Child (1962)
- Garland for the Winter Solstice (1961) selected poems
- The Geography of Faces (1964)
- Blake's Dante Plates (1968) editor
- William Blake: The Artist (1971)
- John Berryman 1914-1972 (1972) broadsheet
- Lament of the Cats of Rapallo (1973)
- McGonagall Remembers Fitzrovia in the 1930s (1973)
Read more about this topic: Ruthven Todd
Famous quotes containing the word volumes:
“The great British Libraryan immense collection of volumes of all ages and languages, many of which are now forgotten, and most of which are seldom read: one of these sequestered pools of obsolete literature to which modern authors repair, and draw buckets full of classic lore, or pure English, undefiled wherewith to swell their own scanty rills of thought.”
—Washington Irving (17831859)
“The ladies understood each other, in the careful way that ladies do once they understand each other. They were rather a pair than a couple, supporting each other from day to day, rather a set of utile, if ill-matched, bookends between which stood the opinion and idea in the metaphorical volumes that both connected them and kept them apart.”
—Alexander Theroux (b. 1940)
“There is hardly a pioneers hut which does not contain a few odd volumes of Shakespeare. I remember reading the feudal drama of Henry V for the first time in a log cabin.”
—Alexis de Tocqueville (18051859)