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:
“These volumes contain not the highest, but a very practicable wisdom, which startles and provokes, rather than informs us. Carlyle does not oblige us to think; we have thought enough for him already, but he compels us to act.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“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)
“The only law was that enforced by the Creek Lighthorsemen and the U.S. deputy marshals who paid rare and brief visits; or the two volumes of common law that every man carried strapped to his thighs.”
—State of Oklahoma, U.S. relief program (1935-1943)