Stuart Mason (Christopher Sclater Millard)

Christopher Sclater Millard (7 November 1872 – 21 November 1927)

was the author of the first bibliography of the works of Oscar Wilde as well as several books on Wilde. Millard’s bibliography was instrumental in enabling Wilde’s literary executor, Robert Baldwin Ross, to establish copyright on behalf of his estate.”

In April 1906, Millard was arrested at Iffley and charged with two counts of gross indecency under the 1885 Labouchere Amendment to the Criminal Law Act which criminalised all sexual acts between men. He pleaded guilty to avoid a third more serious charge of sodomy, which carried a maximum penalty of ten years’ penal servitude, and was sentenced to three months’ imprisonment with hard labour.[5]

After his release Millard went to live with his brother, the Rev. Elwin Millard, at St Edmund’s vicarage in Forest Gate, East London and Robert Ross helped him obtain a position at The Burlington Magazine, edited by More Adey and Roger Fry.[6] Shortly afterwards he met Charles Scott Moncrieff, later the translator of Proust, then a pupil at Winchester College, who became a lifelong friend.[7] Millard was unhappy in England and spent several months during 1907 in France, though he then returned to London where he spent the rest of his life.[8]

Scholarship on Oscar Wilde


Around 1900, Millard began his compilation and collection of Wildeana in earnest, collaborating with Robert Ross and another scholar of Wilde’s works, Walter Edwin Ledger, and he continued to acquire material on and off from much of his life. In 1904 he travelled to Bagneux, south of Paris, with Wilde’s friend and biographer Robert Sherard to visit Wilde’s grave there. It was, he wrote, “a pilgrimage of love when we watered with our tears the roses and lilies with which we covered the poet’s grave”. (Wlide’s remains were later removed to Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.)

In 1905, Millard published his first book, a translation of Prétextes, André Gide’s study of Wilde, under the pseudonym Stuart Mason. In November 1907, he published the first volume of his bibliography, a comprehensive catalogue of Wilde’s poetic works, with a dedication to Charles Scott Moncrieff.

In 1908, Millard released Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality, a defence of The Picture of Dorian Gray. This was followed in the same year by a privately printed bibliography of Oscar Wilde[13] and, in 1910, by The Oscar Wilde Calendar with a “quotation from the works of Oscar Wilde for every day in the year with some unrecorded sayings selected by Stuart Mason”. In early 1912, he published Oscar Wilde: Three Times Tried, the first complete account of the trials which later became the basis for the 1960 film The Trials of Oscar Wilde starring Peter Finch as Wilde.

In July 1914, Millard’s Bibliography of Oscar Wilde appeared to wide acclaim. “It is my life’s work”, he wrote to Walter Ledger, “and the only thing I am likely to be remembered for to my merit.” Ross called it “an astonishing and ingenious compilation”, claiming that in ten minutes of turning the proofs he had learned “more about Wilde’s writings than Wilde himself ever knew”.

In 1920, Millard published his last work on Wilde—Oscar Wilde and the Aesthetic Movement—which dealt with the caricatures of Wilde in the music of the 1880s.

Throughout his career, Millard sought to defend Wilde and to expose works incorrectly or fraudulently attributed to Wilde. In 1926 he was sued for libel by Messrs. Hutchinson and Methuen publishers for a letter he had circulated among the bookselling trade claiming that Methuen had knowingly “succeeding in foisting on an unsuspecting public” a play called For Love of the King allegedly by Wilde, but according to Millard, in fact a forgery authored by Mrs. Wodehouse Pearse, also known as Princess Chantoon. Although the play was agreed to be a fake, the jury found in favour of Methuen.

Private secretary to Robert Ross
In 1911, he became private secretary to Robert Ross. In 1914 he gave testimony on Ross’s behalf in a libel suit against Lord Alfred Douglas and Thomas William Hodgson Crosland, who were charged with conspiring to falsely accuse Ross with acts of gross indecency with a young man called Charles Garratt.

Millard had met Garratt in 1913 and been intrigued by his “Votes for Women” badge. Garratt later visited him at his flat and they began a sexual relationship. When Garratt was arrested for importuning, Millard appeared in court to speak on his behalf, and a report of the trial in Reynolds Newspaper linking their names attracted the attention of Douglas. When Garratt was imprisoned, solicitors acting for Douglas and Crosland visited him and attempted to convince him to admit to sexual relations with Ross. He initially refused, but later signed a statement to that effect, later claiming that he had been tricked.

On learning of his relationship with Garratt, Ross dismissed Millard from his post as secretary. However, although his libel case was ultimately unsuccessful, Ross was impressed by Millard’s loyalty in testifying despite the risk to himself and later reinstated him.

Second imprisonment
In 1916, to avoid a second charge of gross indecency, Millard fled from London and spent several months on a farm in Northumberland before enlisting as a private in the Royal Fusiliers. He was sent to France though he was invalided back to England and discharged from the army in July 1917, whereupon he worked in the War Office as a decipherer of telegram.

In January 1918, he was arrested and charged with gross indecency. He was found guilty and sentenced to a twelve-month sentence in Wormwood Scrubs though the judge spared him hard labour on account of his ill health. Millard’s second conviction emboldened Douglas to publicly denounce Ross in court during Maud Allan’s libel trial against the right-wing conspiracy theorist Noel Pemberton Billing. Ross died that October while Millard was still in prison.

Later life
After his release, Millard began a new occupation as a dealer of antiquarian books and rare manuscripts, doing business from his wooden bungalow at 8 Abercorn Place in St John’s Wood. It was there that Millard first mentioned the novel Hadrian the Seventh to A. J. A. Symons, thus sparking Symons’ “experiment in biography”, The Quest for Corvo, a celebrated study of Frederick Rolfe.

In 1922, through a friendship with the young Anthony Powell, himself a keen collector, Millard began compiling materials for a bibliography of the artist and publisher Claud Lovat Fraser, which appeared the following year.

Millard died of an aneurysm at the Hospital of St John and St Elizabeth, London on 21 November 1927, and was buried at St Mary’s Catholic Cemetery, Kensal Green.”

“Christopher and His Kind: A new biography of Christopher Sclater Millard” OCTOBER 7, 2014 / MISSURANIA

“Robert Baldwin Ross, Wilde’s literary executor called it ‘an astonishing and ingenious compilation’ while his friend and lover C.K. Scott Moncrieff described it as ‘the first good bibliography, and still the best in our language’. Millard himself thought it ‘the only thing I am likely to be remembered by to my merit!’”

“an attempt to reconstruct the life of a remarkable and original individual, an openly and unashamedly gay man living in a society which criminalized all sexual acts between men, for whom the rehabilitation of Wilde’s genius was not merely a personal enthusiasm but a form of political activism.”

“Born in 1872, he was just 22 when Oscar Wilde was convicted of gross indecency and sentenced to two years hard labour. At the time he was a student of theology at Salisbury where he was training for the ministry, and Roberts believes he was already in a relationship with another man. Yet while the scandal had a largely disciplinary effect on many gay men (Edward Carpenter, who Millard admired, declared that ‘The Wilde trial had done its work and silence must henceforth reign on sex subjects’), Christopher was moved to write to Reynolds Newspaper to defend Wilde and descry his treatment by the press. ‘Because a fellow creature has fallen’, he wrote, ‘why should they cast stones at him? Are the writers of such articles themselves immaculate in their passions?’”

The shadow of the Wilde trials hangs ominously over Roberts’ narrative. Though he had admired Wilde’s poems and plays beforehand, Wilde’s prosecution had a profound affect on Millard. From this time he appears to have been consumed by his interest, obsessively collecting anything to do with Wilde, including thousands of newspaper clippings, reviews and caricatures which he compiled in scrapbooks now preserved in the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. In 1904 he left his post as Headmaster of a small private Catholic school to devote himself to the considerable task of compiling an authoritative bibliography of Wilde’s published works.

But in the summer of 1906, Millard suffered the same fate as Wilde. He was arrested following a drunken and ill-judged pass at a young man called Thomas Bradbury, and sentenced to three months hard labour in Oxford Prison. Yet unlike Wilde, Millard did not (to his family’s chagrin) leave England to begin a new life on the Continent, instead staying on to contend with the prejudice and persecution which his conviction left him open to. One of the most interesting chapters in Roberts’ book draws on the police reports collected on Millard by Scotland Yard in 1914-15. Millard was placed under surveillance following his involvement with Charles Nehemiah Garratt, a seventeen year old suffragist and prostitute, who was for a time his lover. Roberts’ use of the PRO documents follows the work of Matt Houlbrook in reconstructing the homosexual subculture in which Millard moved, and which in 1916, led to a second warrant being issued for his arrest.

Remarkably, Millard refused to be cowed either by his imprisonments or the opprobrium with which he was treated by polite society. He was in fact entirely open about his ‘rows’, as he called them, ‘regarding them as accidents which having happened, no honest man would want to conceal’, and ‘out and proud’ more half a century before Stonewall.

When in 1920 he was employed by Vyvyan Holland to edit an edition of Wilde’s letters to Ross, Millard defied Holland’s instructions that all homosexual material should be removed. ‘It was very wrong of you to put the Uranian passages in after my very careful deletions’, wrote Holland. ‘But I forgive you, knowing how earnest you are in your devotion to the subject… I won’t have the letters used as Uranian propaganda’.”

  • H. Montgomery Hyde, Christopher Sclater Millard (Stuart Mason): Bibliographer and Antiquarian Book Dealer (New York: Global Academic Publishers, 1989, 1990). Appendix 1. Sketch of Oscar Wilde’s life and literary career / Christopher S. Millard — Appendix 2. Letters from Christopher Millard to Anthony Powell, February-July, 1922. Clark Library Reference ; PR5828 .H99c
  • Maureen Borland, Wilde’s Devoted Friend: A Life of Robert Ross 1869 – 1918, (Lennard, Oxford 1990)
  • Douglas Murray, Bosie: A Biography of Lord Alfred Douglas (Hodder and Stoughton: 2000)
  • Jonathan Fryer, Robbie Ross: Oscar Wilde’s True Love (Constable: London)
  • Philip Hoare, Wilde’s Last Stand (New York: Arcade, 1998)
  • Maria Roberts, Yours Loyally: A Life of Christopher Sclater Millard (FeedARead.com Publishing: 2014)
  • Robert Scoble, The Corvo Cult: The History of an Obsession (Strange Attractor, London, 2014, pp. 211–215, 266–270)
  • A. J. A. Symons, The Quest for Corvo (London: Cassell, 1934, pp. 1–15)
  • Bibliography of Oscar Wilde / by Stuart Mason (Christopher Millard) Introduced by Timothy d’Arch Smith. London, Rota, 1967. Clark Library Reading Room ; PR5822.A1 M64bi 1967

“Stuart Mason” Bibliography

  • Oscar Wilde : a study / from the French of André Gide ; with introduction, notes and bibliography by Stuart Mason. Oxford : Holywell Press, 1905. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5823 .G453oE *
  • Impressions of America. By Oscar Wilde. Edited, with an Introduction, by Stuart Mason. Keystone Press, Sunderland. 1906. [April].
  • The priest and the acolyte / with an introductory protest by Stuart Mason. London : The Lotus Press, 1907. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5821.A3 P9 1907 *
  • A bibliography of the poems of Oscar Wilde : giving particulars as to the original publication of each poem, with variations of readings and a complete list of all editions, reprints, translations, &c. / by Stuart Mason. London : E.G. Richards, 1907 [November].
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5822.A1 M64p *cited by Ross in Poems, 1908.
  • A bibliography of the poems of Oscar Wilde : giving particulars as to the original publication of each poem, with variations of readings and a complete list of all editions, reprints, translations, &c. / by Stuart Mason [i.e. C.S. Millard] ; with portraits, illustrations, facsimiles of title-pages, manuscripts, &c. New York : M. Kennerley, 1908.
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5822.A1 M64p 1908 *
  • Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality. A Defence of “The Picture of Dorian Gray” Edited by Stuart Mason. London: J. Jacobs, Edgware Road, W. 1908.
  • Bibliography of Oscar Wilde, 1908 [Edinburgh] : Privately printed for the author, 1908.
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5822.A1 M64b *
  • The Oscar Wilde calendar : a quotation from the works of Oscar Wilde for every day in the year with some unrecorded sayings / selected by Stuart Mason. London : F. Palmer, 1910.
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5815 .M64 *
  • The Oscar Wilde calendar : a quotation from the works of Oscar Wilde for every day in the year with some unrecorded sayings / selected by Stuart Mason. Second Edition. London : F. Palmer, 1911.
  • Oscar Wilde: Art and Morality. A Record of the Discussion which Followed the Publication of “Dorian Gray” by Stuart Mason. London: Frank Palmer, Red Lion Court. New edition, expanded. Published September 1912. Uniform with Methuen’s foolscap 8vo edition of Wilde’s works.
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5819.P614 M6 1912 *
  • The Oscar Wilde calendar : a quotation from the works of Oscar Wilde for every day in the year with some unrecorded sayings / selected by Stuart Mason. London : Frank Palmer, 1915. Third Edition.
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5815 .M64 1915 *
  • Oscar Wilde: Three Times Tried. Quotation of five lines from “De Profundus.” London: Ferrestone Press Ltd, Red Lion Court, [1912].
  • Bibliography of Oscar Wilde / by Stuart Mason; with a note by Robert Ross. London : T. W. Laurie, [1914].
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5822.A1 M64bi 1914 *
  • Oscar Wilde and the aesthetic movement / by Stuart Mason ; with initial letters by Alan Odle and illustrations from contemporary prints. Dublin : Townley Searle, [1920].
    Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; f PR5823 .M64os *

The printed work of Claud Lovat Fraser. London : H. Danielson, 1923. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; N7417.F84 A5m *

A collection of original manuscripts, letters & books of Oscar Wilde : including his letters written to Robert Ross from Reading Gaol and unpublished letters, poems & plays formerly in the possession of Robert Ross, C.S. Millard (Stuart Mason) and the younger son of Oscar Wilde. London : Dulau & Company Limited, [1928?]
Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5822.A1 D8 *

Robbie Ross Bibliography

Aubrey Beardsley by Robert Ross. With Sixteen Full-Page illustrations and a Revised Iconography by Aymer Vallance. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head. New York: John Lane Company. 1909.

Masques & Phases By Robert Baldwin Ross A. L. Humphreys 1909

Complete Works of Oscar Wilde Edited by Robert Ross. Volume 1: The Duchess of Padua, De Profundis. Boston, Mass: The Wyman-Fogg Company.

In Memoriam Oscar Wilde. London: Privately Printed, 1909.
Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5823 .I36 *
“which Robert Ross had printed in 1909 just after Wilde was removed to Père La Chaise. Only 100 copies were printed for private circulation … Ross and I compiled it between us, and Arthur Humphrey’s of Hatchards got it printed, probably by Strangeways.”

Lord Alfred Douglas Bibliography

Poems / Lord Alfred Douglas. Paris : Published by the Mercure de France, 1896. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 A17 1896 *

Perkin Warbeck, and some other poems / by Alfred Douglas. London : Printed at the Chiswick Press, 1897. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 P4 *

Tails with a twist / the verses by “Belgian Hare” ; the pictures by E.T. Reed. London : Edward Arnold, [1898]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 T11 *

The city of the soul / by Alfred Douglas. London : Grant Richards, 9 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, W.C., 1899. “Second edition printed December 1899”–Verso of title page. The first edition was published anonymously. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 C51 1899 *

The Duke of Berwick, a nonsense rhyme / by the Belgian Hare [pseud.] Illustrated by Tony Ludovici. London : L. Smithers, [1899]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 D81 *

The placid pug and other rhymes / by the Belgian Hare (Lord Alfred Douglas) ; with illustrations by P.P. London : Duckworth, 1906. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 P6 *

The Pongo papers : and the duke of Berwick / by Lord Alfred Douglas ; illustrations by David Whitelaw. London : Greening & Co., 1907. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 P71 *

Sonnets / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, The Academy Pub. Co., 1909. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 S61 *

The city of the soul / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London : John Lane ; New York : John Lane Company, 1911. “First edition printed May 1899; second edition printed December 1899; third edition printed March 1911.” Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 C51 1911 *

The writing on the ground / by E.G.O. … Notes of a speech made in the course of a debate on “Honesty in love.” … [London] : Published for the author, [1913?]. An attack on Lord Alfred Douglas, and T.W.H. Crosland’s The first stone, in defense of Wilde. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5823 .O89 *

Letters to my father-in-law. No. 1. [n.p., 1914]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 L6 *

The rhyme of F double E / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Boulogne-sur-Mer, France : A. Douglas, [1914]. Satire on F.E. Smith. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 R4 *

Oscar Wilde and myself / by Lord Alfred Douglas ; with portrait of the author and thirteen other portraits and illustrations, also fac-simile letters. New York : Duffield & Company, 1914. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .D733o

Oscar Wilde and myself / by Lord Alfred Douglas ; with photogravure portrait of the author and thirteen other portraits and illustrations, also fac-simile letters. London : John Long, ©1914. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .D733o 1919

Sonnet : to a certain judge / by Lord Alfred Douglas. [London?] : [publisher not identified], [1915]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 T61 *

The rossiad : satire / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels, Scotland : R. Dawson, 1916. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 R8 *

Eve and the serpent / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels, Scotland : Robert Dawson & Son, [1917]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 E91 1917 *

Oscar Wilde et moi / Lord Alfred Douglas ; Traduit de l’anglais par William Claude. Paris : Émile-Paul Frerès, 1917. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5823 .D733oF *

Lord Alfred Douglas : the man and the poet / by W. Sorley Brown. Galashiels [Scotland] : John McQueen & Son, [1918]. Clark Library Reference ; PR6007.O6 Z8br

Fashionable intelligence about the “Morning Post” / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels, Scotland : Robert Dawson & Son, [1918?]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 F2 *

Striking tribute to a solicitor : Sir George Lewis honoured : dedicated to the London papers which printed accounts of the Robert Ross testimonial / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels [Selkirk] : R. Dawson, [1919?]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 S9 *

The collected poems of Lord Alfred Douglas. London : M. Secker, [1919]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 A17 1919 *

The rossiad : a satire / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels, Scotland : Robert Dawson & Son, 1921. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 R8 1921 *

The devil’s carnival / by Lord Alfred Douglas. Galashiels, Scotland : Robert Dawson & Son, 1922. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 D41 *

Some letters from Oscar Wilde to Alfred Douglas, 1892-1897 / with illustrative notes by Arthur C. Dennison, Jr., & Harrison Post, and an essay by A.S.W. Rosenbach, Ph. D. San Francisco, Printed for William Andrews Clark, Jr. by John Henry Nash, 1924. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; f PR5824 .D73 1924 *

In excelsis / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London : Martin Secker, 1924. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 I31 1924 *

New preface to “The life and confessions of Oscar Wilde” / by Frank Harris and Alfred Douglas. London : Fortune Press, [1925]. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .H314n

Perkin Warbeck : and other poems / Lord Alfred Douglas ; with an introduction by George Sylvester Viereck. Girard, Kan. : Haldeman-Julius Co., ©1925. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 P4 1925 *

The city of the soul : and other sonnets / Lord Alfred Douglas ; with an introduction by George Sylvester Viereck. Girard, Kan. : Haldeman-Julius Co., ©1925. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 C51 1925 *

The Duke of Berwick, and other rhymes / by Lord Alfred Douglas. New York, A.A. Knopf, 1925. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR4613.D4 D87 1925 *

The Duke of Berwick and other rhymes. London, Martin Secker, 1925. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 D81 1925 *

Nine poems. London, 1926. “Privately printed for A.J.A. Symons.” Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 N7 *

The collected satires of Lord Alfred Douglas. London : Fortune Press, 1926. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 A17 1926 *

New preface to The life and confessions of Oscar Wilde / by Frank Harris and Alfred Douglas. London : Fortune Press, 1927. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .H314n 1927

The complete poems of Lord Alfred Douglas, including the light verse. London, Secker [1928]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 A17 1928 *

Freundschaft mit Oscar Wilde / mit acht Bildtafeln; mit einem Vorwort von Franz Blei. Leipzig, P. List [©1929]. Clark Library Reference ; PR6007.O6 Z7G

The autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas. London : Martin Secker, 1929. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 Z7 *

Oscar Wilde et quelques autres / Lord Alfred Douglas ; traduit de l’anglais par Arnold Van Gennep. [Paris] : Gallimard, [1930]. Clark Library Reference ; PR6007.O6 Z7F 1930

Oscar Wilde, his life and confessions / by Frank Harris, including the hitherto unpublished full and final confession, by Lord Alfred Douglas and My memories of Oscar Wilde, by Bernard Shaw. New York, Covici, Friede, 1930. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .H314 1930

My friendship with Oscar Wilde : being the autobiography of Lord Alfred Douglas. New York : Coventry House, 1932. Clark Library Reference ; PR6007.O6 Z7 1932

A letter from Lord Alfred Douglas on André Gide’s lies about himself and Oscar Wilde / set forth with comments by Robert Harborough Sherard. Calvi (Corsica) Vindex Pub. Co., 1933. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .D733Le

The true history of Shakespeare’s sonnets, by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, M. Secker, 1933. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 T81 *

Oscar Wilde twice defended from André Gide’s wicked lies and Frank Harris’s cruel libels, to which is added a reply to George Bernard Shaw, a refutation of Dr. G.J. Renier’s statements, a letter to the author from Lord Alfred Douglas, an interview with Bernard Shaw by Hugh Kingmill / By Robert Harborough Sherard … Chicago, The Argus Book shop Inc., 1934. [Part two “Oscar Wilde, d́runkard and swindler ̀ …” published separately in Calvi (Corsica) by the Vindex publishing company in 1933.]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR5823 .S551osc *

Lyrics / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, Rich and Cowan, 1935. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 L91 1935 *

Sonnets / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London : Rich and Cowan, 1935. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 S61 1935 *

Bernard Shaw, Frank Harris & Oscar Wilde / by Robert Harborough Sherard ; with a preface by Lord Alfred Douglas, and an additional chapter by Hugh Kingsmill. London : T.W. Laurie, 1937. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .S551

Bernard Shaw, Frank Harris & Oscar Wilde / by Robert Harborough Sherard; with a preface by Lord Alfred Douglas. New York, The Greystone Press [1937]

Without apology / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, M. Secker [1938]. Clark Library Reference ; PR6007.O6 Z7w

Leopold : May 28th, 1940 / by Lord Alfred Douglas. [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], [1940?]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 L58 *

Ireland and the war against Hitler / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London : Richards Press, 1940. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 I65 *

Oscar Wilde; a summing-up / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, Duckworth [1940]. Clark Library Reference ; PR5823 .D733os

Lyrics / by Lord Alfred Douglas. London, Richards Press, 1943. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 L91 1943 *

The principles of poetry: an address delivered by Lord Alfred Douglas before the Royal society of literature on September 2nd, 1943. [London], [The Richards Press Ltd.], [1943]. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 P91 *

Sonnets. London : Richards Press, 1943. Clark Library Rare Book Stacks ; PR6007.O6 S61 1943 *