Ronald Daffern
1937: Triolet; Verse Written During an Hour
Lawrence Dale
IV.3: Benefit Office
D. N. Dalglish
1917: Otmoor
Cahal Dallat
VII.3: Holy Tundish, Markham Main; Dilat Q'hal
Michael Daugherty
VIII.1: Loose Nots
Ian Davie (editor 1942-1943)
Poet and theologian.
1942-1943: Introduction; Ballade; Reflection; Entreaty
1947: A Prologue
1948: Ithaca (For D. S. S.)
Hilary Davies
III.1: "The river bends..."
I. D. Davies
1946:No 2: Life's Voyage (from the Greek of Palladas); Old Friend from Helicarnassus (Callimachus)
John Davies
IX.1: Bluegrass; A short history of the north Wales coast; Raven
IX.1: Breakaway: a review of "War Voices" by Tony Curtis and "Parables & Faxes" by Gwyneth Lewis
Bryan Martin Davies
XI.3: In Memory of a Beekeeper (translated by Damian Walford Davies)
Damian Walford Davies
XI.3: In Memory of a Beekeeper (translated from Bryan Martin Davies)
Ann Davis
1947: Bestiary; Sweet Helen
Hannah Daw
X.1: Marinated Heart
A. J. Dawe
1910-1913: A Rhyme
1914: Verses for some Coloured Drawings; To Mary
Gerald Dawe
III.3: Local People
IV.3: Safe Houses
V.2: A Story
J. Dawson-Jackson
1930: Round a Table, Made of a Box
Sarah Dence
V.2: Voting and Violins: review of "A Scottish Assembly" by Robert Crawford
VI.1: Healing History's Wounds: a review of 'Out of History' by Eavan Boland
Geoffery Dennis (editor 1910-1913)
Unclassifiable writer of 1930s ephemera, though the uncharitable might call him a hack: his works include a 1937 commentary on the Coronation of Edward VIII.
1910-1913: Napoleon's Last Victory; The West Countree; A Song of the Hills and My Friend
Bernard Denvir
1937: Composition
G. D. Desmond
1918: Home-Coming; Age
Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill
III.3: Aubade [translated by Michael Longley]; The Bond [translated by Maeve McGuckian]
Eric Dickinson
1915: The Dance of the Blood-red Sun
1916, as E. C. Dickinson: The Apple Orchard; Love Plays in the South
1917, as E. C. Dickinson: A Child's Voice; River Song
1918, as E. C. Dickinson: A Tavern Lilt (To W. W.)
1919: The Garden
1920: Three Sonnets
John Dixon
V.3: In Memory of Charlotte Mew
E. R. Dodds
Oxford Professor of Greek; close friend and collaborator, later to be literary executor, of Louis MacNeice.
1916: The Awaiters of the Advent
1917: Measure
J. B. Donne (editor 1950, 1951)
Later an editor of Sheridan's "The Rivals".
1950: Foreword; Lines for a Future Generation of Worms; The Return of the Unicorn II, III, IV
1951: Poem for a Child; The Question; A Commendation; A Woman in Love; The Sage; Five Traditional Spanish Songs of the 15th and 16th centuries
Bernard Donoughue (editor 1956)
1955: A Jew and his Dilemma
1956: Linos; The Missionaries
Tim Dooley
VI.1: Tidying Up
Mark Doty
IX.2: Powder and Paint: a review by Rónán McDonald of "Gunpowder" by Bernard O'Donoghue and "My Alexandria" by Mark Doty
Rachel Draper
III.3: Woman avoiding truth in beautiful flat
Charles Drew
1930: I Would Not Have You Wake, as Yet
John Drexel
IX.2: Reassurance; Astrologies
Tom Driberg
Later a distinguished if maverick Labour politician, but at Oxford an ambitious poet. Coaxing Edith Sitwell into coming to speak earned Driberg a considerable reputation among his fellows: his poetry impressed them less, and John Betjeman parodied it mercilessly.
1926, as Thomas Driberg: London Square
1927, as Thomas Driberg: Cottage Squalor; Transvaluation of All Values; Lonely Scholar; Panorama in Lilliput
Christopher Driver
1955: Paul to the Romans
C. J. Druce
1917: The Meeting
Eugene Dubnov
VI.2: Face in the Darkness [translated from the Russian by Peter Porter and the author]
Ian Dudley
II.3: Apple Picking
III.2: Harvest Home; Wappenshaw; Nylon; Tattoo
IV.3: Decade
Esther Lilian Duff
1915: A Kalendar; Black Oxen; Lads' Love and Lavender
1916: The Sea; God's Fool
Carol Ann Duffy
IV.2: Confession; Eley's Bullet
John Dunlop
1936, as J. D. Dunlop: Early Dawn; London Winter; Ten Lines; Death
1937: Teknik; Nory
Walter Dunlop
1914: Reasonableness
Antony Dunn
IX.1: Judith with the Head of Holofernes
X.1: Bournemouth; Low Tide; Narnia
Douglas Dunn
II.2: Interview by Bernard O'Donoghue
Seán Dunne
III.3: The Abdication; Gaeltacht
Denzil Dunnett
1937: Hospital Morning; An Invitation
Paul Durcan
IV.1: Interview by Christiania Whitehead; John Field Visits His Seventy-Eight-Year-Old Widowed Mother; Family Planning Clinic, Easter Sunday Morning
Geoffrey Dutton (OCTCP)
Australian poet and campaigner for liberal arts; raised on a sheep-station; briefly associated with "Angry Penguins", the arch-modernist journal hoaxed by the spoof poet "Ern Malley".
1948: A Girl on Sunday; Dust in Oxford; Elements of the Academic Scene
1949: Alpenblumen; The Dead: A French Cemetery
Peter Dwyer
1936: Street Scene; Of Beauty
Search
Alphabetical List of Contributors
1910-23 Fairie to the Somme
- 1910-13 GH Crow, G Dennis, S Vines
- 1914 GH Crow, S Vines
- 1915 GH Crow, TW Earp
- 1916 WR Childe, TW Earp, Aldous Huxley
- 1917 WR Childe, TW Earp, Dorothy L Sayers
- 1918 TW Earp, E Geach, Dorothy L Sayers
- 1919 TW Earp, DL Sayers, Siegfried Sassoon
- 1920 Vera Brittain, CHB Kitchin, Alan Porter
- 1921 A Porter, Richard Hughes, Robert Graves
- 1922 no editors cited
- 1923 David Cleghorn Thomson, F W Bateson
1924-32 Into the Waste Land
- 1924 Harold Acton, Peter Quennell
- 1925 Patrick Monkhouse, Charles Plumb
- 1926 Charles Plumb, WH Auden
- 1927 WH Auden, Cecil Day-Lewis
- 1928 Clere Parsons, Basil Blackwell
- 1929 Louis MacNeice, Stephen Spender
- 1930 Stephen Spender, Bernard Spencer
- 1931 Bernard Spencer, Richard Goodman
- 1932 Richard Goodman
1936-37 New Age
1942-52 War and Movement
1953-60 The Fantasy
1970 "Fortnightly"
1983-89 Magazine
- I.1 Mick Imlah, Nicholas Jenkins, Elise Paschen, Nicola Richards
- I.2 Nicholas Jenkins, Elise Paschen, Nicola Richards
- I.3 N Jenkins, Bernard O'Donoghue, Peter McDonald, E Paschen
- II.1 Mark Ford, N Jenkins, John Lanchester, E Paschen
- II.2 Mark Ford, Elise Paschen, Mark Wormald
- II.3 Elise Paschen, Mark Wormald
- III.1 M Wormald, Sarah Dence, Bernard O'Donoghue, Janice Whitten
- III.2 Mark Wormald
- III.3 Mark Wormald
- IV.1 Mark Wormald
- IV.2 Mark Wormald
- IV.3 Mark Wormald
1989-95 Fin de siècle
- V.1 Mark Wormald
- V.2 Mark Wormald
- V.3 Mark Wormald
- VI.1 Mark Wormald
- VI.2 Mark Wormald
- VI.3 Sinead Garrigan, Kate Reeves, Mark Wormald
- VII.1 Sinead Garrigan, Kate Reeves
- VII.2 Sinead Garrigan, Kate Reeves, Ian Sansom
- VII.3 Sinead Garrigan, Ian Sansom
- VIII.1 Sinead Garrigan, Ian Sansom
- VIII.2 Sinead Garrigan, Sam Leith
- VIII.3 Sinead Garrigan, Sam Leith
- IX.1 Sinead Garrigan, Sam Leith
- IX.2 Sinead Garrigan, Sam Leith
1998- Rebound
Appendices
"Through about seventy lines Mr Auden continues to show his inability to appreciate the meaning of words" Isis review of Oxford Poetry 1926