Mr. Dana Burnet and the New York Evening Sun:—”The Battle of Liège.”
Mr. Wilfred Campbell and the Ottawa Evening Journal:—”Langemarck at Ypres.”
Mr. Patrick R. Chalmers and Punch:—”Guns of Verdun.”
Mr. Cecil Chesterton and The New Witness:—”France.”
Mr. Oscar C.A. Child and Harper’s Magazine:—”To a Hero.”
Mr. Reginald McIntosh Cleveland and the New York Times:—”Destroyers off Jutland.”
Miss Charlotte Holmes Crawford and Scribner’s Magazine:—”Vive la France!”
Mr. Moray Dalton and the Spectator:—”Rupert Brooke.”
Lord Desborough and the London Times:—”Into Battle,” by the late Captain Julian Grenfell.
Professor W. Macneile Dixon and the London Times:—”To Fellow Travellers in Greece,”
Mr. Austin, Dobson and the Spectator:—”’When There Is Peace;’”
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the London Times:—”The Guards Came Through.”
Mr. John Finley and the Atlantic Monthly:—”The Road to Dieppe”; Mr. Finley, the American Red Cross, and the Red Cross Magazine:—”The Red Cross Spirit Speaks.”
Mr. John Freeman and the Westminster Gazette:—”The Return.”
Mr. Robert Frost and the Yale Review:—”Not to Keep.”
Mr. John Galsworthy and the Westminster Gazette:—”England to Free Men”; Mr. Galsworthy and the London Chronicle:—”Russia—America.”
Mrs. Theodosia Garrison and Scribner’s Magazine:—”The Soul of Jeanne d’Arc.”
Lady Glenconner and the London Times:—”Home Thoughts from Laventie,” by the late Lieutenant E. Wyndham Tennant.
Mr. Robert Grant and the Nation (New York):—”The Superman.”
Mr. Hermann Hagedorn and the Century Magazine:—”Resurrection.”
Mr. James Norman Hall and the Spectator:—”The Cricketers of Flanders.”
Mr. Thomas Hardy and the London Times:—”Men Who March Away,” and “Then and Now.”
Mr. John Helston and the English Review:—”Kitchener.”
Mr. Maurice Hewlett:—”In the Trenches,” from Sing-Songs of the War (The Poetry Bookshop).
Dr. A. E. Hillard:—”The Dawn Patrol,” by Lieutenant Paul Bewsher.
Mrs. Katharine Tynan Hinkson:—”To the Others” and “The Old Soldier.”
Mrs. Florence T. Holt and the Atlantic Monthly:—”England and America.”
Mr. William Dean Howells and the North American Review:—”The Passengers of a Retarded Submersible.”
Lady Hutchinson:—”Sonnets,” by the late Lieutenant Henry William Hutchinson.
Mr. Robert Underwood Johnson:—”To Russia New and Free,” from Poems of War and Peace, published by the author.
Mr. Rudyard Kipling:—”The Choice”; “’For All we Have and Are’”; and “The Mine-Sweepers.” (Copyright, 1914, 1915, 1917, by Rudyard Kipling.)
Captain James H. Knight-Adkin and the Spectator;—”No Man’s Land” and “On Les Aura!”
Sergeant Joseph Lee and the Spectator:—”German Prisoners.”
Mr. E. V. Lucas and the Sphere:—”The Debt.”
Mr. Walter de la Mare and the London Times:—”’How Sleep the Brave!’”; Mr. de la Mare and the Westminster Gazette:—”The Fool Rings his Bells.”
Mr. Edward Marsh, literary executor of the late Rupert Brooke:—”The Soldier” and “The Dead.”
Mr. Thomas L. Masson:—”The Red Cross Nurses,” from the Red Cross Magazine.
Lieutenant Charles Langbridge Morgan and the Westminster Gazette:—”To America.”
Sir Henry Newbolt:—”The Vigil”; “The War Films”; “The Toy Band,” and “A Letter from the Front.”
Mr. Alfred Noyes:—”Princeton, May, 1917”; “The Searchlights” (London Times), “A Prayer in Time of War” (London Daily Mail), and “Kilmeny.”
Mr. Will H. Ogilvie:—”Canadians.”
Mr. Barry Pain and the London Times:—”The Kaiser and God.”
Miss Marjorie Pickthall and the London Times:—”Canada to England.”
Canon H.D. Dawnsley and the Westminster Gazette:—”At St. Paul‘s, April 20, 1917.”
Dr. Charles Alexander Richmond:—”A Song.”
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Ronald Ross and the Poetry Review:—”The Death of Peace.”
Mr. Robert Haven Schauffler:—”The White Comrade.”
Mr. W. Snow and the Spectator:—”Oxford in War-Time.”
Mrs. Grace Ellery Channing Stetson and the New York Tribune:—”Qui Vive?”
Mr. Rowland Thirlmere and the Poetry Review:—”Jimmy Doane.”
Mrs. Ada Turrell and the Saturday Review:—”My Son.”
Dr. Henry van Dyke and the London Times:—”Liberty Enlightening the World,” and “Mare Liberum”; Dr. van Dyke and the Art World: “The Name of France.”
Mr. Tertius van Dyke and the Spectator:—”Oxford Revisited in War-Time.“
Mrs. Edith Wharton:—”Belgium,” from King Albert’s Book (Hearst’s International Library Company).
Mr. George Edward Woodberry and the Boston Herald:—”On the Italian Front, MCMXVI”; Mr. Woodberry, the New York Times and the North American Review:—”Sonnets Written in the Fall of 1914.”
The Athenaeum:—”A Cross in Flanders,” by G. Rostrevor Hamilton.
The Poetry Review:—”The Messines Road,” by Captain J.E. Stewart; “— But a Short Time to Live,” by the late Sergeant Leslie Coulson.
The Spectator:—”The Challenge of the Guns,” by Private A.N. Field.
The London Times:—”To Our Fallen” and “A Petition,” by the late Lieutenant Robert Ernest Vernède.
The Westminster Gazette:—”Lines Written in Surrey, 1917,” by George Herbert Clarke.
Messrs. Barse & Hopkins:—”Fleurette,” by Robert W. Service.
The Cambridge University Press and Professor William R. Sorley:— “Expectans Expectavi”; “’All the Hills and Vales Along,’” and “Two Sonnets,” by the late Captain Charles Hamilton Sorley, from Marlborough and Other Poems.
Messrs. Chatto & Windus:—”Fulfilment” and “The Day’s March,” by Robert Nichols.
Messrs. Constable & Company:—”Pro Patria,” “Thomas of the Light Heart,” and “To Belgium in Exile,” by Sir Owen Seaman, from War-Time; “To France” and “Requiescant,” by Canon and Major Frederick George Scott, from In the Battle Silences.
Messrs. E. P. Dutton & Company:—”To a Soldier in Hospital” (the Spectator); “Chaplain to the Forces” and “The Spires of Oxford” (Westminster Gazette), by Winifred M. Letts, from Hallowe’en, and Poems of the War; “A Chant of Love for England,”