Downie only started publishing her poetry in the 1970s, and much of her work was published by small presses including Mandeville and Priapus. Her two main published collections were
A Stranger Here (1977) and
Plainsong (1981). Her
Collected Poems, edited by
George Szirtes, were published in 2023, after her death. Downie described her wartime memories in her
memoir ''There'll Always Be an England: a poet's childhood, 1929–1945'', written in the last year of her life and published in 2003. Downie's poems have been described as "elegant, full of gently spiked
irony, and oblique, wistful glances at everyday events and familiar
landscapes".
Geoffrey Grigson described
A Stranger Here as "a better book of new poetry than any I have seen for years". Her obituarist in
The Independent said that: She won the
Stroud Festival poetry competition in 1970, and an Arts Council Poetry Prize in 1977 for her
A Stranger Here. ==Personal life==