He began publishing a monthly magazine,
The Microbe, in 1901, printing his own verse under his pseudonym of "Furnley Maurice", a pen-name he was to continue to use for the rest of his writing life. His first verse published in
The Bulletin appeared in the 2 February 1905 issue under his pen-name after being repeatedly rejected by the magazine's editor
Alfred George Stephens. On 24 August 1910 he married Ida Lizzie Meeking at Christ Church, St Kilda. The pair would go on to have two sons. Wilmot was associated with the Victorian Socialist Party and this, along with his pacificst leanings, moved him to oppose conscription during
World War I. In 1916 he founded the Melbourne Literary Club and became printer of the club's journal
Birth. He was later prominent in the
Fellowship of Australian Writers and campaigned on its members' behalf against censorship and for copyright protections. He continued to work at E. W. Cole's Book Arcade until its closure in 1929, going on to be a bookseller in
Little Collins Street for several years before becoming the first full-time manager of the Melbourne University Press. He wrote throughout his life, producing 11 volumes of poetry, a number of plays and short stories, as well as writing reviews of prominent books of his day. Wilmot died suddenly of heart disease on 22 February 1942. ==Bibliography==