Rope was a scholar, a linguist and a prolific writer, of poems, articles and books. A man of strong traditionalist opinions, an advocate of
Distributism, an enemy of mechanisation and, above all, the motor car, his writings are a prolonged elegy for the ways of the past, and an elevation of time-honoured forms of Catholic faith and worship. He edited The Catholic Review quarterly in succession to its founder
Benedict Williamson, a fellow convert from Anglicanism. He took the opportunity to include poems of his own, which also appeared in several collections, detailed below. He also wrote a number of books and well as articles in a number of Catholic publications, including
The Month, Ampleforth Journal, The Cross and the Plough,
G. K.'s Weekly, The Weekly Review,
The Dublin Review, The
Irish Monthly and The
Catholic World and Venerabile. A typical article available online is "Martyrs and Markets" Articles in
The Month included Unfounded Optimism, The Fallacy of Reunion, Tolerance In Praise of Papal Rome, The Balm of Solitude, Is Anglo-Catholicism near The Church?, La Terre Qui Meurt, Compromise no Charity, The Limitations of
Richard Cobden, Elizabethan Continuity: Bishop Tunstall's Confession of the Faith, The Theory of Progress, Jewel: an Early Exponent of Anglicanism. Similarly, in The
Irish Monthly "The Real John Donne" "An English historian of Ireland" "Bella Tola, in the Valais (July, 1914)". Likewise in
New Blackfriars "Lourdes and Art", "The Staleness of Novelty". Also, in the Irish Quarterly Review, "Epiphanytide" (poem), In 1940 his biography of
Pope Benedict XV was published, having been started in 1938. In prefacing it, Rope stated that he hoped the biography would serve as "small effort in reparation" for the fact that few British Catholics (himself included) had listened to Benedict's message of peace during the
Great War. He also noted that, as of 1938, many were now wishing they had listened to the 'Pope of Peace'. As of 2021, Rope's biography is one of a limited number of English-language biographies of Benedict XV - the other notable biography being John F. Pollard's
The Unknown Pope: Benedict XV (1914-1922) and the Pursuit of Peace (1999). A range of his more secular interests is on view in "Forgotten England". On a more piecemeal level, having been on the staff of the
Oxford English Dictionary in his early adulthood (as a member of Murray's, and, from 1905, Bradley's editorial staff), he continued to be a contributor of material throughout his life. On a campaigning front, he is quoted as being a "leader of the Catholic Land Movement" in 1931. Apart from his writings, his life was enriched by many friendships, which he nurtured with a wealth of correspondence. Apart from Benedict Williamson, on whom he wrote a two-part monograph, he is associated with
G.K.Chesterton,
Hilaire Belloc,
John Hawes and many others. ==Publications==