Colony wrote a historical novel,
Free Forester (1935), as well as twelve books of poetry and two plays.
Free Forester was the most successful of his works, receiving a positive review from
The New York Times, which called him "a new name in literary circles" and the novel "sensitively and intelligently made and felt." A review in the
Saturday Review similarly praised the novel, calling it an "extraordinary book" that succeeded in "recreating the all but lost American frontier of the day of
Boone and
Crockett." Colony's poetic works include
A Brook of Leaves (1935),
Birth and Burials (1939),
Bacchus and Krishna (1952),
Demon in Love (1955),
Young Malatesta (1957),
Three Loves the Same (1961),
The Early Land (1962),
The Flying Ones (1964),
Some Phoenix Blood (1969),
Magic Child (1966),
Flower Myth (1971), and ''Antique Thorn: The Faun's Girl
(1974). He also wrote the plays The Amazon's Hero
(1972) and The Emperor and the Bee Boy'' (1976). Many of his writings are classically themed, which reflect his literary tastes. He also kept a diary for much of his life; the manuscript is preserved at the
Syracuse University Library. == Legacy ==