His poetry was published in
Poems (1938,
Hogarth Press), and ''The Ventriloquist's Doll'' (1943, Cresset Press). Perhaps his best-known poem was 'Lament for a Cricket Eleven'. He was regarded by many as one of the most promising poets of the day;
Francis Scarfe devoted a whole chapter to him in
Auden and After. Allott became general editor of the five-volume
Pelican Book of English Prose (1956) and of the
Oxford History of English Literature. His familiar yellow anthology
The Penguin Book of Contemporary Verse (1950; revised and enlarged 1962) was used widely in colleges.
Inspector Wexford has been seen reading it on television. Allott published
Selected poems of Winthrop Mackworth Praed (1953);
Five Uncollected Essays of Matthew Arnold (1953); and
The Poems of Matthew Arnold (1965). He also published
Robert Browning: Selected Poems (1967). Allott's
Collected Poems was published posthumously in 1975. He was a witty and popular lecturer, with a great affection for cats. He also smoked heavily, believing wrongly that an earlier bout of tuberculosis would confer protection. He did in fact die of lung cancer. A new revised and expanded edition of Allott's
Collected Poems, edited, introduced and annotated by Michael Murphy], was published in 2008. ==References==