At the request of the Shakespeare Society of New South Wales, she wrote a book,
The Shakespeare Cult in Germany from the Sixteenth Century to the Present Time, which was published in Sydney in 1907. In a pamphlet,
The Neglect of the Study of Modern Languages in Australia, she advocated compulsory oral examinations in French and German at Australian universities and the teaching of spoken foreign languages in schools from kindergarten level. Between 1910 and 1917, as a member of the Teachers' Association of New South Wales, she instituted a yearly series of lectures in foreign languages. In 1917, these lectures were taken over by the
Modern Language Association, of which she remained a member. She also published
monographs on several subjects ranging from the functioning of the peace societies to the roles of international peace conferences and her reminiscences of Rose Scott. She made extensive correspondence with a number of international pacifist and feminist organizations. ==Editorship==