Alfred Henry Miles (26 February 1848 – 30 October 1929) was a prolific Victorian-era English writer – including as an anthologist, children's writer, editor, journalist, and poet – as well as a composer and lecturer.
He published hundreds of works on a wide range of topics, ranging from poetry (The Poets and the Poetry of the Century, 10 volumes. (London: Hutchinson, 1891)), warfare (Wars of the Olden Times, Abraham to Cromwell) to household encyclopaedias with information for every conceivable contingency (The Household Oracle: A Popular Referee on Subjects of Household Enquiry), and even advice to the lovelorn (Wooing: Stories of the Course That Never Did Run Smooth by R. E. Francillon and others. Issued as a volume in The Idle Hour Series, London: Hutchinson, [1891]).
He was editor of the Fifty-Two Library, a series of children's adventure stories published by Hutchinson & Co., London in the 19th century. He compiled some fifty volumes that appeared at five shillings apiece.
The Poets and Poetry of the Century (ed.) [10v|p|1891–97]
The Universal Natural History, with Anecdotes Illustrating the Nature, Habits, Manners and Customs of Animals, Birds, Fishes, Reptiles, Insects, etc., etc. edited by Alfred H. Miles, New York : Dodd, Mead and Co., 1895 [1]
Successful Recitations (ed.) [1902]
Log Leaves and Sailing Orders (ed.) [c|1902]
Edward Hayes Plumptre to Selwyn Image: The Sacred Poets of the Nineteenth Century [b|1906]
Christina G. Rossetti to Katharine Tynan (ed.) [1907]
Drawing Room Entertainments [d|pub:1909]
Ballads of Brave Women [1909]
A Book of Brave Girls at Home and Abroad [n|1909]
A Book of Brave Boys All the World Over [n|1909]
The First Favourite Reciter (ed.) [1909]
Original Poems, Ballads, and Tales in Verse [p|1910]
The Sweep of the Sword [1910]
Twixt Life and Death Opon Sea and Shore [1910]
Heroines of the Home and the World of Duty [1910]
A Garland of Verse for Young People [p|1911]
The Diner's-Out Vade Mecum [n|1912]
A Book of Brave Boys [n|?/1915]
Heroes of History [1916]
Poetry
Miles's poetry is unashamedly chauvinistic and strongly reminiscent of Rudyard Kipling.