E. H. Visiak describes Lilley in his 1968 memoir Life's Morning Hour as having "the aspect of a monk with a genial and sagacious mind", with "a capacity for suffering bores gladly".[6] (Lilley provided the introduction for Visiak's 1911 poetry collection Flints and Flashes.)
^Amongst others he wrote Sir Joshua Fitch: his Life and Work, 1906; Adventus Regni, 1907; Modernism, 1908; The Soul of St Paul, 1909; The Religion of Life, 1910; Nature and Super-nature, 1911; Prayer in Christian Theology, 1924; Worship; Its Necessity, Nature, and Expression, 1926; Sacraments, their Meaning for Christian Worship, 1928; and Religion and Revelation, 1932 > British Library web site accessed 09:13 GMT Thursday 4 May 2017
^'LILLEY, Canon Alfred Leslie', Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014; online edn, April 2014 accessed 4 May 2017
^Visiak, E. H. (1968). Life's Morning Hour. London: John Baker. p. 196.