Vol. 1, No. 1 - September 1913 - Adolf Wolff: Songs, Sighs and Curses (collected poems).[3]
Vol. 1, No. 2 - October 1913 - Wallace E. Baker: Diary of a Suicide (diary).[4]
Vol. 1, No. 3 - December 1913 - Charles Demuth: The Azure Adder (play).
Vol. 1, No. 4 - January 1914 - Leonid Andreyev: Love of One's Neighbor (play, translated by Thomas Seltzer)
Vol. 1, No. 5 - February 1914 - Ezra Pound (editor): Des Imagistes: An Anthology (poetry by 11 authors)
Vol. 1, No. 6 - March 1914 - Alfred Kreymborg: Erna Vitek (novel).
Vol. 2, No. 1 - April 1914 - Horace L. Traubel: Collects (essays).[5]
Vol. 2, No. 2 - September 1914 - George W. Cronyn: Poems[6]
Vol. 2, No. 3 - October 1914 - Frank Wedekind: Erdgeist (Earth Spirit; play in verse translated by Samuel A. Eliot, Jr.).
Vol. 2. No. 4 - November 1914 - Frank Wedekind: Pandora's Box (play in verse translated by Samuel A. Eliot, Jr.).
^The Glebe was reissued in 1967 by Kraus Reprint, New York, using the collections of the New York Public Library.
^Belgian born Adolf Wolff (1883-1944) was an anarchist and sculptor. A further collection Songs of Rebellion, Songs of Life, Songs of Love, was published by Alfred & Charles Boni in 1914.
^Wallace Baker sent his diary to Russell Herts, who published the magazine The International, before committing suicide at Manhattan Beach, New York (September, 1913).
^Walt Whitman scholar Horace Traubel wrote a Collect column for his monthly magazine The Conservator (1890-1919).
^In 1918 Boni & Liveright published The Path of the Rainbow: An Anthology of Songs and Chants from the Indians of North America. Edited by George W. Croyn, with Introduction by Mary Austin.
Suzanne Churchill: Making Space for Others: A History of a Modernist Little Magazine. In: Journal of Modern Literature, Volume 22, No. 1, 1998, p. 53, note 26.
Jay Bochner: The Glebe. In: Edward E. Chielens (editor): American Literary Magazines, pp. 135–139.