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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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<strong>The</strong> guard-room alarm. Bentley’s Misc Apr 1842.<br />

Coyne was an early contributor to Punch and dramatic critic <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> Sunday<br />

Times. From 1856 until his death he was secretary <strong>of</strong> the Dramatic Authors’<br />

Soc. See also Nicoll 4, pp. 284–5, 578; 5, pp. 327–8, 786; Conolly, <strong>English</strong><br />

drama, pp. 140–2; Readex Index, pp. 63–4.<br />

§2<br />

Obits: Sunday Times 26 July 1868; GM Aug 1868.<br />

In H. T. M. Bell, Half hours with representative novelists <strong>of</strong> the<br />

nineteenth century; being passages from their works with brief<br />

biographies, and a critical essay. 3 vols 1927. [jrs]<br />

‘Henry Thornton Craven’, Henry Thornton<br />

1818–1905<br />

Done Brown! F [also called a vaudeville]. (Adelphi, Edinburgh 1845).<br />

Duncombe 56; Lacy 81; Duncombe’s British theatre 442.<br />

Bletchington House: or the surrender! D. (CL 20 Apr 1846).<br />

Duncombe 56; New BT 447.<br />

<strong>The</strong> village nightingale: or the spider, the fly and the butterfly. Ba.<br />

(Str 23 June 1851). French 108.<br />

Bowl’d out: or a bit <strong>of</strong> brummagem. F. (P’cess 9 July 1860). Boston<br />

1868; Lacy 47 and 694.<br />

<strong>The</strong> post-boy. D. (Str 31 Oct 1860). 1860. Lacy 720; French 720.<br />

<strong>The</strong> chimney corner. D. (Olym 21 Feb 1861). Lacy 50; French 346 and<br />

742.<br />

Miriam’s crime. D. (Royal Str 9 Oct 1863). Lacy 60; De Witt 46.<br />

Milky white: an original serio-comic drama. (PW, Liverpool 20 June<br />

1864; Str 28 Sep 1864). 189?. Lacy 85 and 1264; French 1264.<br />

Meg’s diversion[s]. C. or D. ([New] Royalty 17 Oct 1866). Lacy 73;<br />

French 341 and 1082.<br />

See also Nicoll 4, p. 285; 5, pp. 328–9, 786. [ds]<br />

Charles Dickens 1812–70<br />

See col 1181.<br />

Colin Henry Fleetwood Hazlewood 1819–75<br />

Mss are located in Hackney archives, Rose Lipman Lib, London, and in BL,<br />

where licensing copies <strong>of</strong> the plays are to be found.<br />

§1<br />

All plays listed below are also issued in Readex micro edns.<br />

Going to Chobham: or the petticoat captains. F. (CL 30 July 1853).<br />

Lacy 11.<br />

Jenny Foster, the sailor’s child: or the winter robin. D. (Brit Oct<br />

1855). Lacy 32.<br />

Jessy Vere: or the return <strong>of</strong> the wanderer. D. (Brit Feb 1856). Lacy 25.<br />

<strong>The</strong> marble bride: or the elves <strong>of</strong> the forest. D. (Brit Mar 1857). Lacy<br />

32. From Les elves.<br />

Never too late to mend. D. (M’bone 1859). French 370; Lorenzen<br />

micro. From C. Reade.<br />

Waiting for the verdict: or falsely accused. D. (CL 29 Jan 1859). Lacy<br />

99.<br />

Capitola: or the masked mother and the hidden hand. D. (Sur 4 July<br />

1859). Lacy 70.<br />

<strong>The</strong> chevalier <strong>of</strong> the maison rouge: or the days <strong>of</strong> terror! D. (Acton 1<br />

Aug 1859). Lacy 42. From A. Dumas.<br />

<strong>The</strong> staff <strong>of</strong> diamonds. D. (Sur 14 Jan 1861). French 104.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bridal wreath. D. (CL 1861). French 107.<br />

<strong>The</strong> dragon <strong>of</strong> Wantley: or Harlequin Moore, <strong>of</strong> Moore Hall, and his<br />

fayre Margery. (No performance details). Sheffield 1861. With W.<br />

Reeve.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house on the bridge <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame. (M’bone 1 Apr 1861). Lacy 50.<br />

From T. Barrière & H. de Kock, La maison du pont Notre Dame.<br />

<strong>The</strong> clock on the stairs. D. (Brit 3 Feb 1862). Lacy 70.<br />

<strong>The</strong> harvest storm. D. (Brit June 1862?). Lacy 55.<br />

Mary Edmonstone. D. (Brit 22 Dec 1862). French 103.<br />

Aurora Floyd: or the dark duel in the wood. D. (Brit 20 Apr 1863).<br />

Lacy 58. Also as Aurora Floyd: or the first and second marriage.<br />

From M. E. Braddon.<br />

Lady Audley’s secret. D. (Vic 25 May 1863; new version Olym 25 June<br />

1877). Lacy 57; Lacy Suppl 2; (new Amer edn) New York 1889;<br />

Rowell. From M. E. Braddon.<br />

Ashore and afloat. D. (Sur 15 Feb 1864). French 106.<br />

<strong>The</strong> mother’s dying child. D. (Brit 5 Oct 1864). Lacy 64.<br />

<strong>The</strong> female detective: or the mother’s dying child. D. (21 June 1865?).<br />

De Witt 128.<br />

Poul a Dhoil: or the fairy man. D. (Brit 4 Oct 1865). Lacy 77.<br />

<strong>The</strong> headless horseman: or the ride <strong>of</strong> death. D. (Brit Nov 1868).<br />

French 107. From Capt M. Reid.<br />

Hop-pickers and gipsies: or the lost daughter. D. (Brit 17 May 1869).<br />

Lacy 85.<br />

Lizzie Lyle: or the flower makers <strong>of</strong> Finsbury. D. (Grec 7 Oct 1869 as<br />

Flower makers and heart breakers: or the tale <strong>of</strong> trials and<br />

temptations). Lacy 87.<br />

Taking the veil: or the harsh step-father. D. (Brit 30 July 1870).<br />

French 106.<br />

Leave it to me. F. (Sur 26 Dec 1870). Lacy 96. With A. Williams.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bitter reckoning. D. (Brit 19 June 1871). French 107.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lost wife: or a husband’s confession. D. (Brit 7 Aug 1871). Lacy 93<br />

(dated 1871).<br />

<strong>The</strong> stolen Jewess: or the two children <strong>of</strong> Israel. D. (Brit 1 Apr 1872).<br />

French 105.<br />

For honour’s sake. D. (Brit 1 Oct 1873). French 108.<br />

Jessamy’s courtship. D. (Philharmonic 12 Apr 1875). French 109.<br />

Splendid misery. Dicks’ <strong>English</strong> novels 83 nd.<br />

§2<br />

Era almanack 1869.<br />

J. Davis (ed). <strong>The</strong> Britannia diaries 1863–1875: selections from the<br />

diaries <strong>of</strong> Frederick C. Wilton. 1992.<br />

Hazlewood was an extremely prolific author, providing the Britannia with<br />

two-thirds <strong>of</strong> its new melodramas in the 1860s and early 1870s, though he was<br />

not, as <strong>of</strong>ten supposed, its <strong>of</strong>ficial house dramatist. See also Nicoll 5, 412–15,<br />

796–7; Conolly, <strong>English</strong> drama, pp. 189–90; Readex Index, p. 122. [jrs]<br />

Richard Hengist Horne 1803–84<br />

See col 618.<br />

Joseph Stirling Coyne | Douglas Jerrold<br />

Douglas Jerrold, Douglas William Jerrold 1803–57<br />

<strong>The</strong>re are substantial collections <strong>of</strong> Jerrold letters in the following libs:<br />

Brotherton, Leeds; Berg Collection, NYPL; Chicago Univ Lib; New York Univ<br />

(De Coursey Fales Collection); Pierpont Morgan, New York (Gordon N. Ray<br />

Collection); Victoria and Albert Museum (Forster Collection; this also contains<br />

mss <strong>of</strong> two plays by Jerrold and four mag articles). <strong>The</strong> Lord<br />

Chamberlain’s Collection in the BL contains mss <strong>of</strong> all plays first performed at<br />

the patent theatres and some others. Copies <strong>of</strong> the sale-catalogue <strong>of</strong> his lib are<br />

in the Bodleian and the BL.<br />

Collections<br />

Writings <strong>of</strong> Douglas Jerrold. 8 vols 1851–4. Also issued in weekly and<br />

monthly pts.<br />

Works with introductory memoir by W. B. Jerrold. 4 vols [1863–4].<br />

Also issued in 5 vols without introductory memoir but with 2nd<br />

edn <strong>of</strong> W. B. Jerrold’s life and remains (see §2, below) as vol 5.<br />

Selections<br />

Wit and opinions <strong>of</strong> Douglas Jerrold. Ed B. Jerrold 1859.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Brownrigg papers. Ed B. Jerrold, illustr G. Cruikshank 1860,<br />

1874.<br />

2001 | 2002

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