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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Early Nineteenth-Century Prose<br />

2155 | 2156<br />

<strong>The</strong> sinecurist’s creed. 1817.<br />

A political catechism, dedicated without permission to His Most<br />

Serene Highness Omar, Bashan Day etc, etc <strong>of</strong> Algiers, by an<br />

<strong>English</strong>man. 1817.<br />

<strong>The</strong> political house that Jack built. 1819 (42 edns) (anon), 1820 (8<br />

edns), 1821 (3 edns), 1827 (in Facetiae and miscellanies). With 13<br />

cuts by George Cruikshank.<br />

<strong>The</strong> radical house that Jack built. 1819.<br />

Dance in chains. 1819.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>English</strong>man’s mentor: a picture <strong>of</strong> the Palais Royal. [1819?]<br />

<strong>The</strong> Queen’s matrimonial ladder: a national toy. 1819. With 14 ‘stepscenes’<br />

and illustrations in verse, with 18 other cuts by G.<br />

Cruikshank.<br />

Caroline: a poem in blank verse. 1820. Anon.<br />

Buonepartephobia. <strong>The</strong> origin <strong>of</strong> Dr Slop’s name. 1820 (10 edns)<br />

(anon), 1827 (in Facetiae and miscellanies).<br />

<strong>The</strong> green bag: . . . a ballad. By the author <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> political ‘a, apple<br />

pie’. 1820 (9 edns). Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Queen’s budget opened. 1820.<br />

<strong>The</strong> man in the moon. 1820 (25 edns) (anon), 1821, 1827 (in Facetiae<br />

and miscellanies). With 15 illustrations by Cruikshank.<br />

<strong>The</strong> midnight intruder: or Old Nick at Carlton House. 3 pts 1820. A<br />

poem.<br />

‘Non mi ricordo’. 1820 (31 edns). Anon. Satire on George IV.<br />

A political lecture on heads. 1820.<br />

A political Christmas carol. 1820.<br />

Plenipo and the devil: or the upshot <strong>of</strong> the plot: an infernal poem.<br />

By the author <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> house that Jack built. 1820 (3 edns). Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> political ‘a, apple pie’: or the ‘extraordinary red book’<br />

versified. By the author <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> house that Jack built. 1820 (20<br />

edns). Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> political queen that Jack loves. 1820 (10 edns). Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> queen and magna charta: or the thing that Jack signed. 1820 (3<br />

edns) anon: authorship uncertain.<br />

<strong>The</strong> queen that Jack found. 1820 (10 edns). Anon: authorship uncertain.<br />

<strong>The</strong> queen’s matrimonial ladder . . . illustrations in verse. 1820 (44<br />

edns) (anon), 1827 (in Facetiae and miscellanies).<br />

<strong>The</strong> form <strong>of</strong> prayer, with thanksgiving to Almighty God, to be used<br />

daily for the happy deliverance <strong>of</strong> Queen Caroline from the late<br />

most traitorous conspiracy. 1820.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bank-restriction barometer. 1820. Originally ptd as a large open<br />

half-sheet, as an envelope for Cruikshank’s ‘Banknote not to be<br />

imitated’.<br />

<strong>The</strong> apocryphal New Testament: being all the gospels, epistles and<br />

other pieces now extant, attributed in the first four centuries to<br />

Jesus Christ, his apostles and companions, and not included in<br />

the New Testament. 1820. Fiercely attacked in Quart Rev and<br />

furiously defended by Hone.<br />

<strong>The</strong> political showman – at home! [1821.]<br />

A slap at Slop and the Bridge St gang. 1821. A burlesque on Stoddart’s<br />

New Times, illustr Cruikshank, who inspired it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> right divine <strong>of</strong> kings to govern wrong. 1821 (8 edns) (anon), 1827<br />

(in Facetiae and miscellanies). An adaptation, with addns and<br />

alterations, <strong>of</strong> Defoe’s Jure divino, 1706, with a preface by Hone<br />

and 2 woodcuts by G. Cruikshank.<br />

An imaginary interview between W. Hone and a lady. 1822.<br />

<strong>The</strong> northern excursion <strong>of</strong> Geordie, emperor <strong>of</strong> Gotham. [1822.]<br />

Anon.<br />

Ancient mysteries described. 1823. Old <strong>English</strong> miracle plays and<br />

other early dramas found by Hone in ms in BM and pbd with<br />

notes and illustrations, the latter by G. Cruikshank.<br />

<strong>The</strong> every-day book: or everlasting calendar <strong>of</strong> popular amusements;<br />

with four hundred and ninety engravings [by G.<br />

Cruikshank and others]. 2 vols 1826–7, introd by L. Shepard,<br />

Detroit 1967.<br />

<strong>The</strong> table book. 2 vols 1827–8, Detroit 1966. With 116 engravings by<br />

Cruikshank and others.<br />

Full annals <strong>of</strong> the revolution in France. 1830.<br />

<strong>The</strong> year-book <strong>of</strong> daily recreation and information concerning<br />

remarkable men and manners, times and seasons. 1832, rptd 1967.<br />

Illustr George Cruikshank and others.<br />

<strong>The</strong> early life and conversion <strong>of</strong> William Hone by himself, edited by<br />

his son. 1841.<br />

Some account <strong>of</strong> the conversion <strong>of</strong> the late W. Hone, with further<br />

particulars <strong>of</strong> his life and extracts from his correspondence. 1853.<br />

§2<br />

<strong>The</strong> three trials <strong>of</strong> Hone, for publishing three parodies. 1818; ed W.<br />

Tegg 1876. <strong>The</strong> Trials were pbd separately in 1817.<br />

Hackwood, F. W. Hone: his life and times. 1912.<br />

Herd, H. In his Seven editors, 1955.<br />

Sikes, H. M. Hone: Regency patriot, parodist and pamphleteer.<br />

Newberry Lib Bull 5 1961.<br />

Regency radicalism and antiquarianism: William Hone’s Ancient<br />

mysteries described (1823). Leeds Stud in <strong>English</strong> 10 1978.<br />

Robinson, D. L. Hawthorne’s April fools: sources and significance.<br />

American Transcendental Quart 53, Winter 1982.<br />

Vitale, M. <strong>The</strong> domesticated heroine in Byron’s Corsair and William<br />

Hone’s prose adaptation. <strong>Literature</strong> and History 10, Spring 1984.<br />

Manning, P. J. <strong>The</strong> Hone-ing <strong>of</strong> Byron’s Corsair. In Textual criticism<br />

and literary interpretation, ed J. J. McGann, Chicago 1985.<br />

Mary Howitt, née Botham 1799–1888<br />

For works written in collaboration with her husband, see William Howitt,<br />

below.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Woodring, C. R. William and Mary Howitt: bibliographical notes.<br />

HLB 5 1951.<br />

Collections<br />

Complete poetical works. Boston 1858, 1859.<br />

In Miles, <strong>The</strong> poets and poetry <strong>of</strong> the century 10 vols [1891–7].<br />

<strong>The</strong> poetical works <strong>of</strong> Howitt, Milman and Keats. Philadelphia<br />

1840, 1845, 1846, 1847, 1849, 1852, 1853, [c. 1855].<br />

<strong>The</strong> poetical works <strong>of</strong> Mary Howitt, Eliza Cook and L. E. L. Boston<br />

1849, 1850, 1852, 1853, 1855, 1856, 1857, 1859, 1860, 1866.<br />

§1<br />

<strong>The</strong> forest minstrel, and other poems. 1823. With William Howitt.<br />

<strong>The</strong> desolation <strong>of</strong> Eyam, the emigrant: a tale <strong>of</strong> the American woods<br />

and other poems. London, Edinburgh and Dublin 1827, 1828.<br />

With William Howitt.<br />

<strong>The</strong> seven temptations. 1834.<br />

Sketches <strong>of</strong> natural history. 1834, Philadelphia 1834, London [1839],<br />

Boston 1842, London [1851] (7th edn, enlarged), [1864], [1872].<br />

Wood Leighton: or a year in the country. 3 vols 1836.<br />

Tales in verse. [1836], New York [1836], Boston 1839, 1842, 1843,<br />

London [1850?] (as Mary Howitt’s Tales in verse for the young),<br />

[1857?], London and Edinburgh [1865].<br />

Hymns and fireside verses. 1839 (2 edns), [1845?].<br />

Hope on, hope ever! 1840.<br />

Strive and thrive: a tale. 1840.<br />

Sowing and reaping: or what will come <strong>of</strong> it? 1841, 1841.<br />

Work and wages: or life in service. [1842.]<br />

Little coin, much care. 1842.<br />

Love and money: an every day tale. [1843.]<br />

No sense like common sense: or some passages in the life <strong>of</strong> Charles<br />

Middleton. 1843. Probably by William Howitt.<br />

<strong>The</strong> child’s poetry book. New York 1844.<br />

Marien’s pilgrimage: a fire-side story, and other poems. [New York<br />

1844]; [n.p. 1845], London [1859].

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