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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Mid-Nineteenth-Century Prose<br />

2215 | 2216<br />

Landscapes, churches and moralities. 1874.<br />

From a quiet place: discourses. 1879.<br />

East coast days and memories. 1881.<br />

Our little life: essays consolatory. 2 ser 1882–4.<br />

Towards the sunset: teachings after thirty years. 1883.<br />

A young man, his home and friends. 1884.<br />

What set him right; with other chapters to help. 1885–8.<br />

Our homely comedy and tragedy. 1887.<br />

<strong>The</strong> best last, with other papers. 1888.<br />

To meet the day through the Christian year. 1889.<br />

Twenty-five years <strong>of</strong> St Andrews, September 1865 to September<br />

1890. 2 vols 1892.<br />

St Andrews and elsewhere: glimpses <strong>of</strong> some gone and <strong>of</strong> things<br />

left. 1894.<br />

Occasional and immemorial days. 1895. Sermons.<br />

<strong>The</strong> last years <strong>of</strong> St Andrews, September 1890 to September 1895.<br />

1896.<br />

Sermons and stray papers: with a biographical sketch by W. W.<br />

Tulloch. 1907.<br />

Boyd also pbd several lectures and sermons.<br />

§2<br />

Story, R. H. A. K. H. B. Guild Life & Work (Edinburgh) 13 May 1899.<br />

<strong>The</strong> true significance <strong>of</strong> Boyd. Eclectic Mag 132 1899.<br />

George Brimley 1819–57<br />

Essays. Ed W. G. Clark, <strong>Cambridge</strong> 1858 (with memoir), 1860, 1882,<br />

[1905].<br />

For appreciations <strong>of</strong> Brimley, see G. Saintsbury, A history <strong>of</strong> criticism vol 3,<br />

1904, pp. 504–8; S. T. Williams, A mid-Victorian critic, Sewanee Rev 30<br />

1922.<br />

John Brown 1810–82<br />

§1<br />

Horae subsecivae: Locke and Sydenham, with other occasional<br />

papers. Vol 1 Edinburgh 1858; vol 2 Edinburgh 1861. Vols 1–2, 2<br />

vols 1862; ed A. Dobson, Oxford 1907 (WC); vol 3 Edinburgh<br />

1882.<br />

Rab and his friends. Edinburgh 1859, London 1901 (‘and other<br />

papers’), [1905] (with Our dogs, and notes), 1906 (EL) (with other<br />

papers and essays, and bibliography), 1908 (with character<br />

sketches <strong>of</strong> the author by A. C. Brown and E. T. Maclaren), 1931.<br />

From Horae subsecivae, above.<br />

‘With brains, Sir’. Edinburgh 1860. An essay on education extracted<br />

from Horae subsecivae vol 1, above.<br />

On the deaths <strong>of</strong> Rev John M’Gilchrist, John Brown and John<br />

Henderson. Edinburgh 1860.<br />

Letter to Rev Dr Cairns. Edinburgh 1860, 1861 (in Horae subsecivae<br />

vol 2, above). Contains Domestic and personal details <strong>of</strong> the life <strong>of</strong><br />

John Brown DD (the elder).<br />

Health: five lay sermons to working people. Edinburgh 1862.<br />

Our dogs. Edinburgh 1862. From Horae subsecivae vol 2, above.<br />

Marjorie Fleming: a sketch. Edinburgh 1863. Rptd from North Br<br />

Rev; included in Horae subsecivae vol 3, above.<br />

Jeems the doorkeeper: a lay sermon. Edinburgh 1864, 1912 (‘and<br />

other stories’, viz Her last half crown, Landseer’s picture, In clear<br />

dream and solemn vision, <strong>The</strong> black dwarf’s bones).<br />

Subsequently included in Horae subsecivae vol 3, above.<br />

Minchmoor. Edinburgh 1864, 1912 (with Enterkin, Biggar and the<br />

house <strong>of</strong> Fleming). Included in Horae subsecivae vol 3, above.<br />

Locke and Sydenham. Edinburgh 1866. Originally in Horae subsecivae<br />

vol 1, above, but not included in later edns.<br />

Sir Henry Raeburn and his works. Edinburgh 1876 (priv ptd).<br />

Included in Horae subsecivae vol 3, above.<br />

John Leech. Edinburgh 1877, 1882. In Horae subsecivae vol 3, above.<br />

Thackeray: his literary career. Boston 1877.<br />

Something about a well; with more <strong>of</strong> Our dogs. Edinburgh 1882.<br />

Letters<br />

Letters; with letters from Ruskin, Thackeray and others. Ed J. Brown<br />

and D. W. Forrest 1907.<br />

§2<br />

Lang, A. Rab’s friend. Cent Illus Monthly Mag Feb 1883.<br />

Maclaren, E. T. Brown and his sister Isabella. 1889, 1896 (as Brown<br />

and his sisters Isabella and Jane), 1901 (with introductory note by<br />

A. C. Brown).<br />

Masson, D. In his Edinburgh sketches and memories, 1892.<br />

Peddie, A. Recollections <strong>of</strong> Brown, with a selection from his correspondence.<br />

1893.<br />

Brown, J. T. Brown: a biography and a criticism. 1903.<br />

Josephine Elizabeth Butler, née Grey 1828–1906<br />

<strong>The</strong> Josephine Butler Soc Lib containing letters, papers and pams, is in the<br />

Fawcett Lib, Guildhall Univ, London. <strong>The</strong>re is also a collection <strong>of</strong> her letters in<br />

Josephine Butler House, Liverpool Univ.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Johnson, G. W. and L. A. (ed). In their Josephine E. Butler, 1909.<br />

Petrie, G. In his A singular iniquity. <strong>The</strong> campaigns <strong>of</strong> Josephine<br />

Butler, 1971.<br />

§1<br />

<strong>The</strong> education and employment <strong>of</strong> women. Liverpool 1868, London<br />

1868.<br />

Letter to Mr Boyce on examination for governesses. Liverpool<br />

[1868].<br />

Memoir <strong>of</strong> John Grey <strong>of</strong> Dilston. Edinburgh 1869, London 1874 (rev<br />

edn); tr Ital 1871.<br />

reviews: Fortnightly Rev 12 1869; Spectator 42 1869.<br />

An appeal to the people <strong>of</strong> England on the recognition and superintendence<br />

<strong>of</strong> prostitution by government. Nottingham 1870<br />

(anon). Pam.<br />

<strong>The</strong> duty <strong>of</strong> women. Address at Carlisle. Carlisle 1870.<br />

On the moral reclaimability <strong>of</strong> prostitutes. 1870; tr Ital 1875. Pam.<br />

Address delivered at Craigie Hall, Edinburgh, 24 Feb 1871.<br />

Manchester 1871. Pam.<br />

Address delivered at Croydon, 3 July 1871. 1871. Pam.<br />

<strong>The</strong> constitutional iniquity <strong>of</strong> the contagious diseases acts.<br />

Bradford 1871. Pam.<br />

<strong>The</strong> constitution violated. Edinburgh 1871. Anon.<br />

Letter to the Order <strong>of</strong> Good Templars. Liverpool 1871. Pam.<br />

Sursum corda: annual address delivered to the Ladies’ National<br />

Association. Liverpool 1871. Pam.<br />

Vox populi. Liverpool 1871.<br />

A few words addressed to true-hearted women. 1872. Pam.<br />

A letter on the subject <strong>of</strong> Mr Bruce’s bill, addressed to the repealers<br />

<strong>of</strong> the contagious diseases act. [Liverpool] 1872.<br />

<strong>The</strong> new era: containing a retrospect <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> the regulation<br />

system in Berlin . . .. Liverpool 1872.<br />

Letter to a friend on recent divisions in the House <strong>of</strong> Commons.<br />

Liverpool 1873. Pam.<br />

Some thoughts on the present aspect <strong>of</strong> the crusade against the state<br />

regulation <strong>of</strong> vice. Liverpool 1874.<br />

Speech delivered . . . at the 4th annual meeting <strong>of</strong> the Vigilance<br />

Association . . . Bristol, 15 Oct 1874. [1874.] Pam.<br />

A letter to the members <strong>of</strong> the Ladies’ National Association.<br />

[Liverpool 1875.] Pam.<br />

Une voix dans le desert. [1875], Geneva 1905, Bristol 1913 (as A voice<br />

<strong>of</strong> one crying in the wilderness; tr O. Airy, with an introd by J.<br />

Stuart).

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