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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Shirley Palmer d. 1860?<br />

<strong>The</strong> Swiss exile: a poem. Lichfield 1804; London 1807.<br />

Edited London Medical Repository and New Medical and Physical<br />

Jnl, and wrote on medical topics.<br />

Andrew Park, also ‘James Wilson’ <strong>of</strong> Paisley<br />

1807–63<br />

Collections<br />

Rogers.<br />

<strong>The</strong> poetical works. 1854.<br />

§1<br />

A vision <strong>of</strong> mankind and miscellaneous poems. Glasgow 1833.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bridegroom and the bride, with miscellaneous poems. Glasgow<br />

1834.<br />

Blindness, or the second sense restored and lost: a poem. 1839.<br />

Watty and Meg. By ‘J. Wilson’. Kilmarnock [1840?].<br />

<strong>The</strong> queen’s welcome to Edinburgh. Edinburgh [1842].<br />

Broadsheet.<br />

<strong>The</strong> royal visit. Glasgow 1842.<br />

Songs. Glasgow 1842, 1848.<br />

<strong>The</strong> mariners: an opera, and songs for all seasons. 1843.<br />

Silent love: a poem. By ‘J. Wilson’. Paisley 1843, 1845 (4th edn);<br />

Glasgow 1846; London 1851.<br />

Miscellaneous poems. [1844?] Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> squire’s daughter: a tragedy. 1846.<br />

<strong>The</strong> book <strong>of</strong> poetical apophthegms. Ed Park 1852 (2nd edn).<br />

Beauty: a poem. 1853.<br />

To the memory <strong>of</strong> Burns: centenary ode. Glasgow 1859 (2nd edn).<br />

<strong>The</strong> world, past, present and future, and other poems. Glasgow<br />

1862.<br />

Richard Parkinson 1797–1858<br />

§1<br />

<strong>The</strong> ascent <strong>of</strong> Elijah . . .. London and <strong>Cambridge</strong> 1830.<br />

Poems sacred and miscellaneous. 1832; London and Manchester<br />

1845.<br />

<strong>The</strong> old church clock. 1843; London and Manchester 1844 (3rd edn);<br />

Manchester 1880 (5th edn, with memoir by J. Evans). Prose.<br />

Byrom, J. <strong>The</strong> private journal and literary remains. Ed Parkinson 4<br />

vols 1854–7.<br />

§2<br />

Evans, J. Canon Parkinson. Manchester 1878.<br />

Author <strong>of</strong> numerous sermons, editor <strong>of</strong> memoirs.<br />

William Parsons fl. 1785–1807<br />

Elegy written at Florence. Geneva 1785 (priv ptd).<br />

Odes. Rome 1786 (priv ptd). Anon.<br />

A poetical tour in the years 1784, 1785, and 1786 . . .. 1787. Anon.<br />

An ode to a boy at Eton, with three sonnets and one epigram. 1796.<br />

Fidelity, or love at first sight: a tale . . .. 1798 (priv ptd).<br />

Travelling recreations. 2 vols 1807. Prose.<br />

Oakwood in Sussex. Chelsea 1811. Anon.<br />

Contributed to <strong>The</strong> Florence miscellany (1785).<br />

Samuel Pattison fl. 1790–1802<br />

Original poems, chiefly on divine subjects . . .. Manchester [1790?];<br />

London 1801 (as Original poems chiefly on sublime subjects).<br />

Original poems, moral and satirical. 1792.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Christian in the holy <strong>of</strong> holies, or the grateful effusions <strong>of</strong> a<br />

believer. Bristol 1793.<br />

<strong>The</strong> golden lamp yet burning! A poem . . .. Bristol 1799 (2nd edn).<br />

<strong>The</strong> feeling mother: a tender story . . .. [1802.]<br />

David William Paynter 1791–1823<br />

<strong>The</strong> history and adventures <strong>of</strong> Godfrey Ranger. 3 vols Manchester<br />

1813. Prose.<br />

Eurypilus, king <strong>of</strong> Sicily: a tragedy . . .. Manchester 1817.<br />

<strong>The</strong> muse in idleness. Manchester 1819.<br />

King Stephen, or the battle <strong>of</strong> Lincoln: an historical tragedy . . ..<br />

Manchester 1822.<br />

<strong>The</strong> wife <strong>of</strong> Florence: a tragedy . . .. Manchester 1823.<br />

Contributed to J. Watson, <strong>The</strong> spirit <strong>of</strong> the doctor (1820).<br />

Ann Pearson, Mrs Fenwick fl. 1816–34<br />

<strong>The</strong> grateful remembrance, in letters <strong>of</strong> advice to an absent niece, on<br />

different subjects. Hexham 1816. Prose and verse.<br />

Miscellaneous pieces. Hexham 1834. Verse and prose.<br />

William Peebles 1753–1826<br />

Sermons on various subjects, to which are subjoined hymns.<br />

Edinburgh 1794.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crisis, or the progress <strong>of</strong> revolutionary principles . . . By a clergyman<br />

<strong>of</strong> Scotland. Edinburgh and London 1803 (anon), 1804<br />

(acknowledged).<br />

Poems, consisting chiefly <strong>of</strong> odes and elegies. Glasgow 1810. Anon.<br />

Burnomania: the celebrity <strong>of</strong> . . . Burns considered . . . Epistles in<br />

verse. Edinburgh 1811. Anon.<br />

Charles Peers fl. 1805–24<br />

Christ’s lamentation over Jerusalem: a Seatonian prize poem.<br />

<strong>Cambridge</strong> 1805, 1808 (in Musae Seatonianae vol 2).<br />

<strong>The</strong> siege <strong>of</strong> Jerusalem . . .. 1823, 1824.<br />

John Fitzgerald Pennie 1782–1848<br />

<strong>The</strong> royal minstrel, or the witcheries <strong>of</strong> Endor: an epic poem.<br />

Dorchester 1817; London 1819.<br />

Ethelwolf, or the Danish pirates: a tragedy. 1821, 1828. Prose and<br />

verse.<br />

<strong>The</strong> garland <strong>of</strong> wild roses . . .. 1822.<br />

<strong>The</strong> harp <strong>of</strong> Parnassus, including several original pieces. Ed Pennie<br />

1822.<br />

Rogvald: an epic poem. 1823.<br />

Corfe Castle, or Keneswitha. 1824. Anon. Prose.<br />

Scenes in Palestine, or dramatic sketches from the Bible. 1825, 1827.<br />

<strong>The</strong> tale <strong>of</strong> a modern genius. 3 vols 1827. Anon. Prose.<br />

Britain’s historical drama: a series <strong>of</strong> national tragedies. 2 pts 1832<br />

and 1839. Verse and prose.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Judith play. Ed W. D. Filliter 1908.<br />

Elizabeth Steel Perkins, Mrs fl. 1834–9<br />

John Moultrie | Elizabeth Steel Perkins<br />

<strong>The</strong> botanical and horticultural meeting, or Flora’s and Pomona’s<br />

fête: a poem, in humble imitation <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> butterfly’s ball . . . By a<br />

lady. Birmingham 1834 (anon); London 1834, 1835 (4th edn);<br />

Brighton 1838 (as Flora and Pomona’s fête; authorship acknowledged);<br />

London and Tamworth [1854] (as Flora and Pomona’s<br />

fête).<br />

<strong>The</strong> elements <strong>of</strong> botany. 1837. Prose.<br />

Flora’s fancy fête, or floral characteristics: a poem . . . a sequel.<br />

Brighton [1839].<br />

Also active as an illustrator <strong>of</strong> botanical books.<br />

417 | 418

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