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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Stanzas to Miss J*** H******. Newcastle 1837; 1849 (in Stray leaves <strong>of</strong><br />

northern history and tradition).<br />

Poems. Newcastle 1842.<br />

<strong>The</strong> auld fisher’s invitation to his friend. Newcastle 1844. Anon.<br />

Edited <strong>The</strong> Fisher’s Garland (1821–45).<br />

Richard Ryan 1796–1849<br />

Biographica Hibernica. 2 vols 1819–21, 1821, 1821–2. Prose.<br />

Eight ballads on the fictions <strong>of</strong> the ancient Irish, and other poems.<br />

1822.<br />

Poems on sacred subjects. 1824.<br />

Dramatic table-talk. 3 vols 1825. Anon. Prose.<br />

Poetry and poets . . .: a collection <strong>of</strong> anecdotes. Ed Ryan 3 vols 1826.<br />

Everybody’s husband: a comic drama. 1831 (in Cumberland’s Minor<br />

<strong>The</strong>atre vol 34), [1875?] (in Lacy’s Acting Edn vol 92). Prose.<br />

Quite at home: a comic entertainment. 1836 (in Cumberland’s<br />

British <strong>The</strong>atre vol 35). Prose.<br />

Also translated French drama and edited plays.<br />

Maria Grace Saffery, Mrs John 1772–1858<br />

Cheyt Sing: a poem . . . inscribed . . . to . . . Charles James Fox . . . By a<br />

young lady <strong>of</strong> fifteen. London, Newbury and Salisbury 1790. Anon.<br />

Shoveller, J. Memoirs <strong>of</strong> . . . J. Horsey . . . added an elegy by Mrs<br />

Saffery. Portsea 1803.<br />

Poems on sacred subjects. London and Edinburgh 1834.<br />

John Humphrey St Aubyn, also ‘L. Bouverie’<br />

fl. 1821–38<br />

Mazza: a tale in three cantos. 1821.<br />

Phantoms: a poem in two parts . . .. 1823.<br />

Robert d’Artois, or the heron vow. 3 vols 1835. Anon. Prose.<br />

<strong>The</strong> elopement, or the deadly struggle. By ‘L. Bouverie’. 3 vols 1838.<br />

Prose.<br />

James Sansom fl. 1795–1814<br />

Oppression, or the abuse <strong>of</strong> power . . .. 1795.<br />

True greatness, or tributary stanzas to . . . Nelson . . .. 1806. Anon.<br />

Greenwich: a poem descriptive and historical. 1808, 1809.<br />

Carmen triumphale, for the year 1814. 1814.<br />

Martha Savory, later Mrs Yeardley 1781–1851<br />

§1<br />

Inspiration: a poetical essay. 1805.<br />

Poetical tales, founded on facts. 1808, 1813 (as Pathetic tales, founded<br />

on facts).<br />

Life’s vicissitudes, or winter’s tears: original poems . . . containing<br />

<strong>The</strong> mausoleum . . . and various fugitive pieces. 1809.<br />

An original wreath <strong>of</strong> forget-me-not presented to those who love to<br />

reflect on heavenly things. London and York 1829.<br />

True tales from foreign lands, in verse designed for the young.<br />

London and York [1835].<br />

Eastern customs. London and York 1842. Prose. With J. Yeardley.<br />

Poetical sketches <strong>of</strong> scripture characters. 1848.<br />

§2<br />

Extracts from the letters <strong>of</strong> J. and M. Yeardley. Lindfield 1835.<br />

James Sayers 1748–1823<br />

<strong>The</strong> foundling chapel brawl: a non-heroic ballad. 2 pts 1804–5.<br />

Anon.<br />

All the talents’ garland, or a few rockets let <strong>of</strong>f at a celebrated ministry.<br />

1807 (3 edns, the 3rd as All the talents’ garland including<br />

Elijah’s mantle and other poems). Anon.<br />

Elijah’s mantle: a poem. 1807 (6 edns). Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> uti possidetis and status quo: a political satire. 1807. Anon.<br />

Hints to J. Nollekens . . . on his modelling a bust <strong>of</strong> Lord G******le.<br />

1808. Anon.<br />

Also a caricaturist.<br />

John Scafe fl. 1815–20<br />

Poems in four parts. Alnwick 1815. Anon.<br />

Poems. 2 vols Newcastle 1818.<br />

King Coal’s levee, or geological etiquette . . .. Alnwick 1818, 1819;<br />

London 1819, 1820. Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> genius and other poems. Newcastle 1819.<br />

Court news, or the peers <strong>of</strong> King Coal . . .. 1820. Anon.<br />

A geological primer in verse, with a poetical geognosy. 1820.<br />

Martha Ann Sellon fl. 1811–14<br />

<strong>The</strong> Caledonian comet elucidated. 1811. Anon.<br />

Individuality, or the causes <strong>of</strong> reciprocal misapprehension, in six<br />

books. 1814.<br />

David Service, also ‘Dr Sigma’ fl. 1802–22<br />

<strong>The</strong> Caledonian herd boy: a rural poem. Yarmouth 1802.<br />

An elegy on the death <strong>of</strong> Mr Swanton, painter. Yarmouth [1802].<br />

Crispin, or the apprentice boy: a poem. Yarmouth 1804.<br />

<strong>The</strong> wild harp’s murmurs, or rustic strains. Yarmouth and London<br />

[1806].<br />

A voyage and travels in the regions <strong>of</strong> the brain . . . and Dumbarton<br />

Castle, a sonnet. Yarmouth 1808. Prose and verse.<br />

A tour in pursuit <strong>of</strong> ideas, a picturesque view <strong>of</strong> all the Yarmouth<br />

public-houses: a poem. By ‘Dr Sigma’. Yarmouth 1822. Anon.<br />

James Service, <strong>of</strong> Chatton fl. 1822–61<br />

<strong>The</strong> wandering knight <strong>of</strong> Dunstanborough Castle and miscellaneous<br />

poems. Alnwick 1822.<br />

Metrical legends <strong>of</strong> Northumberland . . .. Alnwick 1834.<br />

<strong>The</strong> pilgrim <strong>of</strong> John Bunyan, paraphrased in verse. Glasgow 1861.<br />

Mary Sewell, née Wright 1797–1884<br />

Robert Roscoe | Mary Sewell, née Wright<br />

Ms letters in Norfolk Record Office, Norwich.<br />

Collections<br />

Mrs Sewell’s poems and ballads. With memoir by E. Boyd-Bayly. 2<br />

vols [1886], another edn [1886].<br />

Popular stories and ballads by Mrs Sewell. In Household Tracts for<br />

the People. Sold individually and including Saved from the sea,<br />

<strong>The</strong> housewife’s lament, Hedgerow teachings, <strong>The</strong> neighbours,<br />

Conscience makes the coward, Think before you marry, <strong>The</strong> little<br />

shoes, Almost wrecked, <strong>The</strong> lord will provide, <strong>The</strong>re’s help at<br />

hand, <strong>The</strong> old man’s story, Sister’s love or Lost in the bush.<br />

§1<br />

Walks with Mamma ‘in words <strong>of</strong> one syllable’. c. 1822–32.<br />

Homely ballads for the working man’s fireside. 1858. Containing<br />

ballads also sold individually: Faith, hope and charity, <strong>The</strong><br />

funeral bell, <strong>The</strong> miller’s wife, Abel Howard and his family, <strong>The</strong><br />

thieves’ ladder, <strong>The</strong> guilty conscience; or, Hell begun, <strong>The</strong> poor<br />

little boy, <strong>The</strong> common, <strong>The</strong> working woman’s appeal, Mrs<br />

Godliman, A religious woman, <strong>The</strong> young <strong>English</strong> gentleman,<br />

<strong>The</strong> primrose gatherers, Boy going to service, <strong>The</strong> drunkard’s<br />

433 | 434

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