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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Mid-Nineteenth-Century Poetry<br />

603 | 604<br />

Miscellaneous writings. Ed J. A. Symonds with a memoir by H. J. S.<br />

Smith 2 vols 1872. Includes King Lear, Hamlet, <strong>The</strong> <strong>English</strong> translators<br />

<strong>of</strong> Virgil, Six lectures on Latin literature, <strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong><br />

Virgil translated into <strong>English</strong> prose, Fables <strong>of</strong> Babrius etc.<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Virgil, translated. 1882. Rptd from Miscellaneous<br />

writings, above.<br />

See also Wellesley vol 5 1989.<br />

Eliza Cook 1812–89<br />

Collections<br />

Poems. 4 vols 1846–53.<br />

Poems. 3 vols [1848?], vol 1 5th edn 1848; vol 2 3rd edn 1848, vol 3 1848.<br />

review: Literary Gazette 17 Feb 1849.<br />

Poetical works. Philadelphia 1853.<br />

Poems. A new edn in 1 vol 1859, reissued 1864.<br />

Auswahl englischer Gedichte der Eliza Cook, aus dem Englischen<br />

in’s Deutsche übertragen von Hermann Simon. Leipzig 1865.<br />

Poetical works. 1870, New York [1882], [1905], [1920]. A complete edn<br />

(Chandos Classics).<br />

Poetical works. [1874?], New York [1874?].<br />

Selections<br />

Poems: selected and edited by the author. 1861.<br />

Miles 7 (8).<br />

Selections from the poems <strong>of</strong> Mrs Hemans and the patriotic poems<br />

<strong>of</strong> Eliza Cook. [1895?] Masterpiece Lib 38.<br />

§1<br />

Lays <strong>of</strong> a wild harp: a collection <strong>of</strong> metrical pieces. 1835.<br />

Melaia and other poems. 1838, 1840 (with addns from Lays <strong>of</strong> a wild<br />

harp).<br />

review: NMM Nov 1839.<br />

Poems: second series. 1845.<br />

Eliza Cook’s journal. May 1849–54. A weekly periodical ed and<br />

partly written by Eliza Cook. Many <strong>of</strong> her poems first pbd here, as<br />

well as the aphorisms collected in Diamond dust.<br />

I’m afloat. [1850?] Songs.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>English</strong>man: two songs. [1850?]<br />

Songs <strong>of</strong> the haymakers: Standard bearer and In this old chair my<br />

father sat. [1850?]<br />

Mother be proud <strong>of</strong> your boy in blue. [1860?] Songs.<br />

Songs <strong>of</strong> the haymakers: gipsy’s tent. [1860?]<br />

Jottings from my journal. 1860. Short essays, several rptd from Eliza<br />

Cook’s journal.<br />

New echoes, and other poems. 1864.<br />

reviews: Athenaeum 10 Dec 1864; Saturday Rev 10 Dec 1864;<br />

Reader 11 Feb 1865.<br />

Diamond dust. 1865. A collection <strong>of</strong> aphorisms, mostly original.<br />

reviews: Athenaeum 30 Dec 1865; Reader 30 Dec 1865.<br />

Cook’s poems appeared also in Catholic World, Metropolitan Mag,<br />

NMM, Once a Week, and Weekly Dispatch. Her journalism was pbd in<br />

Eclectic Mag and Nat Mag.<br />

§2<br />

In Notable women <strong>of</strong> our own times, [1883?].<br />

Obit: <strong>The</strong> Times 26 Sep 1889; Athenaeum 28 Sep 1889. [rs]<br />

Thomas Cooper, ‘Adam Hornbook’ 1805–92<br />

Mss: Notebook (including poems) 184– , papers, letters, Lincolnshire<br />

Archives Office. <strong>The</strong> purgatory <strong>of</strong> suicides, Lincoln Central Lib.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

List <strong>of</strong> published works in R. J. Conklin, Cooper the Chartist,<br />

Manilla 1935.<br />

Collections<br />

Poetical works. 1877, 1886.<br />

§1<br />

<strong>The</strong> Wesleyan chiefs and other poems. 1833.<br />

Wise Saws and modern instances. 2 vols 1845, 1 vol 1874 (enlarged as<br />

Old-fashioned stories). Short stories and sketches.<br />

<strong>The</strong> purgatory <strong>of</strong> suicides: a prison-rhyme in ten books. 1845, 1847,<br />

1853 (3rd edn).<br />

<strong>The</strong> Baron’s yule feast: a Christmas-rhyme. 1846.<br />

<strong>The</strong> land for the labourers, and the fraternity <strong>of</strong> nations: a scheme<br />

for a new industrial system, published in Paris, and intended for<br />

proposal to the National Assembly. [1848.] Ed Cooper.<br />

<strong>The</strong> life and character <strong>of</strong> Henry Hetherington. 1849. Abridged from<br />

Cooper’s éloge by G. J. Holyoake.<br />

<strong>The</strong> plain speaker. 1849. Ed Cooper.<br />

Captain Cobler, or the Lincolnshire rebellion: an historical romance<br />

<strong>of</strong> the reign <strong>of</strong> Henry VIII. 1850.<br />

Cooper’s journal: or unfetterd thinker and plain speaker for truth,<br />

freedom and progress. [1850], facs reprint New York 1970.<br />

Eight letters to the young men <strong>of</strong> the working-classes. 1851. Rptd<br />

from Plain Speaker. Advice on the art <strong>of</strong> living.<br />

Alderman Ralph: or the history <strong>of</strong> the borough <strong>of</strong> Willowacre, by<br />

Adam Hornbook. 2 vols 1853.<br />

<strong>The</strong> family feud: a tale by Adam Hornbook. 1855.<br />

<strong>The</strong> bridge <strong>of</strong> history over the gulf <strong>of</strong> time: a popular view <strong>of</strong> the<br />

historical evidence for the truth <strong>of</strong> Christianity. 1871, 1880,<br />

1892.<br />

<strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong> Thomas Cooper, written by himself. 1872, 1873 (4th edn),<br />

facs reprint, intro J. Saville, Leicester 1971.<br />

Plain pulpit talk. 1872, 1874 3rd thousand; <strong>The</strong> atonement and<br />

other discourses: being a second series <strong>of</strong> Plain pulpit talk, 1880.<br />

<strong>The</strong> paradise <strong>of</strong> martyrs: a faith rhyme, part first, in five books. 1873.<br />

No further pts pbd.<br />

Evolution, the stone book and the Mosaic record <strong>of</strong> creation. 1878.<br />

Thoughts at fourscore and earlier: a medley. 1885. Includes the<br />

Letters to the young working men.<br />

Cooper also edited and contributed to numerous Chartist and other jnls<br />

including Chartist Pioneer (ed), Douglas Jerrold’s Shilling Mag,<br />

<strong>English</strong> Chartist, Howitt’s Jnl, Leicester Mercury, Lloyd’s Illustrated<br />

Weekly, Midland Counties Illuminator (ed), Northern Tribune and<br />

Reasoner. He also pbd theological works and sermons.<br />

§2<br />

Holyoake, G. J. Cooper delineated as convert and controversialist.<br />

[1861.]<br />

Cazamian, L. Kingsley et Cooper: étude sur une source d’Alton<br />

Locke. Paris 1903.<br />

Conklin, R. J. Cooper the Chartist. Manilla 1935, 1936.<br />

Hobman, D. L. Cooper, Chartist and poet. Contemporary Rev Oct<br />

1948.<br />

William Davies 1829/30–97<br />

§1<br />

Songs <strong>of</strong> a wayfarer. 1869.<br />

<strong>The</strong> shepherd’s garden. 1873. Poems.<br />

<strong>The</strong> pilgrimage <strong>of</strong> the Tiber from its mouth to its source, with some<br />

account <strong>of</strong> its tributaries. 1873.<br />

A fine old <strong>English</strong> gentleman, exemplified in the life and character<br />

<strong>of</strong> Lord Collingwood: a biographical study. 1875.<br />

Dante Alighieri and his works. 1888.<br />

Letters <strong>of</strong> James Smetham; memoir by W. Davies. 1891. Ed with S.<br />

Smetham et al.<br />

<strong>The</strong> literary works <strong>of</strong> James Smetham. 1893. Ed Davies.<br />

Davies contributed to Fortnightly Rev, Quarterly Rev and Temple Bar.<br />

See Wellesley vol 5, pp. 208–9. See also Wellesley vol 5 1989.<br />

§2<br />

Obit: <strong>The</strong> Times 12 May 1897; Athenaeum 15 May 1897.

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