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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Mid-Nineteenth-Century Poetry<br />

619 | 620<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Shumaker, E. J. A concise bibliography <strong>of</strong> the complete works <strong>of</strong><br />

Horne. Granville OH 1943.<br />

Selections<br />

Miles 2.<br />

§1<br />

Exposition <strong>of</strong> the false medium and barriers excluding men <strong>of</strong><br />

genius from the public. 1833. Anon.<br />

Zara, or the black death. A poem <strong>of</strong> the sea. By the author <strong>of</strong><br />

Naufragus. 1833.<br />

<strong>The</strong> spirit <strong>of</strong> peers and people: a nation tragi-comedy. 1834.<br />

Introduction to characteristics, by W. Hazlitt. 1837. Introd by Horne.<br />

Cosmo de’Medici: an historical tragedy. 1837, 1875 (with added<br />

poems). In verse.<br />

<strong>The</strong> death <strong>of</strong> Marlowe: a tragedy in one act. 1837, 1870 (5th edn).<br />

Chiefly in verse; rptd in Works <strong>of</strong> Marlow, ed A. H. Bullen, vol 3<br />

1885.<br />

<strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong> Van Amburgh the brute tamer, with anecdotes <strong>of</strong> his<br />

pupils, by Ephraim Watts. [1838.]<br />

Gregory VII: a tragedy in one act. 1840, 1849 (3rd edn). In verse,<br />

includes an essay on tragic influence.<br />

<strong>The</strong> history <strong>of</strong> Napoleon. 2 vols 1840, 1841, New York 1852, 1 vol 1879.<br />

Poems <strong>of</strong> Chaucer, modernized. 1841. By various writers. Horne contributed<br />

the introd and 3 tales.<br />

Orion: an epic poem in three books. 1843 (3 edns), Melbourne 1854<br />

(adds preface), London 1872 (9th and definitive edn); ed E.<br />

Partridge 1928 (with introd on Horne’s life and work).<br />

A new spirit <strong>of</strong> the age. Ed [and largely written by] Horne 2 vols 1844,<br />

1 vol 1844; ed W. Jerrold, Oxford 1907 (WC).<br />

Ballad romances. 1846.<br />

<strong>The</strong> good-natured bear: a story for children <strong>of</strong> all ages. 1846, 1856,<br />

[1878].<br />

Memoirs <strong>of</strong> a London doll, written by herself. Ed ‘Mrs Fairstar’ 1846,<br />

Boston 1852, London 1855, New York 1922 (introd by C. W. Hart),<br />

London 1923.<br />

Judas Iscariot: a miracle play, with other poems. 1848; rptd in Bible<br />

tragedies, [1891].<br />

<strong>The</strong> poor artist: or seven eye-sights and one object. 1850, 1871 (adds<br />

preliminary essay on varieties <strong>of</strong> vision in man).<br />

Memoir <strong>of</strong> the Emperor Napoleon. [1850?]<br />

<strong>The</strong> dreamer and the worker: a story <strong>of</strong> the present time. 2 vols 1851.<br />

<strong>The</strong> complete works <strong>of</strong> Shakespeare. Ed Horne [1857].<br />

Australian facts and prospects, to which is prefixed the author’s<br />

Australian autobiography. 1859.<br />

Prometheus the fire bringer: a drama in verse. Edinburgh 1864,<br />

Melbourne 1866.<br />

<strong>The</strong> two Georges: a dialogue <strong>of</strong> the dead. Melbourne [1865?]. In<br />

verse.<br />

<strong>The</strong> south-sea sisters: a lyric masque. Melbourne [1866]. With trns<br />

into Fr and Ger verse.<br />

Galatea secunda: an odaic cantata. Melbourne 1867 (priv ptd).<br />

Was Hamlet mad? being a series <strong>of</strong> critiques on the acting <strong>of</strong> the late<br />

W. Montgomery. Written in Melbourne in 1867. Ed R. H. H.<br />

[1871].<br />

Parting legacy <strong>of</strong> R. H. Horne to Australia (John Ferncliff: an<br />

Australian narrative poem). Melbourne [1868]. A prospectus.<br />

<strong>The</strong> great peace-maker: a sub-marine dialogue. 1871 (priv ptd), 1872.<br />

Poem, rptd from Household Words.<br />

Ode to the Mikado <strong>of</strong> Japan. 1873.<br />

Psyche apocalypté a lyric drama. 1876. Drafts and correspondences<br />

between Horne and his co-author E. B. Browning, with connecting<br />

narrative by Horne, all rptd from St James’s Mag and United<br />

Empire Rev for Feb 1876.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Countess von Labn<strong>of</strong>f, or the three lovers. [From the New<br />

Quart] [1877].<br />

Letters <strong>of</strong> Elizabeth Barrett Browning addressed to R. H. Horne. Ed<br />

S. R. T. Mayer 2 vols 1877. Connecting narrative by Horne.<br />

<strong>The</strong> history <strong>of</strong> duelling in all countries, translated from the French<br />

<strong>of</strong> Coustard de Massi, with introductions and concluding<br />

chapter by ‘Sir L. O’Trigger’. [1880.]<br />

Laura Dibalzo; or the patriot martyrs. A tragedy. 1880.<br />

King Nihil’s round table: or the regicide’s symposium. 1881. A dramatic<br />

scene.<br />

Sir Featherbright, an apologue [in verse]. n.p. [1881?].<br />

Bible tragedies: John the Baptist, or the valour <strong>of</strong> the soul; Rahman,<br />

the apocryphal book <strong>of</strong> Job’s wife; Judas Iscariot, a mystery [1881.]<br />

In prose and verse.<br />

Soliloquium fratris Rogeri Baconis. 1882 (priv ptd). In verse, rptd<br />

from Fraser’s Mag.<br />

<strong>The</strong> last words <strong>of</strong> Cleanthes: a poem. [1883.] Rptd from Longman’s<br />

Mag.<br />

Sithron the star-stricken, translated from an ancient Arabic manuscript<br />

by Salem ben Uzäir. 1883. Written in Eng by Horne.<br />

King Penguin: a legend <strong>of</strong> the South Sea Isles. Ed F. M. Fox, New<br />

York 1925.<br />

Horne edited Monthly Repository <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong>ology & General Lit July<br />

1836–June 1837. See also Wellesley 5 1989.<br />

§2<br />

Poe, E. A. R. H. Horne. Graham’s Mag (Philadelphia) Mar 1844; rptd<br />

in Works, ed C. F. Richardson, vol 6, New York 1902.<br />

Powell, T. In his Pictures <strong>of</strong> the living authors <strong>of</strong> Britain, 1851.<br />

Chiefly on Gregory VII and Orion.<br />

Forman, H. B. In his Our living poets, 1871.<br />

Forman, H. B. In Miles 2.<br />

Forman, H. B. In his Literary anecdotes <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century, ed<br />

W. R. Nicoll and T. J. Wise, vol 1, 1895.<br />

Gosse, E. In his Portraits and sketches, 1912.<br />

Dickens, C. Notes and comments on certain writings by R. H. Horne.<br />

1920 (priv ptd). 6 letters from Dickens to Horne.<br />

Letters from A. C. Swinburne to Horne. 1920 (priv ptd).<br />

Mabbott, T. O. Changes in the text <strong>of</strong> Horne’s Orion. N & Q 1928.<br />

Partridge, E. In his Literary sessions, 1932.<br />

Shackford, M. E. B. Browning, Horne: two studies. Wellesley MA 1935.<br />

Mineka, F. E. <strong>The</strong> dissidence <strong>of</strong> dissent: the Monthly Repository<br />

1806–38. Chapel Hill NC 1944.<br />

DeVane, W. C. and K. L. Knickerbocker (ed). New letters <strong>of</strong> Robert<br />

Browning. New Haven CT 1950. Includes letter to Horne and<br />

several references to him.<br />

Fielding, K. J. Dickens and Horne. <strong>English</strong> 9 1952.<br />

Pearl, C. Always morning: the life <strong>of</strong> Richard Henry ‘Orion’ Horne.<br />

Melbourne 1960.<br />

Blainey, Ann. <strong>The</strong> farthing poet: a biography <strong>of</strong> R. H. Horne,<br />

1802–84, a lesser literary lion. 1968.<br />

William Walsham How 1823–97<br />

Selections<br />

Miles 10 (12).<br />

§1<br />

Psalms and hymns, compiled by T. B. Morrell and How. 1854, [1860],<br />

[1864], [1872].<br />

Hymns [1886].<br />

A supplement to Psalms and hymns. [1867.]<br />

Poems: enlarged edition. [1886.]<br />

Was lost and is found: a tale <strong>of</strong> the London mission <strong>of</strong> 1874. [1886.] In<br />

verse.<br />

Public worship. [1894.] In verse.<br />

A sermon in a children’s ward in a hospital. 1896. In verse.<br />

A souvenir <strong>of</strong> the late Bishop Walsham How. [1898]. A poem, To a<br />

mother on the death <strong>of</strong> her boy.

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