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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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A legend <strong>of</strong> Argyle: or ’tis a hundred years since. 3 vols 1821. Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> lord <strong>of</strong> the desert: sketches <strong>of</strong> scenery, foreign and domestic:<br />

odes and other poems. 1821.<br />

Life in Paris: comprising the rambles, sprees and amours <strong>of</strong> Dick<br />

Wildfire, <strong>of</strong> Corinthian celebrity, and his bang-up companions,<br />

Squire Jenkins and Captain O’Shuffleton. 1822, 1828, 2 vols New<br />

Orleans 1837.<br />

Frederick Moreland. 2 vols 1824.<br />

Attributed or spurious works.<br />

Picturesque scenes: or a guide to the Highlands. 1811. Attributed to<br />

Carey by DNB and Summers, but no evidence <strong>of</strong> a work with this<br />

title discovered.<br />

Macbeth: a poem in six cantos. 1817. Also attributed to James Mann;<br />

with notes by J. Adam.<br />

Hardenbrass and Haverill, or the secret <strong>of</strong> the castle: a novel. 4 vols<br />

1817.<br />

Reft Rob, or the witch <strong>of</strong> Scot-muir: a Scottish tale. 1817, 1834 (as <strong>The</strong><br />

nuptial doom: or the witch <strong>of</strong> Scots-muir).<br />

<strong>The</strong> history <strong>of</strong> Julius Fitz-John. 3 vols 1818.<br />

Normanburn: or, the history <strong>of</strong> a Yorkshire family: a novel. 4 vols<br />

1819.<br />

<strong>The</strong> above sequence <strong>of</strong> four novels has been associated with Carey, and more<br />

commonly with James Athearn Jones, though their true authorship remains<br />

uncertain.<br />

Carey also edited the Inverness Jnl and wrote for several London periodicals.<br />

See also col 290. [pg]<br />

William Carleton 1794–1869<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Sadleir, M. In his XIX century fiction: a bibliographical record, 2<br />

vols 1951.<br />

Hayley, B. A bibliography <strong>of</strong> the writings <strong>of</strong> William Carleton.<br />

Gerrards Cross 1985.<br />

Selections<br />

Popular tales and legends <strong>of</strong> the Irish peasantry [by Carleton, Denis<br />

O’Donoho, Mrs S. C. Hall etc]. Illustr S. Lover, Dublin 1834.<br />

Contains 2 stories by Carleton.<br />

<strong>The</strong> battle <strong>of</strong> the factions and other tales <strong>of</strong> Ireland. Philadelphia<br />

1845.<br />

Characteristic sketches <strong>of</strong> Ireland and the Irish [by Carleton, Lover<br />

and Mrs Hall]. Dublin 1842, 1845, Halifax 1846, 1849, 1852 (as<br />

Tales and stories <strong>of</strong> Ireland). Contains 5 tales by Carleton.<br />

Alley Sheridan and other stories. Dublin 1857. Serialised in Nat Mag<br />

1857.<br />

<strong>The</strong> poor scholar; Frank Martin and the fairies; <strong>The</strong> country<br />

dancing master and other Irish tales. 1869.<br />

Works. New York 1882.<br />

Amusing Irish tales. Ser 1, London and Glasgow 1889; ser 2, 1890.<br />

Stories from Carleton. Ed W. B. Yeats [1889], New York 1889.<br />

Stories from Carleton. Ed T. Hopkins [1905].<br />

Carleton’s stories <strong>of</strong> Irish life. Ed D. Figgis, Dublin 1919, New York<br />

1920.<br />

Tubber Derg or the red well; Party fight and funeral; Dandy Kehoe’s<br />

christening and other Irish tales. nd.<br />

Inside the margins: a Carleton reader. Ed T. Hurson, Belfast 1992.<br />

§1<br />

Father Butler; <strong>The</strong> Lough Dearg pilgrim: being sketches <strong>of</strong> Irish<br />

manners. Dublin 1829, Philadelphia 1835, London and Dublin<br />

1839. Anon; first pbd in Christian Examiner 1828 and Church <strong>of</strong><br />

Ireland Mag respectively.<br />

Traits and stories <strong>of</strong> the Irish peasantry. Illustr W. H. Brooke. Ser 1, 2<br />

vols Dublin 1830, 1832, 1834, 1835; ser 2, 3 vols Dublin 1833, 1834;<br />

ser 1–2, 5 vols Dublin 1836; in monthly parts illustr Phiz et al<br />

Lady Charlotte Susan Maria Bury | William Carleton<br />

1842; with autobiographical introd 2 vols 1843; illustr Phiz 5 vols<br />

1853, 2 vols 1856, 1 vol 1860 (as Irish life and character); illustr W.<br />

Harvey et al 2 vols 1864, 1 vol 1872, 1875, 2 vols 1876, 1 vol 1877, 2<br />

vols 1881 (with author’s last corrections), 10 pts New York 1886, 1<br />

vol 1893; ed D. J. O’Donoghue 4 vols 1896; ed F. A. Niccolls, Boston<br />

1911; tr Ger 1837, Fr 1861 (3 tales).<br />

Tales <strong>of</strong> Ireland. Illustr W. H. Brooke, Dublin and London 1834,<br />

1848. First pbd in Christian Examiner 1831.<br />

Fardorougha the miser: or the convicts <strong>of</strong> Lisnamona. Dublin,<br />

London and Edinburgh 1839, Dublin 1846, London 1848 (with<br />

introd), 1857, 1871 etc. First pbd in Dublin Univ Mag 1837–8; tr<br />

Irish 1933.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fawn <strong>of</strong> Spring-vale; <strong>The</strong> clarionet and other tales. 3 vols Dublin<br />

and London 1841; reissued as Jane Sinclair or the fawn <strong>of</strong> Springvale<br />

etc, 3 vols Dublin and London 1843; and as <strong>The</strong> clarionet; <strong>The</strong><br />

dead boxer; and Barney Branagan, 1850.<br />

Art Maguire: or the broken pledge. Dublin 1845, Dublin and<br />

London 1847.<br />

Parra Sastha: or the history <strong>of</strong> Paddy Go-Easy and his wife Nancy.<br />

Dublin 1845, 1846.<br />

Rody the rover: or the Ribbonman. Dublin 1845, Philadelphia [186–?].<br />

Valentine M’Clutchy, the Irish agent: or chronicles <strong>of</strong> the Castle<br />

Cumber property. 3 vols Dublin 1845, illustr Phiz 1 vol Dublin<br />

1847, 1859, London 1860; tr Fr 1845 (serialised in L’Univers).<br />

Tales and sketches illustrating the character, usages, traditions,<br />

sports and pastimes <strong>of</strong> the Irish peasantry. Dublin 1845; illustr<br />

Phiz 1846, 1849, 1851, 1855 (as Irish life and character). Some <strong>of</strong><br />

these stories were rptd from the Irish Penny Jnl.<br />

Denis O’Shaughnessy going to Maynooth. Illustr W. H. Brooke 1845.<br />

First pbd in Traits and stories ser 2, 1833.<br />

<strong>The</strong> black prophet: a tale <strong>of</strong> Irish famine. Belfast and London 1847;<br />

illustr W. Harvey, London and Belfast 1847, 1862; ed D. J.<br />

O’Donoghue, illustr J. B. Yeats 1899; tr Irish 1940. First pbd in<br />

Dublin Univ Mag 1846.<br />

<strong>The</strong> emigrants <strong>of</strong> Ahadarra: a tale <strong>of</strong> Irish life. 1848, 1857, 1871.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Irishman at home: characteristic sketches <strong>of</strong> the Irish peasantry.<br />

Dublin 1849. First pbd in part in the Dublin Penny Jnl.<br />

<strong>The</strong> tithe proctor: a novel, being a tale <strong>of</strong> the Tithe Rebellion in<br />

Ireland. 1849, 1857.<br />

Red Hall: or the baronet’s daughter. 3 vols 1852, 1 vol Dublin 1853, 3<br />

vols 1854, 1 vol Dublin 1858 (as <strong>The</strong> black baronet: or the<br />

Chronicles <strong>of</strong> Ballytrain), 1875.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Squanders <strong>of</strong> Castle Squander. 2 vols 1852, 1 vol 1876. First pbd<br />

in Illustr London Mag 1851–2.<br />

Willy Reilly and his dear Cooleen Bawn: a tale founded upon fact. 3<br />

vols 1855, 1 vol Dublin 1857, Philadelphia 1883, London 1896; ed E.<br />

A. Baker 1904, Dublin 1909.<br />

<strong>The</strong> evil eye, or the black spectre: a romance. Illustr E. Fitzpatrick,<br />

Dublin 1860, 1864.<br />

Redmond Count O’Hanlon, the Irish rapparee: an historical tale.<br />

Dublin 1862. First pbd in Hibernian Mag 1861.<br />

<strong>The</strong> double prophecy: or trials <strong>of</strong> the heart. 2 vols London and<br />

Dublin 1862. Serialised in Hibernian Mag and Irish Amer 1861.<br />

<strong>The</strong> silver acre and other tales. 1862. Serialised in Illustr London<br />

Mag 1853–4 (illustr Phiz).<br />

<strong>The</strong> fair <strong>of</strong> Emyvale, and the Master and scholar. 1870. Serialised in<br />

Illustr London Mag July–Sep 1853 (illustr Phiz).<br />

<strong>The</strong> red haired man’s wife. Dublin and London 1889. Serialised in<br />

Carlow College Mag 1870.<br />

<strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong> William Carleton: being his autobiography and letters . . .<br />

[continued] by D. J. O’Donoghue. 2 vols 1896; ed P. Kavanagh<br />

1968.<br />

<strong>The</strong> courtship <strong>of</strong> Phelim O’Toole. Ed A. Cronin 1962. First pbd in<br />

Traits and stories ser 2, 1833.<br />

King Richard McRoyal: or the dream <strong>of</strong> an antiquarian. Ed L.<br />

Bradley, Armagh 1983.<br />

893 | 894

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