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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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<strong>The</strong> Early Nineteenth-Century Novel<br />

991 | 992<br />

Blue-stocking Hall: a work <strong>of</strong> fiction designed to inculcate the<br />

various duties <strong>of</strong> domestic life. 3 vols 1827, 2 vols New York 1828, 3<br />

vols London 1829.<br />

Truckleborough Hall: a novel. 3 vols 1827.<br />

Penelope, or love’s labour lost: a novel. 3 vols 1828, 1829.<br />

Rank and talent: a novel. 3 vols 1829, 1835, 1 vol 1856.<br />

Recollections <strong>of</strong> a Blue-coat boy: or a view <strong>of</strong> Christ’s hospital. 1829.<br />

Tales <strong>of</strong> a briefless barrister. 3 vols 1829, 1831.<br />

Tales <strong>of</strong> my time. 3 vols 1829.<br />

<strong>The</strong> peace <strong>of</strong> the country: a letter to the Freeholders <strong>of</strong> Suffolk on . . .<br />

the election <strong>of</strong> two independent representatives. 1830, 1830.<br />

Atherton: a tale <strong>of</strong> the last century. 3 vols 1831.<br />

<strong>The</strong> usurer’s daughter, by a contributor to Blackwood’s Mag. 3 vols<br />

1832, 1 vol 1853.<br />

A reformer’s reasons for voting for Earl Jermyn. [1832].<br />

<strong>The</strong> Puritan’s grave. 3 vols 1833, 1 vol 1846.<br />

<strong>The</strong> autobiography <strong>of</strong> a Dissenting Minister. 1834 (anon), 1835, 1835,<br />

1835 (4th edn), 1843 (6th edn).<br />

Provincial sketches. 1835.<br />

<strong>The</strong> widow’s <strong>of</strong>fering: a selection <strong>of</strong> tales and essays. Ed M. A.<br />

Scargill 2 vols 1837, 1856 (unauthorised, as <strong>The</strong> <strong>English</strong> sketch<br />

book), 1857 (authorised 2nd edn, as Essays and sketches).<br />

Attributed works<br />

Truth: a novel, by the author <strong>of</strong> Nothing. 3 vols 1826. No book entitled<br />

‘Nothing’ can be located.<br />

Elizabeth Evanshaw, the sequel <strong>of</strong> ‘Truth’: a novel. 3 vols 1827.<br />

Scargill contributed to NMM and the Atlas newspaper regularly. [am]<br />

Honoria Scott<br />

Amatory tales <strong>of</strong> Spain, France, Switzerland and the<br />

Mediterranean: containing the fair Andalusian, Rosolia <strong>of</strong><br />

Palermo, and the Maltese portrait: interspersed with pieces <strong>of</strong><br />

original poetry. 4 vols 1810.<br />

Sketch <strong>of</strong> the life and character <strong>of</strong> Her Royal Highness the Princess<br />

Amelia. 1810.<br />

<strong>The</strong> vale <strong>of</strong> Clyde: a tale. 2 vols 1810.<br />

A winter in Edinburgh, or the Russian brothers: a novel. 3 vols 1810,<br />

1822.<br />

Strathmay, or scenes in the North illustrative <strong>of</strong> Scottish manners<br />

etc: a tale. 2 vols Edinburgh 1813, 1814 (as <strong>The</strong> Castle <strong>of</strong> Strathmay,<br />

or scenes in the North illustrative <strong>of</strong> Scottish manners and<br />

society: a tale).<br />

Honoria Scott may or may not have been the pseudonym <strong>of</strong> Mrs Susan Fraser,<br />

author <strong>of</strong> Camilla de Florian, and other poems, 1809, and Poems, 1811.<br />

[pg]<br />

Lady Caroline Lucy Scott, née Douglas 1784–1857<br />

BL holds an agreement <strong>of</strong> Scott’s with publishers R. Bentley; the Nat Lib <strong>of</strong><br />

Scotland holds a letter from her to Sir Walter Scott.<br />

A marriage in high life. Edited by the authoress <strong>of</strong> Flirtation [Lady<br />

Charlotte Bury]. 2 vols 1828 (anon), 1 vol Philadelphia 1833<br />

(Novelist’s Mag), 1 vol Paris 1836, 1857 (new edn), Philadelphia<br />

[187–?] (new edn); tr Fr nd (attributed to Joanna Baillie), Ger<br />

1837.<br />

Trevelyan. 3 vols 1833 (anon), 2 vols Philadelphia 1834, 3 vols London<br />

1834 (2nd edn), 1 vol Paris 1835, 1 vol London 1837 (Bentley’s<br />

Standard Novels), 1855, 1861 (Routledge’s Railway Lib).<br />

review: Athenaeum 2 Nov 1833.<br />

Exposition <strong>of</strong> the types and antitypes <strong>of</strong> the Old and New<br />

Testament. 1856.<br />

<strong>The</strong> old grey church: a novel. 3 vols 1856 (anon).<br />

review: (George Eliot) in Silly novels by lady novelists,<br />

Westminster Rev 66, Oct 1856.<br />

Incentives to Bible study: Scripture acrostics: a Sabbath pastime for<br />

young persons. [1860.]<br />

Acrostics: historical, geographical, and biographical. [1863.] [jw]<br />

Michael Scott 1789–1835<br />

§1<br />

Tom Cringle’s log. 2 vols Edinburgh 1833, 1834, 1 vol Paris 1836,<br />

Edinburgh 1842 etc, New York [1883]; ed M. Morris, illustr J. A.<br />

Symington 1895; illustr H. Edwards, New York 1899; ed E. Rhys<br />

[1915?] (EL); ed W. McFee, illustr M. Schaeffer, New York 1927; ed J.<br />

Webber 1956 (abridged). First pbd in Blackwood’s Mag 1829–33<br />

(anon).<br />

<strong>The</strong> cruise <strong>of</strong> the Midge, by the author <strong>of</strong> Tom Cringle’s log. 2 vols<br />

Edinburgh 1836, 1 vol Paris 1836, Edinburgh 1842, London 1878;<br />

illustr F. Brangwyn 1894. First pbd in Blackwood’s Mag 1834–5<br />

(anon).<br />

§2<br />

Douglas, G. In his Blackwood group, 1897.<br />

Sir Walter Scott 1771–1832<br />

Quotation marks in ‘2nd’ edn etc indicate a re-issue <strong>of</strong> an earlier edn with a<br />

new title page, or an issue made up <strong>of</strong> sheets from more than one genuine<br />

edition.<br />

Translations are selectively listed. For the numerous Russian translations<br />

see Walter Scott, comp I. M. Levidova, Moscow 1958 (in Rus).<br />

Almost all mss by or relating to Scott are now in public libraries. <strong>The</strong><br />

Pierpont Morgan Lib, New York, has the largest single collection <strong>of</strong> Scott’s own<br />

works, including the Journal, <strong>The</strong> lady <strong>of</strong> the lake, Rokeby, <strong>The</strong> bridal<br />

<strong>of</strong> Triermain, part <strong>of</strong> Waverley, Guy Mannering, <strong>The</strong> antiquary, <strong>The</strong><br />

tale <strong>of</strong> Old Mortality, <strong>The</strong> black dwarf, Ivanhoe, <strong>The</strong> monastery,<br />

Peveril <strong>of</strong> the Peak, Saint Ronan’s Well, Woodstock, Anne <strong>of</strong><br />

Geierstein, the first ser <strong>of</strong> Tales <strong>of</strong> a grandfather, the Life <strong>of</strong> Napoleon<br />

and <strong>The</strong> Doom <strong>of</strong> Devorgoil. <strong>The</strong> NLS, Edinburgh, owns Marmion, <strong>The</strong><br />

lord <strong>of</strong> the Isles, most <strong>of</strong> Waverley, <strong>The</strong> heart <strong>of</strong> Mid-Lothian,<br />

Quentin Durward, Redgauntlet, the two ser <strong>of</strong> Chronicles <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Canongate (<strong>The</strong> two drovers is missing), <strong>The</strong> betrothed, and minor<br />

works. Harold the Daunt le ss and a small part <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> lay <strong>of</strong> the last<br />

minstrel are in the Huntington. <strong>The</strong> pirate is in Princeton. <strong>The</strong> BL has<br />

Kenilworth and <strong>The</strong> tapestried chamber. <strong>The</strong> Fortunes <strong>of</strong> Nigel,<br />

Count Robert <strong>of</strong> Paris, the fifth ser <strong>of</strong> Tales <strong>of</strong> a grandfather, and a vol <strong>of</strong><br />

misc minor prose works are in King’s School, Canterbury. <strong>The</strong> bride <strong>of</strong><br />

Lammermoor, and memoirs <strong>of</strong> Goldsmith, Johnson and part <strong>of</strong> Sterne<br />

are in the Signet Lib, Edinburgh. Castle dangerous is in the NY Soc Lib. <strong>The</strong><br />

unpbd <strong>The</strong> Siege <strong>of</strong> Malta is in NYPL. <strong>The</strong> talisman is in the State<br />

Historical Museum, Moscow. Harvard has the Life <strong>of</strong> Swift. <strong>The</strong> largest collection<br />

<strong>of</strong> mss relating to Scott is in the NLS. It contains the Abbotsford<br />

Collection acquired in 1931–2 and the Walpole Collection <strong>of</strong> about 6,000<br />

letters to Scott purchased from Abbotsford by Sir Hugh Walpole in 1921 and<br />

bequeathed by him to the library, together with Scott’s interleaved set <strong>of</strong> the<br />

novels, with his ms corrections (used for the Magnum opus edn and by Messrs<br />

A. & C. Black for their rev texts). <strong>The</strong> abbot is in the possession <strong>of</strong> John<br />

Murray, London, and Rob Roy is in private hands in Britain, as is the first<br />

vol <strong>of</strong> Minstrelsy <strong>of</strong> the Scottish Border from the interleaved set <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Poetical works. For locations <strong>of</strong> pro<strong>of</strong>s and <strong>of</strong> portions <strong>of</strong> mss, see the article<br />

by G. Dyson cited below. <strong>The</strong> principal Scott material in the NLS, including<br />

the entire Walpole Collection, was pbd on micr<strong>of</strong>ilm by Harvester Press in<br />

1986–7. <strong>The</strong> interleaved set was pbd on micr<strong>of</strong>iche by Aberdeen Univ Press and<br />

Pergamon Press in 1987.<br />

Bibliographies etc<br />

[Chambers, R.?] Manuscripts <strong>of</strong> Sir Walter Scott. Chambers’s<br />

Edinburgh Jnl 14 Feb 1835.<br />

Quérard, J. M. Scott. In his La France littéraire, ou dictionnaire bibliographique<br />

des savants, 12 vols Paris 1827–64 (vol 8 1836).

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