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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Bennett and C. E. Robinson, New York 1990 (in Mary Shelley<br />

reader); ed J. Todd 1991 (Pickering Women’s Classics), rptd 1992<br />

(Pen) (retitled Matilda) with Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary and<br />

Maria; ed P. Clemit 1996 (in Novels and selected works, vol 2) (retitled<br />

Matilda); ed A. Weinberg, New York and London 1997 (in<br />

Additional materials in the hand <strong>of</strong> Mary W. Shelley: mss Shelley<br />

adds. c. 5 and Shelley adds. d. 8, Bodleian Shelley mss, vol 22)<br />

(portion, annotated facs); tr Ital 1980.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fields <strong>of</strong> fancy. (Written 1819.) Ed E. Nitchie, Chapel Hill NC<br />

1959 (ch 1 only); ed E. B. Murray, New York and London 1988 (in<br />

Facsimile <strong>of</strong> Bodleian ms Shelley d. 1, pt 1, Bodleian Shelley mss,<br />

vol 4) (portion, annotated photo facs); ed P. Clemit 1996 (in Novels<br />

and selected works, vol 2).<br />

Verse plays<br />

Proserpine, a mythological drama in two acts. (Written 1820.)<br />

Includes two lyrics by P. B. Shelley. In Winter’s Wreath for 1832<br />

[1831] (rev); ed A. H. Koszul 1922 (in Proserpine & Midas: two<br />

unpublished mythological dramas), rptd Folcr<strong>of</strong>t PA 1974 (facs);<br />

ed B. T. Bennett and C. E. Robinson, New York and London 1992<br />

(in Mary Shelley’s plays and her translation <strong>of</strong> the Cenci story:<br />

Bodleian mss Shelley adds. d. 2 and adds. e. 13, Bodleian Shelley<br />

mss, vol 10) (annotated photo facs); ed P. Clemit 1996 (in Novels<br />

and selected works, vol 2).<br />

Midas. (Written 1820.) Includes two lyrics by P. B. Shelley. Ed A. H.<br />

Koszul 1922 (in Proserpine & Midas: two unpublished mythological<br />

dramas), rptd Folcr<strong>of</strong>t PA 1974 (facs); ed B. T. Bennett and C.<br />

E. Robinson, New York and London 1992 (in Mary Shelley’s plays<br />

and her translation <strong>of</strong> the Cenci story: Bodleian mss Shelley adds.<br />

d. 2 and adds. e. 13, Bodleian Shelley mss vol 10) (annotated phot<strong>of</strong>acs);<br />

ed P. Clemit 1996 (in Novels and selected works, vol 2).<br />

Poetry<br />

Absence: Ah! he is gone – and I alone! In Keepsake for 1831 [1830]; ed<br />

T. J. Wise 1924 (priv ptd) (in A Shelley library), rptd New York 1971<br />

(facs), New York 1982.<br />

A dirge: This morn, thy gallant bark, love. (Written 1827.) In<br />

Keepsake for 1831 [1830], rptd in P. B. Shelley, Poetical works, 4<br />

vols 1839 (variant), see Other works, below; ed B. T. Bennett,<br />

Baltimore and London 1980–8 (in Letters <strong>of</strong> Mary Wollstonecraft<br />

Shelley, vol 2) (variant); ed D. Wu, Oxford and <strong>Cambridge</strong> MA<br />

1994, rptd 1995 (in Romanticism: an anthology) (edited from ms<br />

and subtitled ‘To the air <strong>of</strong> Phillida, adieu, love!’); ed P. Clemit<br />

1996 (in Novels and selected works, vol 2) (1839 text).<br />

Stanzas: I must forget thy dark eyes’ love-fraught gaze. In Keepsake<br />

for 1833 [1832].<br />

Stanzas: How like a star you rose upon my life. In Keepsake for 1839<br />

[1838].<br />

Stanzas: O come to me in dreams, my love! In Keepsake for 1839<br />

[1838]; ed R. G. Grylls 1952 (in Keats–Shelley Memorial Bull 4)<br />

(variant entitled ‘To the dead’); ed D. Wu, Oxford and <strong>Cambridge</strong><br />

MA 1994, rptd 1995 (in Romanticism: an anthology) (edited from<br />

ms).<br />

O listen while I sing to thee. nd (written 1838) (‘Canzonet, with<br />

accompaniment for the harp or piano forte’); ed D. Wu, Oxford<br />

and <strong>Cambridge</strong> MA 1994, rptd 1995 (in Romanticism: an anthology).<br />

Orpheus. (Written 1821.) With P. B. Shelley. Ed R. Garnett 1862 (in<br />

Relics <strong>of</strong> Shelley); ed N. Crook, New York and London 1991 (in<br />

Shelley’s Charles the First notebook: Bodleian ms Shelley adds. e.<br />

17, Bodleian Shelley mss, vol 12) (annotated photo facs); ed N.<br />

Crook 1996 (in Novels and selected works, vol 2).<br />

<strong>The</strong> choice: a poem on Shelley’s death. Ed H. B. Forman 1876 (priv<br />

ptd), rptd Folger PA 1973; ed P. R. Feldman and D. Scott-Kilvert,<br />

Oxford 1987, rptd Baltimore and London 1995 (in Journals <strong>of</strong><br />

Mary Shelley 1814–1844) (variant dated July 1823).<br />

On reading Wordsworth’s lines on Peel [sic] castle. (Dated 8 Dec<br />

Sir Martin Archer Shee | Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley<br />

1825.) In R. G. Grylls, Mary Shelley: a biography, 1938, rptd<br />

Norwood PA 1977, Philadelphia 1978, New York 1982; ed P. R.<br />

Feldman and D. Scott-Kilvert, Oxford 1987, rptd Baltimore and<br />

London 1995 (in Journals <strong>of</strong> Mary Shelley 1814–1844); ed D. Wu,<br />

Oxford and <strong>Cambridge</strong> MA 1994, rptd 1995 (in Romanticism: an<br />

anthology).<br />

Fragment: Tribute for thee, dear solace <strong>of</strong> my life. In R. G. Grylls,<br />

Mary Shelley: a biography, 1938, rptd Norwood PA 1977,<br />

Philadelphia 1978, New York 1982 (annotated ‘To Jane with <strong>The</strong><br />

last [man]’); ed P. R. Feldman and D. Scott-Kilvert, Oxford 1987,<br />

rptd Baltimore and London 1995 (in Journals <strong>of</strong> Mary Shelley<br />

1814–1844).<br />

Tempo è ben di morire. (Dated 1833.) In E. Nitchie, Mary Shelley:<br />

author <strong>of</strong> Frankenstein, New Brunswick NJ 1953.<br />

La vida es sueño. In E. Nitchie, Mary Shelley: author <strong>of</strong><br />

Frankenstein, New Brunswick NJ 1953 (dated 1834); in J. de<br />

Palacio, Mary Shelley dans son oeuvre, Paris 1969 (variant dated<br />

1833).<br />

Other works<br />

History <strong>of</strong> a six weeks’ tour through a part <strong>of</strong> France, Switzerland,<br />

Germany, and Holland: with letters descriptive <strong>of</strong> a sail round<br />

the lake <strong>of</strong> Geneva, and <strong>of</strong> the glaciers <strong>of</strong> Chamouni. 1817. (With P.<br />

B. Shelley; contains Mary Shelley’s History <strong>of</strong> a six weeks’ tour<br />

and two <strong>of</strong> her letters from Geneva.) 1829; ed Mary Shelley 2 vols<br />

1840 [1839] (in P. B. Shelley, Essays, letters from abroad, translations<br />

and fragments (retitled journal <strong>of</strong> a six weeks’ tour), see<br />

below); ed C. Elton 1894 introd by J. Wordsworth, Spelsbury 1989,<br />

rptd 1991 (facs); ed E. B. Murray, Oxford 1993 (in P. B. Shelley,<br />

Prose works, vol 1); ed J. Moskal 1996 (in Novels and selected<br />

works, vol 8).<br />

P. B. Shelley, Posthumous poems. Ed Mary Shelley 1824 (with<br />

preface); London, New York and Melbourne 1889 (in 1 vol with P.<br />

B. Shelley, Poetical works, and Essays, letters from abroad, translations<br />

and fragments); introd by J. Wordsworth, Spelsbury 1991<br />

(facs).<br />

Memoirs <strong>of</strong> William Godwin. In W. Godwin, Caleb Williams, 1831<br />

(Bentley’s Standard Novels), rptd 1849; ed P. Clemit 1996 (in<br />

Novels and selected works, vol 2).<br />

Lives <strong>of</strong> the most eminent literary and scientific men <strong>of</strong> Italy, Spain<br />

and Portugal. In vols 86–8 <strong>of</strong> Cabinet cyclopaedia, ed D. Lardner,<br />

3 vols 1835–7. With D. Brewster, J. Montgomery and others. (Mary<br />

Shelley’s contributions include the lives <strong>of</strong> the Italian writers<br />

Petrarch, Boccaccio, Machiavelli, Metastasio, Goldoni, Alfieri,<br />

Monti and Foscolo, and all the Spanish and Portuguese lives with<br />

the possible exception <strong>of</strong> Ercilla.) 2 vols Philadelphia 1841 (retitled<br />

Lives <strong>of</strong> eminent literary and scientific men <strong>of</strong> Italy).<br />

Lives <strong>of</strong> the most eminent literary and scientific men <strong>of</strong> France. In<br />

vols 102–3 <strong>of</strong> Cabinet cyclopaedia, ed D. Lardner, 2 vols 1838–9; 2<br />

vols Philadelphia 1840 (retitled Lives <strong>of</strong> the most eminent French<br />

writers).<br />

P. B. Shelley, Poetical works. Ed Mary Shelley 4 vols 1839 (with<br />

preface and notes, prints Queen Mab with omissions); 1 vol ‘1840’<br />

[1839] (rev) (with added postscript, includes Swellfoot the tyrant,<br />

Peter Bell III and Queen Mab complete); 1 vol 1841 (omits Queen<br />

Mab); 4 vols 1846; 1 vol Philadelphia 1846; 3 vols London 1847 (rev,<br />

prints Queen Mab, cantos 1–2); 1 vol Philadelphia 1847; London<br />

1847 (in 1 vol with P. B. Shelley, Essays, letters from abroad, translations<br />

and fragments); 1 vol 1850; 1 vol Philadelphia 1851; 3 vols<br />

London 1853; 1 vol 1853; 1854 (in 1 vol with P. B. Shelley, Essays,<br />

letters from abroad, translations and fragments); 3 vols Boston<br />

1855; 1 vol London 1856; 3 vols 1857; 2 vols Boston 1857 (with<br />

memoir by J. Lowell); 1 vol London 1862; 3 vols 1866; 3 vols 1869; 1<br />

vol 1869; ed H. B. Forman 4 vols 1876–7, 1882 (with notes by Mary<br />

Shelley); 1 vol Philadelphia [1884]; 3 vols Boston 1889; London,<br />

New York and Melbourne 1889 (in 1 vol with P. B. Shelley,<br />

1065 | 1066

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