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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Branwell Brontë’s flute book 1831–3. Introd by R. Rastall, Co.<br />

Kilkenny, Ireland 1980. Reproduction <strong>of</strong> ms in Bonnell collection.<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Patrick Branwell Brontë. Ed T. Winnifrith, Oxford<br />

1983 (Shakespeare Head Brontë).<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë: a new text and commentary. Ed V. A.<br />

Neufeldt, New York and London 1985. 7 poems by ‘UT’ first pbd<br />

here.<br />

Brother in the shadow: stories & sketches by Patrick Branwell<br />

Brontë. Transcribed by M. Butterfield, ed R. J. Duckett, Bradford<br />

1988.<br />

E. Flint<strong>of</strong>f. Some unpublished poems <strong>of</strong> Branwell Brontë. Durham<br />

Univ Jnl 81, June 1989.<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Patrick Branwell Brontë: a new text and commentary.<br />

Ed V. A. Neufeldt, New York and London 1990.<br />

<strong>The</strong> hand <strong>of</strong> the arch-sinner: two Angrian chronicles <strong>of</strong> Branwell<br />

Brontë. Reconstructed and ed with an introd, notes and commentary<br />

by R. G. Collins, initial transcription by J. Barnard, M.<br />

Collins, J. Bates and Collins, Oxford 1993. Texts: <strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong> Field<br />

Marshal the Right Honourable Alexander Percy, Earl <strong>of</strong><br />

Northangerland . . .; and Real life in Verdopolis, a tale.<br />

Branwell’s Blackwood’s Magazine. Introd by and ed C. Alexander,<br />

assisted by V. Benson and R. Alexander, Edmonton, Alberta 1995.<br />

<strong>The</strong> works <strong>of</strong> Patrick Branwell Brontë. An edition, vol 1. Ed V. A.<br />

Neufeldt, New York and London 1997.<br />

Individual poems published earlier than their appearance in<br />

collections noted above<br />

Heaven and earth. Halifax Guardian 5 June 1841.<br />

On the Melbourne ministry. Halifax Guardian 14 Aug 1841; Brontë<br />

Soc Trans 19 pt 8 1989.<br />

Sonnet I. On Landseer’s painting: ‘<strong>The</strong> shepherd’s chief mourner’.<br />

Bradford Herald 28 Apr 1842; in Unpublished poems by Patrick<br />

Branwell Brontë, Brontë Soc Trans 7 pt 37 1927.<br />

Sonnet II. On the callousness produced by cares. Bradford Herald 5<br />

May 1842; as Sonnet I in Halifax Guardian 7 May 1842; in F. A.<br />

Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; also in W. Gérin, Branwell<br />

Brontë: a biography, 1961.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Affghan War. Leeds Intelligencer 7 May 1842; in F. A. Leyland,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886.<br />

Sonnet III. On peaceful death and painful life. Bradford Herald 12<br />

May 1842; as Sonnet II in Halifax Guardian 14 May 1842; in F. A.<br />

Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; also in W. Gérin, Branwell<br />

Brontë: a biography, 1961.<br />

Caroline’s prayer. On the change from childhood to womanhood.<br />

Bradford Herald 2 June 1842; Halifax Guardian 4 June 1842; in F.<br />

A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886. Extracts from Sir Henry<br />

Tunstall, below.<br />

Song [‘Should Life’s first feelings be forgot’, extract from ‘How Eden<br />

like seem palace halls’]. Bradford Herald 9 June 1842; Halifax<br />

Guardian 11 June 1842; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886;<br />

complete text pbd in <strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë and Patrick<br />

Branwell Brontë, 1934 (Shakespeare Head Brontë). Extracts from<br />

‘How Eden like’ also pbd in <strong>The</strong> complete works <strong>of</strong> Emily Jane<br />

Brontë vol 1, 1910; and in <strong>The</strong> orphans, and other poems, 1917, see<br />

Collections, above.<br />

An epicurean’s song. Bradford Herald 7 July 1842; Halifax Guardian<br />

9 July 1842; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886.<br />

On Caroline. Bradford Herald 12 July 1842; Halifax Guardian 14 July<br />

1842; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; extract pbd in I.<br />

Holgate, <strong>The</strong> key to ‘Caroline’, Brontë Soc Trans 13 pt 68 1958.<br />

Noah’s warning over Methuselah’s grave [revised version <strong>of</strong> first 48<br />

lines <strong>of</strong> Azrael]. Bradford Herald 25 Aug 1842; in F. A. Leyland,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; earlier version and remaining text <strong>of</strong><br />

Azrael pbd in Brontë Soc Trans 8 pt 43 1933 (as Azrael: or the eve<br />

<strong>of</strong> destruction: unpublished poem by Patrick Branwell Brontë).<br />

Patrick Branwell Brontë<br />

Real rest. Halifax Guardian 8 Nov 1845; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë<br />

family, 1886.<br />

Penmaenmawr. Halifax Guardian 20 Dec 1845; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong><br />

Brontë family, 1886.<br />

Letter from a father on Earth to his child in her grave. Halifax<br />

Guardian 18 Apr 1846; in F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; in<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Patrick Branwell Brontë, ed T. Winnifrith, 1983 (as<br />

‘From Earth – whose life-refreshing April showers’); in S. H.<br />

Goodacre, <strong>The</strong> published poems <strong>of</strong> Branwell Brontë, Brontë Soc<br />

Trans 19 pt 8 1989.<br />

<strong>The</strong> end <strong>of</strong> all. Halifax Guardian 5 June 1847.<br />

‘Still and bright in twighlight shining’. In E. C. Gaskell, <strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong><br />

Charlotte Brontë, 1857 (extract); in <strong>The</strong> complete works <strong>of</strong> Emily<br />

Jane Brontë, 1910 (extract, misattributed); complete text in <strong>The</strong><br />

poems <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë and Patrick Branwell Brontë, 1934<br />

(Shakespeare Head Brontë).<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> man who will not know another’. In F. H. Grundy, Pictures <strong>of</strong><br />

the past, 1879.<br />

Sir Henry Tunstall. In F. A. Leyland, <strong>The</strong> Brontë family, 1886; in De<br />

Quincey memorials, ed A. H. Japp, vol 2 1891; in W. Gérin,<br />

Branwell Brontë: a biography, 1961 (extracts); complete text in<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Patrick Branwell Brontë, ed V. A. Neufeldt, 1990.<br />

Extracts pbd earlier in Bradford Herald 2 June 1842 and Halifax<br />

Guardian 4 June 1842 (both as ‘Caroline’s prayer: on the change<br />

from childhood to womanhood’).<br />

‘Misery. Scene 1’ [‘How fast that courser fleeted by’]. In Mrs<br />

Oliphant, Annals <strong>of</strong> a publishing house: William Blackwood and<br />

his sons, their magazine and friends vol 2, Edinburgh 1897<br />

(extract).<br />

‘Augusta’, ‘Backward I look upon my life’, ‘Song: I saw her in the<br />

crowded hall’, and ‘<strong>The</strong> Rover’. In T. J. Wise, A bibliography <strong>of</strong> the<br />

writings in prose and verse <strong>of</strong> the members <strong>of</strong> the Brontë family,<br />

1917.<br />

Unpublished juvenile manuscript by Charlotte Brontë [‘On the<br />

great bay <strong>of</strong> the Glass Town’ (by ‘UT’), ‘Lines spoken by a lawyer<br />

on the occasion <strong>of</strong> the transfer <strong>of</strong> this magazine’ (by ‘WT’), and<br />

‘Lines spoken by one who was tired <strong>of</strong> dullness upon the same<br />

occasion’ (by ‘UT’), in ‘Blackwood’s Young Men’s Magazine Dec<br />

(1) 1829’]. Brontë Soc Trans 5 pt 29 1919. See also An edition <strong>of</strong> the<br />

early writings <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë, ed C. Alexander, vol 1 1987.<br />

‘Addressed to “the tower <strong>of</strong> all nations’’’ (by ‘UT’). In Albion and<br />

Marina: a romantic love story by Charlotte Brontë, Brontë Soc<br />

Trans 6 pt 30 1920.<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Angrian welcome’, ‘Before our mighty Maker’s throne’, and<br />

‘Zamorna and Percy’ (in appendix). In <strong>The</strong> complete poems <strong>of</strong><br />

Charlotte Brontë, 1923 (misattributed).<br />

‘Harvest in Spain’ (by ‘UT’). In D. Cook, Miniature magazines <strong>of</strong><br />

Charlotte Brontë: with unpublished poems from an original<br />

manuscript in Ashley Library. In Bookman 71, Dec 1926. See also<br />

<strong>The</strong> poems <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë, ed V. A. Neufeldt, 1985; and An<br />

edition <strong>of</strong> the early writings <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë, ed C. Alexander,<br />

vol 1 1987.<br />

‘Our hopes on earth seem wholly gone’. In Catalogue <strong>of</strong> the Bonnell<br />

Collection in the Brontë Parsonage Museum, 1932.<br />

An unpublished poem written by Patrick Branwell Brontë in<br />

October, 1835 [‘Song: written by Percy in 1813’]. Brontë Soc Trans 8<br />

pt 44 1934.<br />

‘Oh may America’, ‘Dirge <strong>of</strong> the Genii’ (facs), and extracts from ‘If<br />

you live by the sunny fountain’, ‘One day I went out awalking’,<br />

‘<strong>The</strong> Ammon tree cutter’, ‘Ode to the cheif Genius Bany’, ‘Ode to<br />

Napoleon’, ‘Adress to the Genius &c’, and ‘W[h]ose that who<br />

ridest on the storm’. In F. E. Ratchford, <strong>The</strong> Brontës’ web <strong>of</strong> childhood,<br />

New York 1941.<br />

‘Laussane: a dramatic poem by Young Soult’ (extract), ‘But now the<br />

night with dusky wings’, and ‘Caractacus’ (extract). In J. Malham-<br />

Dembleby, <strong>The</strong> confessions <strong>of</strong> Charlotte Brontë, Bradford 1954<br />

1133 | 1134

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