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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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

1143 | 1144<br />

<strong>The</strong> three guides. Fraser’s Mag 38, Aug 1848. Included in Selections<br />

from poems by Acton Bell, in 1850 edn <strong>of</strong> Wuthering Heights and<br />

Agnes Grey: see Collections, above.<br />

Self-communion: a poem. Ed T. J. Wise 1900 (priv ptd).<br />

Retirement (‘O, let me be alone a while’). Attributed to E. Brontë in<br />

1910 edn <strong>of</strong> her poems: see complete works <strong>of</strong> Emily Brontë vol 2,<br />

1910, above.<br />

Two poems by Anne Brontë [‘A prisoner in a dungeon deep’; <strong>The</strong><br />

shadow <strong>of</strong> Christ (‘Take my friend this little token’); the latter is<br />

not by A. Brontë]. Brontë Soc Trans 7 pt 36 1926.<br />

I will not mourn thee, lovely one. In A. Harrison and D. Stanford,<br />

Anne Brontë: her life and work, 1959.<br />

Letters, diary papers, preface<br />

Diary papers <strong>of</strong> 30 July 1841, 31 July 1845. In C. K. Shorter, Charlotte<br />

Brontë and her circle, London and New York 1896.<br />

Letters <strong>of</strong> 4 January 1848 (to Ellen Nussey) and 18 January 1849 (to W.<br />

S. Williams). In C. K. Shorter, Charlotte Brontë and her circle,<br />

London and New York 1896.<br />

Preface to the second edn. <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall, 2nd edn 1848;<br />

see above.<br />

Letter to the Rev D. Thom, 30 Dec 1848. TLS 21 June 1923; given also<br />

in appendix 3 <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall (Clarendon edn),<br />

Oxford 1992.<br />

New acquisitions: letters from Emily, Anne and Patrick; Mrs<br />

Gaskell’s annotations. Brontë Soc Trans 12 pt 63 1953. Letters to E.<br />

Nussey, 4 Oct 1847, 26 Jan 1848, 5 Apr 1849.<br />

Textual/bibliographical studies<br />

Anne Brontë’s hymns. Baptist Messenger Mar 1891.<br />

Hatfield, C. W. <strong>The</strong> last verses written by Anne Brontë. Brontë Soc<br />

Trans 8 pt 42 1932.<br />

Christian, M. G. Manuscripts <strong>of</strong> stories and poems by Anne Brontë.<br />

In A census <strong>of</strong> Brontë manuscripts in the United States, part 2,<br />

Trollopian 2, Mar 1948.<br />

Visick, M. Anne Brontë’s last poem. Brontë Soc Trans 13 pt 69 1959.<br />

Ekeblad, I.-S. <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall and Women beware<br />

women. N & Q n.s. 10, Dec 1963.<br />

Hargreaves, G. D. Incomplete texts <strong>of</strong> <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall.<br />

Brontë Soc Trans 16 pt 82 1972.<br />

Tiffany, L. K. Charlotte and Anne’s literary reputation. Brontë Soc<br />

Trans 16 pt 84 1974.<br />

Hargreaves, G. D. Further omissions in <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall.<br />

Brontë Soc Trans 17 pt 87 1977.<br />

Easson, A. Anne Brontë and the glow-worms. N & Q n.s. 26, Aug<br />

1979.<br />

Rastall, J. R. Anne Brontë’s song book. Clifden, Ireland 1980.<br />

Peterson, N. J. <strong>The</strong> Marmion scene in <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall.<br />

American N & Q 23, Mar–Apr 1985.<br />

Letters/early comments on <strong>The</strong> tenant <strong>of</strong> Wildfell Hall<br />

Charlotte Brontë, letter to W. S. Williams, 14 August 1848. In <strong>The</strong><br />

Brontës: their lives, friendships, and correspondence, ed Wise<br />

and Symington, vol 2.<br />

Biographical studies<br />

V. Brontë portraits. Bookman 1, Nov 1891.<br />

Hale, W. T. Anne Brontë: her life and writings. Bloomington IN<br />

1929.<br />

Edgerley, C. M. Anne Brontë. Brontë Soc Trans 9 pt 48 1938.<br />

Raymond, E. Exiled and harassed Anne. Brontë Soc Trans 11 pt 59<br />

1949.<br />

Brooke, S. Anne Brontë at Blake Hall: an episode <strong>of</strong> courage and<br />

insight. Brontë Soc Trans 13 pt 68 1958.<br />

Gérin, W. Anne Brontë: a biography. London and New York 1959.<br />

Harrison, A. and D. Stanford. Anne Brontë: her life and work. 1959.<br />

Stevenson, W. H. Emily and Anne Brontë. London and New York<br />

1968.<br />

Le Guern, J. Anne Brontë 1820–1849: la vie et l’oeuvre. 2 vols Paris<br />

1977.<br />

Langland, E. Anne Brontë: the other one. Totowa NJ 1989.<br />

Chitham, E. A life <strong>of</strong> Anne Brontë. Oxford and <strong>Cambridge</strong> MA 1991.<br />

[ca and hjr]<br />

Charles William Shirley Brooks 1816–74<br />

See col 1996.<br />

Robert Barnabas Brough 1828–60<br />

See col 1997.<br />

Frances Browne 1816–79<br />

<strong>The</strong> star <strong>of</strong> Attéghéi; the vision <strong>of</strong> Schwartz; and other poems. 1844.<br />

Lyrics and miscellaneous poems. Edinburgh 1848.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Ericksons; [and] <strong>The</strong> clever boy: or consider another. Edinburgh<br />

1852. At head <strong>of</strong> title: Two stories for my young friends.<br />

Pictures and songs <strong>of</strong> home. [1856.]<br />

Granny’s wonderful chair and its tales <strong>of</strong> fairy times. 1857 (for 1856);<br />

ed R. L. Green 1963.<br />

Our uncle the traveller’s stories. 1859.<br />

My share <strong>of</strong> the world, an autobiography [a novel]. 3 vols 1861.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Castleford case. 3 vols 1862.<br />

<strong>The</strong> orphans <strong>of</strong> Elfholm. [1862.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> poor cousin. [1863.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> young Foresters. [1864.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> hidden sin: a novel. 3 vols 1866. Anon.<br />

<strong>The</strong> exile’s trust: a tale <strong>of</strong> the French Revolution, and other stories.<br />

[1869.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> nearest neighbour and other stories. [1875.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> dangerous guest: a story <strong>of</strong> 1745. [1886.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> foundling <strong>of</strong> the Fens: a story <strong>of</strong> a flood. [1886.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> first <strong>of</strong> the African diamonds. [1887].<br />

Bulwer Lytton, Sir Edward George<br />

Earle Lytton, 1st Lord Lytton 1803–73<br />

Bulwer Lytton published under a variety <strong>of</strong> names. For the first (and most<br />

prolific) two decades <strong>of</strong> his career he styled himself Edward Bulwer or Edward<br />

Lytton Bulwer. He was knighted in 1838: hence, generally, Sir Edward [Lytton]<br />

Bulwer. In 1843 he formally expanded his surname to Bulwer Lytton (generally<br />

without a hyphen): hence [Sir] Edward Bulwer Lytton. In 1866 he was<br />

raised to the peerage as Baron Lytton <strong>of</strong> Knebworth, and thereafter was<br />

usually styled simply Lord Lytton on title pages. His son, Edward Robert<br />

Bulwer Lytton (see col 765), with whom he is sometimes confused, was a poet<br />

(pseud Owen Meredith) and diplomat who became Viceroy <strong>of</strong> India and was<br />

created 1st Earl <strong>of</strong> Lytton in 1880.<br />

<strong>The</strong> main repository <strong>of</strong> mss is the Hertfordshire County Record Office,<br />

Hertford. This includes the complete or partial autograph mss <strong>of</strong> all his novels<br />

(excepting Eugene Aram, <strong>The</strong> pilgrims <strong>of</strong> the Rhine, What will he do<br />

with it?, and <strong>The</strong> coming race), the historical study Athens: its rise and<br />

fall (including an unpbd 3rd vol), the epic poem King Arthur, and the essay<br />

collection Caxtoniana. <strong>The</strong>re are, in addition, fragments <strong>of</strong> two dozen<br />

unfinished novels, stories and plays, drafts <strong>of</strong> three dozen essays, 30 commonplace<br />

books filled with miscellaneous notes, several hundred letters, and<br />

countless thousands <strong>of</strong> lines <strong>of</strong> verse.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Wilstack, P. Dramatisations <strong>of</strong> Bulwer. Bookman (New York) July<br />

1903.<br />

Taft, W. H. III. Lytton as a literary critic. Unpbd diss, Princeton Univ<br />

1942. For complete listing <strong>of</strong> prefaces, advertisements and dedicatory<br />

epistles to Bulwer’s novels.

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