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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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ms prompt-book for the part <strong>of</strong> Obenreizer are in the Gimble<br />

Collection, Yale.<br />

Sherwell, L. R. and F. Williams. No thoroughfare. Boston 1867.<br />

Lequel, L. Identity, or no thoroughfare: a drama. New York 1868.<br />

Hazlewood, H. C., jr. No thoroughfare beyond Highbury; or, the<br />

maid, the mother and the malicious mountaineer. 1868.<br />

Burlesque.<br />

Grossmith, G. No thoroughfare. 1869. Burlesque.<br />

Brand, O. No thoroughfare; or, the story <strong>of</strong> a foundling. 1903.<br />

Review<br />

[Dallas, E. S.] <strong>The</strong> Times 27 Dec 1867.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Pierpont, R. Letter to the editor. Dickensian 4 1908. Describes 1868<br />

edn.<br />

Notes on sales: Dickens’s Christmas numbers. TLS 25 Dec 1924.<br />

Pierpont, R. Dickens’s Christmas numbers. TLS 8 Jan 1925.<br />

Thomas, D. A. Contributors to the Christmas numbers <strong>of</strong><br />

Household Words and All the Year Round. Dickensian 69–70<br />

1973–4.<br />

Davies, H. N. <strong>The</strong> Tauchnitz extra Christmas numbers <strong>of</strong> All the<br />

Year Round. Library 5th ser 33 1978. Attributions.<br />

Collected editions<br />

[1859]. Christmas stories from Household Words (1850–8).<br />

Leipzig 1862 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 609.<br />

Christmas stories: <strong>The</strong> haunted house, A message from the sea,<br />

and Tom Tiddler’s ground.<br />

Boston 1867 Diamond edn, illustr S. Eytinge, jr. Dickens’s portions<br />

<strong>of</strong> Christmas numbers first removed by Dickens for this edn and<br />

pbd together as Christmas stories; only 9 stories included, not in<br />

chronological order. See Glancy, Dickens’s Christmas books, 1985,<br />

Bibliographies, below.<br />

Leipzig 1867 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 888.<br />

Somebody’s luggage, Mrs Lirriper’s luggage, and Mrs Lirriper’s<br />

legacy.<br />

Leipzig 1867 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 894. Doctor<br />

Marigold’s Prescription and Mugby Junction.<br />

1868 Household Words Christmas stories 1851–8; 9 vols 1906.<br />

[1868] Christmas stories from All the Year Round. 9 pts; 1 vol 1868, 9<br />

vols [1907].<br />

1871 Christmas stories from Household Words and All the Year<br />

Round. Charles Dickens edn, with stories in chronological order.<br />

1874 Christmas stories from Household Words and All the Year<br />

Round, Illus Lib edn.<br />

1898 Christmas stories from Household Words and All the Year<br />

Round. Gadshill edn, introd by A. Lang and illustr A. J.<br />

Goodman. 2 vols.<br />

1900 <strong>The</strong> Holly Tree Inn and <strong>The</strong> seven poor travellers, introd by W.<br />

Jerrold.<br />

New York 1906 Stories from the Christmas numbers <strong>of</strong> Household<br />

Words and All the Year Round 1852–1867, introd and notes by C.<br />

Dickens the younger.<br />

1908 <strong>The</strong> Holly Tree Inn and A Christmas tree, introd and illustr G.<br />

A. Williams.<br />

1910 Christmas stories, Everyman’s Lib, introd by G. K. Chesterton.<br />

New York 1911 Christmas stories, introd and notes by A. Lang, J.<br />

Forster, P. Fitzgerald et al.<br />

New York 1927 A Christmas tree and What Christmas is as we grow<br />

older. Introd by W. L. Phelps.<br />

1956 Christmas stories, New Oxford Illus edn, introd by M. Lane.<br />

1996 Christmas stories, Everyman Dickens, ed with introd and<br />

notes by R. Glancy.<br />

Studies and appreciations<br />

Ellis, F. M. Dickens’s Christmas stories. Christian Realm Dec 1903.<br />

Fitzgerald, P. Boz and Christmas. Pears’ Christmas Annual 1904.<br />

Readings<br />

For reading-texts <strong>of</strong> individual items, see under Novels, Christmas books,<br />

Christmas stories, above.<br />

<strong>Bibliography</strong><br />

Stonehouse, J. H. A first bibliography <strong>of</strong> the reading editions <strong>of</strong><br />

Dickens’s works. In his edn <strong>of</strong> Sikes and Nancy, 1921.<br />

Collected editions<br />

<strong>The</strong> poor traveller; Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn; and Mrs Gamp. 1858<br />

(priv ptd), 1858, nd.<br />

Barbox brothers; <strong>The</strong> boy at Mugby; and <strong>The</strong> signalman: three readings,<br />

each in one chapter. [1866] (priv ptd).<br />

Bardell and Pickwick; Mr Chops the dwarf; Mr Bob Sawyer’s party:<br />

three readings, each in one chapter. nd (priv ptd).<br />

<strong>The</strong> readings <strong>of</strong> Dickens, as condensed by himself. Boston 1868,<br />

London 1883, 1907. 10 readings. Items also issued separately<br />

Boston 1867–8.<br />

Readings from the works <strong>of</strong> Dickens as arranged and read by<br />

himself. Ed J. Hollingshead 1907. 10 readings.<br />

Charles Dickens: the public readings. Ed P. Collins, Oxford 1975.<br />

Charles Dickens: Sikes and Nancy and other public readings. Ed P.<br />

Collins, Oxford 1983 (World’s Classics edn).<br />

Contemporary accounts<br />

See notes in Pilgrim Letters from 1854 onwards for many further<br />

accounts.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Times 2 Jan 1854, 8 Jan 1869.<br />

Leader 4 July 1857.<br />

Saturday Rev 19 June 1858, 9 May 1868.<br />

[Hollingshead, J.] Critic 4 Sep 1858; rptd in his Today vol 2, 1865 and<br />

his Miscellanies vol 3, 1874; also as Introd to his 1907 edn <strong>of</strong><br />

Readings, above.<br />

Manchester Guardian 1861–7; Dickensian 34 1938.<br />

Harper’s Weekly 28 Dec 1867.<br />

Yates, E. Tinsley’s Mag Feb 1869.<br />

Illus London News 19 Mar 1870.<br />

Field, K. Pen photographs <strong>of</strong> Dickens’s readings. Boston [1868], 1871<br />

(rev and enlarged). See her diary in L. Whiting, Kate Field: a<br />

record, 1899.<br />

Kent, W. C. M. Dickens as a reader. 1872, Farnborough 1971, New<br />

York 1973.<br />

Dolby, G. Dickens as I knew him: the story <strong>of</strong> the reading tours<br />

1866–70. 1885, 1912, New York 1970. See J. G. Ollé, Dickens and<br />

Dolby, Dickensian 54 1958.<br />

Murray, D. C. Recollections. 1908. Ch 4.<br />

Studies and appreciations<br />

Dexter, W. For one night only: an account <strong>of</strong> the famous readings.<br />

Dickensian 37–8 1941–2.<br />

Dexter, W. <strong>The</strong> readings in America. Dickensian 38 1942.<br />

Dexter, W. (‘L. A. Kennethe’). <strong>The</strong> unique reading books. Dickensian<br />

39 1943.<br />

Murphy, T. and R. Dickens as a pr<strong>of</strong>essional reader. Quart Jnl <strong>of</strong><br />

Speech 33 1947.<br />

Fielding, K. J. Dickens and Thomas C. Evans. N & Q 186 Mar 1951. See<br />

G. G. Grubb, Dickensian 48 1952.<br />

Williams, E. Readings from Dickens. Introd by B. Darwin 1953<br />

(limited edn), 1954. Williams’s Notes on the adaptations compare<br />

his versions with Dickens’s.<br />

Murphy, T. Interpretation in the Dickens period. Quart Jnl <strong>of</strong><br />

Speech 41 1955.<br />

Gordon, J. D. (ed). Mrs Gamp: a facsimile <strong>of</strong> the author’s prompt<br />

copy. New York 1956. Discusses Dickens’s methods.<br />

Gordon, J. D. Reading for pr<strong>of</strong>it: the other career <strong>of</strong> Dickens. BNYPL<br />

Sep 1958. Also pbd separately.<br />

Collins, P. Dickens’s public readings: the performer and the novelist.<br />

Stud in the Novel 1 1969.<br />

Charles Dickens<br />

1241 | 1242

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