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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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

1247 | 1248<br />

Liberator 18 Nov 1842; Chambers’s Jnl 19–26 Nov 1842; [Warren,<br />

S.] Blackwood’s Mag Dec 1842; Bradshaw’s Jnl Dec 1842;<br />

Christian Remembrancer Dec 1842; Knickerbocker Dec 1842; S.,<br />

J. London Univ Mag 1 1842; [Spedding, J.] Edinburgh Rev 76 1843<br />

(enlarged in his Reviews and discussions, 1979. Reply by<br />

Dickens, <strong>The</strong> Times 16 Jan 1843); [Thompson, J. T.] New<br />

Englander Jan 1843; [Felton, C.] North Amer Rev 56 1843;<br />

Southern Literary Messenger Jan 1843; [Wiseman, N.] Dublin<br />

Rev 15 1843; [Hickson, W. E.?] Westminster Rev 40 1843; [Croker,<br />

J. W.] Quart Rev 71 1843; National Quart Rev Sep 1860; Whipple,<br />

E. P. Atlantic Monthly Apr 1877.<br />

Parodies<br />

‘Quickens, Quarles’. <strong>English</strong> notes, intended for very extensive circulation!<br />

Boston 1842; ed J. Jackson and G. H. Sargent, New York<br />

1920. A parody and retort to American notes. Not by E. A. Poe, as<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten conjectured.<br />

‘Buz’. Current American notes. nd. A close parody; includes material<br />

transcribed from American notes.<br />

Studies and appreciations<br />

[Cary, T. G.] Letter to a lady in France with answers to enquiries concerning<br />

the books <strong>of</strong> Capt Marryat and Mr Dickens. Boston 1843,<br />

1844.<br />

[Wood, Henry.] Change for American notes: in letters from London<br />

to New York, by an American lady. 1843.<br />

Overs, John. Evenings <strong>of</strong> a working man, with a preface relative to<br />

the author by Charles Dickens. 1844. See G. G. Grubb, Dickensian<br />

49 1953.<br />

Adshead, J. <strong>The</strong> fictions <strong>of</strong> Dickens on solitary confinement. In his<br />

Prisons and prisoners, 1845. On American notes, ch 7.<br />

Tellkampf, J. L. Remarks on American notes. In his Essays on law<br />

reform, 1859.<br />

Some notes on America to be rewritten: suggested, with respect, to<br />

Charles Dickens esq. Philadelphia 1868.<br />

[Tallack, W.] Dickens’s prison fiction. 1894. Issued by the Howard<br />

Assoc.<br />

Dickensian special numbers on Dickens and America: Aug 1909,<br />

Aug 1910, Sep 1916, Apr 1926, Dec 1941.<br />

Jackson, J. Dickens in Philadelphia. Philadelphia 1912 (priv ptd).<br />

Pictures from Italy<br />

Pictures from Italy, the vignette illustrations on wood by Samuel<br />

Palmer. 1846; Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 103,<br />

Leipzig 1846; 1865 Cheap edn; 1868 Charles Dickens edn; ed D.<br />

Paroissien 1973; 1997, Everyman Dickens, bound with American<br />

notes, ed L. Ormond and F. Schwarzbach. Appeared in part in<br />

Daily News 21 Jan–11 Mar 1846, as Travelling letters written on<br />

the road, by Charles Dickens.<br />

Reviews<br />

Athenaeum 23 May 1846; <strong>The</strong> Times 1 June 1846; Chambers’s Jnl 20<br />

June 1846; London Jnl 20 June 1846; GM July 1846; Tait’s Mag<br />

July 1846; Literary Gazette 18 July 1846; [Murray, P. A.] Dublin<br />

Rev 21 1846; Macphail’s Edinburgh Ecclesiastical Jnl Sep 1846.<br />

Study<br />

‘Savonarolo, Don Jeremy’ [F. S. Mahony]. Facts and figures from Italy,<br />

addressed to Charles Dickens. 1847. Prefatory note by Dickens.<br />

Autobiographical fragment. Written c. 1845–6; not pbd by Dickens.<br />

In Forster, Life bk 1 ch 2.<br />

Circular sent to the friends <strong>of</strong> Leigh Hunt about performances for<br />

his benefit, June 1847; rptd Pilgrim Letters vol 5 appendix B. See<br />

Dickensian 36 1940.<br />

Broadsheet for the friends <strong>of</strong> Leigh Hunt about performances for<br />

his benefit, at Liverpool, July 1847; rptd Pilgrim Letters vol 5<br />

appendix C.<br />

An appeal to fallen women. Pamphlet [1847], written in connection<br />

with Miss Coutts’s Home for fallen women. Rptd in Collected<br />

papers (Nonesuch edn), in Johnson 1952 (Biographies, below), and<br />

in Pilgrim Letters vol 5 appendix D.<br />

Proposed prospectus for the Provident union <strong>of</strong> literature, science<br />

and art, [November] 1847; rptd in Pilgrim Letters vol 5 appendix<br />

E.<br />

Explanation <strong>of</strong> the mark table used in Urania cottage, 29 Aug 1848;<br />

rptd in Pilgrim Letters vol 5 appendix F.<br />

Bill <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> Dickens’s conjuring performances at Bonchurch 1849;<br />

rptd in Pilgrim Letters vol 5 appendix G.<br />

[Charles Dickens]. (Pro<strong>of</strong>.) [Private and Confidential]. Brackets thus<br />

on title page. A pamphlet denouncing the forgeries <strong>of</strong> Thomas<br />

Powell, prepared by Dickens 1849 (priv ptd) and sent to various<br />

<strong>English</strong> and Amer newspapers. See W. Partington, Should a biographer<br />

tell? Atlantic Monthly Aug 1947; rptd with addns,<br />

Dickensian 43 1947 (reply by W. J. Carlton, Atlantic Monthly Aug<br />

1947).<br />

<strong>The</strong> life <strong>of</strong> our Lord, written expressly for his own children, 1849.<br />

1934, 1970, Philadelphia 1981; rptd 1995 in Everyman Dickens,<br />

Holiday romance and other writings for children, ed G. Avery.<br />

Not intended for pbn; written 1846. See Dickensian 30 1934.<br />

Prayer at night. Written for his children, c. 1849. Pbd by J. Suddaby,<br />

Dickensian 5 1909, and in Mr and Mrs Charles Dickens, ed W.<br />

Dexter 1935.<br />

Emigration. [February 1850?]. Unpbd in Dickens’s lifetime; ptd in<br />

Pilgrim Letters vol 6 appendix E.<br />

A child’s history <strong>of</strong> England, with a frontispiece by F. W. Topham (in<br />

each vol). Vol 1 1852, vol 2 1853, vol 3 1854; Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong><br />

British Authors (unnumbered), Leipzig 1853; 1 vol 1863. Slight<br />

variants. Originally appeared intermittently in Household<br />

Words 25 Jan 1851–10 Dec 1853. Illustr Marcus Stone 1873. Rptd<br />

1995 in Everyman Dickens, Holiday romance and other writings<br />

for children, ed G. Avery.<br />

Topham’s illustration to A child’s history <strong>of</strong> England. Dickensian 3<br />

1907.<br />

To be read at dusk. In Keepsake for 1852, ed M. Power; pirated in<br />

Harper’s New Monthly Mag Jan 1852. Rptd 1852 (priv ptd); ed F.<br />

G. Kitton 1898 (with other stories, etc, below). <strong>The</strong> 1852 edn is<br />

probably a forgery; see J. Carter and H. G. Pollard, An enquiry into<br />

the nature <strong>of</strong> certain nineteenth-century pamphlets, 1934, and J.<br />

Carter, TLS 26 July 1934.<br />

<strong>The</strong> late Mr Justice Talfourd. [1854]. Private pre-print <strong>of</strong> the article<br />

in Household Words 25 Mar 1854.<br />

Address <strong>of</strong> the <strong>English</strong> author to the French public, 17 January 1857.<br />

Prefixed to P. Lorain’s authorised trn <strong>of</strong> Nicholas Nickleby, 2 vols<br />

Paris 1857. Rptd in Collected papers (Nonesuch).<br />

<strong>The</strong> lazy tour <strong>of</strong> two idle apprentices. In collaboration with Wilkie<br />

Collins. Originally appeared in Household Words 3–31 Oct 1857.<br />

Rptd [1875] (in part in Joseph Sly, King’s Arms and Royal Hotel,<br />

Lancaster), 1890 (illus), with No thoroughfare and <strong>The</strong> perils <strong>of</strong><br />

certain <strong>English</strong> prisoners (see Christmas numbers, above). Rptd in<br />

part as <strong>The</strong> bride’s chamber, ed with introd by H. Stone, illustr K.<br />

Jacobi, Santa Monica CA 1996.<br />

<strong>The</strong> case <strong>of</strong> the reformers in the [Royal] Literary Fund; stated by<br />

Charles W. Dilke, Charles Dickens and John Forster. [1858] (priv<br />

ptd). Followed by A summary <strong>of</strong> facts in answer to allegations . . .<br />

[1858] (priv ptd by the Committee), and <strong>The</strong> Answer to the<br />

Committee’s summary <strong>of</strong> ‘facts’ [1858] (priv ptd). For Dickens’s<br />

substantial authorship <strong>of</strong> the reformers’ pamphlets, see Speeches,<br />

ed K. J. Fielding, Oxford 1960.<br />

Hunted down: a story, with an account <strong>of</strong> Thomas Griffiths<br />

Wainewright the poisoner. [1870]. Originally in New York Ledger<br />

7–20 Aug, 3 Sep 1859; also in All the Year Round 4–11 Aug 1860;<br />

Leipzig 1860 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 536,<br />

with Uncommercial traveller; Philadelphia [1861] (with

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