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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Lamplighter and other novelettes). <strong>The</strong> account <strong>of</strong> Wainewright<br />

is by John Camden Hotten.<br />

Matchett, W. Thomas Griffiths Wainewright: a notable Dickens<br />

model. Dickensian 2 1906.<br />

Matchett, W. <strong>The</strong> lesson <strong>of</strong> Hunted down. Dickensian 6 1910.<br />

Curling, J. Janus Weathercock: the life <strong>of</strong> Thomas Griffiths<br />

Wainewright. 1938. Ch 7, As Dickens saw him.<br />

Procter, A. A. Legends and lyrics, with an introduction by Charles<br />

Dickens. New edn, with addns, illus 1866. Introd included in<br />

later edns and in the Complete works, 1905.<br />

Holiday romance. Our Young Folks (Boston) Jan, Mar, Apr, May<br />

1868; rptd in All the Year Round 25 Jan, 8 Feb, 14 Mar, 4 Apr 1868;<br />

[1875] (Charles Dickens edn). Rptd 1920 with decorations by D. M.<br />

Palmer; pt 1 (<strong>The</strong> trial <strong>of</strong> William Tinkling) [1912] with illustrations<br />

by S. B. Pearce; pt 2 (<strong>The</strong> magic fishbone) [1911] with illustrations<br />

by S. B. Pearce; [1921] by F. D. Bedford; Oxford 1939 by P.<br />

Bray; by H. Knight 1964. New York 1976 facs <strong>of</strong> Our Young Folks<br />

as <strong>The</strong> king <strong>of</strong> the golden river, A Holiday romance, Petsetilla’s<br />

posy, by J. Ruskin, C. Dickens and T. Hood. Rptd 1995 Everyman<br />

Dickens, Holiday romance and other stories for children, ed G.<br />

Avery, with illustrations by G. C. White and J. Gilbert.<br />

George Silverman’s explanation. Atlantic Monthly Jan–Mar 1867;<br />

rptd in All the Year Round 1, 15, 29 Feb 1868; [1875] (Charles<br />

Dickens edn, with Drood); Northridge CA 1984, introd and notes<br />

by H. Stone.<br />

Batterson, R. F. <strong>The</strong> manuscript and text <strong>of</strong> Dickens’s George<br />

Silverman’s explanation. PBSA 73 1979.<br />

<strong>The</strong> great international walking match <strong>of</strong> February 29th, 1868<br />

(broadside, priv pbd, Boston).<br />

East London Hospital for Children, reprinted by permission <strong>of</strong><br />

Charles Dickens esq from All the Year Round Dec 19th 1868. nd.<br />

Original mag title, New uncommercial samples: A small star in<br />

the east.<br />

Religious opinions <strong>of</strong> the late Reverend Chauncey Hare<br />

Townshend, published as directed in his will, by his literary<br />

executor [Charles Dickens]. 1869. Explanatory introd by Dickens.<br />

An unpublished satirical sketch by Dickens. Ed and introd by G.<br />

Storey. Dickensian 74 1978.<br />

Supposititious article<br />

Women in the home. Preface to A summary account <strong>of</strong> prizes for<br />

common things <strong>of</strong>fered and awarded by Miss Burdett Coutts at<br />

the Whitelands Training Institute. 1856 [by A. B. Coutts, copied<br />

by Dickens]. See K. J. Fielding, Women in the home: an article<br />

Dickens did not write, Dickensian 47 1951.<br />

Periodicals edited by Dickens<br />

Dickens contributed many items to his periodicals and, particularly for his<br />

weeklies (in which almost all contributions were unsigned), accepted responsibility<br />

for the tenor as well as the quality <strong>of</strong> whatever he pbd; so he <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

silently rewrote or otherwise amended his colleagues’ work. Many stories<br />

and essays by other contributors were rptd, especially in America, as his<br />

work.<br />

Bibliographies<br />

B. W. Matz. Writings wrongly attributed to Dickens. Chambers’s Jnl<br />

16 Aug 1924, rptd in Dickensian 21 1925. Incomplete.<br />

‘T. Kent Brumleigh’ (T. W. Hill). Journalistics. Dickensian 48 1952. A<br />

list <strong>of</strong> Dickens’s journalistic works.<br />

<strong>The</strong> letters <strong>of</strong> Charles Dickens. Ed M. House and G. Storey, Oxford<br />

1965 (Pilgrim edn). Vol 1 Appendix F.<br />

Lohrli, A. Household Words: a weekly journal 1850–1859 conducted<br />

by Charles Dickens. Toronto 1973. Table <strong>of</strong> contents, list <strong>of</strong> contributors<br />

and their contributions based on the Household Words<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice book.<br />

DeVries, D. Dickens’s apprentice years: the making <strong>of</strong> a novelist.<br />

Appendix A. Hassocks 1976.<br />

Oppenlander, E. A. Dickens’s All the Year Round: descriptive index<br />

and contributor list. Troy NY 1984.<br />

Atkinson, D. Appendix: Dickens’s journalism. In <strong>The</strong> Dickens<br />

index, ed N. Bentley, M. Slater and N. Burgis, Oxford 1988.<br />

M. Slater (ed). Dickens’ journalism. 1995 (Everyman Dickens edn).<br />

Vol 2 Appendix B, vol 3 Appendix C.<br />

Periodicals<br />

Bentley’s Miscellany. Monthly from Jan 1837. Dickens was its first<br />

editor and resigned 31 Jan 1839. Contents included Oliver Twist<br />

and sundry shorter items, mostly signed; see below.<br />

Prospectus for Bentley’s Miscellany. Ptd from Dickens’s ms. In <strong>The</strong><br />

letters <strong>of</strong> Charles Dickens, ed M. House and G. Storey, Oxford<br />

1965 (Pilgrim edn). Vol 1 Appendix D.<br />

Extraordinary Gazette. Speech <strong>of</strong> his Mightiness on opening the<br />

second number <strong>of</strong> Bentley’s Miscellany. 1837. Pam, illustr H. K.<br />

Browne. Rptd with illustration, Dickensian 26 1930, 34 1938.<br />

Daily News. From 21 Jan 1846. Dickens was its first editor and<br />

resigned 9 Feb 1846. Contents included his Travelling letters, rptd<br />

as Pictures from Italy (see above), also other contributions, mostly<br />

signed. Facs <strong>of</strong> opening no pbd with Jubilee no, 21 Jan 1896.<br />

Dummy issue 19 Jan 1846 (rare) with contributions by Dickens.<br />

Household Words. Weekly 30 Mar 1850–28 May 1859, when it was<br />

incorporated into All the Year Round. Also in monthly pts and 19<br />

half-yearly vols. Cheap edn, 19 vols 1868–73. Charles Dickens the<br />

younger revived the mag and its title 1881. Contents included A<br />

child’s history <strong>of</strong> England, Hard times, Christmas stories and<br />

numerous unsigned essays; see below. Extensive reprinting<br />

Leipzig 1851–6 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 199 as<br />

Household Words. Conducted by Charles Dickens, 36 vols,<br />

Leipzig 1856–9 Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong> British Authors no 376 as<br />

Novels and tales reprinted from Household Words, 11 vols; rptd<br />

1868–73, with variants, 19 vols, also monthly parts; see A. Lohrli<br />

1973 under Bibliographies, above.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Household Narrative <strong>of</strong> Current Events. Monthly Apr 1850–Dec<br />

1855; nos for Jan–Mar 1850 pbd retrospectively. Bound, 6 vols. A<br />

news suppl to Household Words.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Household Words Almanac. Annually 1856, 1857.<br />

All the Year Round. Weekly from 30 Apr 1859. Also in monthly pts<br />

and half-yearly vols. Edited by Dickens until his death, and by C.<br />

Dickens the younger thereafter; incorporated 1895 in the revived<br />

Household Words. Bound, 20 vols 1859–68 (with General index,<br />

1868); new ser 1868–88. Contents included A tale <strong>of</strong> two cities,<br />

<strong>The</strong> uncommercial traveller, Great expectations, Christmas<br />

stories and some unsigned essays; see below.<br />

New weekly illustrated periodical, Once a Week. 1859. Prospectus by<br />

Bradbury & Evans, with a statement, Mr Charles Dickens and his<br />

late publishers, about their differences with him.<br />

Collections from Dickens’s periodicals<br />

Novels and tales reprinted from Household Words, conducted by<br />

Charles Dickens. 11 vols Leipzig 1856–9 (Tauchnitz Collection <strong>of</strong><br />

British Authors no 376).<br />

Reprinted pieces. 1858. Vol 8 <strong>of</strong> the Library edn <strong>of</strong> the Works. 31 anon<br />

contributions to Household Words 1850–6.<br />

Wills, W. H. Old leaves gleaned from Household Words. 1860.<br />

Dedication acknowledges Dickens’s helpful revisions. One essay,<br />

A plated article, appears both here and in Dickens’s Reprinted<br />

pieces, 1858.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Gad’s Hill Gazette. [1860–6]. A family mag mainly ed H. F.<br />

Dickens, to which Dickens contributed. Produced partly in ms<br />

and partly on a small private press, for domestic use only. See<br />

Dickensian 6, July 1910 (facs) and P. Fitzgerald, Recreations <strong>of</strong> a<br />

literary man, vol 1, 1882 (facs). Not rptd; incomplete runs in some<br />

libraries, notably NYPL and Yale.<br />

Dickens, H. F. <strong>The</strong> history <strong>of</strong> the Gad’s Hill Gazette. Dickensian 25<br />

1929.<br />

Charles Dickens<br />

1249 | 1250

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