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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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

1515 | 1516<br />

A duet. A one-act comedy adapted from A duet. Performed 1902. Pbd<br />

1903.<br />

Brigadier Gerard. A four-act comedy. Performed 1906.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fires <strong>of</strong> fate. A four-act modern morality play adapted from <strong>The</strong><br />

tragedy <strong>of</strong> the Korosko. Performed 1909–10.<br />

<strong>The</strong> house <strong>of</strong> Temperley. A melodrama <strong>of</strong> the Ring, adapted from<br />

Rodney Stone. Performed 1910.<br />

A pot <strong>of</strong> caviare. A one-act play adapted from the eponymous short<br />

story (in Round the fire stories 1908). Performed 1910.<br />

<strong>The</strong> speckled band: an adventure <strong>of</strong> Sherlock Holmes. A three-act<br />

play adapted from the eponymous short story, originally <strong>The</strong><br />

Stonor case. Performed 1910, 1911, 1921. Pbd 1912.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crown diamond. An evening with Sherlock Holmes . . .. A oneact<br />

play rewritten as <strong>The</strong> Mazarin stone (Case-book). Performed<br />

1921, pbd 1958.<br />

Poems<br />

Songs <strong>of</strong> action. 1898. 28 poems, most previously pbd.<br />

Songs <strong>of</strong> the road. 1911. 33 poems, most previously unpbd.<br />

<strong>The</strong> guards came through and other poems. 1919. 17 poems, most<br />

unpbd.<br />

Prose<br />

(1) Contemporary history<br />

<strong>The</strong> great Boer war. 1900, rev 1901, 1902.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaign in France and Flanders 1914. 1916.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaign in France and Flanders 1915. 1917.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaign in France and Flanders 1916. 1918.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaign in France and Flanders 1917. 1918.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaign in France and Flanders 1918. 1919.<br />

<strong>The</strong> British campaigns in Europe 1914–18. 1928. (<strong>The</strong> 6 vols reduced<br />

to slightly more than half with new material.)<br />

(2) Literary criticism<br />

<strong>The</strong> immortal memory. 1901. Address to the Edinburgh Burns Club<br />

23 Mar 1901.<br />

Through the magic door. 1907. Remotely based on Before my bookshelf,<br />

6 pt ser in Great Thoughts 5 May–30 June 1894.<br />

<strong>The</strong> future <strong>of</strong> Canadian literature. With an introd by C. and B.<br />

Roden. 1994. Address to Canadian Club <strong>of</strong> Montreal 4 June 1914.<br />

First pbd in Addresses delivered before the Canadian Club <strong>of</strong><br />

Montreal 1914–15 season.<br />

(3) Polemic<br />

<strong>The</strong> war in South Africa – its cause and conduct. 1902.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fiscal question treated in a series <strong>of</strong> three speeches. 1905.<br />

An incursion into diplomacy. 1906.<br />

<strong>The</strong> story <strong>of</strong> Mr George Edalji. 1907. First pbd Daily Telegraph 11, 12<br />

Jan 1907.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crime <strong>of</strong> the Congo. 1909.<br />

Divorce law reform: an essay. [1909.]<br />

Why he is now in favour <strong>of</strong> home rule. 1911. First pbd Belfast<br />

Evening Telegraph 22 Sep 1911.<br />

<strong>The</strong> case <strong>of</strong> Oscar Slater. [1912.]<br />

Civilian national reserve. [1914.]<br />

Great Britain and the next war. 1914. First pbd Fortnightly Rev Feb<br />

1913.<br />

To arms! With preface by F. E. Smith. [1914.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> world war conspiracy: Germany’s long drawn plot against<br />

England. [1914.] First pbd Daily Chron 27 Aug 1914.<br />

<strong>The</strong> German war. 1914. First pbd with previous 3 items Daily Chron<br />

18, 26 Sep, 10, 26 Oct, 23 Nov 1914.<br />

Western wanderings. [1915.] First pbd Cornhill Mag Jan–Apr<br />

1915.<br />

<strong>The</strong> outlook on the war. [1915] First pbd Daily Chron 25 Oct 1915.<br />

An appreciation <strong>of</strong> Sir John French. [1916.] First pbd Daily Chron<br />

20 Dec 1915.<br />

A visit to three fronts June 1916. 1916. First pbd Daily Chron 13, 15,<br />

20, 22, 27, 29 June 1916.<br />

Supremacy <strong>of</strong> the British soldier. [1917.] First pbd Daily Chron 18 Apr<br />

1917.<br />

(4) Autobiography<br />

Memories and adventures. 1924, rev 1930. First pbd Strand Mag<br />

1897, 1900, 1906, 1916–18, 1923–4.<br />

(5) Religion<br />

<strong>The</strong> new revelation. 1918.<br />

Life after death. 1918.<br />

<strong>The</strong> vital message. 1919. First pbd Nash’s Pall Mall Mag May–Oct<br />

1919.<br />

Our reply to the cleric. 1920.<br />

Spiritualism and rationalism with a drastic examination <strong>of</strong> Mr<br />

Joseph M’Cabe. 1920. A reply to Joseph McCabe, Is spiritualism<br />

based on fraud? <strong>The</strong> evidence given by Sir A. C. Doyle and others<br />

drastically examined.<br />

<strong>The</strong> wanderings <strong>of</strong> a spiritualist. 1921. First pbd Weekly Dispatch 29<br />

May–10 July 1921.<br />

<strong>The</strong> coming <strong>of</strong> the fairies. 1921. First pbd in pt Strand Mag Dec 1920,<br />

Mar 1921.<br />

Spiritualism: some straight questions and direct answers. [1922.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> case for spirit photography. [1922.]<br />

Our American adventure. [1923.] First pbd as <strong>The</strong> adventures <strong>of</strong> a<br />

spiritualist in America, Lloyd’s Sunday News 3 Sep–17 Dec 1922.<br />

Our second American adventure. [1924.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> early Christian church and modern spiritualism. [1925.]<br />

Psychic experiences. [1925.] First pbd Pearson’s Mag Apr 1924.<br />

<strong>The</strong> history <strong>of</strong> spiritualism. 2 vols 1926. First pbd Light 7, 14, 21, 28<br />

Feb, 7, 14, 21 Mar, 4, 11, 18 Apr 1925; Strand Mag Sep 1920, May 1921;<br />

Quart Trans <strong>of</strong> the Br College <strong>of</strong> Psychic Science Oct 1922, Oct<br />

1924.<br />

Pheneas speaks: direct spirit communications in the family circle.<br />

1927.<br />

What does spiritualism actually teach and stand for? [1928.]<br />

A word <strong>of</strong> warning. [1928.]<br />

An open letter to those <strong>of</strong> my generation. 1929.<br />

Our African winter. 1929.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Roman Catholic church. A rejoinder. 1929. A reply to Rev<br />

Herbert Thurston, S.J., Modern spiritualism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> edge <strong>of</strong> the unknown. 1930. First pbd Strand Mag 1919–21,<br />

1927–8, etc.<br />

(6) Criminology<br />

Strange studies from life containing three hitherto uncollected<br />

tales. Based on the Annals <strong>of</strong> true crime. A pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> the author by<br />

P. Trevor, ed P. Ruber 1963. First pbd Strand Mag Mar–June 1901.<br />

§2<br />

Criticism<br />

Prothero, R. E. Noticeable books: Micah Clarke. Nineteenth Cent 26,<br />

Aug 1889.<br />

Bell, J. <strong>The</strong> adventures <strong>of</strong> Sherlock Holmes. Bookman (London) Dec<br />

1892.<br />

Some notable beginners in Chambers’s Journal. Chambers’s Jnl 19<br />

Jan 1895. (ACD’s first story, <strong>The</strong> mystery <strong>of</strong> Sassasa Valley, in<br />

Chambers’s 6 Sep 1879.)<br />

Cromwell, A. and H. S. Maclauchlan. Dr Conan Doyle and his<br />

stories. Windsor Mag 4, Oct 1896.<br />

Cromie, R. Dr C. Doyle’s place in modern literature. Twentieth Cent<br />

2, May 1901.<br />

S[idgwick], F. <strong>The</strong> hound <strong>of</strong> the Baskervilles at fault (An open letter<br />

to Dr Watson). <strong>Cambridge</strong> Rev 23, Jan 1902. (Inaugurated the<br />

endless pursuit <strong>of</strong> alleged Watsonian literary solecisms on the<br />

facetious assumption <strong>of</strong> Holmes–Watson actual existence.)

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