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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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Quart Mag, see Wellesley vol 5, for those to other journals, see the bibliography<br />

by Edwards listed above.<br />

Translations<br />

Hoey translated 35 books from Fr into Eng, including two <strong>of</strong> Jules Verne’s<br />

novels, and contributed to two other books. <strong>The</strong>se are listed in the bibliography<br />

by Edwards.<br />

Attributed works<br />

William Tinsley, in his Random recollections <strong>of</strong> an old publisher<br />

(1900), asserted that Hoey was the author <strong>of</strong> 1 novel pbd as the work <strong>of</strong><br />

Edmund Yates, A righted wrong (3 vols 1870), and pt-author <strong>of</strong> 4 others,<br />

Land at last (3 vols 1865), A forlorn hope (3 vols 1867), Black sheep (3 vols<br />

1867),and <strong>The</strong> rock ahead (3 vols 1868). Yates’s family and friends disputed<br />

the assertion and Hoey herself did not corroborate it. <strong>The</strong>re is insufficient evidence<br />

to justify the attribution <strong>of</strong> the novels in question to Hoey, even conjecturally.<br />

<strong>The</strong> arguments for and against her possible authorship, or<br />

pt-authorship, are considered by Edwards in the introd to his bibliography <strong>of</strong><br />

Hoey’s works.<br />

§2<br />

Tinsley, W. Random recollections <strong>of</strong> an old publisher. 1900.<br />

Escott, T. Anthony Trollope: his work, associates and literary originals.<br />

1913. According to Escott, Trollope helped spread the story<br />

about Hoey’s authorship <strong>of</strong> parts or the whole <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong><br />

Edmund Yates’s novels.<br />

Shaw, C. M. Bernard’s brethren. 1939. Bernard Shaw was Hoey’s<br />

cousin.<br />

Edwards, P. D. Dickens’s ‘young men’: George Augustus Sala,<br />

Edmund Yates, and the world <strong>of</strong> Victorian journalism. Aldershot<br />

1997. [pde]<br />

‘Anthony Hope’, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins<br />

1863–1933<br />

§1<br />

A man <strong>of</strong> mark. 1890, 1895.<br />

Father Stafford. 1891.<br />

Mr Witt’s widow: a frivolous tale. 1892.<br />

A change <strong>of</strong> air. 1893.<br />

Half a hero. 2 vols 1893.<br />

Sport Royal and other stories. 1893.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Dolly dialogues. 1894, 1896, [1901].<br />

<strong>The</strong> god in the car. 2 vols 1894.<br />

<strong>The</strong> indiscretion <strong>of</strong> the Duchess: being a story concerning two<br />

ladies, a nobleman, and a necklace. Bristol 1894, (as Arrowsmith’s<br />

Christmas Annual, [1897]).<br />

<strong>The</strong> prisoner <strong>of</strong> Zenda: being the history <strong>of</strong> three months in the life<br />

<strong>of</strong> an <strong>English</strong> gentleman. Bristol [1894]; ed R. L. Green 1966 (EL)<br />

(with Rupert <strong>of</strong> Hentzau, below).<br />

<strong>The</strong> chronicles <strong>of</strong> Count Antonio. 1895.<br />

Comedies <strong>of</strong> courtship. 1896.<br />

<strong>The</strong> heart <strong>of</strong> Princess Osra. 1896.<br />

Phroso: a romance. 1897.<br />

Rupert <strong>of</strong> Hentzau: being the sequel to a story by the same writer<br />

entitled the Prisoner <strong>of</strong> Zenda. Bristol [1898].<br />

Simon Dale. 1898.<br />

<strong>The</strong> King’s mirror. 1899.<br />

Quisanté. 1900.<br />

Tristram <strong>of</strong> Blent: an episode in the story <strong>of</strong> an ancient house. 1901.<br />

<strong>The</strong> intrusions <strong>of</strong> Peggy. 1902.<br />

Double harness. 1904.<br />

A servant <strong>of</strong> the public. 1905.<br />

Sophy <strong>of</strong> Kravonia. Bristol 1906.<br />

Tales <strong>of</strong> two people. 1907.<br />

<strong>The</strong> great Miss Driver. 1908.<br />

Dialogue. 1909. Eng Assoc lecture.<br />

Second string. 1910.<br />

Mrs Maxon protests. 1911.<br />

<strong>The</strong> New (German) Testament: some texts and a commentary. 1914.<br />

Militarism, German and British. 1915.<br />

A young man’s year. 1915.<br />

Why Italy is with the Allies. 1917.<br />

Captain Dieppe. [1918.]<br />

Beaumaroy home from the wars. 1919.<br />

Lucinda. [1920.]<br />

Little Tiger: a novel. [1925.]<br />

Memories and notes. [1927.]<br />

§2<br />

Mallet, C. Anthony Hope and his books: being the authorized life <strong>of</strong><br />

Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins. 1935.<br />

Putt, S. G. <strong>The</strong> prisoner <strong>of</strong> the prisoner <strong>of</strong> Zenda: Hope and the<br />

novel <strong>of</strong> society. EIC 6 1956.<br />

Margaret Raine Hunt, Mrs Alfred W. Hunt<br />

1831–1912<br />

§1<br />

Magdalen Wynyard. By Averil Beaumont (pseud). 1872.<br />

Thornicr<strong>of</strong>t’s Model. By Averil Beaumont (pseud). 1873.<br />

Under seal <strong>of</strong> confession. By Averil Beaumont (pseud). 1874.<br />

This indenture witnesseth. 3 vols 1875.<br />

<strong>The</strong> hazard <strong>of</strong> the die. 3 vols 1878.<br />

Basildon. 2 vols 1879, New York 1879.<br />

<strong>The</strong> leaden casket. New York 1880. Novel.<br />

<strong>The</strong> posy ring. New York 1881 (rptd from Gentleman’s Annual 1880).<br />

Barrington’s fate. 1883, Boston 1883.<br />

Self-condemned. 3 vols 1883.<br />

Our grandmothers’ gowns. 1884.<br />

That other person. 3 vols 1885, New York 1887, Philadelphia 1887.<br />

Richmondshire. Illustr J. M. W. Turner, with descriptions by M.<br />

Hunt and an introd by M. B. Huish. 1891.<br />

Mrs Juliet. 1892.<br />

A black squire. 1894.<br />

<strong>The</strong> governess. Preface by Ford Madox Ford. 1912. With Violet Hunt.<br />

Editions<br />

Grimm’s household tales. Tr and ed Margaret Hunt, etc. Introd by<br />

A. Lang 1884. [md]<br />

William Henry Hudson 1841–1922<br />

‘John Oliver Hobbes’ | William Henry Hudson<br />

Bibliographies<br />

Wilson, G. F. A bibliography <strong>of</strong> the writings <strong>of</strong> Hudson. 1922.<br />

Collections<br />

Collected works. 24 vols 1922–3.<br />

A Hudson anthology, arranged by Edward Garnett. 1924.<br />

Hudson’s South American romances: <strong>The</strong> purple land; Green mansions;<br />

El Ombú [etc]. 1930.<br />

Birds <strong>of</strong> wing and other wild things: selections from the works <strong>of</strong><br />

Hudson by H. F. B. Fox. 1930.<br />

<strong>The</strong> best <strong>of</strong> Hudson. Ed O. Shepard, New York 1949.<br />

Works: uniform edition. 1951– .<br />

§1<br />

<strong>The</strong> purple land that England lost: travels and adventures in the<br />

Banda Oriental, South America. 2 vols 1885.<br />

A crystal age. 1887 (anon), 1906 (with signed preface).<br />

Ralph Herne. In Youth 12 1888, New York 1923 (limited edn).<br />

Hudson’s first story; not separately rptd in England, but<br />

included in Collected works, 1922–3, above.<br />

Fan: the story <strong>of</strong> a young girl’s life. 3 vols 1892. Pbd under the pseud<br />

‘Henry Harford’.<br />

1581 | 1582

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