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The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature ... - uogenglish

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<strong>The</strong> secret terror. 1909.<br />

Mary Pillenger. 1912.<br />

More about Froggy: a sequel to Froggy’s little brother. [1914.]<br />

Opened doors. <strong>The</strong> story <strong>of</strong> Sonny Baba. 1932, 1945.<br />

Also wrote a number <strong>of</strong> religious bks.<br />

E. J. Brett, Edwin John Brett 1828–95<br />

Boys <strong>of</strong> England cricket guide. 1867.<br />

Brett’s illustrated naval history <strong>of</strong> Great Britain from the earliest<br />

period to the present time. 1871.<br />

Brett’s housekeeper and guide. 1872.<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s Harkaway series <strong>of</strong> stories. Vol 1 containing Jack<br />

Harkaway’s schooldays, complete with numerous illustrations<br />

and coloured plates. 1877.<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s Jack Harkaway among the brigands. 1878?<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s Jack Harkaway’s schooldays. 1880.<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s Jack Harkaway and his son’s adventures in<br />

Australia. 1899.<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s Jack Harkaway and his son’s adventures in Greece.<br />

1899.<br />

A pictorial and descriptive record <strong>of</strong> the origin and development <strong>of</strong><br />

arms and armour. 1894.<br />

Edwin J. Brett’s adventures <strong>of</strong> Young Jack Harkaway and his boy<br />

tinker . . . sometimes attributed to Bracebridge Hemying. 1900.<br />

Brett was a prolific author <strong>of</strong> sensational novels for adults, bks on armour and<br />

the editor <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> boys’ sensational weeklies.<br />

C. E. Broad<br />

Mary Lorn: the story <strong>of</strong> an ocean waif. A tale for the young. Glasgow<br />

1879.<br />

Janie Brockman<br />

Bert. nd.<br />

Buffer’s best and his father’s son. nd.<br />

Scrap: or the mystery <strong>of</strong> Davington caves. A story for boys and girls.<br />

nd (illus).<br />

Seven o’clock. A home story for home loving children. 1884.<br />

Worth doing. 1890 (illus).<br />

Right side up. [1895.]<br />

<strong>The</strong> old tin box: or a missing legacy. 1900.<br />

Frances Freeling Broderip, née Hood 1830–78<br />

Way side fancies. 1857.<br />

<strong>The</strong> orphans <strong>of</strong> Elfhold, and other stories. Containing the poor<br />

cousin, <strong>The</strong> young forester. [186?]<br />

Funny fables for little folks. 1860 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

Chrysal: or a story with an end. 1861 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

Fairyland: or recreation for the rising generation by the late Thomas<br />

and Jane Hood, their son and daughter. 1861 (ed F. F. Broderip,<br />

illustr T. Hood).<br />

Tiny tadpole, and other tales. 1862 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

My grandmother’s budget <strong>of</strong> stories and songs. 1863 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

Peter Drake’s dream. 1863, 1869.<br />

<strong>The</strong> daisy and her friends: simple tales and stories for children. 1864<br />

(illus), 1869.<br />

Wee Maggie. 1864.<br />

Crosspatch, the crickets and the counterpane: a patchwork <strong>of</strong> story<br />

and song. 1865 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

Merry songs for little verses. 1865 (illus).<br />

Mamma’s morning gossips: or little bits for little birds. Being easy<br />

lessons for a month. 1866 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

Wild roses: or simple stories <strong>of</strong> country life. 1867 (illus).<br />

<strong>The</strong> daisy and her friends: simple tales and stories for children. 1869.<br />

Tales <strong>of</strong> the toys, told by themselves. 1869 (illustr T. Hood).<br />

<strong>The</strong> whispers <strong>of</strong> a shell: or stories from the sea. 1871 (illus).<br />

Merry songs for little voices. 1864 (illus). With T. Hood.<br />

Edited works by Tom Hood.<br />

Emily Brodie<br />

Rough the terrier: his life and adventures. 1879.<br />

Lonely Jack and his friends at Sunnyside. 1882, [1893?].<br />

Little Nell the flower seller. [1890.]<br />

Old Christie’s cabin. [1890.]<br />

Right about face: or Ben the Gordon boy. 1891, 1896.<br />

Norman and Elsie: or two little prisoners. [1894.]<br />

Also pbd novels for adults.<br />

Mary Isabella Irwin Brotherton<br />

Poems. 1855, Brussels 1855 (2nd edn).<br />

Arthur Brandon. 2 vols 1856.<br />

Respectable sinners. 1863, 1865.<br />

Old acquaintance. 1874.<br />

Rosemary for remembrance. 1895. Poems.<br />

Louisa Brown<br />

<strong>The</strong> heathen mythology in easy and pleasing verses . . . intended for<br />

the instruction <strong>of</strong> young ladies. 1810.<br />

Historical questions on the Kings <strong>of</strong> England in verse. Calculated to<br />

fix in the minds <strong>of</strong> children. 1815.<br />

‘Maggie Brown’, Margaret Hamer, later<br />

Andrewes<br />

Creatures tame. [1884.]<br />

Little mothers and their children. [1884.]<br />

Our schoolday hours. [1884.]<br />

Our holiday hours. 1887.<br />

Up and down the garden. [1887.]<br />

Wandering ways. 1889.<br />

Wanted a king: or how Merle set the nursery rhymes to rights. 1890.<br />

Rub-a-dub tales – firelight stories. [1892.]<br />

Sunday stories for small people. [1893.]<br />

Bright tales and funny pictures. 1894.<br />

Two old ladies, two foolish fairies and a tom cat. 1897.<br />

Kurus: the King <strong>of</strong> the Cannibal islands. 1900.<br />

Frances Browne 1816–79<br />

Henrietta Bowman | Jane Euphemia Browne<br />

<strong>The</strong> Ericksons. <strong>The</strong> clever boy: or consider another. Two stories for<br />

my young friends. 1852.<br />

Granny’s wonderful chair and its tales <strong>of</strong> fairy times. 1856, 1871<br />

(illustr M. S. Lucas), 1906 (ed D. Radford, EL), 1963 (ed R. L. Green).<br />

See also col 1144.<br />

‘A Nobody’, Gordon Frederick Browne 1858–1932<br />

Nonsense for somebody, anybody or everybody particularly the<br />

baby body. [1896.]<br />

Some more nonsense for the same bodies as before. [1896.]<br />

Jane Euphemia Browne, later Saxby 1811–98<br />

<strong>The</strong> dove on the cross. 1849, 1853, 1859.<br />

<strong>The</strong> child. From the Dove on the cross. 1862.<br />

Sam Bolton’s cottage: and what kept his wife from church. 1865.<br />

1757 | 1758

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