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The
Rise of the Tale
A Preliminary Checklist of Collections of Short Fiction
Published 182029
in the Corvey Collection
Tim Killick
I
Conventional studies of the short
fictional form, whilst acknowledging the existence
of the genre in the early nineteenth century, have
nevertheless viewed that period as one of relative
infertility. Ian Reid, for example, despite arguing
that 'the short story is in essence a Romantic form:
the Romantic prose form', describes the output
of short fiction by English writers of the nineteenth
century as 'virtually negligible'. [1]
T. O. Beachcroft, in The Modest Art (1968),
limits his analysis of the Romantic period to three
female authors (Hannah More, Maria Edgeworth, and
Mary Russell Mitford), and of the early nineteenth
century in general declares: 'If, however, we ask
ourselves where are the short stories that correspond
to a single incident, to a chapter of, say, Jane Austen,
the answer is that they do not exist.' [2]
This
consensus is derived in the main from a theoretical
approach that differentiates between the 'true' or
'modern' 'short story' and short fiction in general.
In the case of the former, genre is defined not only
in terms of magnitude but also meritocratically by
stylistic, thematic, and qualitative factors. In the
view of many critics, the short story is a genre that
differs in certain ways from the more diffuse form
of short fiction. In Ian Reid's words, the above stance
contends that 'there may be certain formal characteristics
which distinguish the short story from stories
that just happen to be short.' [3]
In
historical terms, according to this model, which originates
to some extent from Edgar Allan Poe's influential
theorising on the subject, developments in short fiction
are considered to be relatively minor until the 1830s
and 1840s: the decades which saw the advent of certain
key, predominantly American, writers. [4]
Washington Irving is sometimes included here, but
in the main it is Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne,
and Herman Melville who are cited as the founding
fathers of the short story. The works of the above
authors and the subsequent development of the form
in America in the mid-nineteenth century are considered
to dominate the formation of the modern concept of
English language short fiction.
While
there is a strong argument for a substantial increase
in the complexity of the short fictional form in the
works of these American authors, as well as a subsequent
development in the understanding of short fiction
and output of the form in early and mid-Victorian
British writers, the contention underlying the present
report is that the stories of these individuals represent
only a part of the form's generic maturity. It is
hoped that the following checklist will serve as a
starting point for a more dispassionate survey of
the critically neglected works of the period, many
of which found large contemporary readerships. By
not attempting to gauge the merit of its entries,
the report's aim is to move some way beyond the traditional
view of short fictional history as being dominated
by the genius and vision of a few authors, toward
a more inclusive and incremental view of the genesis
of the genre. Wendell Harris, in his comprehensive
British Short Fiction in the Nineteenth Century
(1979), has begun this process by engaging in a far
more thorough critique of some of the period's less
celebrated authors, and by compiling a useful bibliography.
Harris's work, however, charts the genre's development
through the whole of the nineteenth century, and focuses
predominantly on 'the arrival of the true short story
in the 1880s and 1890s'-it therefore contains only
a limited analysis of the particular period now under
view. [5]
The bibliographic appendix to Harris's work contains
forty-seven authors of short fiction, many of whom
issued multiple titles. Of these only ten of the included
titles were published in the 1820s, five of which
are the various parts of Mary Russell Mitford's Our
Village series.
The
checklist's aim, therefore, is to disclose more fully
the 1820s as the period immediately preceding the
traditional focal point for the beginning of the 'modern'
short story. Such an overview will hopefully allow
examination of those trends and innovations which
paved the way for the later important works, as well
as those modes which would die out. Although the works
of this period which do in fact anticipate later modes
provide the greatest interest from a modern perspective,
it is important to remember that these works were
not necessarily indicative of the state of the whole
genre, or recognised as belonging to a certain trend
by contemporary critics or readers: a fact which the
inclusive nature of the checklist will hopefully make
evident. Another point that it is crucial to bear
in mind, one which Wendell Harris is careful to make,
is that the terminology used in any discussion of
pre-twentieth-century short fiction is imposed retrospectively.
That is to say, during the nineteenth century terms
such as 'tale', 'novel', 'sketch', and 'story' had
far looser definitions than we might wish to give
them today, and the works I have listed here would
therefore not have been separated out so decisively
from the general body of fiction at the time.
The
single decade selected, the 1820s, yielded nearly
150 titles, notwithstanding the formal limitations
applied and the fact that only the works present in
the Corvey collection were considered. The chosen
titles are restricted to works published in Britain
which, whilst presented in the form of a conventional
work of fiction, consist of two or more tales. In
some instances the parameters are slightly extended
beyond the decade, most notably in the case of works
published in series. Though some longer works have
been excluded there is no absolute word or page limit.
Exclusions
from the checklist include:
Works containing two very
long tales, both of which are essentially novels:
e.g. the first two Series of Sayings and Doings;
or, Sketches from Life (1828) by Theodore
Hook are included, but the Third Series, which contains
only two tales in 3 volumes.
Works consisting of an assembly
of very short sketches, jokes, anecdotes and observations:
e.g. the anonymous work The Humourist: A Collection
of Entertaining Tales, Anecdotes, Repartees, Witty
Sayings, Epigrams, Bon Mots, Jeu d'esprits, &c.
(1819-22), which contains several medium-length
tales but in the main consists of anecdotal quotations
and stories only a few lines in length.
Works that, whilst being
told in a fictional style, are essentially non-fictional:
e.g. Tales of a Grandfather (1828-31) by
Walter Scott, a series of historical narratives
for children.
Works that, though containing
some tales, consist mainly of other literary forms-poetry,
non-narrative essays, drama etc.: e.g. A Fireside
Book, or the Account of a Christmas Spent at Old
Court (1828) by Charles Taylor includes
six tales but in the main consists of lengthy sequences
of the central narrative and a large number of poems.
Single tales, published
in one volume (one effect of this is to exclude
a large number of shorter evangelical tales and
tales for youth proliferating in this period, which
form a distinct genre of their own and deserve separate
study).
Inevitably,
some of the works included in the checklist contain
material similar to that detailed above. Judgements
have been made regarding the balance of relevant and
irrelevant material in each text considered and as
such the list cannot be considered in any way exhaustive
or beyond revision. The checklist also excludes tales
published exclusively in journals or magazines. 
The
form of the entries is as follows:
- Author, if known. Where the authorial information
is not present on the title-page square brackets
have been used.
- Full title, as given on the title page. Capitalisation
has been standardised.
- Publishing details and date.
- Printer details, taken from colophon; number
of volumes if more than one; format details.
- Holding library (normally Corvey): Corvey
ISBN number; entry number for EN2 (xEN2 is used
if the work is not present).
- Notes, including:
Details of inscription/dedication
(if present).
Details of author (square
brackets surround researched details).
Number of tales and range
of tale length.
Titles and length of individual
tales (only given in some cases).
Details of further editions
and source of information. Up to five British
and Irish further editions are listed, with
authority; further subsequent editions up to
1870 are numbered in parenthesis. The first
American edition is given as are the first French
and German translations.
Any other relevant information.
Abbreviations
| BL |
British Library. |
| Blanck |
Jacob Blanck, A Bibliography of American
Literature, 9 vols. (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1955-91). |
| BLC |
British Library Catalogue. |
| BN |
Catalogue of the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris. |
| C |
Cambridge University Library. |
| Corvey |
Corvey, Fürstliche Bibliothek zu Corvey. |
| CME |
Corvey Microfiche Edition. |
| E |
National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh. |
| Edn. |
Edition. |
| EN2 |
Vol. 2 of Peter Garside, James Raven, and Rainer
Schöwerling (eds.), The English Novel, 1770-1829:
A Bibligraphical Survey of Prose Fiction Published
in the British Isles (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2000). |
| xEN2 |
Not in above. |
| O |
Bodleian Library, Oxford. |
| OCLC |
OCLC WorldCat online database. |
| MGD |
M. G. Devonshire, The English Novel in France
1830-1870 (London: University of London Press,
1929). |
| MH |
Harvard University. |
| NSTC |
Nineteenth-Century Short-Title Catalogue
[1801-70], 61 vols. (Newcastle-upon-Tyne:
Avero Publications, 1984-95); CD-ROM (1996). |
| NUC |
National Union Catalog. |
| RS |
Rainer Schöwerling and Verena Ebbes, 'Die Rezeption
englisher Romane in Deutschland 1790-1834. Eine
Bibliographie' (project in progress at the University
of Paderborn). |
| Sadleir |
Michael Sadleir, XIX Century Fiction: A Bibliographical
Record based on his own Collection. 2 vols.
(London: Constable, 1951). |
| t.p. |
title page. |
| Wolff |
Robert Lee Wolff, Nineteenth-Century Fiction:
A Bibliographical Catalogue, 5 vols.
(New York and London: Garland, 1981-86). |
| @ |
Prefixes range of tale length, in pages, contained
in particular work or volume. |

Notes
1. Ian
Reid, The Short Story (London: Methuen, 1977),
pp. 2829.
2. T.
O. Beachcroft, The Modest Art: A Survey of the
Short Story in English (London: Oxford University
Press, 1968), p. 88.
3. Reid,
p. 4 (Reid's italics and parenthesis).
4. See
Poe's reviews of Hawthorne's Twice-Told Tales,
first published in Graham's Magazine
(April and May 1842). Reprinted in The Complete
Works of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. James A. Harrison,
vol. 11: Literary Criticism 4 (New York:
AMS Press, 1979), pp. 102-13.
5. Wendell
V. Harris, British Short Fiction in the Nineteenth
Century: A Literary and Bibliographic Guide
(Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1979),
p. 12.

II
-
ANON.
The Bride of Obeyda; and Other Tales.
In Three Volumes. By the Author of Montville,
or the Dark Heir of the Castle.
London: Printed by A. K. Newman and Co.,
1827.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-street, London.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47122-2; EN2 1827: 1.
*Vol. I-300p: The Bride of Obeyda (1-245); The
Matron and her Sons (247-300). Vol. II-295p:
One-Eyed Beauty (1-39); Wood of Rooverstane
(41-136); A Story of Edgewolde (137-295). Vol.
III-285p: Adventure of a Half-Pay (1-66); The
Lover and the Two Friends (67-285).
-
ANON. [Various]
Christmas Tales. 1825. To Be Continued
Annually.
London: Printed for R. Ackerman, 101, Strand;
and Sold by all the Booksellers in the United
Kingdom, 1825.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street,
London. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51005-8; xEN2.
*Preface claims these are works intended for,
but never published in, the Forget Me Not
periodical.
372p: 10 Tales @ 20-60p.
Annual continuation unlikely, no record of later
issues in NSTC or OCLC.
-
ANON.
English Life; or Manners at Home. In
Four Pictures. In Two Volumes.
London: Printed for G. Wightman, Fleet Street,
1825.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet Street. 2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47608-9; EN2 1825: 4.
*Vol. I-279p: Lord William (1-94); A Tale of
Everyday Life (95-279). Vol. II-286p: A Tale
of Everyday Life [cont.] (1-63); The Cure for
Love (65-107); A Tale Somewhat Serious (109-286).
Further edn: 1829 (Sadleir 84a).
-
ANON.
Good-Nature: or, Sensibility: And Other
Tales. By Miss Aimwell [pseud.]. In Three
Volumes.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.,
Leadenhall-Street, 1822.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-Street. 3
vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47029-3; EN2 1822: 15.
*Vol. I-271p: Good-Nature: Or, Sensibility (1-271).
Vol. II-277p: Good-Nature: Or, Sensibility [cont.]
(1-208); The Heiress of Castlebrook: Or, Family
Pride (209-77). Vol. III-258p: The Heiress of
Castlebrook: Or, Family Pride [cont.] (1-144);
Silence; or, the Sisters (145-258).
Miss Aimwell given as pseud. in NSTC.
-
ANON.
My Grandfather's Farm; or, Pictures of
Rural Life.
Edinburgh: Published by Oliver & Boyd,
Tweedale-Court; and Geo. B. Whittaker, London,
1829.
Printed by Oliver & Boyd, Edinburgh. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51100-3; EN2 1829: 6.
*335p: 22 Sketches and Tales @ 10-25p.
-
ANON.
New Landlord's Tales; or, Jedediah in
the South. In Two Volumes.
London: Printed for T. Hookham, Old Bond
Street, 1825.
Printed by S. Gosnell, Little Queen Street,
London. 2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51102-X; EN2 1825: 9.
*Vol. I-347p: Introductory, by Jedediah Cleishbotham
(1-16); But Just in Time (17-147); Friar Robert's
Walk (148-229); The Red Man of Nagy Retsky (230-347).
Vol. II-351p: Constancy, in the Nineteenth Century
(1-112); Substance of Some Traditions respecting
Grimmfer the Wizard (113-351).
-
ANON.
The Night Watch; or, Tales of the Sea.
In Two Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1828.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street,
London. 2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48227-5; EN2 1828: 11.
*Vol. I-328p: The Captain; or, the Life of a
Naval Officer (1-295); The Monster; or, Impressment
(299-328). Vol. II-340p: The Monster; or, Impressment
[cont.] (1-39); The Boatswain (79-161); The
Doctor (163-207); The Prisoner of War (209-340).
-
ANON.
Odd Moments; or, Time Beguiled.
London: For Thomas Boys, Ludgate Hill, 1825.
Printed by Ibotson and Palmer, Savoy Street,
Strand. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51107-0; EN2 Appendix B: 3.
*290p: The Sisters (1-76); Louisa (77-142);
Agatha; or Contrition (143-210); More Truth
than Fiction (211-90).
Further edn: 1834 (NSTC).
-
ANON.
More Odd Moments. By The Author of "Odd
Moments."
London: Published for the author, by J.
A. Hessey, 93, Fleet Street, 1826.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51112-7; xEN2.
*Dedication: 'To my Beloved Mother.' Also includes
subscription list.
304p: The Adventures of a Locket (1-72); The
Rambles of a Subaltern (73-139); Think Twice
before You Act (141-304).
-
ANON.
Old Wives' Tales.
London: F. C. & J. Rivington, No. 62,
St. Paul's Church-Yard, and No. 3, Waterloo-Place,
Pall-Mall, 1821.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51109-7; EN2 1821: 10.
*195p: The Crickett Family (1-120); Barnaby
Byas (121-95).
-
ANON.
Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern
Nations. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for W. Simpkin and R. Marshall,
Stationers' Hall Court, Ludgate Street; and
J. H. Bohte, York Street, Covent Garden, 1823.
Printed by G. Schulze, Poland Street. 3 vols.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51186-0; xEN2.
*Vol. I-332p: 6 Tales @ 40-65p. Vol. II-316p.
5 Tales @ 10-115p. Vol. III-349p. 6 Tales @
30-100p.
OCLC attributes origin of tales to Johann Karl
August Musäus, Friedrich Heinrich Karl La Motte-Foqué,
and Ludwig Tieck.
-
ANON.
Scenes and Thoughts.
London: Printed for G. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria
Lane, 1824.
Printed by William Clowes, Northumberland-court,
London. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51181-X; xEN2.
*278p: 15 Tales and Sketches @ 5-80p.
-
ANON.
Sketches, Scenes and Narratives. Chiefly
of a Religious Tendency. By an Officer of the
Line.
Dublin: James Marshall Leckie, 11, Grafton
Street. W. White and Co. W. Oliphant, and Brown
and Wardlaw, Edinburgh; W. Collins, Glasgow;
James Duncan, James Nisbet, and Houlston and
Son, London, 1828.
Printed by Thomas I. White, Dublin. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51138-0; xEN2.
*Inscription: 'To Lieut. General Neville.'
300p: 9 Sketches and Tales @ 12-50p.
-
ANON.
Smiles and Tears: Comprising Maria Darlington,
a Sketch from Real Life: And Sixteen Other Sketches
and Tales: With Vignettes from Posthumous Designs
of Thurston.
London: William Charlton Wright, Paternoster
Row, 1825.
Printed by Davidson and Son, Serle's Place,
Carey Street. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51140-2; xEN2.
*Dedication: 'To [.] Washington Irving.'
191p: 17 Sketches and Tales @ 4-18p.
-
ANON.
Stories of Chivalry and Romance.
London: Published by Longman, Rees, Orme,
Brown, and Green, 1827.
Printed by Bradbury and Co., St. Dunstan's Court,
Fleet Street. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51129-1; EN2 1827: 10.
*275p: 6 Tales @ 30-60p.
-
ANON. [Various]
Tales of All Nations.
Printed for Thomas Hurst and Co., 65, St.
Paul's Church-Yard, 1827.
Printed by Bradbury and Co., Bolt Court, Fleet
Street. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51185-2; xEN2.
*Preface signed H. A. S.
311p: 10 Tales @ 15-60p.
Some authors uncredited, but includes: 'the
author of London in the Olden Time' [Miss
H. Lawrence (NSTC)]; 'Mrs Charles Gore'; 'James
Emerson Esq.'; 'one of the authors of The
Odd Volume' [Marion or Margaret Corbett
(NSTC)]; 'the author of The Legend of Genevieve'
[David Macbeth Moir (NSTC)]; 'the author
of Tales of Chivalry and Romance'; and
'G. F. Richardson Esq.'
-
ANON.
Tales of Four Nations. In Three Volumes.
London: Whitaker [sic], Treacher,
and Arnot, Ave-Maria Lane, 1829.
Printed by Cunnell and Shearman, Salisbury Square.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48799-4; EN2 1829: 10.
*Vol. I-312p: The Hunter's Oak (1-312). Vol.
II-311p: The Hunter's Oak [cont.] (1-75); The
Bereaved (77-179); The Palace of Chapultepec
(181-278); The Ambuscade (279-311). Vol. III-310p:
The Ambuscade [cont.] (1-124); The Chateau near
the Lake (125-310).
Further edn: 1831 (NSTC).
-
ANON.
Tales of Humble Life.
London: Printed for Charles Knight, Pall-Mall
East, 1824.
Printed by C. Knight, Windsor. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51150-X; EN2 Appendix C: 4.
*Preface indicates tales previously published
in unspecified periodical.
103p: 9 Tales @ 6-15p.
-
ANON.
Tales of my Father and my Friends.
London: Printed for T. and G. Underwood,
Fleet Street; and Macredie, Skelly, and Co.,
Edinburgh, 1823.
Printed by J. Moyes, Greville Street, London.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51153-4; EN2 1823: 15.
*172p: Sir Edgar Boyd (1-61); Introduction to
the Tale of Morland (62-73); Morland (74-116);
Alavia (117-47); A Tourist's Tale (148-72).
-
ANON.
Tales of Old Mr Jefferson, of Gray's
Inn. Collected by Young Mr Jefferson, of Lyon's
Inn. The First Series. In Two Volumes.
London: G. and W. B. Whittaker, 13,
Ave-Maria-Lane, 182325.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 3
vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51072-4; EN2 1823: 48.
*Third Volume, published 1825, t.p. reads Tales
of Old Mr Jefferson, of Gray's Inn. Collected
by Young Mr Jefferson, of Lyon's Inn. In Three
Volumes.
Vol. I-340p: The Welch Cottage; or the Woodman's
Fire-Side (1-179); Mandeville; or, the Voyage
(180-340). Vol. II-334p: Mandeville; or, the
Voyage [cont.] (1-190); The Creole; or, the
Negro Suicide (191-334). Vol. III-342p: The
Proselyte; or, the Brahmin's Son (1-42); The
Last Will and Testament (43-342).
-
ANON.
Tales of Perplexity. The Rendezvous.
The Disinherited. Cross Purposes.
London: Sampson Low, 42 Lamb's Conduit Street,
1829.
C. Richards, Printer, 100, St. Martin's Lane,
Charing Cross. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51157-7; EN2 1829: 11.
*223p: The Rendezvous (1-137); The Disinherited
(139-97); Cross Purposes (199-223).
-
ANON.
Vagaries, in Quest of the Wild and the
Whimsical. By Pierce Shafton, Gent.
London: J. Andrews, 167, New Bond Street,
1827.
Printed by James Bullcock, Whitefriars. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51130-5; xEN2.
*239p: 56 Tales, Poems and Sketches @ 1-25p.
Pierce Shafton given as pseud. by NSTC. NSTC
also lists this work under Trevelyan, Herbert
(also pseud.). OCLC states work reissued under
title of Snatches from Oblivion, being the
Remains of the Late Herbert Trevelyan, Esqr.
(1827).
Further edns: 1827 (OCLC); 3rd edn. 1833 (NSTC).
-
ANON.
Tales From Switzerland.
London: Printed for Francis Westley, 10,
Stationers' Court, and Ave-Maria Lane; and L.
B. Seeley, 163, Fleet Street, 182223.
Printed by T. C. Hanson, Peterborough-court,
Fleet-street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51161-5; EN2 1822: 12.
*Third volume published 1823, t.p. reads Tales
From Switzerland. Third Series.
Vol. I-177p- An Evening Walk in the Vicinity
of Geneva (1-92); A Visit to the House of Mourning,
on the Banks of the Lake at Geneva (93-137);
The New Village Pastor (139-77). Vol. II-196p:
A Morning Walk (1-14); Althun and Florine (15-111);
The Lily of the Valley of Arthes [Poem] (113-21);
The Storm (123-56); Eliza (157-96). Vol. III-221p:
Adelaine, or the Maniac [Poem] (1-32); Egbert,
or the House of Blessingburg (33-168); Emma
(169-221).
Attributed to Ann Yosy by NSTC and OCLC, but
attribution disputed by EN2 (see Tales from
Switzerland and Tales from Afar,
EN2 1822: 12 and 1824: 13 respectively).
-
ANON.
Tales from Afar. By a Clergyman, Lately
Resident Abroad; Author of 'An Alpine Tale,'
'Tales from Switzerland,' &c. &c.
London: Printed for Francis Westley, 10,
Stationers' Court, and Ave-Maria Lane, 1824.
Printed by Milne and Banfield, 76, Fleet Street.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51145-3; EN2 1824: 13.
*241p: My College Friend (1-44); The Village
Pastor [full title reads: 'Concluded from vol.
I of Tales from Switzerland.'] (45-123);
The Missionary (125-79); The Drooping Lily [Poem]
(181-92); The Surprise (193-219); The Thunder
Storm (221-41).
Attributed to Ann Yosy by OCLC, but attribution
disputed by EN2 (see Tales from Switzerland
and Tales from Afar in EN2, 1822: 12
and 1824: 13 respectively).
AIMWELL, Miss [pseud.].
Good-Nature: or, Sensibility: And Other Tales.
[see item 4]
-
[AINSWORTH, William Harrison.]
December Tales.
London: Printed for G. and W. B. Whittaker,
Ave-Maria Lane, 1823.
Printed by J. G. Barnard, 57, Skinner Street,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51012-0; EN2 1823: 18.
*Inscription: 'To The Reverend George Croly.'
231p: 11 Tales @ 12-45p.
Attributed to 'Ainsworth, W. H. and others'
by NSTC.
-
[ANWYL, Edward Trevor.]
Tales of Welsh Society and Scenery. In
Two Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme,
Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row, 1827.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48876-1; EN2 1827: 13.
*Inscription: 'To my Dear Mother.' According
to preface: 'whole of one Tale and a portion
of another' previously published in unspecified
periodical.
Vol. I-431p: The Youth of Edward Ellis (1-270);
The Cousins (271-431). Vol. II-393p: Frederic
Anwyl (1-199); The Prediction (201-393).
NSTC gives author as Thomas Richards, Surgeon;
EN2 as Anwyl.
Further edn: Reissued 1829 [as Youth and
Manhood of Edward Ellis, and The Cousins; Romantic
Tales of Welsh Society and Scenery (EN2
1829: 14)].
-
[BANIM, John and Michael.]
Tales, by the O'Hara Family: Containing
Crohoore of the Bill-Hook [M. Banim],
The Fetches [J. Banim], and John Doe
[M. and J. Banim]. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for W. Simpkin and R. Marshall,
Stationer's-Hall-Court, Ludgate-Street, 1825.
Printed by J. McCreery, Tooks Court, Chancery
Lane, London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47950-9; EN2 1825: 13.
*Vol. I-367p: Crohoore of the Bill-Hook (1-367).
Vol. II-392p: Crohoore of the Bill-Hook [cont.]
(1-107); The Fetches (109-392). Vol. III-404p:
John Doe (1-404).
Authorial attribution of individual tales from
NSTC.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1826 (NSTC); 1827 (NSTC),
3rd edn. 1831 (NUC); 1846 (NSTC); Philadelphia
1827 (NSTC). German trans. of 'John Doe' [as
'Hauptmann Reh' (RS)] and 'Crohoore' [as 'Der
Zwerg, ein Irländisches Sittengemälde' (RS)],
1828; French trans. of 'Crohoore' [as 'Croohore
na bilhoge, ou les White boys' (BN)] and 'John
Doe' [as 'John Doe, ou le chef des rebelles'
(BN)], 1829 .
-
BARBER, Elizabeth.
Tales of Modern Days. By Elizabeth Barber,
Author of "Dangerous Errors"-"Influence and
Example."
London: Published by Sherwood, Jones, and
Co. Paternoster Row, 1824.
Printed by J. G. Barnard, 57 Skinner Street,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47102-8; EN2 1824: 17.
*340p: The Spanish Brothers; or, Annals of the
House of De V____ (1-171); The Robber's Child;
or, the Welsh Mountaineer (173-234); Matilda;
or, aWife's Fortitude (235-340).
Further edn: 1840 (NSTC).
-
[?BORROW, George or ?DODS, Mary Diana.]
Tales of the Wild and the Wonderful.
London: Printed for Hurst, Robinson &
Co., 5 Waterloo-Place, Pall Mall; and A. Constable
& Co., Edinburgh, 1825.
Printed by J. Moyes, Bauverie Street. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51167-4; EN2 1825: 15.
-Inscription: 'To Joanna Baillie.'
356p: 6 Tales @ 50-100p.
For debate surrounding authorial attribution
see EN2 entry.
Further edn: Philadelphia 1826 (NSTC).
-
[BRADLEY, Charles.]
Original Memorials; or, Brief Sketches
of Real Characters. By a Clergyman of the Church
of England.
London: Sold by Hatchard and Son, Piccadilly;
Seeley, Fleet Street; and Nisbet, Castle Street,
Oxford Street, 1822.
Printed by M. C. Morris, Wycombe. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51177-1; xEN2.
*196p: 15 Sketches @ 4-40p.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1823 (NSTC).
-
BROWN, Charles Brockden.
Carwin, the Biloquist, and Other American
Tales and Pieces. By Charles Brockden Brown,
Author of Wieland, Ormand, Arthur Mervin, &c.
&c. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Henry Colburn and Co., Public
Library, Conduit Street, 1822.
Printed by J. Nichols and Son, Parliament Street,
London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47135-4; EN2 1822: 21.
*Vol. I-256p: Carwin, the Biloquist (1-155);
Stephen Calvert (157-256). Vol. II-287p: Stephen
Calvert [cont.] (1-287); Vol. III-259p: Stephen
Calvert [cont.] (1-82); Jessica (83-235); The
Scribbler (237-59).
EN2 states: 'For the original composition of
"Carwin" in 1798 and its American publication
in instalments 1803-5, see S. W. Reid, "Brockden
Brown in England: Notes on Henry Colburn's 1822
Editions of his Novels", Early American Literature,
9 (1974), 188-95.'
-
BRYDGES, Sir [Samuel] Egerton.
Tragic Tales. Coningsby, and Lord Brokenhurst.
By Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart.
London: Printed for Robert Triphook, 23,
Old Bond-Street, 1820.
Printed by B. McMillan, Bow-Street, Covent-Garden.
2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47143-5; EN2 1820: 18.
*Vol. I-186p: Two Prefatory Tales: Darcy and
Fitz-Owen (1-22); Coningsby (23-186). Vol. II-198p:
Coningsby [cont.] (1-107); Lord Brockenhurst
(109-98).
EN2 states: 'Preface dated Geneva, 23 Aug 1819.
"Coningsby, a Tragic Tale" was printed separately,
with Paris, Geneva and London publishers on
the t.p., in 1819. "Lord Brokenhurst, or Fragments
of Winter Leaves, a Tragic Tale" was also published
separately, with a Geneva imprint, 1819. In
addition to these titles, Brydges published
"Sir Ralph Willoughby: An Historical Tale of
the Sixteenth Century" under a Florence imprint
of 1820, but no London issue of this has been
discovered (copies at BL, C, E, O, and MH, all
have Florence only imprint).'
-
[BUSK, Mrs M. M.]
Tales of Fault and Feeling. By the Author
of "Zeal and Experience."
London: T. Hookham, Old Bond Street, 1825.
J. and C. Adlard, Printers, Bartholomew Close.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51147-X; EN2 1825: 17.
*Vol. I-314p: Arthur Errington (1-130); The
Unknown Champion (131-314). Vol. II-333p: The
Prince and the Merchant's Daughter (1-88); Miriam
(89-258); The Young Cacique (259-333). Vol.
III-314p: Parental Guilt (1-210); Ida, Heiress
of Unsponnen (211-78); Clotilda, in Verse (279-90);
Lyderic, the Founder of Lille, ditto (291-314).
-
CADDICK, Mrs [H. C.].
Tales of the Affections: Being Sketches from
Real Life. By Mrs Caddick.
London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and
Green; and T. Sowler, Manchester, [1828].
Printed by T. Sowler, Manchester. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47182-6; EN2 1828: 27.
*199p: The Soldier's Sister (1-54); The Broken
Vow (55-111); The Mountain Stream (113-37);
The Sailor's Bride (139-99).
No date on t.p., dated from EN2 and NSTC.
-
[CARNE, John.]
Tales of the West. By the Author of Letters
from the East. In Two Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1828.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street.
2 vols. 12mo. Corvey: CME 3-628-51166-6; EN2
1828: 28.
*Vol. I-317p: Valley of the Lizard (1-62); The
Miner (63-104); The Exile (105-49); The Legend
of Pacorra (151-317). Vol. II-319p: The Legend
of Pacorra [cont.] (1-140); Westley and his
Disciples (141-88); St. Martin's Isle (189-279);
The Power of Affection (281-319).
Pagination incorrect in vol. I, pp. 315-16 missing,
though error does not affect text.
Futher edn: New York 1828 (NSTC).
-
[CORBETT, Marion and Margaret.]
Petticoat Tales.
Edinburgh: Printed for W. and C. Tait, Edinburgh;
and Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London,
1823.
Printed by George C. Ramsey & Co., Edinburgh.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51118-6; EN2 1823: 29.
*Vol. I-339p: Dora (1-177); Constantia (179-204);
The Miller of Calder (205-339). Vol. II-342p:
Frances Colville (1-95); Flirtations or a Fortnight
in August (97-271); Sambo, the Slave. An American
Story (273-307); Terni (309-41).
Also attributed solely to Margaret Corbett in
NSTC.
-
[CORBETT, Marion and Margaret.]
The Odd Volume.
Edinburgh: Printed for Daniel Lizars, Edinburgh;
Thomas Ogilvie, Glasgow; G. B. Whittaker, London;
and W. Curry, Jun. & Co. Dublin, 1826.
Printed by John Brewster, 11, Society, Edinburgh.
2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51108-9 (2nd edn. 1826); EN2
1826: 26.
*Vol. I-376p: 16 Tales @ 10-50p. Vol. II-381p:
7 Tales @ 15-100p.
Also attributed to 'The Misses Corbett' in NSTC.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1826 (Corvey); 3rd edn.
1827 (OCLC); Boston 1827 (NSTC).
-
[CORBETT, Marion and Margaret.]
Tales and Legends. By the Author of "The
Odd Volume," &c. In Three Volumes.
Edinburgh: Printed for Cadell and Co., Edinburgh;
and Simpkin and Marshall, London, 1828.
Printed by Ballantyne & Co. 3 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51146-1; EN2 1828: 31.
*Vol. I-352p: The Three Kings (1-217); The Rescue
(219-352). Vol. II-358p: New Travels round my
Chamber (1-52); Lorenzo.-A Dramatic Fragment
(52-77); Aloyse.-A Tale (79-137); A Legend of
Number Nip (139-97); The Leper of the City of
Aoste (199-231); Count Borworjarginski.A
Polish Tale (233-96); Dorothea.-A Tale (297-358).
Vol. III-404p: The Old Block of Wood (1-99);
The Two Students of St. Andrews (101-404).
Also attributed to 'The Misses Corbett' in NSTC.
-
[CORP, Harriet.]
Tales. Characteristic, Descriptive, and
Allegorical. By the Author of "An Antidote to
The Miseries of Human Life," &c. &c.
With a Frontispiece.
London: Printed for Baldwin and Craddock,
1829.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51144-5; EN2 1829: 28.
*222p: 10 tales @ 15-40p.
-
[CROKER, Thomas Crofton.]
Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South
of Ireland.
London: John Murray, 1825.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52338-9; xEN2.
*363p: The Shefro (3-146) [11 Tales]; The Cluricaune
(149-216) [5 Tales]; The Banshee (219-64) [2
Tales]; The Phooka (267-317) [4 Tales]; Thierna
Na Oge (321-63) [5 Tales].
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1826 (NSTC); Philadelphia
1827 (OCLC); German trans., 1826 [as Irische
Elfmarchen. Uebersetst von den Brudern Grimm
(NSTC)]. 
-
[CROKER, Thomas Crofton.]
Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South
of Ireland. Part II.
London: John Murray, 1828.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52338-9; xEN2.
*327p: The Merrow (3-82) [5 Tales]; The Dullahan
(85-152) [5 Tales]; The Fir-Darrig (156-217)
[4 Tales]; Treasure Legends (221-72) [4 Tales];
Rocks and Stones (275-327) [5 Tales].
-
[CROKER, Thomas Crofton.]
Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South
of Ireland. Part III.
London: John Murray, 1828.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52338-9; xEN2.
*Dedicatory Letter: 'To Dr. Wilhelm Grimm.'
(includes translation of Grimm's essay prefacing
the German edition of Part I [see above]).
300p: The Elves in Ireland (1-12) [5 Tales and
Descriptions]; The Elves in Scotland (13-52)
[12 Tales and Descriptions]; On the Nature of
the Elves (53-154) [16 Tales and Descriptions];
The Mabinogion and Fairy Legends of Wales (157-300)
[32 Tales and Descriptions].
Further edns: 1834 (NSTC); 1838 (NSTC); 1844
(NSTC); 1846 (NSTC); 1859 (NSTC); [at least
2 more edns. to 1870 (NSTC)]. It is unclear
from NSTC how many of the 3 parts these later
edns. contain.
-
CROKER, T[homas] Crofton.
Legends of the Lakes; or, Sayings and Doings
at Killarney. Collected Chiefly from the Manuscripts
of R. Adolphus Lynch, Esq. H. P. King's German
Legion. By T. Crofton Croker.
London: John Ebers and Co. Old Bond Street,
1829.
Printed by C. Whittington, Chiswick. 2 vols.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51008-2; EN2 1829: 29.
*Inscription: 'To Miss Edgeworth, of Edgeworth's
Town, Ireland, These Volumes, Illustrative of
Irish Character and Scenery.'
Vol. I-245p: 12 Chapters @ 15-30p. Vol. II-243p:
12 Chapters @ 15-27p [each chapter consists
of several stories].
-
[CROLY, George.]
Tales of the Great St. Bernard. In Three
Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1828.
Printed by A. J. Valpy, Red Lion Court, Fleet
Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51149-6 (2nd edn. 1829); EN2
1828: 33.
*Author notes, in introduction, that the later
tales in the collection 'have already appeared
in hasty shape in some previous publications.'
Vol. I-336p: Tales of the Great St. Bernard
(3-19) [Introductory Tale]; The Squire's Tale:
The Woes of Wealth (21-197); The Wallachian's
Tale: Hebe (199-336). Vol. II-336p: The Wallachian's
Tale [cont.] (1-308); The Captain's Tale: The
Red-Nosed Lieutenant (309-36). Vol. III-321p:
The Captain's Tale [cont.] (1-15); The Augustine's
Tale: The Patron Saint (17-112); The Englishman's
Tale: The Married Actress (113-58); The Spaniard's
Tale: The Locked-up Beauty (159-257); The Italian's
Tale: The Conspirator (259-321).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1829 (Corvey); New York
1829 (NSTC).
-
[?CROWE, Eyre Evans or ?PHIPPS, Constantine
Henry, Marquis of Normanby.]
The English in Italy. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Saunders and Otley,
British and Foreign Public Library, Conduit
Street, Hanover Square, 1825.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's
Court, Fleet Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47830-8; EN2 1825: 23.
*Vol. I-305p: L'Amoroso (1-220); Il Politico
(221-305). Vol. II-323p: Il Politico [cont.]
(1-66); I Zingari (67-323). Vol. III-318p: Sbarbuto
(1-159); Il Critico (160-318).
For debate surrounding authorial attribution,
see EN2.
-
[?CROWE, Eyre Evans or ?PHIPPS, Constantine
Henry, Marquis Of Normanby.]
Historiettes, or Tales of Continental
Life. By the Author of "The English In Italy."
In Three Volumes.
London: Saunders and Otley, Condiut Street,
1827.
Printed by J. F. Dove, St. John's Square.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51060-9; EN2 1827: 28.
*Vol. I-333p: The Regicide's Family (1-251);
A Week at Tours (253-333). Vol. II-352p: The
Fall of Bern (1-352). Vol. III-316p: Peregrinatory
Introduction (1-21); The German Lottery (23-54);
The Rhine (55-72); The Castle of the Convent
Lake (73-308); L'Envoi (309-16).
For authorial attribution issue, see above.
-
[?CROWE, Eyre Evans or ?PHIPPS, Constantine
Henry, Marquis Of Normanby.]
The English in France. By the Author
of The English in Italy. In Three Volumes.
London: Saunders and Otley, Conduit Street,
1828.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's
Court, Fleet Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47828-6; EN2 1828: 34.
*Contains mix of Narrative Essays and Tales,
with some shorter Sketches.
Vol. I-327p: Characters and Contrasts [Tale]
(1-161); Both Sides of the Channel [Essay] (163-97);
Clerics Abroad [Sketch] (199-211); The Rising
Generation [Essay] (213-38); Fast and Fickle
[Tale] (239-327). Vol. II-357p: Fast and Fickle
[cont.] (1-93); Education [Essay] (95-115);
Operatives Abroad [Essay] (117-29); Adventures
of a Tar [Tale] (131-54); Le Prieure [Tale]
(155-235); Health [Essay] (237-54); Watering
Places [Essay] (255-83); The French Squire [Essay/Tale]
(285-316); A General's Equipage [Sketch] (317-26);
The Royal Shade [Tale] (327-57). Vol. III-338p:
The Anglo-French Wife [Tale] (1-180); The Ambassador's
Bag [Tale] (181-338).
For authorial attribution issue, see above.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1828 (NSTC); Philadelphia
1829 (OCLC).
-
[CROWE, Eyre Evans.]
To-Day in Ireland. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Charles Knight, Pall
Mall East, 1825.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street,
London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48962-8; EN2 1825: 24.
*Vol. I-291p: The Carders (1-291). Vol. II-319p:
The Carders [cont.] (1-158); Connemara (159-319).
Vol. III-305p: Old and New Light (1-258); The
Toole's Warning (259-305).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1826 (NSTC). French trans.
of 'The Carders' and 'Connemara', 1830 (MGD),
and of 'The Toole's Warning', 1833 [as 'La Fée
de la famille O'Toole, ou le signal du départ'
(MGD)].
-
CUNNINGHAM, Allan.
Traditional Tales of the English and
Scottish Peasantry. By Allan Cunningham, Author
of Sir Marmaduke Maxwell, a Dramatic Poem; &c.
In Two Volumes.
London: Printed for Taylor and Hessey, Fleet-Street,
1822.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 2 vols.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51010-4; EN2 1822: 25.
*Preface states that all tales, except first,
were initially published in London Magazine.
Vol. I-322p: 8 Tales @ 20-50p. Vol. II-357p:
10 Tales @ 25-45p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1828 (OCLC); German trans.,
1823 [as Schottische Erzählungen (RS)].
-
CUNNINGHAM, George G[odfrey].
Foreign Tales and Traditions. Chiefly
Selected from the Fugitive Literature of Germany.
By George G. Cunningham. In Two Volumes.
Glasgow: Blackie, Fullarton, & Co., and
A. Fullarton, & Co., Edinburgh, 1829.
Printers: Hutchinson & Brookman, Glasgow.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51026-0; xEN2.
*Vol. I-407p: 32 Tales @ 1-70p. Vol. II-415p:
24 Tales @ 2-60p.
*Further edn: 2nd edn. 1830 (NSTC).
-
DAGLEY, Elizabeth Frances.
The Birthday. With Other Tales. By Elizabeth
Frances Dagley, Authoress of "Fairy Favours."
London: James Bulcock, 163, Strand, 1828.
Printed by C. Smith, One-Bell Yard, Strand.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51014-7; EN2 1828: 36.
*Dedication: 'To Mrs. Hemans.'
270p: 13 Tales @ 6-60p.
-
DAVIS, John Francis.
Chinese Novels. Translated from the Originals;
to Which Are Added Proverbs and Moral Maxims,
Collected from their Classical Books and Other
Sources. The Whole Prefaced by Observations
on the Language and Literature of China. By
John Francis Davis, F.R.S.
London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1822.
Printed by C. Roworth, Bell-yard, Temple-bar.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52342-7; xEN2.
*250p: Observations on the Language and Literature
of China (1-50); The Shadow in the Water (51-106);
The Twin Sisters (107-51); The Three Dedicated
Chambers (153-224); Chinese Proverbs, &c.
(225-50).
Translated from Chinese text of Yu Li (NSTC).
-
DEACON, W[illiam] F[rederick].
The Inn-Keeper's Album. Arranged for
Publication by W. F. Deacon.
London: Thomas MacLean, Haymarket, 1823.
Printed by Howlett and Brimmer, 10, Frith Street,
Soho. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51015-5; xEN2.
*429p: 25 Tales, Essays, and Sketches @ 7-60p.
-
[DEACON, William Frederick.]
November Nights: Or, Tales for Winter
Evenings. By the Author of "Warreniana".
London: Thomas MacLean, 26, Haymarket, 1826.
Printed by Plummer and Brewis, Love Lane, Eastcheap,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51105-4; EN2 1826: 28.
*468p: 15 'Nights' @ 15-50p.
-
DENNISON, James.
Legends of Galloway; being a Series of
Traditions, Illustrative of its Ancient History,
Customs, Manners, and Superstitions. By James
Dennison, Esq.
Edinburgh: Printed for Archibald Constable
and Co. and Hurst, Robinson and Co. London,
1825.
Printed by Michael Anderson. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47412-4; EN2 1825: 25.
*Dedication: 'To the Right Honourable the Earl
of Galloway.' Preliminaries state: 'The Miller
of Eldrig' was previously published in 'a provincial
newspaper of very limited circulation.'
294p: The Standard of Denmark; a Tale of Cruggleton
Castle (1-229); The Miller of Eldrig (231-69);
The Battle of Cairnholy (271-94).
-
[?EDLMANN, Frederick J.]
The Human Heart.
Printed for Taylor and Hessey, 93, Fleet
Street, and 13, Waterloo Place, Pall Mall, 1824.
Printed by J. Moyes, Greville Street. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51041-4; EN2 1824: 8.
*Introductory letter addressed to: 'My Dearest
Brother.'
370p: 9 Tales @ 8-100p.
Authorial attribution from Wolff (item 1999).
-
EDRIDGE, Rebecca.
The Scrinium, in Two Volumes. By Rebecca
Edridge.
London: Printed for G. & W. B. Whittaker,
Ave-Maria-Lane, 1822.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 2
vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47514-7; EN2 1822: 30.
*Vol. I-355p: 23 Tales @ 3-30p. Vol. II-380p:
33 Tales @ 3-70p [also includes 2 Poems].
-
ELLIOTT, Mary.
Confidential Memoirs; or, Memoirs of
a Parrot, a Greyhound, a Cat, and a Monkey.
By Mary Elliott, Late Belson.
London: William Darton, 58, Holburn Hill,
1821. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52303-6; EN2 Appendix A: 5.
*254p: The Parrot's Story (13-51); Julio's Story
[Greyhound] (51-106); Swandown's Adventures
[Cat] (107-78); Pug's Adventures [Monkey] (178-250);
Little Frank's Dream [Poem] (251-54).
-
[GARDINER, Marguerite, Countess of Blessington.]
Sketches and Fragments. By the Author
of "The Magic Lantern."
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, 1822.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52345-1; xEN2.
*139p: 13 Sketches @ 3-25p.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1823 (NSTC).
-
[GILLIES, Robert Pierce.]
Tales of a Voyager to the Arctic Ocean.
In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1826.
Printed by Shackell and Co., Johnson's Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48875-3; EN2 1826: 38.
*Vol. I-347p: Introduction (1-16); 8 Tales @
13-90p. [5 parts of 'The Voyage' alternated
with other tales]. Vol. II-336p: 7 Tales @ 13-50p
[4 parts of 'The Voyage' alternated with other
tales]. Vol. III-350p: 12 Tales @ 5-50p [5 parts
of 'The Voyage', alternated with other tales].
NSTC states: 'Sometimes attributed to George
Robert Gleig.'
Further edns: 1834 (NSTC); Philadelphia 1827
(NSTC); German trans., 1827 (EN2).
-
[GILLIES, Robert Pierce.]
Tales of a Voyager to the Arctic Ocean.
Second Series. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1829.
Printed by Shackell and Bayliss, Johnson's Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48875-3; EN2 1829: 33.
*Vol. I-342p: 6 Tales @ 10-150p [3 parts of
'The Voyage' alternated with other Tales]. Vol.
II-352p: 5 Tales @ 10-250p [Includes conclusion
of last tale of vol. I; 2 parts of 'The Voyage'
alternated with other Tales]. Vol. III-337p:
5 Tales @ 5-50p [Includes conclusion of last
tale of vol. II; 2 parts of 'The Voyage', 2
other Tales].
Further edn: 1834 (NSTC).
-
[GORE, Catherine Grace Francis.]
Hungarian Tales. By the Author of "The
Lettre de Cachet." In Three Volumes.
London: Saunders and Otley, Conduit Street,
1829.
Printed by Samuel Manning and Co., London-House
Yard, St. Paul's. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48862-1; EN2 1829: 36.
*Vol. I-328p: Cassia: A Tale of Pesth (1-328).
Vol. II-348p: Cassia: A Tale of Pesth [cont.]
(329-427); The Tzigany (1-58); The Tavernicus
(59-187); The Elizabethines (189-225); The Ferry
on the Danube (227-50). Vol. III-339p: The Balsam-Seller
of Thurotzer (1-138); The Festival of the Three
Kings (139-68); The Infanta at Presburg (169-339).
Further edn: New York 1829 (OCLC).
-
[GORE, Catherine Grace Francis.]
Romances of Real Life. By the Author
of "Hungarian Tales." In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington-Street,
1829.
Printed by Shackell and Bayliss, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51120-8; EN2 1829: 37.
*Vol. I-329p: 5 Tales @ 24-200p. Vol. II-323p:
3 Tales @ 23-240p; Vol. III-354p: 6 Tales @
15-160p.
Further edn: New York 1829 (NSTC).
-
GRANT, M[ary] A[nne].
Tales. Founded on Facts. By M. A. Grant,
Author of Sketches of Life and Manners, with
Delineations of Scenery, &c.&c.
London: Boosey and Sons, Broad Street, Royal
Exchange, 1820.
E. [unreadable], Printer, 34, Brick Lane, Whitechapel.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51051-1; EN2 1820: 29.
*Inscription: 'To The Right Hon. Sir William
Grant, Late Master of the Rolls.'
268p: Ellen (1-78); Mary; or the Captive (79-181);
Glencoe (183-245); The Author (247-68).
-
[GRATTAN, Thomas Colley.]
High-Ways and By-Ways; or Tales of the
Roadside, Picked up in the French Provinces.
By a Walking Gentleman.
London: Printed for G and W. B. Whittaker,
Ave-Maria-Lane, 1823.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51028-7; EN2 1823: 39.
*Inscription to: 'Washington Irving, Esq., [.]
by his admirer and friend'.
432p: The Father's Curse (1-107); The Exile
of the Landes (109-276); The Birth of Henry
IV (277-341); La Villaine Tete (343-432).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1823 (NSTC); 3rd edn.
1824 (OCLC); 1833 (NSTC); Boston 1824 (NSTC);
German trans., 1825 [as Heer-und Querstraßen,
oder Erzählungen gesammelt auf einer Wanderung
durch Frankreich, von einem fußreisenden Gentleman,
vols. 1-2], 1824 (RS); French trans. [as Contes
sur les grandes et petites routes (BN)].
-
[GRATTAN, Thomas Colley.]
High-Ways and By-Ways; or Tales of the
Roadside, Picked up in the French Provinces.
By a Walking Gentleman. Second Series. In Three
Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1825.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51059-7; EN2 1825: 35.
*Vol. I-293p: Caribert, the Bear Hunter (1-293);
Vol. II-324p: The Priest, and the Garde-du-Corps
(1-324). Vol. III-348p: The Priest, and the
Garde-du-Corps [conc.] (1-44); The Vouée au
Blanc (45- ?) [Fiche missing after p. 191].
Further edns: 1827 (NSTC); 1833 (NSTC); Philadelphia
1827 (NSTC); French trans., 1825 [as Grandes
routes et chemins de traverse, ou contes recueillis
dans les provinces françaises (BN)]; German
trans., 1825-28 [as Heer-und Querstraßen,
oder Erzählungen gesammelt auf einer Wanderung
durch Frankreich, von einem fußreisenden Gentleman,
vols. 3-5 (RS)].
-
[GRATTAN, Thomas Colley.]
High-Ways and By-Ways; or Tales of the
Roadside, Picked up in the French Provinces.
By a Walking Gentleman. Third Series. In Three
Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1827.
Printed by Shackell and Baylis, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51042-2; EN2 1827: 33.
*Vol. I.-333p: The Cagot's Hut (1-333). Vol.
II-319p: The Cagot's Hut [conc.] (1-128); Note
to 'The Cagot's Hut' (129-34); Seeing Is Not
Believing (135-319). Vol. III-367p: The Conscript's
Bride (1-367).
Further edns: 1833 (NSTC); Philadelphia 1833
(NSTC).
-
[GRATTAN, Thomas Colley.]
Traits of Travel; or Tales of Men and
Cities. By the Author of "High-Ways and By-Ways,"
etc. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1829.
Printed by Shackell and Baylis, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51143-7; EN2 1829: 38.
*Dedication: 'To Sir W. J. Wort.'
Vol. I-336p: 7 Tales @ 15-180p. Vol. II-366p:
17 Tales @ 10-20p. Vol. III-335p: 7 Tales @
20-150p.
Further edns: New York 1829 (NSTC); German trans.,
1829 (EN2).
-
[GRIFFIN, Gerald.]
"Holland-Tide;" or, Munster Popular Tales.
London: Printed for W. Simpkin and R. Marshall,
Stationer's Hall Court, Ludgate-Street, 1827.
Printed by J. McCreery, Tooks-Court, Chancery-Lane,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51038-4; EN2 1827: 34.
*378p: Holland-Tide (1-15); The Aylmers of Bally-Alymer
(17-212); The Hand and the Word (213-72); St.
Martin's Day (273-94); The Brown Man (295-307);
The Persecutions of Jack Edy (309-33); The Unburied
Legs (335-47); Owney and Owny-Na-Peak (349-76);
Conclusion (376-78).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1827 (NSTC); 1842 (OCLC);
1857 (NSTC); 1859 [as Tales of the Munster
Festivals: Holland Tide, The Aylmers of Bally-Aylmer
etc. (OCLC)].
-
[GRIFFIN, Gerald.]
Tales of the Munster Festivals. Containing,
Card Drawing; The Half-Sir; and Suil Dhuv, the
Coiner. By the Author of "Holland-Tide; or Irish
Popular Tales." In Three Volumes.
London: Saunders and Otley, Conduit Street,
1827.
Printed by J. F. Dove, St. John's Square.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48867-2; EN2 1827: 35.
*Vol. I-355p: Introduction (v-xxiii); Card Drawing
(1-189); The Half-Sir (191-355). Vol. II-326p:
The Half-Sir [cont.] (1-156); Suil Dhuv, the
Coiner (157-326). Vol. III-316p: Suil Dhuv,
the Coiner [cont.] (1-316).
The Second and Third Series of Tales of the
Munster Festivals were issued in 1829, but
the Second is a novel, and the Third consists
of two tales in 3-vol. form.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1829 (NSTC); 1842 (OCLC);
1848 (NSTC); 1857 (NSTC); German trans., 1829
[as Suil Dhuv, der Falschmünzer und die Kartenschlägerin
(RS)].
-
HALL, Mrs [Anna Maria].
Sketches of Irish Character. By Mrs S.
C. Hall.
London: Frederick Westley, and A. H. Davies,
Stationer's-Hall Court, 1829.
Printed by J. Westley and Co., Ivy Lane. 2 vols.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51029-5; EN2 1829: 43.
*Introduction addressed to 'My Dear Miss Mitford.'
3 of the 'shorter sketches' previously published
in 'The Spirit and Manners of the Age' periodical.
Vol. I-224p: 6 Sketches @ 20-90p. Vol. II-220p:
5 Sketches @ 20-60p.
Further edns: 2nd Series 1831 (NSTC); 1842 (NSTC);
1844 (NSTC); 5th edn. 1854 (OCLC); 1855 (NSTC);
New York 1829 (NSTC).
-
HARRISON, W[illiam] H.
Tales of a Physician. By W. H. Harrison.
London: Robert Jennings, Poultry, 1829.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51031-7; EN2 1829: 44.
*248p: 9 Tales @ 25-40p.
Further edns: Philadelphia 1835 (NSTC); French
trans., 1833 [as Les Mémoires d'un médicin
(MGD)].
-
HARRISON, W[illiam] H.
Tales of a Physician. By W. H. Harrison.
Second Series.
London: Jennings and Chaplin, 1831.
Printed by J. & C. Adlard, Bartholomew Close.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51031-7; EN2 1829: 44.
*262p: 8 Tales @ 25-50p.
-
[HAY, William.]
Tales and Sketches, by Jacob Ruddiman
[pseud.], A.M. of Marischal College,
Aberdeen.
Edinburgh: John Anderson, Jun., 55 North
Bridge Street, and Simpkin & Marshall, London,
1828.
Printed by James Clarke and Co., Edinburgh.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51124-0; EN2 1828: 49.
*300p: 17 Tales and Sketches @ 2-25p.
-
[HAWORTH, Euphrasia Fanny.]
The Pine Tree Dell, and Other Tales.
In Two Volumes.
London: J. Andrews, 167, New Bond Street,
1827.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street.
2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-54707-5; EN2 1827: 39.
*Vol. I-324p: The Pine Tree Dell (91-324). Vol.
II-299p: Fragments of the Story of a Venetian
Artist (1-90); The Poet's Love-Story (91-239);
The Enchanted Island (240-99).
Authorial attribution in NSTC states: 'By E.
F. Haworth, edited by A[lexander] Dyce'.
-
HEFFORD, John.
Crestyphon, a Thebian Tale: And The Vandal
Robbery, a Carthaginian Tale. By John Hefford
Esq. Formerly Professor in the Commercial College,
Woodford.
London: Printed for Matthew Iley, 1, Somerset-Street,
Portman-Square; and Sold by All Booksellers
in Town and Country, 1820.
B. McMillan, Printer, Bow-Street, Covent-Garden.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51045-7; EN2 1820: 32.
*Half-title preceding t.p. states: Two New
Tales. Inscription: 'To John Jay, Esq.,
Principal of the Commercial College.'
301p: Crestyphon (1-115); The Vandal Robbery
(117-301).
OCLC attributes authorship to John Hefford and
Anne Yosy.
-
[HENDERSON, Henry Barkley.]
The Bengalee: or, Sketches of Society
and Manners in the East.
London: Smith, Elder, and Co., 65, Cornhill,
1829.
Printed by Anne Maurice, Fenchurch-Street. 12vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51003-1; xEN2.
*466p: 31 Tales and Sketches @ 3-30p.
Includes interspersed verse as 'Satires In India',
as well as unattributed copy of Shelley's 'Hymn
to Intellectual Beauty'. Also includes Glossary.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1841 (NSTC); revised
edn. Calcutta 1843 (NSTC).
-
HOFLAND, Mrs [Barbara].
Tales of the Priory. By Mrs Hofland.
In Four Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, 1820.
Printed by A. and R. Spottiswoode, Printer's-Street,
London. 4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51040-6; EN2 1820: 33.
*Vol. I-298p: Tale 1 (10-217); Tale 2 (218-98).
Vol. II-317p: Tale 2 [cont.] (1-216); Tale 3
(217-317). Vol. III-361p: Tale 3 [cont.] (1-206);
Tale 4 (217-317). Vol. IV-309p: Tale 4 [cont.]
(1-309). [Tales not titled, my numbering].
Further edn: New York 1820 (OCLC).
-
HOFLAND, Mrs [Barbara].
Tales of the Manor. By Mrs Hofland. In
Four Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, 1822.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square,
London. 4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51039-2; EN2 1822: 43.
*Vol. I-344p: Tale 1 (6-150); Tale 2 (151-344).
Vol. II-309p: Tale 2 [cont.] (1-85); Tale 3
(86-309). Vol. III-342p: Tale 3 [cont.] (1-194);
Tale 4 (195-342). Vol. IV-309p: Tale 5 (1-153);
Tale 6 (153-309). [Tales not titled, my numbering].
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1822 (NSTC); New York
1822 (NSTC).
-
HOGG, James.
Winter Evening Tales. Collected among
the Cottagers in the South of Scotland. By James
Hogg, Author of "The Queen's Wake," &c.
&c. In Two Volumes.
Edinburgh: Printed for Oliver & Boyd,
High-Street; and G. & W. B. Whittaker,
Ave-Maria-Lane, London, 1820.
Printed by Oliver & Boyd, Edinburgh. 2 vols.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51027-9; EN2 1820: 34.
*Vol. I-340p: 13 Tales @ 4-100p [also includes
1 poem]. Vol. II-335p: 6 Tales @ 8-135p [also
includes 2 poems].
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1821 (NSTC); New York
1820 (OCLC); German trans., 1821 [as Die
Wanderer im Hochlande (RS)].
-
HOGG, James.
The Shepherd's Calendar. By James Hogg,
Author of "The Queen's Wake," &c. &c.
In Two Volumes.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood; and T. Cadell,
London, 1829.
Printed by Ballantyne and Company, Edinburgh.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51046-5; xEN2.
*Preliminaries indicate majority of tales originally
published in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine.
Vol. I-341p: 11 Tales and Sketches @ 15-40p.
Vol. II-326p: 10 Tales and Sketches @ 12-60p.
Further edn: New York 1829 (NSTC).
-
HOOD, Thomas.
National Tales. By Thomas Hood, Author
of "Whims and Oddities". In Two Volumes.
London: William H. Ainsworth, Old Bond Street,
1827.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset-Street.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51050-3; EN2 1827: 42.
*Vol. I-244p: 14 Tales @ 10-75p. Vol. II-238p:
11 Tales @ 10-40p.
Further edns: Philadelphia 1839 (NSTC); German
trans., 1828[as Ausgewählte Erzählungen
(RS)].
-
[HOOK, Theodore E.]
Sayings and Doings. A Series of Sketches
from Life. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Henry Colburn, New Burlington
Street, 1824.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48529-0 (2nd edn. 1824); EN2
1824: 52.
*Vol. I-336p: Danvers (1-191); The Friend of
the Family (193-336). Vol. II-350p: The Friend
of the Family [cont.] (1-95); Merton (97-350).
Vol. III-357p: Merton [cont.] (1-317); Martha,
the Gypsy (319-57).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1824 (Corvey); 1836 (NSTC);
1838 (NSTC); 1839 (NSTC). Philadelphia 1824
(OCLC).
-
[HOOK, Theodore E.]
Sayings and Doings; or, Sketches from
Life. Second Series. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1825.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48529-0; EN2 1825: 43.
*Vol. I-326p: The Sutherlands (1-143); The Man
of Many Friends (145-326). Vol. II-380p: The
Man of Many Friends [cont.] (1-58); Doubts and
Fears (59-235); Passion and Principle (237-380).
Vol. III-375p: Passion and Principle [cont.]
(1-375).
The third series was issued in 1828, but contains
only two very long tales.
Further edns: New edn. 1825 (Corvey); 1836 (NSTC);
1838 (NSTC); 1839 (NSTC); Philadelphia 1825
(NSTC).
-
HUME, Grace Stuart.
Alice, or Infidelity; The Trifler; and
My Aunt Anne. Three Tales. By Grace Stuart Hume.
In Five Volumes.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.
Leadenhall-Street, 1823.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall Street, London.
5 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51052-X; EN2 1823: 46.
*Vol. I-319p: Alice, or Infidelity (1-319).
Vol. II-287p: Alice, or Infidelity [cont.] (1-287).
Vol. III-310p: Alice, or Infidelity [cont.]
(1-124); The Trifler (125-310). Vol. IV-289p:
The Trifler [cont.] (1-289). Vol. V-324p: The
Trifler [cont.] (1-142); My Aunt Anne (143-324).
-
HURWITZ, Hyman.
Hebrew Tales; Selected and Translated
from the Writings of the Ancient Hebrew Sages:
To Which is Prefixed, an Essay, on the Uninspired
Literature of the Hebrews. By Hyman Hurwitz,
Author of "Vindicie Hebraice," &c. &c.
London: Printed for Morrison and Watt, 127,
Fenchurch Street, 1826.
Printed by Taylor, Green, and Littlewood, 15,
Old Bailey. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52341-9; xEN2.
*Introduction states that work contains: 'three
moral Tales originally translated by S. T. Coleridge
and published in The Friend'.
211p: Essay (1-84); 71 Tales @ 1-6p.
Further edn: Boston 1845 (NSTC).
-
[INGLIS, Henry David.]
Tales of Ardennes. By Derwent Conway
[pseud.].
London: Printed for G. B. Whittaker, Ave
Maria Lane, 1825.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51017-1; EN2 1825: 45.
*Inscription to: 'Gentle spirit of Lawrence
Sterne'.
242p: 8 Tales @ 10-55p [also includes short
verse drama].
-
[IRVING, Washington.]
The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.
A New Edition. In Two Volumes.
London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1821.
Printed by C. Roworth, Bell Yard, Temple Bar.
2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52302-8 (New Edition); xEN2.
*Dedication: 'To Sir Walter Scott, Bart.'
Vol. I-298p: 18 Sketches @ 6-30p. Vol. II-310p:
14 Sketches @ 4-50p.
1st British edn. in BL has vol. I published
by Miller, vol. II by Murray after Miller's
business collapsed. Both vols. bound together,
but vol. 2 taken from 2nd edn. Vol. I of the
British edn. retains the sketches and order
of the first four American nos. Vol. II reorders
the sketches, placing 'Westminster Abbey' first,
followed by the Christmas sketches (of which
'Christmas Morning' is renamed 'Christmas Day').
'Little Britain' and 'Stratford-On-Avon' follow
and then two new sketches, 'Traits of Indian
Character' and 'Philip of Pokanatet', are introduced.
The remaining sketches are ordered: 'John Bull',
'The Pride of the Village', 'The Angler', and
'The Legend of Sleepy Hollow'. 'L'Envoy' is
added as the final piece.
Further edns: 1st edn. New York 1819 [issued
in 7 numbers] (NSTC); 1st British edn. 1820
[see above] (NSTC); [5 British edns. by 1821
(NSTC)].
-
[IRVING, Washington.]
Bracebridge Hall; or, the Humorists.
By Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. In Two Volumes.
London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1822.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 2 vols.
8vo.
Corvey; EN2 1822: 46
*Vol. I-393p: 27 Sketches and Tales @ 5-22p.
Vol. II-403p: 24 Sketches and Tales @ 5-80p.
Present in Corvey collection, but not in CME.
These details taken from private edn.
Further edns: Published simultaneously New York
1822. New edn. 1823 (OCLC); 1824 (NSTC); 1845
(NSTC); 1848 (NSTC); 1850 (NSTC); New York 1822
(NSTC); French trans., 1822 (EN2); German trans.,
1822-23 (EN2).
-
[IRVING, Washington.]
Tales of a Traveller. By Geoffrey Crayon,
Gent. In Two Volumes.
London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1824.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars. 2 vols.
8vo.
Corvey; EN2 1824: 54.
*Vol. I-364p: Part 1: Strange Stories by a Nervous
Gentleman (3-176); Introduction: The Great Unknown
(3-5); 8 Tales @ 9-55p. Part II: Buckthorne
and his Friends (179-364); 7 Tales @ 4-40p.
Vol. II-394p: Part II: Buckthorne and his Friends
[cont.] (3-56); 3 Tales @ 10-30p; Part III:
The Italian Banditti (59-230); 8 Tales @ 12-30p;
Part IV: The Money-Diggers (233-394); 5 Tales
@ 6-65p.
Present in Corvey collection, but not in CME.
These details taken from BL edn.
Further edns: Published simultaneously New York
1824. New edn. 1825 (Corvey, NSTC); 1848 (NSTC);
1850 (Blanck); Philadelphia 1824 (Blanck); French
trans. 1825 (EN2); German trans., 1825 (EN2).
JEFFERSON, Mr [pseud.].
Tales of Old Mr Jefferson.
[see item 20]
-
[JONES, James Athearn.]
Tales of an Indian Camp. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley,
New Burlington Street, 1829.
Printed by F. Shoberl, Jun., Lazenby Court,
Long Acre, London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51151-8; EN2 1829: 51.
*Vol. I-312p: 18 Tales @ 4-45p. Vol. II-336p:
20 Tales @ 6-40p. Vol. III-341p: 18 Tales @
8-30p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1830 [as Traditions
of the North American Indians (NSTC)].
-
LATHOM, Francis.
The One-Pound Note. And Other Tales.
In Two Volumes. By Francis Lathom. Author of
Italian Mysteries; Mysterious Freebooter; London;
Romance of the Hebrides; The Unknown; Men and
Manners; Fatal Vow; Very Strange but Very True;
Astonishment, &c. &c.
London: Printed at the Minerva Press for
A. K. Newman and Co., Leadenhall-Street, 1820.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-Street. 2
vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51076-9; EN2 1820: 43.
*Vol. I-271p: The One-Pound Note (1-176); The
Wife, the Mistress, and the Friend (177-271).
Vol. II-245p: The Prophecy (1-245).
-
LATHOM, Francis.
Puzzled and Pleased; or, the Two Old
Soldiers: And Other Tales. In Three Volumes.
By Francis Lathom, Author of The Mysterious
Freebooter, The Unknown, Very Strange but Very
True, Men and Manners, Romance of the Hebrides,
London, Mystery, One Pound Note, Impenetrable
Secret, Human Beings, Italian Mysteries, Astonishment,
Fatal Vow, Midnight Bell, &c. &c.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.,
Leadenhall-Street, 1822.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-Street, London.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47902-9; EN2 1822: 53.
*Vol. I-274p: Puzzled and Pleased (1-274). Vol.
II-270p: Puzzled and Pleased [cont.] (1-270).
Vol. III-225p: Puzzled and Pleased [cont.] (1-109);
The Benefit Night; or, Actors and Amateurs (111-99);
Read your Bible (201-25).
-
LATHOM, Francis.
The Polish Bandit; or, Who Is my Bride?
And Other Tales. In Three Volumes. By Francis
Lathom, Author of Puzzled and Pleased, The Mysterious
Freebooter, The Unknown, Very Strange but Very
True, Men and Manners, Romance of the Hebrides,
One Pound Note, Italian Mysteries, Live and
Learn, Astonishment, &c.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.,
Leadenhall-Street, 1824.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-Street. 3
vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51076-7; EN2 1824: 59.
*Vol. I-241p: The Polish Bandit (1-74); The
Only Son (75-241). Vol II-257p: Preservation
(1-104); The Mysterious Murder (105-257). Vol
III-276p: The Mysterious Murder [cont.] (1-142);
Poor Little Charlie the Sweep (143-276).
-
LATHOM, Francis.
Fashionable Mysteries; or, the Rival
Duchesses, and Other Tales. By Francis Lathom,
Author of The Mysterious Freebooter; Puzzled
and Pleased; London; Young John Bull; Very Strange
but Very True; Astonishment; Polish Bandit;
Unknown; Fatal Vow; Midnight Bell; Live and
Learn; Human Beings; Men and Manners; &c.
&c. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.,
1829.
Printed by J. Darling Leadenhall-Street, London.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47957-6; EN2 1829: 53.
*Vol. I-297p: Fashionable Mysteries; or, the
Rival Duchesses (1-297). Vol. II-274p: A Month
in the Highlands (1-274). Vol. III-281p: A Month
in the Highlands [cont.] (1-71); Poor Mary Ann;
or, the County Election (73-281).
-
[LAURENCE, Miss H.]
London in the Olden Time; or, Tales Intended
to Illustrate the Manners and Superstitions
of its Inhabitants, from the Twelfth to the
Sixteenth Century.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster Row, 1825.
Printed by J. F. Dove, St. John's Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51089-9; EN2 1825: 51.
*Preface indicates 2 tales, not specified, have
previously appeared in periodical form.
324p: The Olden Time: Prefatory Stanzas (13-15);
8 Tales @ 20-85p.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1827 (NSTC).
-
[LAURENCE, Miss H.]
London in the Olden Time; or, Tales Intended
to Illustrate the Manners and Superstitions
of its Inhabitants, from the Twelfth to the
Sixteenth Century. Second Series.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster Row, 1827.
Printed by Ellerton And Henderson, Gough Square,
London. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51089-9; EN2 1827: 49.
*329p: 4 Tales @ 50-100p.
-
[LESTER, Elizabeth B.]
Fire-Side Scenes. By the Author of The
Bachelor and the Married Man, &c. &c.
In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row, 1825.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47551-1; EN2 1825: 52.
*Vol. I-312p: A Few Days from my Journal (1-110);
The Military Ball (111-32); The Pariah (133-96);
The Country Curate (197-312). Vol. II-283p:
The Country Curate [cont.] (1-105); Serious
Recollections (107-41); A Sketch from the Parlour
of my Inn. No. 1. The Church (143-71); A Sketch
from the Parlour of my Inn. No. 2. The Christening
(173-201); A Sketch from the Parlour of my Inn.
No. 3. My Landlord's Niece (203-58); A Sketch
from the Parlour of my Inn. No. 4. The Minstrel
(259-83). Vol. III-300p: A Sketch from the Parlour
of my Inn. No. 5. The Wanderer (1-83); A Sketch
from the Parlour of my Inn. No. 6. The Farewell
(85-108); A Sketch from the Parlour of my Inn.
No. 7. The Unequal Union (110-75); The Stricken
Conscience (177-211); A Mother's Guilt (213-300).
Author given as Mrs Ross in NSTC. For authorial
attribution see notes to The Bachelor and
the Married Man, EN2 1817: 37.
-
LOUDON, Jane C.
Stories of a Bride; by the Author of
The Mummy. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley,
New Burlington Street, 1829.
Printed by J. B. Nichols and Son, 25, Parliament
Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48625-4; EN2 1829: 56.
*Vol. I-307p: The Bride (1-141); The Mystic
(143-307). Vol. II-322p: The Mystic [cont.]
(1-225); The Bride [cont.] (226-41); The Rational
(243-319); The Bride [cont.] (320-22). Vol.
III-296p: The Treasure-Seeker of Hungary (1-288);
The Bride [cont.] (289-96).
-
M'LEOD, Miss [E. H.].
Tales of Ton; the Second Series. By Miss
M'Leod. In Four Volumes.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.
Leadenhall-Street, 1821.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall Street, London.
4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48087-6; EN2 1821: 58.
*Vol. I-307p: The Miser's Daughter (1-307).
Vol. II-274p: The Miser's Daughter [cont.] (1-165);
The Beautiful Countess (167-274). Vol. III-320p:
Rosamund; or The Ghost Story (1-193); A Tale
from the Common Life; or The Evangelical Clergyman
(195-320). Vol. IV-314p: Florabelle (1-155);
The Cure for a Broken Heart (157-255); Determination
(257-314).
The First Series (1821) consists of a single
novel entitled Fashionable Characters.
-
M'LEOD, Miss [E. H.]
Tales of Ton; the Third Series. By Miss
M'Leod. In Four Volumes.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.
Leadenhall-Street, 1822.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall Street, London.
4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48087-6; EN2 1822: 56.
*Vol. I-294p: Education, and No Education (1-294).
Vol. II-286p: A Tale of the Heart (1-286). Vol.
III-262p: The Hat and Feathers (1-112); Caprice
(114-262). Vol. IV-290p: Caprice [cont.] (1-75);
Inconsistency (77-271); The Vision (273-90).
-
MACAULEY, Miss [Elizabeth Wright].
Tales of the Drama. Founded on the Tragedies
of Shakspeare, Massinger, Shirley, Rowe, Murphey,
Lillo, and Moore, and on the Comedies of Steele,
Farquhar, Cumberland, Bickerstaff, Goldsmith,
and Mrs Cowley. By Miss Macauley.
London: Printed for Sherwood, Neely, and
Jones, Paternoster Row, 1822.
Printed by C. Whittingham, College House, Chiswick.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51091-0; xEN2.
*424p: 20 Tales @ 15-30p.
Further edn: Boston 1834 (NSTC).
-
[MACDONOGH, Felix.]
The Hermit in London; or, Sketches of
English Manners.
London: Printed for Henry Colburn, Public
Library, Conduit Street, 181920.
Printed by Cox and Baylis, Great Queen Street,
Lincoln-Inn-Fields. 5 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51058-9; EN2 1819: 46.
*Vol. I-237p: Introduction (1-9); 19 Sketches
@ 8-15p. Vol. II-251p: 22 Sketches @ 8-18p.
Vol. III-264p: 24 Sketches @ 8-15p. Vol. IV-245p:
23 Sketches @ 10-15p. Vol. V-243p: 21 Sketches
@ 8-15p.
Vols. IV and V published 1820.
Further edns: New edn. 1821 (OCLC); 1822 (NSTC);
[1850?] (NSTC); New York 1820 (NSTC); French
trans., 182021 (EN2).
-
[MACDONOGH, Felix.]
The Hermit in the Country; or, Sketches
of English Manners.
London: Printed for Henry Colburn & Co.,
Public Library, Conduit Street, 182022.
Printed by W. Shackell, Johnson's-Court, London.
4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51035-X; EN2 1820: 48.
*Vol. I-279p: 23 Sketches @ 10-15p. Vol. II-237p:
17 Sketches @ 10-25p. Vol. III-231p: 19 Sketches
@ 10-15p. Vol. IV-264p: 23 Sketches @ 8-15p.
Vol. IV published 1822.
Further edns: New edn. 1823 (NSTC); New York
1820 (NSTC).
-
[MACDONOGH, Felix.]
The Hermit Abroad. By the Author of The
Hermit in London, and The Hermit in the Country.
London: Printed for Henry Colburn and Co.,
Conduit Street, Hanover-Square, 1823.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-47657-7; EN2 1823: 60.
*Vol. I-269p: 24 Sketches @ 10-18p. Vol. II-266p:
24 Sketches @ 10-15p. Vol. III-311p: 28 Sketches
@ 8-15p.
Further edns: French trans., 1824 [as L'Hermite
rôdeur (NSTC)].
-
[MACDONOGH, Felix.]
The Hermit in Edinburgh; or, Sketches
of Manners and Real Characters and Scenes in
the Drama of Life.
London: Printed for Sherwood, Jones, and
Co., Paternoster-Row, 1824.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51036-8; EN2 1824: 61.
Vol. I-257p: 22 Sketches @ 10-15p. Vol. II-294p:
22 Sketches @ 10-18p. Vol. III-247p: 19 Sketches
@ 10-20p.
-
MALCOLM, John.
Tales of Field and Flood; with Sketches of
Life at Home. By John Malcolm, Author of "Scenes
of War," "Reminiscences of a Campaign in the
Pyrenees and South of France," &c. &c.
Edinburgh: Published by Oliver & Boyd,
Tweeddale-Court; and Simpkin and Marshall, London,
1829.
Oliver & Boyd, Printers. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51097-X; xEN2.
*329p: 19 Tales @ 10-25p.
-
MARTEN, Ambrose.
The Stanley Tales, Original and Select.
Chiefly Collected by the Late Ambrose Marten,
of Stanley Priory, Teesdale.
London: Published by W. Morgan, 45, Dean-Street,
Soho, 182627.
Printed by T. And J. B. Flindell, 67, St. Martin's-Lane.
6 vols. 18mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51099-6; EN2 1826: 58.
*Vol. I-334p: 18 Tales @ 6-30p. Vol. II-356p:
21 Tales @ 3-30p. Vol. III-356p: 16 Tales @
10-45p. Vol. IV-356p: 15 Tales @ 7-100p. Vol.
V-356p: 17 Tales @ 6-50p. Vol. VI-359p: 15 Tales
@ 12-60p.
Vol. III reads 'printed by Bradbury and Co.,
St. Dunstan's Court, Fleet Street'; vol. IV
reads 'printed by Bradbury, and published by
W. Morgan, 33, Old Bond Street; and W. Tait,
Princes Street, Edinburgh, 1827'; vol. V as
above; vol. VI reads 'published by Thomas Hurst
And Co., 65, St. Paul's Church Yard, 1827.'
Further edn: 1827 (NSTC).
-
[MAXWELL, William Hamilton.]
Stories of Waterloo; and Other Tales.
In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley,
New Burlington Street, 1829.
Printed by A. J. Valpy, Red Lion Court, Fleet
Street. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51133-X; EN2 1829: 60.
*Vol. I-336p: 9 Tales @ 15-90p. Vol. II-279p:
14 Tales @ 8-140p. (last tale cont. to p. 54
of vol. III). Vol. III-296p: 9 Tales @ 8-95p.
Further edns: 1833 (NSTC); 1834 (NSTC); 1854
(NSTC); 1856 (NSTC).
-
MITFORD, Mary Russell.
Our Village: Sketches of Rural Characters
and Scenery. By Mary Russell Mitford, Author
of Julian, a Tragedy.
London: G. and W. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria-Lane,
1824.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48316-X; EN2 1824: 67.
*292p: 24 Episodes @ 6-20p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1824 (see below); 3rd
edn. 1825 (NSTC); '2nd edn.' 1835 [3 vols] (NSTC);
new edn. 1848 (NSTC); 1852 (NSTC); [at least
4 more edns. to 1870 (NSTC)]; New York 1828
[3 vols] (OCLC). Facsimile reprint of 2nd edn.
Geo. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria-Lane, 1824 (ed.
Jonathan Wordsworth, Poole and New York: Woodstock,
1996).
-
MITFORD, Mary Russell.
Our Village: Sketches of Rural Characters
and Scenery. By Mary Russell Mitford, Author
of Julian, a Tragedy. Volume II.
London: Geo. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria-Lane,
1826.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48316-X; EN2 1824: 67.
*311p: 23 Episodes @ 8-21p.
Though t.p. reads 'Volume II', this is actually
separately published work, as are all other
numbers.
Further edns: (see above).
-
MITFORD, Mary Russell.
Our Village: Country Stories, Scenes,
Characters, &c. &c. By Mary Russell
Mitford, Author of Julian, and Foscari, Tragedies;
Dramatic Scenes, &c. &c. Volume III.
London: Geo. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria-Lane,
1828.
Printed by R. Gilbert, St. John's Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48316-X; EN2 1824: 67.
*315p: 25 Episodes @ 8-18p.
Further edns: (see above).
-
MITFORD, Mary Russell.
Our Village: Sketches of Rural Characters
and Scenery. By Mary Russell Mitford. Fourth
Series.
London: Whittaker, Treacher, & Co.,
Ave-Maria-Lane, 1830.
Gilbert and Rivington, Printers, St. John's
Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48316-X; EN2 1824: 67.
*345p: 27 Episodes @ 7-26p.
Further edns: (see above).
-
MITFORD, Mary Russell.
Our Village: Sketches of Rural Characters
and Scenery. By Mary Russell Mitford, Author
of Julian, Foscari, and Dramatic Scenes. Volume
V.
London: Whittaker, Treacher, & Co.,
Ave-Maria-Lane, 1832.
Gilbert and Rivington, Printers, St. John's
Square. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48316-X; EN2 1824: 67.
*362p: 24 Episodes @ 4-22p.
Further edns: (see above).
-
MOSSE, Henrietta Rouviere.
Gratitude; and Other Tales. By Henrietta
Rouviere Mosse, Author of Lussington Abbey,
Heirs of Villeroy, Old Irish Baronet, Peep at
our Ancestors, Arrivals from India, Bride and
No Wife, A Father's Love and a Woman's Friendship,
&c.
London: Printed for A. K. Newman and Co.
Leadenhall-Street, 1826.
Printed by J. Darling, Leadenhall-Street, London.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48346-8; EN2 1826: 59.
*Vol. I-304p: Gratitude (17-304). Vol. II-278p:
The Twin Sisters (1-278). Vol. III-315p: The
Weird (Wayard) Sister [cont. of 'The Twin Sisters']
(1-214); Love and Reason (215-315).
-
NEELE, Henry.
The Romance of History. England. By Henry
Neele. In Three Volumes.
London: Printed for Edward Bull, 26, Holles
Street, Cavendish Square, 1828.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street,
London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51101-1; EN2 1828: 61.
*Dedication: 'To the King's Most Excellent Majesty.'
Each Tale is preceded by an 'Historical Summary'.
Vol. I-355p: 13 Tales @ 18-35p. Vol. II-364p:
8 Tales @ 25-90p. Vol. III-355p: 8 Tales @ 25-80p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1828 (OCLC); 3rd edn.
1829 (OCLC); 4th edn. 1831 (NSTC); 1833 (NSTC);
Philadelphia 1828 (NSTC); German trans., 1828
[as Romantische Erzählungen aus der Geschichte
Englands (RS)].
-
OLLIER, Charles.
Inesilla, or the Tempter, a Romance;
with Other Tales. By Charles Ollier, Author
of "Altham and his Wife."
London: Printed by E. Lloyd and Son, Harley-Street;
And William Blackwood, Edinburgh, 1824.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset-Street,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51110-0; EN2 1824: 72.
*Inscription: 'To Chandos Leigh, Esq.'
287p: Inesilla (1-202); The Convict (203-17);
The Disinterment (219-46); The Jilt (247-87).
-
OPIE, Miss [Amelia Alderson].
Tales of the Heart. By Miss Opie. In
Four Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, 1820.
Printed by Richard and Arthur Taylor, Shoe-Lane.
4 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48306-9; EN2 1820: 57.
*Vol. I-350p: Love, Mystery, and Superstition
(1-276); After the Ball; or, the Two Sir Williams
(277-350). Vol. II-419p: The Two Sons (1-200);
A Woman's Love, and a Wife's Duty (201-419).
Vol. III-396p: A Woman's Love, and a Wife's
Duty [cont.] (1-396). Vol. IV-353p: The Opposite
Neighbour (1-104); Happy Faces; or, Benevolence
and Selfishness (105-353).
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1820 (OCLC); New York
1820 (NSTC); German trans., 1820 [as Geschichten
fürs Herz
(RS)]; French trans., 1831 (EN2).
-
[O'SULLIVAN, Samuel.]
College Recollections.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row, 1825.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square,
London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51178-X; xEN2.
*283p: 7 Sketches @ 25-65p.
Further edn: 1829 (NSTC).
-
[PICKEN, Andrew.]
Tales and Sketches of the West of Scotland.
By Christopher Keelivine [pseud.].
Glasgow: Printed for Robertson and Atkinson,
Glasgow; and Sold by Archibald Constable and
Co.; Edinburgh, and Hurst, Robinson and Co.,
London, 1824.
Printed by Cameron, Glasgow. 12mo. Collates
in sixes.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51084-8; EN2 1824: 76.
*366p: Mary Oglivie (1-115); Sketch of Changes
in Society and Manners, in the West of Scotland
during the Last Half-Century (117-217); The
Love Match, a Pedestrian's Tale (219-66).
Further edn: German trans., 1824[as Erzählungen,
aus dem Leben in Schottland (RS)].
-
PORTER, Jane and Anna Maria.
Tales round a Winter Hearth. By Jane and
Anna Maria Porter. In Two Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme,
Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row, 1826.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square,
London. 2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-54704-0; EN2 1826: 64.
*Vol. I-343p: Glenrowan, a Scottish Tradition
[Anna Maria] (3-68); Lord Howth, an Irish Legend
[Anna Maria] (69-131); Jeannie Halliday, a Tale
of our Own Times [Anna Maria] (132-316); My
Chamber in the Old House of Huntercombe [Jane]
(317-43). Vol. II-458p: The Pilgrimage of Berenice,
a Record of Burnham Abbey [Jane] (1-458).
Further edns: New York 1826 (OCLC); German trans.,
1827 [as Erzählungen beim Kaminfeuer
(RS)].
-
[PROCTER, George.]
The Lucubrations of Humphrey Ravelin,
Esg. Late Major in the **Regiment of Infantry.
London: Printed for G. and W. B. Whittaker,
Ave Maria Lane, 1823.
Printed by Thomas Davison, Whitefriars, London.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51085-6; EN2 1823: 69.
*414p: 17 Sketches and Anecdotes @ 20-40p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1824 (NSTC); German trans.,
1824 [as Humoristische Nachtwachen des ehemaligen
brittischen Majors Humphrey Ravelin (RS)].
[RICHARDS, Thomas, Surgeon.]
Tales of Welsh Society and Scenery.
[see item 26]
-
[RITCHIE, Leitch.]
Head-Pieces and Tail-Pieces. By a Travelling
Artist.
London: Charles Tilt, St. Bride's Avenue,
Fleet Street, 1826.
Bungay: Stereotyped and Printed by J. and R.
Childs. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51044-9; xEN2.
*256p: 9 Tales @ 10-45p.
-
RITCHIE, Leitch.
Tales and Confessions. By Leitch Ritchie.
London: Smith, Elder & Co. 65 Cornhill,
1829.
Printed by J. C. Kelly & Son, Aldgate. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51128-3; 1829: 68.
*Dedication: 'To James Augustus St. John, Esq.'
364p: 18 Tales @ 6-20p. (includes 5 'Skeleton
Scenes'; sketches for tale scenarios).
Further edn: 1833 (NSTC).
-
ROSCOE, Thomas.
The German Novelists: Tales Selected
from Ancient and Modern Authors in that Language:
From the Earliest Period down to the Close of
the Eighteenth Century. Translated from the
Originals: With Critical and Bibliographical
Notices. By Thomas Roscoe. In Four Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1826.
Thomas White, Printer, Crane Court. 4 vols.
12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51025-2; xEN2.
*All sections are preceeded by an 'Introductory
Notice'.
Vol. I-413p: Reineke Fuchs (Reynard the Fox)
(1-140) [contains 23 Tales]; Howleglass, the
Merry Jester (141-255) [contains 41 Tales];
Doctor Faustus (256-413) [contains 54 Tales].
Vol. II-405p: Popular Traditions (1-89) [contains
9 Traditions]; Gottschalck (90-178) [contains
15 Tales]; Eberhardt (179-212) [contains 2 Tales];
Büsching (213-34) [contains 2 Tales]; M. M.
Grimm (235-86) [contains 13 Tales]; Lothar (287-305)
[contains 2 Tales]; La Motte Fouque (306-405)
[contains 3 Tales]. Vol. III-374p: Musoeus (1-105)
[contains 2 Tales]; Schiller (106-374) [contains
5 Tales]. Vol. IV-374p: Lewis Tieck (1-132)
[contains 4 Tales]; Langbein (133-345) [contains
6 Tales]; Engel (346-74) [contains 3 Tales].
Further edn: 1868 (NSTC).
-
[SAINT LEGER, Francis Barry Boyle.]
Tales of Passion: Lord Lovel's Daughter.
The Bohemian. Second Love. By the Author of
"Gilbert Earle." In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington-Street,
1829.
Printed by William Clowes, Stamford-Street.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48872-9; EN2 1829: 70.
*Vol. I-315p: Lord Lovel's Daughter;
a Tale of the Reformation (1-253); The Bohemian
(261-315). Vol. II-319p: The Bohemian [cont.]
(1-284); Second Love (285-319). Vol. III-356p:
Second Love [cont.] (1-356).
Further edn: New York 1829 (NSTC).
-
SCOTT, Maria.
Winter Tales, or European Nights'
Entertainments. Edited by Maria Scott.
London: A. Robertson and Co., Bridge Court,
Bridge Street, Blackfriars, 1825.
Printed by N. Bliss, Whitefriars, London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51122-4; xEN2.
*421p: 23 tales @ 10-65p.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1831 (NSTC).
-
[STODDART, Lady Isabella Wellwood.]
Tales of my Aunt Martha; Containing I.
The Laird, a Scottish Tale; II. The Sisters,
an English Tale; III. The Chateau in La Vendee,
a French Tale.
London: William Learman, Library, 170, New
Bond Street, 1822.
Printed by William Clowes, Northumberland-Court.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48868-0; EN2 1822: 72.
*Vol. I-344p: Some Account of my Aunt Martha
(v-xxiv); The Laird, a Scottish Tale (1-344).
Vol. II-372p: The Sisters, an English Tale (1-372).
Vol. III-341p: The Chateau in La Vendee, a French
Tale (1-341).
Also attributed to Martha Blackford (pseud.)
in NSTC.
Further edn: French trans., 1830 (EN2).
SHAFTON, Pierce [pseud.].
Vagaries, in Quest of the Wild and the Whimsical.
[see item 22]
-
[SHERER, Joseph Moyle.]
Tales of the Wars of our Times. By The
Author of "Recollections of the Peninsula" &c.
&c. &c. In Two Volumes.
London: Printed for Longman, Rees, Orme,
Brown, and Green, Paternoster-Row, 1829.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square,
London. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51162-3; EN2 1829: 77.
*Vol. I-364p: The Lady of Cordora; or, the Spanish
Brother (1-315); The Tyroler (317-64). Vol.
II-369p: The Tyroler [cont.] (1-60); The Rival
(161-286); Maria of Meissen (287-329); The Moravian
Brothers (331-69).
Further edn: German trans., 1832 [as Bilder
aus dem Kriegsleben (RS)].
-
[?SHOBERL, Frederick (ed?).]
Tales of Woman. In Two Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1828.
Printed by Henry Diggens, Leicester Street,
Leicester Square. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51168-2; EN2 1828: 74.
*Vol. I-331p: The Wife (1-293); Helen Lindorf
(295-331). Vol. II-271p: Helen Lindorf [cont.]
(1-108); The Russian Daughter (109-213); The
Mother (215-71).
For authorial attribution see EN2.
Further edn: New York 1829 (OCLC).
-
SLINGSBY, Henry.
My Grandmother's Guests and their Tales.
By Henry Slingsby. In Two Volumes.
London: James Robins and Co., Ivy Lane,
Paternoster Row, and Joseph Robins, Jun. and
Co., Lower Ormond Quay, Dublin, 1825.
Printed by J. Robins and Co., Albion Press,
London. 2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51139-9; EN2 1825: 75.
*Vol. I-274p: Introduction (i-xi); Sir Roger
de Calverley's Ghost (1-67); Hours of Peril
(69-128); Malgherita Spoletina (129-45); The
Old Grey Cloak (147-238); The Feast of Lanterns
(239-74). Vol. II-303p: The Magic Mirror (1-106);
Le Morte a Tue les Vivans (107-28); Lady Arabella
Stuart (129-61); The Knight and the Disour (163-299);
[Epilogue] (300-03).
-
[SMITH, Horatio.]
Gaieties and Gravities; a Series of Essays,
Comic Tales, and Fugitive Vagaries. Now First
Collected. By One of the Authors of "Rejected
Addresses." In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1825.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street.
3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51182-8; xEN2.
*Preface states most of tales previously published
in New Monthly Magazine.
Vol. I-353p: 57 Tales and Essays @ 1-40p. Vol.
II-336p: 40 Tales and Essays @ 1-15p. Vol. III-346p:
45 Tales and Essays @ 1-15p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1826 (NSTC); 3rd edn.
1826 (NSTC); Philadelphia 1825 (NSTC).
-
[SMYTH, Amelia Gillespie.]
Tales of the Moors: Or, Rainy Days in
Ross-shire. By the Author of Selwyn in Search
of a Daughter.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood, and T. Cadell,
Strand, London, 1828.
Printed by Ballantyne & Co., Edinburgh.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-48865-6; EN2 1828: 76.
*Dedication: 'To Sir Walter Scott, Baronet.'
437p: Introduction (ix-xix); The Return (1-246);
My Last Day in Rome (247-88); Adventures of
an Attache (289-374); A Day in the Isle of Wight
(375-437).
NSTC states: 'Sometimes attributed to Caroline
Bowles.'
-
SPENCE, Miss [Elizabeth Isabella].
Old Stories. By Miss Spence, Author of
"A Traveller's Tale," &c. &c. In Two
Volumes.
London: Printed by Longman, Hurst, Rees,
Orme, and Brown, Paternoster-Row, 1822.
Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square.
2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51135-6; EN2 1822: 71.
*Dedication: 'To Miss Myddelton Biddulph, the
Present Possessor of Chirk Castle.'
Vol. I-184p: The Knight's Daughter (1-184).
Vol. II-208p: The Knight's Daughter [cont.]
(1-103); Kynaston's Cave (104-208).
-
[SUTHERLAND, Alexander.]
Tales of a Pilgrim. By the Author of
"A Summer Ramble in the North Highlands."
Edinburgh: William Hunter, 23, Hanover Street;
and James Duncan, London, 1827.
Printed by James Auchie, Edinburgh. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51158-5; EN2 1827: 69.
*Dedication: 'To Sir Walter Scott. Baronet.'
394p: 11 Tales @ 15-85p.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1827 (NSTC).
-
[TAYLOR, Charles Benjamin]
May You Like It. By a Country Curate.
London: Printed for T Boys, Ludgate-Hill,
182223.
Printed by D. S. Maurice, Fenchurch-Street,
London. 2 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-54783-0 (2nd edn. 1822); EN2
1822: 74.
*Dedication: 'To my dearest Mother.' Vol. II
has dedication 'To Ralph Winstanley Wood, Esq.'
Vol. I-263p: 8 Tales @ 8-40p. [interspersed
with Poems]. Vol. II-386p: 7 Tales @ 30-60p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1822 (Corvey); 3rd edn.
182324 (NSTC), 5th edn. 1832 (NSTC); 1863
(NSTC); Philadelphia 1822 (NSTC).
-
[THOMSON, Richard.]
Tales of an Antiquary: Chiefly Illustrative
of the Manners, Traditions, and Remarkable Localities
of Ancient London. In Three Volumes.
London: Henry Colburn, New Burlington Street,
1828.
Printed by S. and R. Bentley, Dorset Street,
London. 3 vols. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-52306-0; EN2 1828: 79.
*Inscription: 'To the Author of Waverley, by
an Unknown Admirer of his Genius.'
Vol. I (A.D. 1100 to A.D. 1560)-360p: 8 Tales
@ 28-75p. Vol. II (A.D. 1571 to A.D. 1629)-393p:
6 Tales @ 45-100p. Vol. III (A.D. 1716 to A.D.
1769)-353p: 8 Tales @ 25-100p.
Further edns: 1832 reissue (NSTC); German trans.,
1829 [as Sagen der Vorzeit (RS)].
-
[TIMBS, John.]
Cameleon Sketches. By the Author of "A
Picturesque Promenade round Dorking."
London: Printed for the Author, 1828.
Printed by D. Sidney, Northumberland St. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51021-X; xEN2.
*251p: 8 Sketches @ 20-40p.
Timbs also wrote under Horace Welby (pseud.)
(NSTC).
-
[WEBBE, Cornelius.]
The Posthumous Papers, Facetious and
Fanciful, of a Person Lately about Town.
London: William Sams, Royal Library, St.
John's Street, 1828.
Printed by William Clover, Stamford Street,
London. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-5117-8; xEN2.
*304p: 21 Sketches, Poems, and Tales @ 3-35p.
Further edn: New York 1828 (OCLC).
-
[WELLS, Charles Jeremiah.]
Stories after Nature.
London: T. and J. Allman, Princes Street,
Hanover Square; and C. and J. Ollier, Vere Street,
Oxford Street, 1822.
Charles Wood, Printer, Poppin's Court, Fleet
Street, London. 12mo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51136-4; EN2 1822: 78.
*251p: 19 Tales @ 5-30p.
-
WELLS, Mrs [Sarah] Wilmot.
Tales; Mournful, Mirthful, and Marvellous.
By Mrs Wilmot Wells, of Margate. In Three Volumes.
London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green,
Paternoster-Row; and J. Denne, Margate, 1827.
Printed by J. Denne, Margate. 3 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51164-X; EN2 1827: 77.
*Also includes subscription list.
*Vol. I-216p: The Rose Bud of Deal (1-42); The
Sharpers, or, How to Win a Supper (43-216).
Vol. II-248p: The Jew; a Fragment (1-72); Estella,
or, the Family Picture (73-248). Vol. III-211p:
Estella, or, the Family Picture [cont.] (1-211).
-
[WHITTY, Michael James.]
Tales of Irish Life, Illustrative of
the Manners, Customs, and Conditions of the
People. With Designs by George Cruikshank.
London: Published by J. Robins and Co.,
Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row, 1824. 2 vols. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51018-X; EN2 1824: 96.
*Vol. I-242p: 7 Tales @ 18-120p. Vol. II-249p:
9 Tales @ 25-40p.
Further edn: German trans., 1825 (EN2).
-
[WILSON, John.]
Lights and Shadows of Scottish Life:
A Selection from the Papers of the Late Arthur
Austin.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood, Edinburgh:
And T. Cadell, London, 1822.
Printed by George Ramsey & Co., Edinburgh.
8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51088-0 (2nd edn. 1822); EN2
1822: 82.
*Inscription: 'To Sir Walter Scott, Bart.'
430p: 24 Tales @ 7-40p.
Further edns: 2nd edn. 1822 (Corvey); 3rd edn.
1823 (NSTC); 1824 (NSTC); 1832 (NSTC); 1853
(NSTC); [at least 3 more edns. to 1870 (NSTC)];
Boston 1822 (NSTC); German trans., 1825 [as
Erzählungen aus dem Leben in Schottland],
1824 (RS); French trans. [as Nouvelles écossaises,
tirées des manuscrits d'Arthur Austin (BN)].
-
WILSON, Alexander.
Alice Allan. The Country Town. Et Cet.
By Alexander Wilson.
London: Geo. B. Whittaker, Ave-Maria-Lane,
1825.
Printed by Shackell and Arrowsmith, Johnson's-Court,
Fleet-Street. 8vo.
Corvey: CME 3-628-51165-8; EN2 1825: 89.
*295p: Alice Allan (1-26); My Aunt's Arm Chair
(27-52); Poor Parents (53-70); The Country Town
(71-100); Fanny West (101-18); Introduction
to London (119-295).
[YOSY, Ann.]
Tales from Switzerland.
[see item 23]
[YOSY, Ann.]
Tales from Afar.
[see item 24]
Copyright
Information
This article is copyright © 2001
Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research,
and is the result of the independent labour of
the scholar or scholars credited with authorship. The
material contained in this document may be freely
distributed, as long as the origin of information
used has been properly credited in the appropriate
manner (e.g. through bibliographic citation, etc.).
The matter contained
within this article provides bibliographical information
based on independent personal research by the
contributor, and as such has not been subject
to the peer-review process.
Referring
to this Report
P. T. KILLICK. 'The Rise of the Tale: A Preliminary
Checklist of Collections of Short Fiction Published
1820-29 in the Corvey Collection', Cardiff
Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text 7 (Dec 2001).
Online: Internet (date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/romtext/reports/cc07_n04.html>.
Contributor
Details
Tim Killick (BA Liverpool, MA Wales) is a second-year
doctoral research student at Cardiff University,
based in the Centre for Editorial and Intertextual
Research. His thesis, 'The Development of the
"Tale" in the Fiction of the late Romantic Era',
seeks to evaluate the nature of short fiction
and its interface with the novel market of the
1820s. He has also worked as a research assistant
on CEIR's 'British Fiction, 1800-1829: A Database
of Production, Circulation, and Reception History'.

Last modified
25 January, 2006
.
This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal
(Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
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