This project report relates to The
English Novel, 1770-1829: A Bibliographical Survey of
Prose Fiction Published in the British Isles, general
editors Peter Garside, James Raven, and Rainer Schöwerling,
2 vols (Oxford: OUP, 2000). In particular it offers fresh
commentary on the entries in the second volume, which
was co-edited by Peter Garside and Rainer Schöwerling,
with the assistance of Christopher Skelton-Foord and Karin
Wünsche, and involved close co-operation between Cardiff
University and Paderborn University in Germany. The present
report is the second Update in what is intended to be
a series of annual Reports, each featuring information
that has come to light in the preceding year as a result
of activities in the Centre for Editorial and Intertextual
Research and through contributions sent by interested
individuals outside Cardiff.
The entries below are organised in a
way that matches the order of material in the English
Novel, 1770-1829. While making reference to any relevant
changes that may have occurred in Update 1, the 'base'
it refers to is the printed Bibliography and not the preceding
report. Sections A and B concern authorship, with the
first of these proposing changes to the attribution as
given in the printed Bibliography, and the second recording
the discovery of new information of interest that has
nevertheless not led presently to new attributions. Sections
C includes three additional titles which match the criteria
for inclusion and should ideally have been incorporated
in the printed Bibliography, while the last two sections
involve information such as is usually found in the Notes
field of entries, and those owning copies of the printed
Bibliography might wish (as in the case of the earlier
categories) to amend entries accordingly. An element of
colour coding has been used to facilitate recognition
of the nature of changes, with red
denoting revisions and additions to existing entries in
the Bibliography, and the additional titles discovered
being picked out in blue.
References numbers (e.g. 1806: 12) are the same as those
in the English Novel, 1770-1829; when found as
cross references these refer back to the original Bibliography,
unless accompanied with 'above' or 'below', in which case
a cross reference within the present report is intended.
Abbreviations match those listed at the beginning volume
2 of the English Novel, though in a few cases these
are spelled out more fully for the convenience of present
readers.
This report was prepared by Peter Garside,
with significant inputs of information from Drs Jacqueline
Belanger and Sharon Ragaz, largely through their work
on our Database of Fiction 1800-29 project, and from Dr
Anthony Mandal, primarily through his work on extending
the bibliographical record of fiction to 1836. Information
was also generously communicated by a number of individuals,
notably: Mr Roger Bettridge, of the Buckinghamshire County
Record Office; Mr Peter Doyle, a descendant of George
Matcham; Professors Rolf Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber,
from Pittsburgh University; Professor Pam Perkins, University
of Manitoba; Professor David Skilton, Cardiff University;
Professor Wil Verhoeven, University of Groningen; and
Mr Caspar Wintermans, The Hague. As usual the team has
greatly benefited from its association with Projekt Corvey
at Paderborn University, particularly in this instance
through information received from Verena Ebbes and Angela
Koch. Thanks are also due the trustees of the National
Library of Scotland for permission to quote from manuscript
material in their care.
A: New and Changed Author
Attributions
1806: 12
[GRAINVILLE, Jean Baptiste François
Xavier Cousin de].
THE LAST MAN, OR OMEGARUS AND SYDERIA, A ROMANCE IN FUTURITY.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
London: Printed for R. Dutton, 15, Gracechurch-Street,
1806.
I 220p; II 204p. 12mo. 7s (ER).
CR 3rd ser. 8: 443 (Aug 1806); ER 8: 479 (July 1806);
WSW I: 64.
Corvey; CME 3-628-47899-5; NSTC L528 (BI BL, O).
Notes. Trans. of Le dernier
homme (Paris, 1805). A reprint of the Dutton 1806
edn. appeared in 1978 in the Arno 'Lost Race and Adult
Fantasy Fiction' series. The identification is also made
in Morton D. Paley, 'Mary Shelley's The Last Man: Apocalypse
Without Millenium', Keats-Shelley Review (Autumn,
1989), 1-25: electronically available as http://www.rc.umd.edu/editions/mws/lastman/paley2.htm.
1807: 25
ANON.
BARON DE FALKENHEIM. A GERMAN TALE OF THE SIXTEENTH
CENTURY. IN TWO VOLUMES.
London: Printed at the Minerva-Press, for Lane, Newman,
and Co. Leadenhall-Street, 1807.
I 304p; II 303p. 12mo. 9s (ECB); 9s sewed (ER).
ER 9: 500 (Jan 1807).
Corvey; CME 3-628-47106-0; ECB 41; xNSTC.
Notes. Originally attributed
with reservation to GUÉNARD, Elisabeth, on the basis of
a link with 1808: 51 , though no French original for this
title was discovered. See new note to 1808: 51, below,
for the greater likelihood that this is by an unknown
English author.
1808: 51
ANON.
MYSTERY UPON MYSTERY. A TALE OF EARLIER TIMES.
IN FOUR VOLUMES. BY THE AUTHOR OF THE BARON DE FALKENHEIM.
London: Printed at the Minerva-Press, for Lane, Newman,
and Co. Leadenhall-Street, 1808.
I 271p, ill.; II 268p; III 280p; IV 259p. 12mo. 20s (ECB).
Corvey; CME 3-628-48185-6; ECB 403; NSTC M3825 (BI BL).
Notes. Originally attributed
with reservation to GUÉNARD, Elisabeth, and considered
as a trans. of her Mystères sur mystères, ou les onze
chevaliers (Paris, 1807). Caspar Wintermans of The
Hague, Netherlands, writes in a personal letter, however,
that having consulted a rare copy of Mystères sur mystères
from the Library of the Castle of Oron, Vaud, Switzerland,
he has ascertained that it is completely different from
Mystery upon Mystery. The present title, and two
other novels in the same chain (see 1807: 25, 1811: 36),
most probably then are the work of an anonymous English
author. ECB dates Dec 1807, and lists under title
only.
1811: 36
ANON.
THE BLACK BANNER; OR, THE SIEGE OF CLAGENFURTH. A ROMANTIC
TALE. IN FOUR VOLUMES. BY THE AUTHOR OF THE BARON OF FALKENHEIM,
MYSTERY UPON MYSTERY, &C. &C.
London: Printed at the Minerva-Press, for A. K. Newman
and Co. (Successors to Lane, Newman, & Co.) Leadenhall-Street,
1811.
I 272p; II 290p; III 288p; IV 322p. 12mo.
Corvey; CME 3-628-47198-2; NSTC G2325 (BI BL).
Notes. Originally attributed
with reservation to GUÉNARD, Elisabeth, on the basis of
a link with 1808: 51 , though no French original for this
title was discovered. See new note to 1808: 51, above,
for the great likelihood that this is by an unknown English
author. It now also seems more likely that La Bannière
noire; ou le siège de Clagenforth (1820), though attributed
by BN to Guénard, is in fact a French translation
of this title.
1821: 1
[MATCHAM, George].
ANECDOTES OF A CROAT.
London: Published by Sherwood, Neely, and Jones, Paternoster
Row, 1821.
iv, 425p. 12mo. 5s (ECB).
C Rom.6.31; ECB 19; NSTC 2A12592.
Notes. George Matcham (1753-1833)
is given as the author in an obituary in The Gentleman's
Magazine for March 1833 (pp.276-8).
ECB dates Dec 1821.
Further edn: reissued in an extended form as Anecdotes
of a Croat; or, The Castle of Serai, comprehending Hints
for the Improvement of Public Works, Agriculture, and
Domestic Life, 2 vols, Simpkin and Marshall (compare
1823: 2).
1823: 2
[MATCHAM, George].
ANECDOTES OF A CROAT; OR, THE CASTLE OF SERAI, COMPREHENDING
HINTS FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS, AGRICULTURE,
AND DOMESTIC LIFE. IN TWO VOLUMES.
London: Published by W. Simpkin and R. Marshall, Stationers'
Hall Court, 1823.
I iv, 425p; II 396p. 12mo. 12s (ECB).
Corvey; CME 3-628-47058-7; ECB 19; NSTC 2C43423 (BI BL).
Notes. An extended version of 1821: 1; vol. 1 is
identical to the earlier publication, apart from a new
t.p. George Matcham (1753-1833)
is given as the author in an obituary in The Gentleman's
Magazine for March 1833 (pp.276-8). ECB
dates this version May 1823.
1823: 3
[LESASSIER, Alexander Hamilton].
EDWARD NEVILLE; OR, THE MEMOIRS OF AN ORPHAN. IN FOUR
VOLUMES.
London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown,
Paternoster-Row, 1823.
I 514p; II 424p; III 442p; IV 418p. 12mo. 28s (ECB, QR);
28s boards (ER).
ER 39: 272 (Oct 1823); QR 29: 280 (Apr 1823); WSW II:
9.
Corvey; CME 3-628-47511-2; ECB 180; NSTC 2N3642 (BI BL,
O).
Notes. The author is identified,
with evidence from the Longman Papers, in Lisa Rosner's
The Most Beautiful Man in Existence: The Scandalous
Life of Alexander Lesassier (Philadelphia: University
of Pennsylvania Press, 1990), see especially pp. 154-60.
1823: 81
[WALKER, Anne].
RICH AND POOR.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood, and T. Cadell, London, 1823.
401p. 8vo. 10s 6d (ECB, ER, QR).
ER 39: 272 (Oct 1823); QR 29: 280 (Apr 1823); WSW II:
198.
Corvey; CME 3-628-48570-3; ECB 492; NSTC 2R8959 (BI BL,
C, O; NA MH).
Notes. The author is identified
as Miss Anne Walker, of Dalry, an intimate friend of Susan
Ferrier, in Memoir and Correspondence of Susan Ferrier
1782-1854, ed. John A. Doyle (London: Eveleigh Nash
& Grayson, 1929), p. 169. See also Update 1, for James
Hogg's association of this title with 'our lady novelists'.
1825: 83
[WALKER, Anne].
COMMON EVENTS: A CONTINUATION OF RICH AND POOR.
Edinburgh: William Blackwood, and T. Cadell, London, 1825.
382p. 8vo. 10s 6d (ECB, QR); 10s 6d boards (ER).
ER 42: 266 (Apr 1825); QR 32: 267 (June 1825).
Corvey; CME 3-628-47276-8; ECB 128; NSTC 2W1903 (BI BL,
C, E, O; NA DLC).
Notes. The author is identified
as Miss Anne Walker, of Dalry, an intimate friend of Susan
Ferrier, in Memoir and Correspondence of Susan Ferrier
1782-1854, ed. John A. Doyle (London: Eveleigh Nash
& Grayson, 1929), p. 169n.
B: New Information Relating
to Authorship, but not Presently Leading to Further Attribution
Changes
1803: 75 [WHITFIELD, Henry], LEOPOLD;
OR, THE BASTARD. The 'Correspondence' section at the end
of September 1803 number of the Monthly Review
includes the following notice: 'The Rev. H. Whitfield
requests us to correct the surmise introduced in our last
number, p. 424, by stating that he is not the author
of the Novel intitled Leopold' (n.s. vol. 42, p.
112). This in turn casts doubt most immediately on But
Which? or Domestic Grievances of the Wolmore Family. By
the Author of "Leopold" (1807: 67); though other 'Whitfield'
titles are also perhaps worth now questioning again (see,
e.g., 1816: 58). The only title attributed directly to
Henry Whitfield on the original title-page is A Picture
from Life: or, the History of Emma Tankerville and Sir
Henry Moreton. By Henry Whitfield, M.A. (1804: 70).
1805: 11 ANON, ROSETTA, A NOVEL.
BY A LADY, WELL KNOWN IN THE FASHIONABLE WORLD. This title
is tentatively attributed to Eliza Parsons by the Flowers
of Literature for 1804, in a footnote addendum to
'A List of Mrs Parson's Publications': 'We believe, but
on this point we cannot be certain, that Mrs Parson's
has written "The Wise-ones Bubbled; or, Lovers Triumphant,"
in two volumes, duodecimo - and another novel, intitled
"Rosetta" ' (p. 27).
1806: 43 LATHY, T[homas] P[ike],
THE INVISIBLE ENEMY; OR, THE MINES OF WIELITSKA. A POLISH
LEGENDARY ROMANCE. Casper Wintermans indicates in a personal
letter that this is an unacknowledged trans. of Jean-Louis
Lacroix de Niré's Ladouski et Floriska (Paris,
1801). Currently still under Lathy's name, until proximity
of the two texts can be more fully ascertained.
1809: 24 [?ENGLISH, John], MODERN
TIMES; OR, ANECDOTES OF THE ENGLISH FAMILY. Reattributed
to George LIPSCOMB in Update 1. Roger Bettridge, who provided
the information, subsequently writes of this title that
'John, or Jack, English is a character in the novel, who
is "unmasked" as the author in the denouement, a charge
which he at pains to deny! Lipscombe was clearly continuing
the [?Shandean] joke'.
1809: 41 LATHY, T[homas] P[ike],
*LOVE, HATRED, AND REVENGE; A SWISS ROMANCE. Casper Wintermans
indicates in a personal letter that this might turn out
to be an unacknowledged trans. of François Pagès's Amour,
haine et vengeance (1799), but no further information
about this title has been discovered.
1820: 7 ANON, NICE DISTINCTIONS:
A TALE. A review in the Dublin Magazine, 1 (May
1820), ends with the following short paragraph: 'We now
take our farewell of D-l's NICE DISTINCTIONS; but we sincerely
hope that we may again see characters as nicely distinguished
as this work promises' (p. 378). One suggestion ventured
by Rolf Loeber is that the partly disguised name is Dowdall,
but no further information has been discovered.
1821: 4 CONCEALMENT. A NOVEL.
Attributed by Wolff (Item 7433) in a note to Mary FLETCHER
(1802-?), but on a misreading of his source from
Notes and Queries 215 (October 1970), 382-3.
The article in question, 'The Authorship of "Concealment" ',
by Dorothy R. Scheele, unequivocally concerns the novel
of the same title published by Bentley in 1837, which
on her evidence is clearly attributable to Mary Fletcher
(later Richardson), the youngest daughter Eliza Fletcher
(1770-1858), the wife of the Scottish lawyer Archibald
Fletcher and herself leader of an Edinburgh intellectual-literary
circle. After the publication of this 1837 novel, in a
letter of September 1838, Eliza Fletcher wrote to Allan
Cunningham: 'He [Bentley] offered to take the risk of
the publication and to share the profits with the author
- at the end of a year and a half he sends her an acct.
charging between £30 & £40 for advertizing the Book.
- ten percent upon the copies sold - which after deducting
the Expense of paper and printing leaves her a profit
of 10/!!! So much for a Lady's authorship. - He owns to
the sale of between 200 and 300 Copies. I mention this
in confidence - you will not allow it to go further' (National
Library of Scotland, MS 2617, f.90). Along with CONCEALMENT,
OR THE CASCADE OF LLANTWARRYHN (1801: 27), by the shadowy
Mrs E. M. Foster, this means there were at least three
novels with the lead title Concealment published
between 1800 and 1837. Thanks are due to Pam Perkins for
drawing attention to the letter from Eliza Fletcher.
1824: 8 ANON, THE HUMAN HEART.
Entered under EDLMANN, Frederick J., in Wolff (Item 1999),
but on the rather shaky grounds of a presentation copy
with the bookplate of Frederick J. Edlmann, Hawkwood,
and an inscription in hand "Maryann Edlmann from her affectionate
brother, the Author'. As Wolff conceded, Edlmann may be
the married name of the inscriber's sister, in which case
the book remains anonymous; but there is also the possibility
that the inscription is fanciful of part of a family game.
In these circumstances, any ascription to Edlmann must
be highly speculative.
1825: 23 [?CROWE, Eyre Evans or
?PHIPPS, Constantine Henry, Marquis of Normanby], THE
ENGLISH IN ITALY. A recently purchased copy, owned by
Peter Garside, has 'by Eyre Evans Crowe' written beneath
the title in the first volume, apparently in a contemporary
hand. Further evidence in favour of Crowe's authorship
appears in the Bentley Publishing Records, where 'The
English at Home, By the Author of "The English in Italy,"
etc.', entered as published on 27 May 1830, is given as
'By Eyre Evans Crowe, son of a military officer of the
same name, who received £500 for the copyright': see A
List of the Principal Publications Issued from New Burlington
Street during the Year 1830 (London: Richard Bentley
and Son, 1893). The same note continues: 'Mr. Crowe was
French Correspondent of the Morning Chronicle,
and afterwards Editor, for some time, of the Daily
News. "The English at Home" was preceded by two other
novels from his pen, "The English in France," and "The
English in Italy." Mr. Crowe died in 1868.' It is also
worth noting that the same attribution is found in the
earlier manuscript Catalogue of Bentley Publications held
by the British Library (BL Add MSS 46637), covering the
years 1829-1837. The evidence in favour of Crowe's rather
than Phipps's authorship of this title, as well as of
Historiettes (1827: 27) and The English in France
(1828: 34), now seems to approach the overwhelming.
1827: 13 [ANWYL, Edward Trevor],
TALES OF WELSH SOCIETY AND SCENERY. The Bodleian pre-1920
catalogue attributes this to Thomas RICHARDS, Surgeon.
If this were accepted, then it would have a knock-on effect
with regard to YOUTH AND MANHOOD OF EDWARD ELLIS (1829:
14), effectively the same work, and open up the possibility
that Edward Trevor ANWYL, as found on the title-page of
REGINALD TREVOR; OR, THE WELSH LOYALISTS (1829: 13), is
a pseudonym.
1827: 28 [?CROWE, Eyre Evans or
?PHIPPS, Constantine Henry, Marquis of Normanby], HISTORIETTES,
OR TALES OF CONTINENTAL LIFE, BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE ENGLISH
IN ITALY." See entry on 1825: 23, above.
1827: 60 [SCARGILL, William Pitt],
BLUE-STOCKING HALL. Re-attributed in Update 1, along with
TALES OF MY TIME (1829: 74), to Miss ?Anne CHETWODE, on
the basis of Rolf Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber,
18th-19th Century Irish Fiction Newsletter, January
1998, No. 1. In the Bentley Publishing Records, however,
authorship of the New edition of 1830 is ascribed to 'Mrs.
WILMOT': see A List of the Principal Publications Issued
from New Burlington Street during the Year 1830 (London:
Richard Bentley and Son, 1893), where the month of publication
for the New Edition is given as August [1830]. A note
there also states: 'A reference to Mrs. Wilmot, or Clifton,
will be found in Bentley's Miscellany, volume xvi, page
38'. It is also worth noting that in the earlier manuscript
Catalogue of Bentley Publications held by the British
Library (BL Add MSS 46637) the name of William Pitt Scargill
was first entered against this publication, and then replaced
with 'Miss Wilmot' written in pencil. The name of Mrs
Wilmot is expanded to that of WILMOT, afterwards BRAND,
Barbarina Baroness Dacre (1768-1854), in Michael Turner's
Index and Guide to the Lists of Publications of Richard
Bentley & Son 1829-1898 (Bishop Storford:
Chadwyck-Healey Ltd, 1975), p. 218. This title, however,
is not attributed to Barbarina Brand/Dacre/Wilmot in DNB,
CBEL3, or FC, and there is no mention of any involvement
with this or related works in A Family Chronicle Derived
from the Notes and Letters Selected by Barbarina, the
Hon. Lady Grey, ed. Gertrude Lyster (London: John
Murray, 1908). In view of all the evidence it seems best
to stay with the re-attribution to Miss Chetwode.
1828: 34 [?CROWE, Eyre Evans or
?PHIPPS, Constantine Henry, Marquis of Normanby], THE
ENGLISH IN FRANCE, BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE ENGLISH IN ITALY."
See entry on 1825: 23 above.
1829: 74 [SCARGILL, William Pitt],
TALES OF MY TIME, BY THE AUTHOR OF BLUE-STOCKING HALL.
Re-attributed in Update 1, along with BLUE-STOCKING HALL
(1827: 60), to Miss ?Anne CHETWODE, on the basis of Rolf
Loeber and Magda Stouthamer-Loeber, 18th-19th Century
Irish Fiction Newsletter, January 1998, No. 1. In
the Bentley Publishing Records, however, authorship is
ascribed to 'Mrs. WILMOT': see A List of the Principal
Publications Issued from New Burlington Street during
the last three months of the year 1829 (London: Richard
Bentley and Son, 1893), where the date of publication
is given as 23 October. The note there also states parenthetically
'Wrongly attributed in the Bodleian Catalogue to Mrs.
Loudon, and in the British Museum catalogue to William
Pitt Scargill'. The name of Mrs Wilmot is expanded to
that of WILMOT, afterwards BRAND, Barbarina Baroness Dacre
(1768-1854), in Michael Turner's Index and Guide to
the Lists of Publications of Richard Bentley & Son
1829-1898 (Bishop Storford: Chadwyck-Healey
Ltd, 1975), p. 218. This title, however, is not attributed
to Barbarina Brand/Dacre/Wilmot in DNB, CBEL3, or FC,
and there is no mention any involvement with this or related
works in A Family Chronicle Derived from the Notes
and Letters Selected by Barbarina, the Hon. Lady Grey,
ed. Gertrude Lyster (London: John Murray, 1908). In view
of all the evidence it seems best to stay with the re-attribution
to Miss Chetwode.
C: New Titles for Inclusion
1800.
[WOOD, Sally Sayward Barrell
Keating].
*JULIA AND THE ILLUMINATED
BARON: A NOVEL FOUNDED ON RECENT FACTS, WHICH HAVE TRANSPIRED
IN THE COURSE OF THE LATE REVOLUTION OF MORAL PRINCIPLES
IN FRANCE.
London: W. Row, 1800.
2 vols. 12mo. 8s (Bent03).
No copy of first edn. located.
Notes.
Originally published Portsmouth, NH, 1800. Details in
entry from 2nd edn at Indiana University (OCCL: 42940726:
not seen). This OCCL entry (42940726) gives author as
'P. Barrell', apparently in error. Format from Bent03.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1801 (OCLC).
1801.
ANON.
THE MORAL LEGACY; OR, SIMPLE
NARRATIVES.
London: Printed for William
Miller, Old Bond Street, 1801.
xi, 359p. 8vo. 7s boards
(CR); 7s (ECB).
CR 2nd ser. 33: 354 (Nov
1801); WSW I: 80.
BL 1578/2364; ECB 395, NSTC
M3116 (BI O).
Notes.
'Introduction', pp. [v]-xi, signed 'Editor' and dated
'London, April 10, 1801'. This claims that contents derive
from narratives collected and bequeathed by a philanthropist
friend. The constituent stories (all in the first person)
are: 'The Gamester', pp. [1]-35; 'The Passionate Man',
pp. 36-50; 'The Envious Woman', pp. 51-67; 'The Vain Man',
pp. 68-99; 'The Libertine', pp. 100-22; 'The Prodigal',
pp. 123-51; 'The Miser', pp. 152-95; 'The Enthusiast',
pp. 196-265; 'The Adulteress', pp. 266-359.
Further edn: 2nd edn. 1808
(BL 1507/197).
1829.
[SHEPHERD, William].
CLOUDS AND SUNSHINE.
London: Printed for Samuel
Maunder, 10, Newgate Street, n.d. [1829].
x, 324p. 12mo. 8s 6d (ECB).
O 29.196; ECB 122; NSTC 2S18889
(BI BL, C, Dt, E).
Notes.
Correctly attributable to William Shepherd , Rector of
Margaret Roding (Essex), and wrongly in NSTC to William
Shepherd (1768-1847), Unitarian Minister. The Revd Shepherd
in question was author of Liturgical Considerations
(1824), and almost certainly a co-author with George Wilkins
of Body and Soul (1822: 81) and The Village
Pastor (1825: 88). For these last two titles, see
also Update 1. Preface states of the author's intentions:
'His simple object is to convey instruction in a pleasing
manner, and maintain fairly and charitably that Doctrine
which is accordant to the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to
the Established Church, which he firmly and conscientiously
believes founded on that rock of ages' (p. ix).The constituent
tales are: 'The Gipsy Girl', pp. [3] -40; 'Religious Offices'
pp. [43] -95; 'Enthusiasm', pp. [99] -148; 'Romanism',
pp. [151]-197; 'Rashness' [201] -250; 'De Lawrence' [253]
-312. 'Romanism' in particular takes an anti-Emancipationist
stance. 'Appendix', pp. [317] -24 is purely theological
in content.
D: Titles Previously not
Located for Which Holding Libraries
Have Subsequently Been Discovered
Nothing new to report for this section.
E: New Information Relating
to Existing Title Entries
Appendix F: 5 MATTHEWS, Mrs, THE
PHANTOM; OR MYSTERIES OF THE CASTLE. 'The
Phantom, or Mysteries of the Castle, by Mrs. Matthews'
at the price of 4s features in a list of 'New Publications'
by A. K. Newman, at the end of vol. 2 of the Corvey copy
of Alexander Campbell, Perkin Warbeck; or, the Court
of James the Fourth of Scotland, 3 vols. (1830).
F: Further Editions Previously
not Noted
1796: 4 BERKELEY HALL; OR, THE
PUPIL OF EXPERIENCE. 'second edition', William Lane 1803
(W.M. Verhoeven, p.c.).
1826: 26 [CORBETT, Marion and
Margaret], THE ODD VOLUME. 3rd edn. 1827 (OCLC: 12369898).
1826: 64 PORTER, Jane and Anna
Maria, TALES ROUND A WINTER HEARTH. New York 1826 (OCLC:
37287646).
1827: 34 [GRIFFIN, Gerald Joseph],
"HOLLAND-TIDE;" OR, MUNSTER POPULAR TALES. 1842 (OCLC:
27635563).
1829: 36 [GORE, Catherine Grace
Frances], HUNGARIAN TALES. New York 1829 (OCLC: 3908799).