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Gothic Bluebooks
in the Princely Library of Corvey and Beyond
Angela
Koch
Peut-être
devirons-nous analyser ici ces Romans
nouveaux, dont le sortilège et la fantasmagorie
composent à-peu-près tout le mérite, en
placant à leur tête le Moine, supérieur, sous tous les rapports, aux bisarres élans de
la brillante imagination de Radgliffe
[sic]; [.] ce genre [.] devenait
le fruit indispensable de secousses révolutionnaires,
dont l'Europe entière se ressentait. Pour
qui connaissait tous les malheurs dont
les méchans peuvent accabler les hommes,
le Roman devenait aussi difficile à faire,
que monotone à lire; il n'y avait point
d'individu qui n'eût plus éprouvé d'infortunes
en quatre ou cinq ans que n'en pouvait
peindre en un siècle, le plus fameux romancier
de la littérature; il fallait donc appeller
l'enfer à son secours, pour se composer
des titres à l'intérêt, et trouver dans
le pays de chimères, a qu'on savait couramment
en ne fouillant que l'histoire de l'homme
dans cet âge de fer.-Marquis
de Sade (1800) [ 1]
As a commonplace in literary
criticism, the political upheaval and
ensuing war experienced by this (in)famous
commentator's native country at the turn
of the eighteenth century are held responsible
for a correlative revolutionary development
in the evolution of fiction: the unprecedented
rise of the Gothic novel. Whereas earlier
critics have concentrated on direct representations
of revolution in the genre, [2]
more recent interpretations apply Freudian
categories in order to reveal the mechanisms
of Gothic: in other words, to substitute
political with imaginary terrors. [3]
Quoting from Mrs Bonhote's Bungay Castle
(1797)-'A novel was never intended as
a vehicle for politics'-and Miss Pilkington's
The Subterranean Cavern (1798)-'My
limited education, as a female, utterly
disqualifies me for forming any decided
opinion respecting the political problems
which are constantly discussed in my presence'-Maurice
Lévy, for instance, illustrates the literary
counterpart of repression in the Gothic:
the renunciation of political discussion
in an escapist genre. [4]
According
to the mechanisms of repression in the
Gothic, however, such vocalised concerns
as those cited above can be regarded as
rare instances of eruption from the subconscious.
In Gothic fiction in general, these anxieties
are sublimated within the narrative, and
fear of political and social chaos finds
expression in the deliberately restricted
perspective of the explained supernatural
of Ann Radcliffe and her innumerable imitators.
Not uncommonly, this perspective coincides
with an unrestrained glorification of
a vague historical past, which is itself
characterised by an idealised political
system grounded in feudalism. For descriptions
of authentic social circumstances and
their political conditions, the reader
has to refer to Radcliffe's travel journal
of 1795:
Rheinberg [.] is a
wretched place of one dirty street, and
three or four hundred mean houses, surrounded
by a decayed wall that never was grand,
and half filled by inhabitants whose indolence,
while it is probably more to be pitied
than blamed, accounts for the sullenness
and wretchedness of their appearance.
Not one symptom of labour, or comfort,
was to be perceived in the whole town.
The men seemed for the most part, to be
standing at their doors, in unbuckled
shoes and woollen caps. [ 5]
Such disaffected comments
illustrate the breakdown of Radcliffe's
epistemological scepticism, which typically
underlies her elaborate landscape descriptions,
as well as the introduction of Gothic
paraphernalia in her novels. Wherever
political and social terror become unbearable
and can no longer be transferred to the
level of the Sublime-reason in her novels
being insufficiently reconstituted by
the application of the explained supernatural-Radcliffe's
representations of reality inevitably
approach the Gothic mode of M. G. 'Monk'
Lewis and the 'divine Marquis', namely
in the form of horror unexplained and
unexplainable. Nevertheless, in her travel
journal Radcliffe does not refer exclusively
to France or Germany as the source of
social insecurity, but to the whole European
continent:
Wealthy and commercial countries may
be injured immensely by making war either
for Germany or against it [.]; but Germany
itself cannot be proportionately injured
with them, except when it is the scene
of actual violence. Englishmen, who feel,
as they always must, the love of their
own country much increased by the view
of others, should be induced, at every
step, to wish, that there may be as little
political intercourse as possible [.]
between the blessings of their Island
and the wretchedness of the Continent.
[ 6]
 |
|
I.
Frontispiece to The Black Forest;
or the Cavern of Horrors! A Gothic
Romance (London: Ann Lemoine
/ J. Roe, 1802) |
What reads like radical
nationalism from the perspective of the
present, shows the inevitable disturbance
in a nation that distinguished itself
from the Continent by its unprecedented
economic progress, compared to which the
continental states were still characterised
by pre-industrial structures. The war
between Britain and France, however, ultimately
revealed that despite-or even because
of-its economic backwardness, the Continent
was able to cause incomparably greater
damage to a country whose economy was
increasingly built on intact international
relationships.
As
a result of the divergence between economic
and political conditions in Radcliffe's
England and the continental Europe, the
French Revolution and the war of 1793
provided only new fuel to an already established
atmosphere of social disturbance, the
cause of which is to be located in the
native country of the Gothic itself. The
publication rate of terror novels hinted
at by Montague Summers and Robert B. Mayo
indicates a cause-and-effect relationship
between the rapid industrial progress,
which took place in England from the 1760s
onwards, and the rise of the Gothic mode
in literature. [7]
Additionally, striking differences between
the Gothic novel and the roman noir
and the respective reception of both milieux
in France contradict the simplifying restriction
to the French Revolution as the
political factor that precipitated the
rise of the Gothic novel. [8]
Prior
to the political upheaval in France, the
English Industrial Revolution not only
supplied the technological but also the
ideological conditions for the unprecedented
rise of popular literature around 1800.
Economic progress and the destruction
of extant structures resulting from it
must have caused fear of changed conditions
of life and unsolved social problems long
before the fall of the Bastille. Horace
Walpole's Castle of Otranto, generally
regarded as the first Gothic novel in
English, was published as early as 1765,
to be followed in 1777 by Clara Reeve's
The Old English Baron. [9]
Thus, it becomes necessary to turn to
the parallels between the earlier novel
of sensibility and the Gothic to trace
escapism in the novel previous to the
French Revolution. [10]
Until
recently, the influence of the Industrial
Revolution on the evolution of mass literature
has mainly been described in terms of
production and reception. [11]
Admittedly, some account has been taken
of the fact that the changes affecting
the social system in the wake of technological
progress also created a new readership
to consume the products of a thriving
publishing industry. As far as the Gothic
novel is concerned, however, traditional
critics rarely mention the profound social
disturbances that are hardly ever alluded
to in the works themselves, but which
ultimately led to the deluge of such escapist
fiction in the first place. [12]
On the contrary, by disproportionately
restricting the concept of the Gothic
novel to a few 'acceptable' works, effort
has been made to free the genre from the
disreputable notion of 'mass literature'.
[13]
If
the entire Gothic spectrum is examined
in its entirety-as is possible for the
first decades of the early nineteenth
century, owing to the extensive preservation
of early fiction in the Princely Library
of Corvey Castle near Höxter (North Rhine
Westphalia)-it becomes clear that the
innovative 'horror' Gothic found in writers
such as M. G. Lewis's The Monk
(1796) or C. R. Maturin's Melmoth the
Wanderer (1820) represents only a
tiny minority compared to the overwhelming
'terror' mode practised by the imitators
of Ann Radcliffe. The contents of innumerable
'lesser novels' on the shelves of the
Corvey Library not only illustrate that
the last aim of such Gothicism was to
meet high aesthetic expectations on the
part of a discriminating readership, but
also that the term 'Romantic' Gothic novel
is somewhat misleading. Any form of 'high'
Romanticism in these second- and third-rate
Gothics is restricted to a few standardised
landscape descriptions and the occasional
appearance of a rather down-to-earth ghost.
An
attempted revaluation of the Gothic in
'high' aesthetic terms not only faces
the difficulty of the widespread dissemination
of the Radcliffe 'terror' mode in the
bulk of 'lesser novels', but also must
face the fact that, in an even weaker
form, identical mechanisms of terror combined
with quasi-rational explanation are applied
in the 'bluebooks' or 'shilling shockers'.
Frederick S. Frank defines such literary
forms as:
Low quality Gothic fiction denoted
by its garish blue coverings or wrappers.
The Gothic bluebook is a primitive paperback
or ur-pulp publication, cheaply manufactured,
sometimes garishly illustrated, and meant
to be thrown away after being 'read to
pieces.' [.] The reader of the bluebook
received a single dose of Gothicism between
the blue covers. Almost all of the hundreds
of bluebooks published during the period
are pirated abridgments of full-length
Gothic novels. [ 14]
Compared with this depreciative
description of the small-scale Gothics,
which are occasionally to be found side
by side with their fully fledged counterparts
in public and academic libraries, a quite
different sense is given in a contemporary
comment by Thomas Medwin, as found in
the biography of his friend Percy Bysshe
Shelley:
Who does not know what blue books mean?
but if there should be any one ignorant
enough not to know what those dear darling
volumes, so designated from their covers,
contain, be it known, that they are or
were to be bought for sixpence, and embodied
stories of haunted castles, bandits, murderers,
and other grim personages-a most exciting
and interesting sort of food for boys'
minds. [15]
Disregarding the striking
opposition in terms of valuation-resulting
from the fact that those 'who have grown
up' with the bluebooks feel inclined to
treat them with leniency, whereas historical
distance predisposes twentieth-century
critics to adopt a rather negative view
of them as degenerate Gothic novels-both
definitions correlate the bluebook's physical
appearance with a specific mode of contents.
Around 1800, two traditions effectively
merged into a new type of cheap popular
literature: whereas the bluebook's size
of thirty-six to seventy-two pages recalls
the eighteenth century chapbook tradition,
their inevitable blue covers, copperplate
frontispieces, and above all their contents,
derive from the late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century
Gothic romance. Apart from using the same
Gothic paraphernalia, such as family feud,
illicit love, and the intervention of
supernatural powers, among some 220 items
physically inspected by the author, no
more or less than sixty-three proved to
be adaptations of longer works. (A checklist
of these follows this essay.)
In
any case, the practise of condensing three-decker
novels into thirty-six- or seventy-two-page
duodecimos does not logically lead to
the conclusion that bluebooks are degenerate
Gothics in the sense that they represent
an epiphenomenon of the Gothic rage. If
the concept of the novel of terror is
extended from the few innovative works
that initiated the Gothic craze to the
full range of the genre as it is preserved
in the Princely Library of Corvey, Ian
Watt's statement that '[i]n the shilling
shockers we are enabled [.] to appreciate
the absurd extent to which the Gothic
vogue was carried in the declining years
of its life' proves incorrect. [16]
In fact, a close examination of output
of thirty-six- or seventy-two-page bluebooks
with Gothic novels in standard form reveals
that both forms represent virtually contemporaneous
phenomena, peaking in the early 1800s
and diminishing by the 1810s. Furthermore,
in view of evidence that-as the checklist
at the end of this paper indicates-the
contents of three-decker Gothics and bluebooks
are more or less identical, it becomes
apparent that both modes of fiction must
have aimed at similar expectations from
their readership, with the only difference
that the triple-deckers were produced
for the circulating libraries and some
well-to-do buyers (such as the owner of
the Corvey Library), whereas the bluebooks
were printed for private purchase at either
sixpence or one shilling exclusively.
[17]
Of
course, it is not only long-term attempts
to revaluate the Gothic novel in the teeth
of its aesthetic 'defects' that have been
responsible for the general neglect of
bluebooks, but also the evanescence of
the tiny volumes themselves. Through consulting
library catalogues and bibliographies
such as Summers Gothic Bibliography
(1940) and Frank's The First Gothics
(1987), [18]
the author of this essay was able to locate
the 220 titles previously mentioned in
twenty national, academic, and public
libraries in the UK and North America,
with the twenty-first source being the
private library situated in Corvey Castle
with its astonishingly complete corpus
of romantic fiction. Due to their ephemeral
nature it is impossible to ascertain with
certainty how many bluebooks were originally
published shortly after 1800, nor in what
numbers they were produced. Summers does
not provide any contextual evidence to
substantiate his statement 'that these
little bluebooks were sold in their hundreds
upon hundreds for a tester apiece'. [19]
Admittedly, Medwin's comment quoted earlier
encourages the assumption that bluebooks
were so widely spread at the time as to
become a universally known phenomenon.
One should not forget, however, that-compared
to the Gothic novel, which retained much
of its early force far into the early
1810s-their actual publication dates with
the high-tide about 1803-05 mark the bluebooks
as a relatively short-lived phenomenon.
This challenges Summers's assumption that
the bluebook phenomenon might well have
been an experiment practised by enterprising
publishers such as Thomas Tegg or Dean
& Munday, which ultimately failed
owing to the fact that the circulating
libraries made the full-length Gothic
novel accessible to a large public.
Whereas
in the past the preservation of Gothic
bluebooks in national or academic libraries
has depended largely on chance-pencil
notes in some British Library specimen
still mark them as donations from private
owners-the twenty-four titles in the Corvey
Library survived thanks to the indiscriminate
acquisition policy of the principal collectors
of Romantic fiction: Victor Amadeus, Landgrave
of Hesse-Rotenburg (1779-1835) and his
second wife Elise (1790-1830), both of
whom were connected to the British royal
family. As a bibliomaniac the Landgrave
bought almost every novel in German, English,
and French that was advertised from the
1790s onwards, thus turning the aristocratic
family library into a universal library
of contemporary fiction. Although Victor
Amadeus's preferences clearly lay with
the lengthy romance, the 2,500 English
language fictions collected between 1790
and 1834 occasionally prove collections
of tales and other forms of shorter fiction,
among these The Marvellous Magazine
and Compendium of Prodigies (1802-04).
The Marvellous Magazine consisted
of twenty-four short Gothic pieces (see
Appendix I) published by various firms,
most notably the 'publisher, re-publisher,
printer and book-buyer' Thomas Tegg of
St John's Street, later of Cheapside,
who was responsible for the bulk of bluebook
production shortly after 1800. [20]
Among
the colourful 'house' bindings of the
fully fledged novels in Corvey, the two
leather-bound volumes of the Marvellous
Magazine with their gilded ornaments
are not particularly exceptional in terms
of their outward appearance. Such bindings
are indicative of two salient points:
firstly, the owners of the library purchased
virtually every English fiction title
they could acquire, regardless of mode;
and secondly, that they did not
read the bulk of their acquisition. [21]
As we do not exactly know about the Landgrave's
purchase policy, except that in the field
of the belles-lettres he bought
almost every item that appeared on the
literary scene, it is impossible to reconstruct
why the collection includes what Frank
describes as 'little flowers of evil planted
by rapacious publishers across the literary
scene'. [22]
There are two possible explanations, which
do not necessarily exclude each other:
either the Marvellous Magazine was
advertised and the Landgrave did not know
what he was ordering from his German bookseller,
[23]
or the small-scale novels it contains
enjoyed a much different reputation from
the prejudiced concept of popular literature
that has long prevailed in modern literary
criticism.
It
is hard to imagine how a bibliomaniac
like the Landgrave might have responded
to titles such as Albani: Or the Murderer
of his Child. Containing the Different
Views of his Character, as a Libertine
in Palermo, an Officer in the Spanish
Service, a Planter in the Island of Cuba,
and an Independent Gentleman, on his Return
to Italy (c. 1803), an adaptation
of John Moore's famous Gothic novel Zeluco
(1789). The Marvellous Magazine's
series frontispiece that is bound with
the work suggests that Victor Amadeus
did not buy the titles in the form in
which they first appeared, namely as single
items, but that he ordered a reprinted
version of the series as a whole, and
indeed did not know about its contents
beforehand. To the scholar, the twenty-four
items included in the Marvellous Magazine
reveal that the bluebook format embraced
the whole spectrum of Gothic subgenres,
from sentimental to pseudo-historical
Gothic, from Robber Romanticism to orientalised
Gothic fantasy. As a whole, the contents
of the small incorporated volumes tend
towards a mixture of genres typical of
the Gothic: what is generally to be found
between their flimsy covers is a sentimental
love story set against the background
of a picturesque, vaguely medieval landscape,
decorated with the occasional appearance
of such memento mori as a bleeding
nun or a stately knight long-supposed
to be dead, recalled to the stage of life
by some imminent injury to be done to
a maiden orphan or a legitimate heir.
The
sensational titles found among bluebooks
as a whole indicates that their authors,
most of whom remain anonymous, set out
to meet the expectations of as large a
readership as possible. In 1803 Almagro
& Claude; or Monastic Murder; Exemplified
in the Dreadful Doom of an Unfortunate
Nun was published by Tegg & Castleman,
while a comparatively late example in
this mode is The Midnight Groan; or,
the Spectre of the Chapel: Involving an
Exposure of the Horrible Secrets of the
Nocturnal Assembly, published by T.
& R. Hughes in 1808. [24]
From the prolific pen of Sarah Scudgell
Wilkinson, one of the few authors whose
name has come down to the present, derives
a bluebook bearing the extensive title,
The Eve of St Mark; or, the Mysterious
Spectre: Describing the Murder of Lady
Bertha de Clifford by a Jealous and Disappointed
Suitor; and Suicide of her Father: Her
Singular Re-appearance after the Lapse
of a Whole Century-Surprising Events in
Consequence of this Marvellous Incident-Descent
of the Steward of the De Clifford Family
into the Vaults of Mowbray Church; Remarkable
Discovery there, and the Marriage of Earl
de Clifford with the Steward's Daughter,
Margaret. A Romance (London: J. Bailey,
n.d.). [25]
Corresponding to the modern blurb, the
title in this and many other instances
supplies a complete synopsis of the narrative,
catching the eye of a public searching
for sentimental at least as much as Gothic
entertainment.
On
the one hand, examples such as these indicate
the high predictability of the bluebook
plot. Apparently, readers were less interested
in the 'what?' than in the 'how?' and
'why?' of the action, as the former category
is often fully summarised on the title
page. On the other hand, the authors'
ambition to satisfy the needs of Tegg's
or Bailey's customers led to an extreme
eclecticism in terms of sensational detail.
Thus, in F. Legge's The Spectre Chief;
or, the Blood-Stained Banner (London:
J. Bailey, n.d.), two Gothic villains
with names of Romance origin attack a
Scandinavian monastery with the quasi-German
name of Risbatz. In the anonymous Banditti
of the Appennines (London: C. Sharp,
1808), the tale's lovers providentially
escape from one gang of ferocious robbers
merely to fall into the hands of another.
The full title reads: The Banditti
of the Appennines; or, the Singular Adventures
of Alphonsus and Adela (during the Civil
Wars in Italy), with an Interesting Account
of their Providential Escape from a Band
of Ferocious Robbers who Infested the
Mountains, at that Period, and also from
Another Band, still More Formidable, by
Whom They Were Confined in a Dreadful
Dungeon.
 |
| II.
Frontispiece to The History
of Arden of Feversham. A Tragic
Fact of 1550 (London: Ann Lemoine
/ J. Roe, 1804) |
Owing
to such apparent absurdities as these,
as already suggested, critics have come
to regard the bluebook as a degenerate
variant of the Gothic romance. The denigration
of the Gothic bluebook in favour of the
full-length novel is particularly apparent
in a number of German academic publications,
which differentiate between the 'classical'
Gothic novel and the 'popular' or 'trivial'
shilling shocker, both adjectives carrying
distinctly negative connotations in German
literary criticism. [26]
Neither does the bluebook fare much better
in America. In his primary bibliography
The First Gothics, which supplies
useful synopses of the longer novels in
contrast to relatively unreliable summaries
of bluebook contents, Frank notes:
While lengthy and elegant Gothics were
still being written and published, a study
of the Gothic types flooding the literary
marketplace during the opening decades
of the Nineteenth Century reveals the
decline of the long Gothic as it was displaced
by these shilling shockers. [.] The chapbooks
represent Gothicism in its most decadent
and rampant phase, bringing down upon
the Gothic novel widespread critical denunciation
and ridicule. [ 26]
Contrary to this assumption,
the material in Corvey strongly suggests
that the description of the Gothic novel
as 'lengthy and elegant' and the characterisation
of the so-called 'shilling shocker' as
degenerate result from critics' prioritisation
of the triple-decker Gothic novel on
its own.
As
this paper has already argued, in order
to arrive at the distinction of high-quality
novels and low-quality shilling shockers,
the majority of critical studies on the
Gothic romance restrict their subject
to a very limited set of innovative works
published in the decade before 1800 or
shortly after. Nevertheless, the vast
amount of full-length Gothic novels in
the Corvey Collection cannot live up to
the standard of Ann Radcliffe or 'Monk'
Lewis. Among the better of these novels
one finds Netley Abbey of 1795,
a Radcliffean imitation by Richard Warner,
or several triple-deckers by Sarah Wilkinson,
the bluebook authoress mentioned above.
In contrast to these, the comparatively
early work The Animated Skeleton
(1798) is already characterised by all
the properties of 'degenerate Gothicism',
whereas the similarly anonymous novel,
The Avenger; or, the Sicilian Vespers
(1810), with its sensational plot
of intrigue and revenge causes Frank to
erroneously label the three-decker as
a 'Gothic bluebook'.
On
a number of occasions, the titles of Gothic
novels in the Corvey Library do not differ
conspicuously from the bluebook titles
quoted above. Alongside Radcliffe's novels
one finds works such as The Mysterious
Penitent; or, the Norman Chateau (1800),
The Spirit of Turretville: Or, the Mysterious
Resemblance (1800), The Castle
of Eridan: Or, the Entertaining and Surprising
History of the Valiant Don Alvares, and
the Beautiful Eugenia, Duchess of Savoy
(1800), not to mention Labyrinth of
Corcira: Or, the Most Extraordinary and
Surprising History of the Incomparable
Don Fernando D'Avalo, Hereditary Prince
of Salerno, and the Beautiful and Virtuous
Isidora, Duchess of Catania. Together
with the Surprising Events of the Countess
of Lipary his Sister (1804). Discussing
the anonymous Valombrosa; or the Venetian
Nun (1805), the Critical Reviewnotes
that '[w]e cannot congratulate this gentleman
(for a male performance it must certainly
be) on the slightest ambition to imitate
that delicacy which is one of the many
beauties so profusely scattered over the
writings of Mrs. Radcliffe'. [28]
Although it would take years to undertake
a full survey of the Gothic material preserved
in the Corvey Library, the contents of
second- and third-rate novels like these
already corroborates the fact suggested
by the publication dates of novels and
bluebooks respectively, namely that they
are not consecutive phenomena but contemporary
facets of the Gothic craze.
A
devaluation, however, of the Gothic novel
in favour of the Gothic bluebook would
mean going from one extreme to another.
Despite the fact that the number of plagiarisms
among the so-called 'sixpenny shockers'
is definitely over-emphasised by Watt,
Frank, and others, the checklist appended
in Appendix II lists no less than five
versions of Lewis's Monk. All of
the four great Gothic novels by Ann Radcliffe
are present, with even two different versions
of The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794).
Furthermore, there are condensations of
Walpole's Otranto, Clara Reeve's
Old English Baron, Sophia Lee's
The Recess (1783-85), Charlotte
Smith's The Old Manor House (1793),
and Charlotte Dacre's Zofloya (1806).
Secondary literature on the Gothic novel
has long identified the first item on
the list, The Midnight Assassin: or,
Confession of the Monk Rinaldi (1802),
as an adaptation of Radcliffe's Italian
(1797). Don Algonah; or the Sorceress
of Montillo (1802), another item included
in The Marvellous Magazine,
is a seventy-two-page version of George
Walker's The Three Spaniards (1800),
whereas The Wandering Spirit (1802)
corresponds to Stephen Cullen's Haunted
Priory (1794). These adaptations show
that the bluebooks are in no way original;
however, around two-thirds of the titles
could not be traced back to original novels,
tales or plays and many of them, such
as those by Sarah Wilkinson, will never
be.
These
findings encourage the conclusion that
the Gothic paraphernalia favoured in fiction
around 1800 are not the property of the
novel in the first place, but that bluebooks
and Gothic novels are variants of the
same literary tradition brought about
by the preferences of a readership under
the impress of political and economic
change. To reconstruct this readership
is difficult, if not impossible, as there
is scant empirical evidence. From the
biographies of Percy Shelley, Robert Southey,
and Sheridan LeFanu we can deduce that
in their youth they belonged to the class
of bluebook readers. As the emphasis on
the younger generation indicates, the
bluebooks were produced specifically for
those parts of the reading public who
wanted to participate in the Gothic rage,
but who could not to afford the comparatively
expensive three-decker novels. This is
most likely the reason why Varma in 1957
called the bluebooks 'poorman's gothic
novels'. [29]
This assumption presupposes, however,
that the bluebook-buyer had come into
contact with the Gothic novel tradition
before: otherwise, the striking similarities
in the outward appearance of bluebooks
and Gothic novels would have been lost
on the reader. And where else could he
or she have come into contact with these
novels other than in the circulating libraries
of the time? In fact, temporal coincidences
indicate that there was commensurate growth
in cheap, popular literature in the form
of bluebooks and in the institution of
the circulating library, both symptoms
of the exponential rise in book prices
that occurred during the Napoleonic Wars.
People who frequented the circulating
library would certainly have wished to
own the novels they could only borrow
there. Once these works had been reduced
to thirty-six or seventy-two pages, however,
readers could obtain versions at the reasonable
price of sixpence or a shilling, not only
in London but-as the title pages of the
Marvellous Magazine suggest-from
'every other bookseller in the United
Kingdom'.
 |
| III.
Frontispiece to Isaac Crookenden’s
The Skeleton; or, Mysterious
Discovery. A Gothic Romance
(London: A Neil, 1805) |
Nevertheless,
this lack of empirical evidence generally
forces commentators on popular literature
to have recourse to the implied reader.
As with the prejudice that the bluebooks
belong to the aftermath of the Gothic
vogue, there is strong evidence against
another argument made by Frank et al.-namely
that the bluebooks represent what has
been termed the 'horror mode' of Gothicism.
For instance, in The First Gothics
Frank states:
the route of development taken by the
Gothic novel after 1800 was down the corridor
of an unrestrained supernatural and toward
the absolute horror of horrors. Hasty
and relentless horror became the stock-in-trade
of the Gothic chapbooks and bluebooks
after 1800 when the main path for Gothic
fiction was mapped out by Monk Lewis,
not Ann Radcliffe. These hundreds of small
Gothics were the cheap and tawdry offspring
of the Schauerromantik energies
released by Lewis' The Monk. [ 30]
Again, as far as the
Gothic novel is concerned, this argument
only applies to a very limited set of
works: strictly speaking, works which
derive from or are inspired by either
Radcliffe or Lewis. Tracing back the bluebook
adaptations to their respective originals
almost exclusively leads to Radcliffean
imitations. The contents of these works
(examples of which have been mentioned
already) reveal the prevalence of the
rationalised variant of the Gothic mode
typical of the early decades of the nineteenth
century, whereas novels representing the
more unsettling Romantic 'horror' variant
(for instance, Lewis's Monk) are
to be regarded as rare experiments. Wherever
works such as the latter have served as
the quarry of prolific bluebook authors,
elements of horror like torture or moral
ambivalence are eliminated, a measure
that conveniently contributed to the practice
of cutting down the original story to
the intended size of thirty-six or seventy-two
pages.
As
adaptations, the bluebooks belong predominantly
to the so-called 'terror' mode which follows
in the tradition of Ann Radcliffe, a tendency
that does not apply only to the sixty-three
miniature romances the originals of which
have been identified in the checklist.
The only explanation for the sensational
frontispieces and multiple titles of these
works is their need to attract potential
readers. The contents of the bluebooks,
however, quickly disillusion anybody who
expects the 'absolute horror of horrors':
quite obviously, the readership-which
was attracted by the pictorial representations
of skeletons and spectres-refrained from
the epistemological pessimism of works
like Lewis's Monk. In reading Isaac
Crookenden’s The Skeleton; or,
Mysterious Discovery (London: A. Neil,
1805), for example, one recognises that
the protagonist is less terrified by a
supernatural apparition in the trembling
rays of a midnight lamp, than moved by
his discovery of the corpse of one of
his ancestors. What remains of Gothicism
in the bluebooks in general is the sentimental
love story, adorned with a restricted
set of Gothic paraphernalia, which never
traverse the boundary between terror and
horror, as defined by Radcliffe herself.
[31]
Thus,
in a manner similar to most of the full-length
novels of the period, the Gothic in bluebooks
represents an attractive alternative to
the sentimental. Whereas in most cases
Gothicism is reduced to a small set of
comparatively harmless elements of terror
adorning the action, it is the love story,
handed down from the novel of sensibility,
that constitutes the main plot. In this
respect, the stories of the bluebooks
preserved in the Corvey Library differ
as little from those of the full-length
Gothics and the sentimental novels to
be found on the same shelf as the bindings
of the respective works themselves. To
the contemporary reader-whose reading
habits differed as much from ours as the
outward appearance of the early-nineteenth-century
novels does from the literary productions
of the present-they must have appeared
as one coherent tradition of entertainment
and recreation.
Notes
1. Donatien
Antoine François Marquis de Sade, Idée sur les Romans,
ed. Octave Uzanne (1800; Genf: Slatkins Reprints, 1967),
pp. 31-33.
2. See,
e.g., Michael Sadleir, 'The Northanger Novels. A Footnote
to Jane Austen', The English Association Pamphlet
68 (1927), pp. 4 and 7; André Breton, 'Limites non
frontières du surréalisme', Nouvelle Revue Française
48 (1937), 208-09.
3. Cf.
Ronald Paulson, Representations of Revolution
1789-1820 (New Haven, CT and London: Yale University
Press, 1983), pp. 8-9.
4. Maurice
Lévy, Le Roman 'gothique' Anglais 1796-1820
(Toulouse: Association des Publications de la Faculté
des Lettres et de Sciences Humaines, 1968), p. 611.
5. Ann
Radcliffe, A Journey Made in the Summer of 1794 through
Holland and the Western Frontier of Germany with a Return
down the Rhine: To Which Are Added Observations during
a Tour to the Lakes of Lancashire, Westmoreland and Cumberland
(1795; Hildesheim: Georg Olms Verlag, 1975), p. 92.
6. Ibid.,
p. 108.
7. Montague
Summers, The Gothic Quest. A History of the Gothic
Novel (1938; New York: Russell & Russell, 1964),
p. 185. Robert D. Mayo, 'How Long Was Gothic Fiction in
Vogue?', Modern Language Notes 58 (1943), 58-64.
8. A
significant example is Lewis's The Monk (1796),
which was criticised severely in England, while it was
appreciated or at least treated indulgently in France.
See Fernand Baldensperger, 'Le Moine de Lewis dans la
littérature française', in The English Gothic Novel.
A Miscellany in Four Volumes, ed. Thomas Meade Harwell
(Salzburg: Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik Universität
Salzburg, 1986), IV: Collateral Gothic 2, 170-88.
9. E. J.
Clery, The Rise of Supernatural Fiction 1762-1800
(Cambridge: CUP, 1995) takes account of even earlier Gothic
sources.
10.
On the novel of sensibility as a precursor of the
Gothic novel, see Werner Wolf, 'Schauerroman und Empfindsamkeit.
Zur Beziehung zwischen Gothic novel und empfindsamem
Roman in England', Anglia 10 (1989), 1-33. Rudolf
Schenda points out that literary structures aiming at
a recompense of social injustice have a much older history,
and it is only restriction to an 'accepted' canon of primary
material as the subject of literary criticism that has
generally led to a neglect the works in question-Volk
ohne Buch. Studien zur Sozialgeschichte der populären
Lesestoffe 1770-1910 (1970; Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch
Verlag, 1977).
11.
See e.g. Richard D. Altick, The English Common
Reader. A Social History of the Mass Reading Public 1800-1900
(1957; Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press,
1983).
12.
André Parreaux, for instance, only very tentatively
hints at a possible influence of the Industrial Revolution
on the Gothic: 'And perhaps the changes due to the industrial
revolution, which tended to make the general environment
dull and drab, affected the life of ordinary people more
directly than Nelson's and Bonaparte's victories'-The
Publication of 'The Monk'. A Literary Event 1796-98 (Paris:
Librairie Marcel Didier, 1960), p. 36.
13.
Recent exceptions to this approach include: Clery's Rise
of Supernatural Fiction; Ed Jacobs, 'Anonymous Signatures:
Circulating Libraries, Conventionality, and the Production
of Gothic Romances', ELH 62:3 (Fall 1995), 603-29;
James Watt, Contesting the Gothic: Fiction, Genre,
and Cultural Conflict, 1764–1832 (Cambridge:
CUP, 1999).
14.
Frederick S. Frank, The First Gothics. A Critical Guide
to the English Gothic Novel (New York/London: Garland
Publishing, 1987), Appendix I: 'Glossary of Gothic Terms',
p. 433. See also Frank's definitions of 'chapbook gothic'
and 'shilling shocker'.
15.
Thomas Medwin, The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1913;
St Clair Shores, MI: Scholarly Press, 1971), pp. 24-25.
16.
William Whyte Watt, Shilling Shockers of the
Gothic School. A Study of Chapbook Gothic Romances (1932;
New York: Russell & Russell, 1967), p. 21.
17.
One of the bluebooks consulted, Charles Giberne's The
Haunted Tower; or, the Adventures of Sir Egbert de Rothsay
(London: R. Hunter, 1822), p. 3, contains a list
of subscribers, whose family names hint at a readership
hardly less respectable than that of the Gothic novel
with the exception that aristocratic titles are to be
found only in one instance.
18.
Montague Summers, A Gothic Bibliography ([1940];
New York: Russell & Russell, 1964).
19.
Summers, Gothic Quest, p. 84.
20.
Thomas Carlyle, 'Petition on the Copyright Bill', in Critical
and Miscellaneous Essays, 5 vols (London: Chapman
& Hall, n.d.), IV, 206-07. 
21.
Interestingly, the collection lacks Lewis's Monk,
one of the more notorious publications in the Gothic mode.
Taking into consideration the Prince's otherwise indiscriminate
acquisition policy, this could perhaps be taken as indicative
of the fact that the contemporary readership did not universally
accept unrestrained Gothicism in the shape of moral or
psychological ambivalence.
22.
Frank, p. 432.
23.
'It is probable that many of these books entered
into the collection through a German bookseller from Göttingen
specializing in English works, called Dr Möller'-Peter
Garside, 'The English Novel in the Romantic Era', in The
English Novel 1770-1829: A Bibliographical Survey of Prose
Fiction Published in the British Isles, edd. James
Raven, Peter Garside, Rainer Schöwerling, 2 vols (Oxford:
OUP, 2000), II, 28.
24.
Both titles are not included in the Marvellous
Magazine, but survived as single items, the former
in the British and the Bodleian Libraries, the latter
in the British Library only.
25.
Two examples of this title survive: one of them
in the British Library, the other in the Bodleian Library.
26.
See e.g. Ingeborg Weber, Der englische Schauerroman.
Eine Einführung (Munich and Zurich: Artemis-Verlag,
1983), p. 135.
27.
Frank, pp. xxvi-[xxvii].
28.
Critical Review 3rd ser. 4 (Mar 1805), 329.
29.
Devendra P. Varma, The Gothic Flame. Being a
History of the Gothic Novel in England: Its Origin, Efflorescence,
Disintegration, and Residuary Influences (1957; New
York: Russell & Russell, 1966), p. 80.
30.
Frank, p. xxvi.
31.
Ann Radcliffe, 'On the Supernatural in Poetry',
New Monthly Magazine 16 (1826), 149-50.
I
Bluebook
Titles in the Corvey Library
(from The
Marvellous Magazine)
The Marvellous Magazine and Compendium
of Prodigies, 4 vols
(London: T. Hurst/Tegg & Castleman etc., 1802-04)
Marvellous Magazine I
-
The Midnight Assassin: Or, Confession of the
Monk Rinaldi; Containing a Complete History of
His Diabolical Machinations and Unparalleled Ferocity
[...] (London: T. Hurst, 1802).
-
Don Algonah; or the Sorceress of Montillo.
A Romantic Tale (London: T. Hurst, 1802).
-
The Recess. A Tale of Past Times (London:
T. Hurst, 1802).
-
a) The Wandering Spirit: Or Memoirs of the
House of Morno: Including the History of Don Pinto
D'Antos, a Tale of the 14th Century [...];
b) Charles and Emma, or the Unfortunate
Lovers (London: Thomas Tegg & Co., 1802).
-
The Cavern of Horrors; or, Miseries of Miranda:
A Neapolitan Tale (London: T. Tegg &
Co., 1802).
-
The Secret Oath, or Blood-Stained Dagger,
a Romance (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1802)
-
The Southern Tower; or, Conjugal Sacrifice
and Retribution (London: T. Hurst, 1802).
-
The Veiled Picture: Or, the Mysteries of
Gorgono, the Appennine Castle of Signor Androssi.
A Romance of the Sixteenth Century (London:
Thomas Tegg & Co., 1802).
-
A Tale of Mystery; or the Castle of Solitude.
Containing the Dreadful Imprisonment of Count
L. and the Countess Harmina, His Lady (London:
Thomas Tegg & Co., 1803).
-
a) Domestic Misery, or the Victim of Seduction,
a Pathetic Tale; Addressed to the Unprincipled
Libertine;
b) Highland Heroism; or the Castles of
Glencoe and Balloch. A Scottish Legend of the
Sixteenth Century (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
Albani: Or the Murderer of His Child. Containing
Different Views of His Character, as a Libertine
in Palermo [...] (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
Father Innocent, Abbot of the Capuchins;
or, the Crimes of Cloisters (London: Tegg
& Castleman, 1803).
-
The Secret Tribunal; or, the Court of Winceslaus.
A Mysterious Tale (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
Koenigsmark the Robber, or, the Terror of
Bohemia: In which Is Introduced, Stella, the Maniac
of the Wood, a Pathetic Tale (London: Tegg
& Castleman, 1803).
-
Phantasmagoria, or the Development of Magical
Deception (London: Tegg & Castleman, 1803).
-
Ildefonzo & Alberoni, or Tales of Horrors
(London: Tegg & Castleman, 1803).
-
Ulric and Gustavus, or the Unhappy Swedes;
a Finland Tale (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
Blanche and Carlos; or the Constant Lovers:
Including the Adventures of Valville and Adelaide,
a Mexican Tale (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
De la Mark and Constantia; or, Ancient Heroism,
A Gothic Tale (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1803).
-
Lermos and Rosa, or the Fortunate Gipsey:
An Interesting Adventure, which Really Happened
in Spain, about Forty Years Ago (London: Tegg
& Castleman, 1803).
-
Maximilian and Selina; or, the Mysterious
Abbot. A Flemish Tale (London: Tegg &
Castleman, 1804).
-
Lewis Tyrrell, or, the Depraved Count; Including
the Pathetic Adventures and Tragical End of Ella
Clifford and Oscar Henry Hampden; or, the Victims
of Treachery [...] (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1804).
-
a) Matilda; or the Adventures of an Orphan,
an Interesting Tale;
b) Fernando of Castile, or the Husband of Two
Wives (London: Tegg & Castleman, 1804).
-
a) The Soldier's Daughter; or the Fair Fugitive,
a Pathetic Tale;
b) The Mysterious Bride, or the Statue-Spectre
(London: Tegg & Castleman, 1804).
 |
| IV.
Frontispiece to The Soldier’s
Daughter; or, the Fair Fugitive, a Pathetic
Tale (London: Tegg & Castleman,
1804) |

Adaptations
in Bluebook Form
| ADAPTATION |
ORIGINAL |
| The Affecting
History of Louisa, the Wandering Maniac, or,
'Lady of the Haystack' [...] (1803) |
P., L. L'Inconnue, Histoire
Véritable (1785, trans. 1785) |
| The Affecting
History of the Dutchess of C, Who Was Confined
Nine Years in a Horrid Dungeon [...]
(n.d.) |
Genlis, Stéphanie F. de.
'Histoire de la Duchesse de C***', in Adèle
et Théodore (1782, trans. 1783) |
| Albani:
Or the Murderer of His Child [...] (1803) |
Moore, John. Zeluco
(1789) |
| Algernon
& Caroline, or the Spirit of the Spirit
[...] (1820) |
Ashe, Thomas. The Spirit
of 'The Book'; or, Memoirs of Caroline, Princess
of Hasburgh (1811) |
| Almagro &
Claude; or Monastic Murder; Exemplified in
the Dreadful Doom of an Unfortunate Nun
(n.d.) |
Lewis, Matthew Gregory.
The Monk (1796) |
| Barrett, C.
F. Allenrod; or, the Mysterious Freebooter
(1806) |
Lathom, Francis. The
Mysterious Freebooter; or, the Days of Queen
Bess (1806) |
| The Bleeding
Nun of the Castle of Lindenberg; or, the History
of Raymond & Agnes (1823) |
Lewis, Matthew Gregory.
The Monk (1796) |
| The Castle
of Otranto, a Gothic Story (1804) |
Walpole, Horace. The
Castle of Otranto (1765) |
| The Castle
of the Pyrenees; or, the Wanderer of the Alps
(1803) |
Smith, Charlotte. 'The
Interesting History of the Count de Bellegarde',
in Celestina (1791) |
| The Castles
of Montreuil and Barre; or the Histories of
the Marquis La Brun and the Baron la Marche
[...] (1803) |
F., E. The Two Castles,
a Romance. Lady's Magazine 28-29 (1797-98) |
| The Cavern
of Horrors; or, Miseries of Miranda (1802) |
Charlton, Mary. The
Pirate of Naples (1801) |
| Chapman, M.
Marlton Abbey, or the Mystic Tomb of St.
Angelo (1805) |
Sheriffe, Sarah Correlia,
or the Mystic Tomb (1802) |
| The Convent
of St. Michael or the Unfortunate Emilia
(n.d.) |
The Convent of St. Michael,
a Tale (1803) |
| The Convent
of St. Ursula, or Incidents at Ottagro
(1809) |
Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The Fugitive Countess; or, Convent of St.
Ursula (1807) |
| The Convent
Spectre, or Unfortunate Daughter (1808) |
The Convent of St. Michael,
a Tale (1803) |
| The Curfew;
or, the Castle of Baron de Tracy (1807) |
Tobin, John. The Curfew;
a Play (1807) |
| The Daemon
of Venice, an Original Romance (1810) |
Dacre, Charlotte. Zofloya:
Or, the Moor (1806) |
| Don Algonah;
or the Sorceress of Montillo (1802) |
Walker, George. The
Three Spaniards (1800) |
| [Barrington,
George]. Eliza, or the Unhappy Nun (1803) |
Barrington, George. Biographical
Annals of Suicide, or Horrors of Self-Murder
[...] (1803) |
| Entertaining
Gothic Stories; Including Raymond Castle,
or, the Ungrateful Nephew [...] (n.d.) |
Bacon, Mr. Raymond Castle,
a Legendary Tale. Cabinet Magazine
1 (1797) |
| Father
Innocent, Abbot of the Capuchins; or the Crimes
of Cloisters (1803) |
Lewis, Matthew Gregory.
The Monk (1796) |
| Gothic
Stories: Sir Bertrand's Adventures in a Ruinous
Castle, [...] The Adventure James III. of
Scotland Had with the Weird Sisters in the
DreadfulWood of Birnan, The Story of Raymond
Castle [...] (n.d.) |
Aikin, Anna Laetitia.
'Sir Bertrand', in Aikin, Anna Laetitia/Aikin,
John, Miscellaneous Pieces in Prose (1773)
Musgrave, Agnes. Edmund
of the Forest (1797)
Bacon, Mr. 'Raymond Castle,
a Legendary Tale'. Cabinet Magazine
1 (1797) |
| The Gothic
Story of Courville Castle; or the Illegitimate
Son [...] (1803) |
F., E. De Courville
Castle, a Romance. Lady's Magazine 26-28
(1795-97) |
| [Douglas, Robert?].
Highland Heroism; or the Castles of Glencoe
and Balloch (1803) |
Radcliffe, Ann. The
Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne (1789) |
| The History
and Surprising Adventures of Joseph Pignata
[...] (1821) |
Pignate Guiseppe. Les
Aventures des Joseph Pignata [...] (1729,
German trans. 1796, English trans. ?) |
| The History
of Arden of Feversham. A Tragic Fact of 1550
(1804) |
Arden of Feversham (1592) |
| The History
of Cecilia, or the Beautiful Nun (1804) |
Genlis, Stéphanie de. 'Cécile',
in Adèle et Théodore (1782, trans.
1783) |
| The Horrible
Revenge; or, the Assassin of the Solitary
Castle (n.d.) |
Parsons, Eliza. The
Mysterious Warning (1796) |
| Koenigsmark
the Robber; or, the Terror of Bohemia: In
Which Is Included, the Affecting History of
Rosenberg and Adelaide [...] (n.d.) |
Raspe, Rudolf Erich: unidentified
(English trans. By Sarratt, John Henry, 1801/play
by Lewis, Matthew Gregory 1818) |
| [Sarratt, John
Henry?]. Koenigsmark the Robber, or, the
Terror of Bohemia: In Which Is Introduced,
Stella, the Maniac of the Wood [...] (1803) |
Raspe, Rudolf Erich unidentified
(English trans. by Sarratt, John Henry, 1801/play
by Lewis, Matthew Gregory 1818) |
| The Life,
Surprising Adventures, and Most Remarkable
Escapes, of Rinaldo Rinaldini [...] (1801) |
Vulpius, Christian August.
Rinaldo Rinaldini, der Räuberhauptmann
(1797, trans. 1800) |
| Lovel Castle,
or the Rightful Heir Restored, a Gothic Tale
[...] (n.d.) |
Reeve, Clara. The Old
English Baron (1777) |
| Manfredi,
or the Mysterious Hermit (n.d.) |
Lansdell, Sarah Tenterden.
Manfredi, Baron St. Osmund (1796) |
| The Midnight
Assassin: Or, Confession of the Monk Rinaldi
[...] (1802) |
Radcliffe, Ann. The
Italian; or the Confessional of the Black
Penitents (1797) |
| The Midnight
Bell, or the Abbey of St. Francis (1802) |
Lathom, Francis. The
Midnight Bell (1798) |
| The Mysteries
of Udolpho, a Romance [...] (n.d.) |
Radcliffe, Ann. The
Mysteries of Udolpho (1797) |
| The Nun;
or, Memoirs of Angelique (1803) |
The Nun. European Magazine
25 (1794) |
| Lawler, Dennis.
The Old Man of the Mountain; or, Interesting
History of Gorthmund the Cruel (n.d.) |
Tieck, Ludwig. 'Der Alte
vom Berge', in Der Alte vom Berge, und
die Gesellschaft auf dem Lande (1828,
trans. 1831) |
| The Phantasmagoria:
Or, Tales of Wonder (n.d.) |
Tschink, Cajetan. Geschichte
eines Geistersehers [...] (178?, trans.
1795) |
| Phantasmagoria,
or the Development of Magical Deception
(1803) |
Tschink, Cajetan. Geschichte
eines Geistersehers [...] (178?, trans.
1795) |
| Rayland Hall; or, the
Remarkable Adventures of Orlando Somerville
(1810) |
Smith, Charlotte.
The Old Manor House (1793) |
| Raymond & Agnes;
or, the Bleeding Nun of the Castle of Lindenberg
(n.d.) |
Lewis, Matthew
Gregory. The Monk (1796) |
| The Recess, a Tale
of Past Times (1802) |
Lee, Sophia.
The Recess; or, a Tale of Other Times (1783-85) |
| Rochester Castle; or,
Gundulph's Tower (1810) |
Drake, Nathan.
'Sir Egbert', in Literary Hours; or, Sketches
Critical and Narrative (1804) |
| Romances and Gothic
Tales. Containing: The Ruins of the Abbey
of Fitz-Martin, [...] The Castle of Hospitality;
or, the Spectre (1801) |
Curtis.
'The Ruins of the Abbey of Fitz-Martin'.
New Gleaner 2 (1810)
Radcliffe, Ann. 'Provencal
Tale', in The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) |
| Rugantino, the Bravo
of Venice (n.d.) |
Zschokke, Johannes
Heinrich Daniel. Abällino, der große Bandit
(1794, adaption by M. G. Lewis 1804-05) |
| The Secret Tribunal;
or, the Court of Winceslaus (1803) |
Naubert, Christiane
Benedicte Eugenie. Hermann von Unna (1788,
trans. 1794) |
| The Southern Tower;
or, Conjugal Sacrifice and Retribution (1802)
|
Radcliffe,
Ann. A Sicilian Romance (1790) |
| A Tale of Mystery; or
the Castle of Solitude (1803) |
Parsons, Eliza.
The Mysterious Warning (1796) |
| The Tartarian Prince;
or, the Stranger (1804) |
Gomez, Madeleine-A.
de. Le Prince Tartare, in Les Cent
Nouvelles (1732-39, trans. 1745) |
| Undine; or, the Spirit
of the Waters (1824) |
Fouqué, Friedrich
Heinrich Karl de la Motte. Undine (1811,
trans. 1818) |
| Vancenza or the Dangers
of Credulity (1810) |
Robinson, Mary.
Vancenza, or, the Dangers of Credulity
(1792) |
| The Veiled Picture:
Or, the Mysteries of Gorgono, the Appennine
Castle of Signor Androssi (1802) |
Radcliffe,
Ann. The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) |
| The Wandering Spirit:
Or Memoirs of the House of Morno [...] (1802) |
Cullen, Stephen.
The Haunted Priory: Or, the Fortunes of
the House of Rayo (1794) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The Ancestress; or, Super-natural Prediction
of Horror Accomplished [...] (n.d.) |
Grillparzer,
Franz. Die Ahnfrau. Ein Trauerspiel in
fünf Aufzügen (1817, trans. 1820) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The Castle of Lindenberg; or, the History
of Raymond and Agnes [...] (n.d.) |
Lewis, Matthew
Gregory. The Monk (1796) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The Castle Spectre; or, Family Horror (1807) |
Lewis, Matthew
Gregory. The Castle Spectre. A Drama in
Five Acts (1798) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
Conscience; or, the Bridal Night (n.d.) |
Haynes, James.
Conscience; or, the Bridal Night: A Tragedy,
in Five Acts (1821) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
Inkle and Yarico; or, Love in a Cave (1805) |
Ligon, Richard.
True and Exact History of the Island of
Barbados (1657; note by Richard Steele
in The Spectator, 11, 1711; adaptation
by Seymour, Frances 1738) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The Ruffian Boy; or the Castle of Waldemar
(n.d.) |
Opie, Amelia
Alderson. 'The Ruffian Boy', in New Tales
(1813) |
| Wilkinson, Sarah Scudgell.
The White Pilgrim; or, Castle of Olival
[...] (n.d.) |
Pixérécourt,
René Guilbert de. Le Pélerin Blanc. Drama
en Trois Actes (1802) |
| Wolfstein; or, the Mysterious
Bandit (n.d.) |
Shelley, Percy
Bysshe. St. Irvyne; or, the Rosicrucian
(1811) |
| The Wood Daemon: Or,
'The Clock Has Struck' (1807) |
Lewis, Matthew
Gregory. One O'Clock! or, the Knight and
the Wood Daemon (1811) |
Copyright
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This article is copyright ©
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distributed, as long as the origin of information
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This article is a revised
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conference, held 20–23 July 1998, in Gregynog
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Referring
to this Article
A. KOCH. ‘Gothic Bluebooks in the Princely
Library of Corvey and Beyond’, Cardiff
Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text 9 (Dec
2002). Online: Internet (date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/romtext/articles/cc09_n01.html>.
Contributor
Details
Angela Koch (PhD Paderborn) is a research assistant
based in the Projekt Corvey scheme at Paderborn
University, and is currently working with colleagues
at Cardiff University on a Bibliography of British
Fiction, 1830–36.

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