)
This piece, somewhat altered, later appeared as:
1773.
This piece, somewhat altered, later appeared as:
1773.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v10
Ed.
Ellis, A. R. 1881. Ed. Dobson, A. 1904.
Cecilia, or Memoirs of an Heiress. 5 vols. 1782. Ed. Ellis, A. R. 1882.
1904.
Camilla, or a Picture of Youth. 5 vols. 1796.
The Wanderer, or Female Difficulties. 5 vols. 1814.
Tragic Dramas. 1818.
Memoirs of Dr Burney. 3 vols. 1832.
Diary and Letters. 7 vols. 1842-6, 1854. Ed. Barrett, C. 4 vols. 1891.
Ed. Dobson, A. 1904.
Dobson, A. Fanny Burney. 1903.
Hill, Constance. The House in St Martin's Street, being chronicles of the
Burney family. 1907.
Fanny Burney at the Court of Queen Charlotte. 1912.
Macaulay, Lord. Madame d’Arblay. In last edn Hist. Essays, vol. 11. 1854.
Seeley, L. B. Fanny Burney and her friends. 1890.
Thomas Day (1748-1789)
See bibliography to vol. xi (chapter on Children's Books), post.
Henry Mackenzie
Works. 8 vols. 1807, 1808.
The Man of Feeling. 1771.
The Man of the World. 1773.
The Prince of Tunis. A tragedy. 1773.
Julia de Roubigné. 1777.
The Shipwreck. A tragedy altered from Lillo. 1784.
The Mirror. Ed. Mackenzie, H. 1779-80.
The Lounger. Ed. Mackenzie, H. 1785-7.
Robert Paltock (1697-1767)
The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins, a Cornish Man. 2 vols. 1751.
With illustrations by Stothard. 2 vols. 1816. Ed. Bullen, A. H. 2 vols.
1884.
Rudolf Eric Raspe (1737-1794)
Baron Munchausen's Narrative of his marvellous travels and campaigns in
Russia. 1785. 2nd edn, Oxford, 1786; 7th edn, 1793. Sequel, 1793. Ed.
Seccombe, T. 1895.
Clara Reeve
The Champion of Virtue, a Gothic Story. 1777. Title changed to The Old
English Baron in second (1778) and all later edns. Rptd, with Memoir by
Scott, Sir W. , 1823 and 1883.
The Two Mentors, a Modern Story. 2 vols. 1783.
The Progress of Romance through Times, Countries, and Manners. 2 vols.
Colchester, 1785.
The Exiles, or Memoirs of Count de Cronstadt. 3 vols. 1788.
The School for Widows, a Novel. 3 vols. 1791.
Plans of Education. 1792.
Memoirs of Sir Roger de Clarendon, a natural son of Edward the Black
Prince. 3 vols. 1793.
## p. 425 (#451) ############################################
Chapter III
425
Horace Walpole, Fourth Earl of Orford
The Castle of Otranto. A Story. Translated by William Marshall, Gent.
From the Original Italian of Onuphrio Muralto, Canon of the Church of
St Nicholas at Otranto. 1765. 2nd edn, 1765; 5th edn, 1786; 6th edn,
Parma, 1791. Rptd with a Memoir by Scott, Sir W. , 1823 and 1883.
Transl. into French, 1767; into Italian, 1795.
A. T. B.
CHAPTER IV
THE DRAMA AND THE STAGE
The names of the playhouses given in this bibliography thus-(Drury
lane)-are those mentioned in the title-pages of the several plays
thus-(as acted at the Theatre Royal, Drury lane). The following
abbreviations are used: T. tragedy; C. comedy; 0. opera; C. 0. comic
opera; F. farce. Where there is no entry to the contrary, the author's
name appears, either on the title-page or at the foot of the dedication.
I. PARTICULAR AUTHORS
Isaac Bickerstaff
1756. Leucothoe. A Dramatic Poem. (Anon. In 3 acts. Never acted. )
1761. Thomas and Sally: or, The Sailor's Return. A Musical Entertain-
ment. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. ) Music by Arne, T. A.
1763. Love in a Village. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1765. The Maid of the Mill. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) By the Author of
Love in a Village.
1765. Daphne and Amintor. C. 0. in one act. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1766. The Plain Dealer. C. (Drury lane. ) With Alterations from
Wycherly. (Anon. )
1767. Love in the City. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) By the Author of Love in
a Village.
This piece, altered and abridged, later appeared as:
1786. The Romp. A Musical Entertainment. In two acts. Altered
from Love in the City, by Mr Bickerstaff. (Theatres Royal,
Dublin and York, and Drury lane. )
1768. [Early imprints read, erroneously, MDCCXLVIII. ] Lionel and
Clarissa. C. O. (Covent garden. ) (Anon.
)
This piece, somewhat altered, later appeared as:
1773. A School for Fathers. C. 0. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) New
edn.
1768. The Absent Man. F. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1768. The Royal Garland; a new Occasional Interlude in Honour of His
Danish Majesty. (Anon. ) Music by Arnold, S. (Covent garden. )
1768. The Padlock. C. 0. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1769. The Hypocrite. C. (Drury lane. ) Taken from Molière (Tartuffe]
and Cibber [The Non-Juror], by the Author of the Alterations of the
Plain-Dealer.
1769. The Ephesian Matron. A Comic Serenata, After the Manner of the
Italian. (Ranelagh house. ) (Anon. ) Music by Dibdin, C.
## p. 426 (#452) ############################################
426
Bibliography
1769. [Early imprints read, erroneously, MDCCXVIX. ] Doctor Last in His
Chariot. C. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
1769. The Captive. C. O. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
[1769. ) Judith, a Sacred Drama : As performed in the Church of Stratford
upon Avon, on Occasion of the Jubilee held there, September 6, 1769, in
Honour of the Memory of Shakespeare. Music by Arne, T. A.
1770. 'Tis Well it's no Worse. C. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1770. The Recruiting Serjeant, a Musical Entertainment. (Drury lane. )
(
(Anon. )
1771. He Wou'd if He Cou'd; or, An Old Fool worse than Any: a Burletta.
(Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) Music by Dibdin, C.
1787. (Acted 1775. ] The Sultan, or a Peep into the Seraglio. F. in two
acts. (Drury lane and Covent garden. )
1792. The Spoild Child; in two acts. (Theatre-Royal, Smoke alley. ) (Anon. )
Dublin, 1792. [Sometimes ascribed to Bickerstaff. ]
Mrs Frances Brooke (1724-1789)
A. Plays
1756. Virginia. T.
1781. The Siege of Sinope. T.
1783. Rosina. C. O. Numerous edns.
B. Other Works
1763. The History of Lady Julia Mandeville. (Anon. )
1777. The Excursion. 2 vols. [Contains an attack on Garrick. ]
Henry Brooke
See bibliography to chap. III, and to vol. ix, chap. XII, ante.
John Brown, Vicar of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1715-1766)
A. Plays
1755. Barbarossa. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1756. Athelstan. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
B. Other Works
1751. Essays on the Characteristics (of the Earl of Shaftesbury]. 5th edn,
1764.
1757. An Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times. By the
Author of Essays on the Characteristics, &c. _7th edn, 1758.
1763. A Dissertation on. . . Poetry and Music. To which is prefixed, The
Cure of Saul. A Sacred Ode. [Performed as oratorio at Covent
garden. ]
Henry Carey
A. Plays
1715. The Contrivances; or, More Ways than One. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
[1722. ] Hanging and Marriage; or, The Dead Man's Wedding. F.
(Lincoln's inn fields. ) [Preface dated 1722. ]
1732. Amelia. A New English Opera. (Haymarket), after the Italian
Manner. (Anon. ) Music by Lampe, John Frederick.
1732. Teraminta. 0. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) Music by Smith, J. C.
[1734. ] The Tragedy of Chrononhotonthologos: Being the Most Tragical
Tragedy, that ever was Tragediz'd by any Company of Tragedians.
Written by Benjamin Bounce, Esq.
## p. 427 (#453) ############################################
Chapter IV
427
1736. The Honest Yorkshire-Man. A Ballad Farce. Refus'd to be Acted
at Drury-Lane Playhouse: but now Performd at the New Theatre in
Goodman's Fields, with great Applause.
An earlier, (? ) pirated, edn, 1736: A Wonder: or, An Honest York-
shire-Man. A Ballad Opera; As it is Perform’d at the Theatres with
Universal Applause. (Anon. )
1738. The Dragon of Wantley, a Burlesque Opera. (Anon. ) Music by
Lampe, J. F. (Covent garden. ) Thirteenth edition, with additions.
(1743? ] The Dragoness, a Burlesque Opera. (Anon. ) Music by Lampe, J. F.
[Acted 1738, under title, Margery; or, A Worse Plague than the
Dragon. ]
Alterations of Carey's Nancy; or, The Parting Lovers, acted 1739.
1755. The Press Gang: or, Love in Low-Life. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1787. True-Blue. A Musical Entertainment, As performing at the Royalty-
Theatre, Wellelose Square. (Anon. )
1743. The Dramatick Works of Henry Carey.
B. Other Works
1713. Poems on Several Occasions. [3rd edn, much enlarged, 1729. ]
1737-40. The Musical Century, in one hundred English Ballads . . . The
Words and Musick of the Whole, by Henry Carey. 2 vols. [Vol. 11
contains Sally in our Alley. ]
Mrs Susanna (Carroll) Centlivre
A. Plays
1700. The erju Husband :
: or, The Adventures of Venice.
Ellis, A. R. 1881. Ed. Dobson, A. 1904.
Cecilia, or Memoirs of an Heiress. 5 vols. 1782. Ed. Ellis, A. R. 1882.
1904.
Camilla, or a Picture of Youth. 5 vols. 1796.
The Wanderer, or Female Difficulties. 5 vols. 1814.
Tragic Dramas. 1818.
Memoirs of Dr Burney. 3 vols. 1832.
Diary and Letters. 7 vols. 1842-6, 1854. Ed. Barrett, C. 4 vols. 1891.
Ed. Dobson, A. 1904.
Dobson, A. Fanny Burney. 1903.
Hill, Constance. The House in St Martin's Street, being chronicles of the
Burney family. 1907.
Fanny Burney at the Court of Queen Charlotte. 1912.
Macaulay, Lord. Madame d’Arblay. In last edn Hist. Essays, vol. 11. 1854.
Seeley, L. B. Fanny Burney and her friends. 1890.
Thomas Day (1748-1789)
See bibliography to vol. xi (chapter on Children's Books), post.
Henry Mackenzie
Works. 8 vols. 1807, 1808.
The Man of Feeling. 1771.
The Man of the World. 1773.
The Prince of Tunis. A tragedy. 1773.
Julia de Roubigné. 1777.
The Shipwreck. A tragedy altered from Lillo. 1784.
The Mirror. Ed. Mackenzie, H. 1779-80.
The Lounger. Ed. Mackenzie, H. 1785-7.
Robert Paltock (1697-1767)
The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins, a Cornish Man. 2 vols. 1751.
With illustrations by Stothard. 2 vols. 1816. Ed. Bullen, A. H. 2 vols.
1884.
Rudolf Eric Raspe (1737-1794)
Baron Munchausen's Narrative of his marvellous travels and campaigns in
Russia. 1785. 2nd edn, Oxford, 1786; 7th edn, 1793. Sequel, 1793. Ed.
Seccombe, T. 1895.
Clara Reeve
The Champion of Virtue, a Gothic Story. 1777. Title changed to The Old
English Baron in second (1778) and all later edns. Rptd, with Memoir by
Scott, Sir W. , 1823 and 1883.
The Two Mentors, a Modern Story. 2 vols. 1783.
The Progress of Romance through Times, Countries, and Manners. 2 vols.
Colchester, 1785.
The Exiles, or Memoirs of Count de Cronstadt. 3 vols. 1788.
The School for Widows, a Novel. 3 vols. 1791.
Plans of Education. 1792.
Memoirs of Sir Roger de Clarendon, a natural son of Edward the Black
Prince. 3 vols. 1793.
## p. 425 (#451) ############################################
Chapter III
425
Horace Walpole, Fourth Earl of Orford
The Castle of Otranto. A Story. Translated by William Marshall, Gent.
From the Original Italian of Onuphrio Muralto, Canon of the Church of
St Nicholas at Otranto. 1765. 2nd edn, 1765; 5th edn, 1786; 6th edn,
Parma, 1791. Rptd with a Memoir by Scott, Sir W. , 1823 and 1883.
Transl. into French, 1767; into Italian, 1795.
A. T. B.
CHAPTER IV
THE DRAMA AND THE STAGE
The names of the playhouses given in this bibliography thus-(Drury
lane)-are those mentioned in the title-pages of the several plays
thus-(as acted at the Theatre Royal, Drury lane). The following
abbreviations are used: T. tragedy; C. comedy; 0. opera; C. 0. comic
opera; F. farce. Where there is no entry to the contrary, the author's
name appears, either on the title-page or at the foot of the dedication.
I. PARTICULAR AUTHORS
Isaac Bickerstaff
1756. Leucothoe. A Dramatic Poem. (Anon. In 3 acts. Never acted. )
1761. Thomas and Sally: or, The Sailor's Return. A Musical Entertain-
ment. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. ) Music by Arne, T. A.
1763. Love in a Village. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1765. The Maid of the Mill. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) By the Author of
Love in a Village.
1765. Daphne and Amintor. C. 0. in one act. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1766. The Plain Dealer. C. (Drury lane. ) With Alterations from
Wycherly. (Anon. )
1767. Love in the City. C. 0. (Covent garden. ) By the Author of Love in
a Village.
This piece, altered and abridged, later appeared as:
1786. The Romp. A Musical Entertainment. In two acts. Altered
from Love in the City, by Mr Bickerstaff. (Theatres Royal,
Dublin and York, and Drury lane. )
1768. [Early imprints read, erroneously, MDCCXLVIII. ] Lionel and
Clarissa. C. O. (Covent garden. ) (Anon.
)
This piece, somewhat altered, later appeared as:
1773. A School for Fathers. C. 0. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) New
edn.
1768. The Absent Man. F. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1768. The Royal Garland; a new Occasional Interlude in Honour of His
Danish Majesty. (Anon. ) Music by Arnold, S. (Covent garden. )
1768. The Padlock. C. 0. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1769. The Hypocrite. C. (Drury lane. ) Taken from Molière (Tartuffe]
and Cibber [The Non-Juror], by the Author of the Alterations of the
Plain-Dealer.
1769. The Ephesian Matron. A Comic Serenata, After the Manner of the
Italian. (Ranelagh house. ) (Anon. ) Music by Dibdin, C.
## p. 426 (#452) ############################################
426
Bibliography
1769. [Early imprints read, erroneously, MDCCXVIX. ] Doctor Last in His
Chariot. C. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
1769. The Captive. C. O. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
[1769. ) Judith, a Sacred Drama : As performed in the Church of Stratford
upon Avon, on Occasion of the Jubilee held there, September 6, 1769, in
Honour of the Memory of Shakespeare. Music by Arne, T. A.
1770. 'Tis Well it's no Worse. C. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1770. The Recruiting Serjeant, a Musical Entertainment. (Drury lane. )
(
(Anon. )
1771. He Wou'd if He Cou'd; or, An Old Fool worse than Any: a Burletta.
(Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) Music by Dibdin, C.
1787. (Acted 1775. ] The Sultan, or a Peep into the Seraglio. F. in two
acts. (Drury lane and Covent garden. )
1792. The Spoild Child; in two acts. (Theatre-Royal, Smoke alley. ) (Anon. )
Dublin, 1792. [Sometimes ascribed to Bickerstaff. ]
Mrs Frances Brooke (1724-1789)
A. Plays
1756. Virginia. T.
1781. The Siege of Sinope. T.
1783. Rosina. C. O. Numerous edns.
B. Other Works
1763. The History of Lady Julia Mandeville. (Anon. )
1777. The Excursion. 2 vols. [Contains an attack on Garrick. ]
Henry Brooke
See bibliography to chap. III, and to vol. ix, chap. XII, ante.
John Brown, Vicar of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1715-1766)
A. Plays
1755. Barbarossa. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1756. Athelstan. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
B. Other Works
1751. Essays on the Characteristics (of the Earl of Shaftesbury]. 5th edn,
1764.
1757. An Estimate of the Manners and Principles of the Times. By the
Author of Essays on the Characteristics, &c. _7th edn, 1758.
1763. A Dissertation on. . . Poetry and Music. To which is prefixed, The
Cure of Saul. A Sacred Ode. [Performed as oratorio at Covent
garden. ]
Henry Carey
A. Plays
1715. The Contrivances; or, More Ways than One. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
[1722. ] Hanging and Marriage; or, The Dead Man's Wedding. F.
(Lincoln's inn fields. ) [Preface dated 1722. ]
1732. Amelia. A New English Opera. (Haymarket), after the Italian
Manner. (Anon. ) Music by Lampe, John Frederick.
1732. Teraminta. 0. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) Music by Smith, J. C.
[1734. ] The Tragedy of Chrononhotonthologos: Being the Most Tragical
Tragedy, that ever was Tragediz'd by any Company of Tragedians.
Written by Benjamin Bounce, Esq.
## p. 427 (#453) ############################################
Chapter IV
427
1736. The Honest Yorkshire-Man. A Ballad Farce. Refus'd to be Acted
at Drury-Lane Playhouse: but now Performd at the New Theatre in
Goodman's Fields, with great Applause.
An earlier, (? ) pirated, edn, 1736: A Wonder: or, An Honest York-
shire-Man. A Ballad Opera; As it is Perform’d at the Theatres with
Universal Applause. (Anon. )
1738. The Dragon of Wantley, a Burlesque Opera. (Anon. ) Music by
Lampe, J. F. (Covent garden. ) Thirteenth edition, with additions.
(1743? ] The Dragoness, a Burlesque Opera. (Anon. ) Music by Lampe, J. F.
[Acted 1738, under title, Margery; or, A Worse Plague than the
Dragon. ]
Alterations of Carey's Nancy; or, The Parting Lovers, acted 1739.
1755. The Press Gang: or, Love in Low-Life. (Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1787. True-Blue. A Musical Entertainment, As performing at the Royalty-
Theatre, Wellelose Square. (Anon. )
1743. The Dramatick Works of Henry Carey.
B. Other Works
1713. Poems on Several Occasions. [3rd edn, much enlarged, 1729. ]
1737-40. The Musical Century, in one hundred English Ballads . . . The
Words and Musick of the Whole, by Henry Carey. 2 vols. [Vol. 11
contains Sally in our Alley. ]
Mrs Susanna (Carroll) Centlivre
A. Plays
1700. The erju Husband :
: or, The Adventures of Venice.
