A
Dramatick
Satire on the Times: Being the Rehearsal of Two
Plays, viz.
Plays, viz.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v10
Lately
found at Constantinople. . . . Book 1. 1741.
The Opposition. A Vision. 1742.
The Crisis: A Sermon on Rev. 14. 9-11 (ascribed to Fielding—see Nichols
Anecdotes, vol. VIII, 8. 4 (6)).
A Review of a Late Treatise entitled An Account of the Conduct of the Dowager
D- of M- &c. In which Many Misrepresentations are detected,
several Obscure Passages searched into and explained, and Abundance of
False Facts set in their true Light; Especially such as relate to the Reigns
of K. William and Q. Mary. In a Letter to a Person of Distinction.
1742.
Plutus, The God of Riches. A Comedy. Translated from the Original
Greek of Aristophanes. With Large Notes Explanatory and Critical.
By Henry Fielding, Esq. , and the Revd. Mr Young. 1742.
A Letter to a Noble Lord, To whom alone it Belongs. Occasioned by a
Representation at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, of a Farce called
Miss Lucy in Town. 1742.
Preface to The Adventures of David Simple. By a Lady (Sarah Fielding).
1744.
Preface (anonymous) to Familiar Letters between the principal characters
in David Simple. . . . By the author of David Simple. 1747.
A True State of the Case of Bosavern Penley, who suffered on account of
the late Riot in the Strand. In which the Law regarding these Offenses,
and the Statute of George the First, commonly called the Riot Act, are
fully considered. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1749.
A Charge delivered to the Grand Jury at the Sessions. . . held for the City
and Liberty of Westminster, etc. , the 29th of June, 1749. 1749.
An Enquiry Into the Causes of the late Increase of Robbers, etc. With
some Proposals for Remedying this Growing Evil. In which the
Present reigning Vices are impartially exposed; and the Laws that
relate to the Provision for the Poor, and to the Punishment of Felons
are eagerly and freely examined. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1751.
Examples of the Interposition of Providence in the Detection and Punish-
ment of Murder. Containing above thirty Cases, in which this dreadful
Crime has been brought to Light in the most extraordinary and
miraculous manner; collected from various authors, ancient and modern.
With an Introduction and conclusion. Both written by Henry Fielding,
Esq. 1752.
A proposal for Making an Effectual Provision for the Poor, for Amending
2
ods
their morals, and for rendering them useful Members of the Society.
To which is added, A Plan of the Buildings proposed, with proper
Elevations. Drawn by an Eminent Hand. By Henry Fielding, Esq.
1753.
A Clear State of the Case of Elizabeth Canning, Who hath sworn that she
was robbed and almost starved to Death by a Gang of Gipsies and other
Villains in January last, for which one Mary Squires now lies under
Sentence of Death. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1753.
The Lover's Assistant; or New Year's Gift; Being a New Art of Love
Adapted to the Present Times. Translated from the Latin with Notes,
By the Late Ingenious Henry Fielding Of Facetious Memory. 1759.
[On page 1: Ovid's Art of Love Paraphrased. ]
Film
markas
## p. 416 (#442) ############################################
416
Bibliography
F. A Voyage to Lisbon
The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon, By the late Henry Fielding, Esq.
With A Fragment of a Comment on L. Bolingbroke's Essays. 1755.
Later edns: 1755, 1892 (introd. by Dobson, A. ); 1907 (introd. by Dobson,
A. , in The World's Classics).
As to the two editions of 1755, see Dobson, A. , Introd. and Notes to
World's Classics edn, 1907.
Dobson, A. At Prior Park and other Papers. 1912. P. 128: A Fielding
Find.
(Contains selections from previously unpublished letters written by
Fielding from Lisbon, which throw light upon his life there. ]
G. Plays
Love in Several Masques. A Comedy as it is Acted at the Theatre Royal, by
His Majesty's Servants. Written by Mr Fielding. 1728. German
trans. , 1782.
The Temple Beau. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre in Goodman's
Fields. Written by Mr Fielding. 1730.
The Author's Farce; And the pleasures of the Town. As Acted at the
Theatre in the Hay-Market. Written by Scriblerus Secundus. 1730.
The Author's Farce; With a Puppet Show called The Pleasures of the
Town. As Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Written by
Henry Fielding, Esq. : The Third Edition. This Piece was Originally
Acted at the Hay Market and Revived some Years after at Drury Lane,
when it was Revis'd and partly Alter'd by the Author, as now Printed.
1750.
Rape upon Rape, Or The Justice Caught in his own Trap. A Comedy, As
it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay-Market. The Coffee-House
Politician; or, the Justice Caught in his own Trap. A Comedy. As it
is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's Inn Fields. Written by Mr
Fielding. 1730.
Tom Thumb. A Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Theatres in London,
Dublin; Printed and sold by S. Powell. 1730.
Many other editions: 1730, etc. ; 1830 (with designs by Cruikshank, G. ).
German trans. , 1899.
The Welsh Opera: Or, The Grey Mare the better Horse. As it is Acted at
the New Theatre in the Hay Market. Written by Scriblerus Secundus,
Author of the Tragedy of Tragedies. 1731. Re-issued 1731 under the
title of The Grub-street Opera, with The Masquerade, a Poem.
The Letter-writers: Or, a New Way to keep a wife at Home. A Farce, in
Three Acts. As it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay Market. Written
by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1750. German trans. , 1781.
The Lottery. A Farce. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane,
With the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 1732.
The Modern Husband. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. Written by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1732. German trans. ,
1781.
The Covent Garden Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury
Lane. 1732.
The Old Debauchees. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. By the Author of the Modern Husband. Dublin. 1732.
3rd edn, 1750, under the title: The Debauchees, or, The Jesuit Caught.
## p. 417 (#443) ############################################
Chapter II
417
:
The Mock Doctor: or The Dumb Lady Curd. A Comedy. Done from
Molière. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. With
the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 1732.
The Miser. A Comedy. Taken from Plautus and Molière. As it is Acted
at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1733.
The Intriguing Chambermaid. A Comedy of Two Acts. As it is Acted at
the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Taken from the French of Regnard,
by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1750.
Don Quixote in England. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the New Theatre
in the Hay-Market. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1734.
An Old Man taught Wisdom: or, The Virgin Unmask'd. A Farce. As it
is Perform’d at the Theatre Royal. By Henry Fielding, Esq. : With
the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 2nd edn. 1735.
The Universal Gallant: or, The Different Husbands. A Comedy. As it is
Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, By His Majesty's Servants.
By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1735.
Pasquin.
A Dramatick Satire on the Times: Being the Rehearsal of Two
Plays, viz. A Comedy call'd The Election; and a Tragedy call'd The Life
and Death of Common-Sense. As it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay-
Market. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1736. Other edns: 1736, 1740.
The Historical Register for the Year 1736. As it is Acted at the New
Theatre in the Hay-Market. To which is added a very merry Tragedy
callid Eurydice Hiss'd; or, A Word to the Wise. Both written by
the Author of Pasquin. To these are prefixed a long Dedication to
the publick, and a Preface to that Dedication. Dublin: Printed by and
for J. Jones. 1737. Other edns: 1741, 1744.
Eurydice, a Farce: As it was d-mned At the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane.
[1735. ]
Tumble-Down Dick: Or, Phaethon in the Suds. A Dramatick Enter-
tainment of Walking, in Serious and Foolish Characters; Interlarded
with Burlesque, Grotesque, Comick Interludes, Call’d Harlequin a Pick-
Pocket. As it is Perform’d at the New Theatre in the Hay Market.
Being (tis hop'd) the last Entertainment that will ever be exhibited on
any Stage. Invented by the Ingenious Monsieur Sant Esprit. The
Musick compos'd by the Harmonious Signior Warblerini, And the Scenes
Painted by the Prodigious Mynheer Van Bottom-feet. 1744. (1st edn,
1737. )
Miss Lucy in Town. A Sequel to The Virgin Unmasqued. A Farce; With
Songs. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal, In Drury-lane. 1742.
The Wedding-Day. A Comedy, As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1743.
The Fathers: Or, The Good Naturd Man. A Comedy, As it is Acted at the
Theatre Royal, In Drury Lane. By the late Henry Fielding, Esq. ,
Author of Tom Jones, etc. 1778.
H. Periodicals
&
The Champion: Containing a Series of Papers, Humorous, Moral, Political
and Critical, to each of which is added A popular Index to the Times.
[2 vols. ] 1741. Another edn. 1766.
The True Patriot: And the History of Our Own Times (To be continued
Every Tuesday). 5 November 1745—10 June 1746.
The Jacobite's Journal. By John Trott-Plaid, Esq. [Saturdays). 5 De-
cember 1747–5 November 1748.
The Covent Garden Journal. By Sir Alexander Drawcansir, Knt. Censor of
E. L. x.
27
## p. 418 (#444) ############################################
418
Bibliography
Great Britain, Saturday, January 4, 1752. To be continued every Tuesday
and Saturday. Last number 70, 11 November 1752. (In Burney
Collection in B. M. some numbers missing and some seemingly not
issued. )
I. Selections
Illustrations of Smollett, Fielding and Goldsmith, in a series of forty-one
plates, designed and engraved by Cruikshank, G. Accompanied by
descriptive extracts. 1832.
Fielding. Edited by Saintsbury, G. (with introduction). (Masters of Litera-
ture. ) 1905.
J. Biography and Criticism
Besides the introductions and notes mentioned above the following may
be consulted :
A Catalogue of the entire and valuable library of books of the late Henry
Fielding, Esq. , which will be sold by auction by Samuel Baker . . . on
Monday, Feb. the 10th, and the three following evenings, etc. (British
Museum oopy, with MS prices. ] [1755. ]
An Essay on the New Species of writing founded by Mr Fielding: With a
word or two upon the Modern State of Criticism. 1751.
Dobson, Austin. Art. Fielding, Henry, in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
edn.
Henry Fielding. A Memoir. 1900.
Fielding. (English Men of Letters. ) 1907.
Fraser's Magazine. January and February, 1858.
Godden, G. M. Henry Fielding: a memoir. 1910. [Contains previously
unpublished facts and a chronological list of Fielding's writings. ]
Green, Emanuel. Henry Fielding, his works. An independent criticism. 1909.
Hazlitt, William. Lectures on the English Comic Writers. 1819.
(Waller and Glover's Hazlitt, vol. viii, p. 106 et al. For further
references by Hazlitt, see the Index to this edn. ]
Jesse, J. Heneage. Memoirs of celebrated Etonians, vol. 1. 1875.
Lawrence, F. The Life of Henry Fielding, with notices of his writings, his
times and his contemporaries. 1855.
Quarterly Review, The, vol. xxxiv, no. 68, p. 349. September 1826.
Vol. xcviii, No. 195, p. 100. December 1855.
Vol. ciii, No. 205, p. 66. January 1858.
Vol. clxiii, No. 325, p. 34. July 1886.
Raleigh, Sir Walter. The English Novel. 1894.
Stephen, Sir Leslie. Art. Fielding, Henry, in D. of N. B. vol. XVIII.
1889.
Thackeray, W. M. The English Humourists of the xvi1 Century. 1853.
Times, The, Literary Supplement, no. 423. 17 February 1910.
II. SMOLLETT
A. Collected Works
The Miscellaneous Works of Tobias Smollett M. D. 6 vols. 1790.
with memoirs of his life and writings by Robert Anderson. 6 vols. 1796.
Edited, with memoir, by Roscoe, T. 1841.
with memoir of his life, to which is prefixed a view of the commence-
ment and progress of romance by Moore, J. 1797. Re-issue, ed. Browne,
J. P. 8 vols. 1872.
Edited by Saintsbury, G. 12 vols. 1895.
With an introduction by Henley, W. E. 12 vols. 1899-1901.
## p. 419 (#445) ############################################
Chapter II
419
B. Collected Novels
Cooke's Select British Novels. 1793–5. Walker's British Classics. 1815.
Ballantyno's Novelists' Library (with life by Sir Walter Scott). 1821.
Roscoe's Novelists' Library. 1831. Bohn's Novelists' Library. 1895.
C. Separate Novels
The Adventures of Roderick Random. 2 vols. Printed for J. Osborn,
1748. Many other edns: 1857 (with memoir by Townsend, J. H. ).
found at Constantinople. . . . Book 1. 1741.
The Opposition. A Vision. 1742.
The Crisis: A Sermon on Rev. 14. 9-11 (ascribed to Fielding—see Nichols
Anecdotes, vol. VIII, 8. 4 (6)).
A Review of a Late Treatise entitled An Account of the Conduct of the Dowager
D- of M- &c. In which Many Misrepresentations are detected,
several Obscure Passages searched into and explained, and Abundance of
False Facts set in their true Light; Especially such as relate to the Reigns
of K. William and Q. Mary. In a Letter to a Person of Distinction.
1742.
Plutus, The God of Riches. A Comedy. Translated from the Original
Greek of Aristophanes. With Large Notes Explanatory and Critical.
By Henry Fielding, Esq. , and the Revd. Mr Young. 1742.
A Letter to a Noble Lord, To whom alone it Belongs. Occasioned by a
Representation at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, of a Farce called
Miss Lucy in Town. 1742.
Preface to The Adventures of David Simple. By a Lady (Sarah Fielding).
1744.
Preface (anonymous) to Familiar Letters between the principal characters
in David Simple. . . . By the author of David Simple. 1747.
A True State of the Case of Bosavern Penley, who suffered on account of
the late Riot in the Strand. In which the Law regarding these Offenses,
and the Statute of George the First, commonly called the Riot Act, are
fully considered. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1749.
A Charge delivered to the Grand Jury at the Sessions. . . held for the City
and Liberty of Westminster, etc. , the 29th of June, 1749. 1749.
An Enquiry Into the Causes of the late Increase of Robbers, etc. With
some Proposals for Remedying this Growing Evil. In which the
Present reigning Vices are impartially exposed; and the Laws that
relate to the Provision for the Poor, and to the Punishment of Felons
are eagerly and freely examined. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1751.
Examples of the Interposition of Providence in the Detection and Punish-
ment of Murder. Containing above thirty Cases, in which this dreadful
Crime has been brought to Light in the most extraordinary and
miraculous manner; collected from various authors, ancient and modern.
With an Introduction and conclusion. Both written by Henry Fielding,
Esq. 1752.
A proposal for Making an Effectual Provision for the Poor, for Amending
2
ods
their morals, and for rendering them useful Members of the Society.
To which is added, A Plan of the Buildings proposed, with proper
Elevations. Drawn by an Eminent Hand. By Henry Fielding, Esq.
1753.
A Clear State of the Case of Elizabeth Canning, Who hath sworn that she
was robbed and almost starved to Death by a Gang of Gipsies and other
Villains in January last, for which one Mary Squires now lies under
Sentence of Death. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1753.
The Lover's Assistant; or New Year's Gift; Being a New Art of Love
Adapted to the Present Times. Translated from the Latin with Notes,
By the Late Ingenious Henry Fielding Of Facetious Memory. 1759.
[On page 1: Ovid's Art of Love Paraphrased. ]
Film
markas
## p. 416 (#442) ############################################
416
Bibliography
F. A Voyage to Lisbon
The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon, By the late Henry Fielding, Esq.
With A Fragment of a Comment on L. Bolingbroke's Essays. 1755.
Later edns: 1755, 1892 (introd. by Dobson, A. ); 1907 (introd. by Dobson,
A. , in The World's Classics).
As to the two editions of 1755, see Dobson, A. , Introd. and Notes to
World's Classics edn, 1907.
Dobson, A. At Prior Park and other Papers. 1912. P. 128: A Fielding
Find.
(Contains selections from previously unpublished letters written by
Fielding from Lisbon, which throw light upon his life there. ]
G. Plays
Love in Several Masques. A Comedy as it is Acted at the Theatre Royal, by
His Majesty's Servants. Written by Mr Fielding. 1728. German
trans. , 1782.
The Temple Beau. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre in Goodman's
Fields. Written by Mr Fielding. 1730.
The Author's Farce; And the pleasures of the Town. As Acted at the
Theatre in the Hay-Market. Written by Scriblerus Secundus. 1730.
The Author's Farce; With a Puppet Show called The Pleasures of the
Town. As Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Written by
Henry Fielding, Esq. : The Third Edition. This Piece was Originally
Acted at the Hay Market and Revived some Years after at Drury Lane,
when it was Revis'd and partly Alter'd by the Author, as now Printed.
1750.
Rape upon Rape, Or The Justice Caught in his own Trap. A Comedy, As
it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay-Market. The Coffee-House
Politician; or, the Justice Caught in his own Trap. A Comedy. As it
is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's Inn Fields. Written by Mr
Fielding. 1730.
Tom Thumb. A Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Theatres in London,
Dublin; Printed and sold by S. Powell. 1730.
Many other editions: 1730, etc. ; 1830 (with designs by Cruikshank, G. ).
German trans. , 1899.
The Welsh Opera: Or, The Grey Mare the better Horse. As it is Acted at
the New Theatre in the Hay Market. Written by Scriblerus Secundus,
Author of the Tragedy of Tragedies. 1731. Re-issued 1731 under the
title of The Grub-street Opera, with The Masquerade, a Poem.
The Letter-writers: Or, a New Way to keep a wife at Home. A Farce, in
Three Acts. As it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay Market. Written
by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1750. German trans. , 1781.
The Lottery. A Farce. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane,
With the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 1732.
The Modern Husband. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. Written by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1732. German trans. ,
1781.
The Covent Garden Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury
Lane. 1732.
The Old Debauchees. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. By the Author of the Modern Husband. Dublin. 1732.
3rd edn, 1750, under the title: The Debauchees, or, The Jesuit Caught.
## p. 417 (#443) ############################################
Chapter II
417
:
The Mock Doctor: or The Dumb Lady Curd. A Comedy. Done from
Molière. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. With
the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 1732.
The Miser. A Comedy. Taken from Plautus and Molière. As it is Acted
at the Theatre-Royal in Drury Lane. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1733.
The Intriguing Chambermaid. A Comedy of Two Acts. As it is Acted at
the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane. Taken from the French of Regnard,
by Henry Fielding, Esq. 1750.
Don Quixote in England. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the New Theatre
in the Hay-Market. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1734.
An Old Man taught Wisdom: or, The Virgin Unmask'd. A Farce. As it
is Perform’d at the Theatre Royal. By Henry Fielding, Esq. : With
the Musick prefix'd to each Song. 2nd edn. 1735.
The Universal Gallant: or, The Different Husbands. A Comedy. As it is
Acted at the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane, By His Majesty's Servants.
By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1735.
Pasquin.
A Dramatick Satire on the Times: Being the Rehearsal of Two
Plays, viz. A Comedy call'd The Election; and a Tragedy call'd The Life
and Death of Common-Sense. As it is Acted at the Theatre in the Hay-
Market. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1736. Other edns: 1736, 1740.
The Historical Register for the Year 1736. As it is Acted at the New
Theatre in the Hay-Market. To which is added a very merry Tragedy
callid Eurydice Hiss'd; or, A Word to the Wise. Both written by
the Author of Pasquin. To these are prefixed a long Dedication to
the publick, and a Preface to that Dedication. Dublin: Printed by and
for J. Jones. 1737. Other edns: 1741, 1744.
Eurydice, a Farce: As it was d-mned At the Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane.
[1735. ]
Tumble-Down Dick: Or, Phaethon in the Suds. A Dramatick Enter-
tainment of Walking, in Serious and Foolish Characters; Interlarded
with Burlesque, Grotesque, Comick Interludes, Call’d Harlequin a Pick-
Pocket. As it is Perform’d at the New Theatre in the Hay Market.
Being (tis hop'd) the last Entertainment that will ever be exhibited on
any Stage. Invented by the Ingenious Monsieur Sant Esprit. The
Musick compos'd by the Harmonious Signior Warblerini, And the Scenes
Painted by the Prodigious Mynheer Van Bottom-feet. 1744. (1st edn,
1737. )
Miss Lucy in Town. A Sequel to The Virgin Unmasqued. A Farce; With
Songs. As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal, In Drury-lane. 1742.
The Wedding-Day. A Comedy, As it is Acted at the Theatre-Royal in
Drury Lane. By Henry Fielding, Esq. 1743.
The Fathers: Or, The Good Naturd Man. A Comedy, As it is Acted at the
Theatre Royal, In Drury Lane. By the late Henry Fielding, Esq. ,
Author of Tom Jones, etc. 1778.
H. Periodicals
&
The Champion: Containing a Series of Papers, Humorous, Moral, Political
and Critical, to each of which is added A popular Index to the Times.
[2 vols. ] 1741. Another edn. 1766.
The True Patriot: And the History of Our Own Times (To be continued
Every Tuesday). 5 November 1745—10 June 1746.
The Jacobite's Journal. By John Trott-Plaid, Esq. [Saturdays). 5 De-
cember 1747–5 November 1748.
The Covent Garden Journal. By Sir Alexander Drawcansir, Knt. Censor of
E. L. x.
27
## p. 418 (#444) ############################################
418
Bibliography
Great Britain, Saturday, January 4, 1752. To be continued every Tuesday
and Saturday. Last number 70, 11 November 1752. (In Burney
Collection in B. M. some numbers missing and some seemingly not
issued. )
I. Selections
Illustrations of Smollett, Fielding and Goldsmith, in a series of forty-one
plates, designed and engraved by Cruikshank, G. Accompanied by
descriptive extracts. 1832.
Fielding. Edited by Saintsbury, G. (with introduction). (Masters of Litera-
ture. ) 1905.
J. Biography and Criticism
Besides the introductions and notes mentioned above the following may
be consulted :
A Catalogue of the entire and valuable library of books of the late Henry
Fielding, Esq. , which will be sold by auction by Samuel Baker . . . on
Monday, Feb. the 10th, and the three following evenings, etc. (British
Museum oopy, with MS prices. ] [1755. ]
An Essay on the New Species of writing founded by Mr Fielding: With a
word or two upon the Modern State of Criticism. 1751.
Dobson, Austin. Art. Fielding, Henry, in Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th
edn.
Henry Fielding. A Memoir. 1900.
Fielding. (English Men of Letters. ) 1907.
Fraser's Magazine. January and February, 1858.
Godden, G. M. Henry Fielding: a memoir. 1910. [Contains previously
unpublished facts and a chronological list of Fielding's writings. ]
Green, Emanuel. Henry Fielding, his works. An independent criticism. 1909.
Hazlitt, William. Lectures on the English Comic Writers. 1819.
(Waller and Glover's Hazlitt, vol. viii, p. 106 et al. For further
references by Hazlitt, see the Index to this edn. ]
Jesse, J. Heneage. Memoirs of celebrated Etonians, vol. 1. 1875.
Lawrence, F. The Life of Henry Fielding, with notices of his writings, his
times and his contemporaries. 1855.
Quarterly Review, The, vol. xxxiv, no. 68, p. 349. September 1826.
Vol. xcviii, No. 195, p. 100. December 1855.
Vol. ciii, No. 205, p. 66. January 1858.
Vol. clxiii, No. 325, p. 34. July 1886.
Raleigh, Sir Walter. The English Novel. 1894.
Stephen, Sir Leslie. Art. Fielding, Henry, in D. of N. B. vol. XVIII.
1889.
Thackeray, W. M. The English Humourists of the xvi1 Century. 1853.
Times, The, Literary Supplement, no. 423. 17 February 1910.
II. SMOLLETT
A. Collected Works
The Miscellaneous Works of Tobias Smollett M. D. 6 vols. 1790.
with memoirs of his life and writings by Robert Anderson. 6 vols. 1796.
Edited, with memoir, by Roscoe, T. 1841.
with memoir of his life, to which is prefixed a view of the commence-
ment and progress of romance by Moore, J. 1797. Re-issue, ed. Browne,
J. P. 8 vols. 1872.
Edited by Saintsbury, G. 12 vols. 1895.
With an introduction by Henley, W. E. 12 vols. 1899-1901.
## p. 419 (#445) ############################################
Chapter II
419
B. Collected Novels
Cooke's Select British Novels. 1793–5. Walker's British Classics. 1815.
Ballantyno's Novelists' Library (with life by Sir Walter Scott). 1821.
Roscoe's Novelists' Library. 1831. Bohn's Novelists' Library. 1895.
C. Separate Novels
The Adventures of Roderick Random. 2 vols. Printed for J. Osborn,
1748. Many other edns: 1857 (with memoir by Townsend, J. H. ).
