The FictionMags Index
Index by Date: Page 8311
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[The Veteran] (items)
- When Sullivan Fought Corbett, (ar) Thrilling Sports November 1936
- Ted Coy, (ar) Thrilling Sports December 1936
- Hackenschmidt and Gotch, (ar) Thrilling Sports January 1937
- Hoppe and Vignaux, (ar) Thrilling Sports February 1937
- Ty Cobb, (ar) Thrilling Sports March 1937
- Berlenbach and Slattery, (ar) Thrilling Sports April 1937
- The Hitchcock Tradition, (ar) Thrilling Sports May 1937
- He Didn’t Touch Second, (cl) Thrilling Sports November 1937
- Fighters Gans and Nelson, (ar) Thrilling Sports January 1938
- Yates and the Grand National, (ar) Thrilling Sports March 1938
- Belmonte the Matador, (ar) Thrilling Sports May 1938
- The Wild Bull and the Mauler, (ar) Thrilling Sports July 1938
[uncredited] (books) (items)
- The Grendel Episode, (ex) ca. 750
- St. Brendan and the Harper, (ss) ca. 900
- Gesta Romanorum, (vi) 1340
- The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville, (ex) 1350
- Gloria, (pm) 1456
- Carol, (pm) ca. 1400
- Privy Council Report: An Alleged Witchcraft Plot Against Queen Elizabeth, (ar) 1580
- A New Ballad of the Life and Death of Three Chelmsford Witches, (pm) 1589
- Arden of Feversham, (ex) 1592
- The Lowest Trees Have Tops, (pm) 1603
- “Sister, Awake”, (pm) Madrigals by Thomas Bateson, 1604, as by Thomas Bateson
- How a Witch Served a Fellow in an Alehouse, (ar) 1606
- “Who Liveth So Merry”, (pm) 1609
- America’s First Criminal Code, (ms) 1611
- Isaiah 14, 12-15, (ex) The Holy Bible, Robert Barker, 1611
- Character of a Happy Life, (ex) 1614 (by Henry Wotton)
- The Squirrel-Hunt, (pm) 1625 (by William Browne)
- Christmastide, (pm) 1630
- A Blazing Starre Seene in the West, (ar) 1642
- A New Year’s Carol, (pm) 1642
- The Labours of Satan, (ar) 1645
- The Bell-man, (pm) Hesperides by Robert Herrick, 1648, as by Robert Herrick
- Christmasse-Eve, Another Ceremonie, (pm) Hesperides by Robert Herrick, 1648, as by Robert Herrick
- Upon an Old Woman, (pm) Hesperides by Robert Herrick, 1648, as by Robert Herrick
- The New Drink, Coffee, First Offered in England by Pasqua Rosee, (ms) 1652
- The Angler’s Song, (pm) 1653 (by Izaak Walton)
- Provide for Christmas, (pm) Poor Robin’s Almanac 1664
- The Triumph of Truth, (nv) 1664
- The Confession of the Witches of Elfdale, (ar) 1669
- The Confessions of the Witches of Elfdale, (ar) 1669
- I’d Have You, Quoth He, (pm) 1670
- The Noble Birth and Gallant Achievements of That Remarkable Outlaw, Robin Hood, (na) 1678
- An Indictment for Witchcraft, (ar) 1679
- Don Tomazo, or the Juvenile Rambles of Thomas Dangerfield, (n.) 1680
- New Year’s Gifts, (pm) 1688
- The Prodigal Reformed, (ex) 1688
- Old Christmas Song (“Now thrice welcome Christmas”), (pm) Poor Robin’s Almanac 1695
- A Christmas Carol, (pm) Poor Robin’s Almanac 1696
- “Come Sweet Lass”, (pm) 1699
- The Nymph’s Reply to the Shepherd, (pm) Englands Helicon ed. John Flasket, I.R., 1600 (by Walter Raleigh), uncredited.
- Phillada Flouts Me, (pm) 16??
- Tom o’Bedlam’s Song, (pm) 16??
- Maxims and Precepts, (ms) 1701
- Now Enter Christmas Like a Man, (pm) Poor Robin’s Almanac 1701
- A True Relation of the Apparition of One Mrs. Veal the Next Day After Her Death to One Mrs. Bargrave at Canterbury the 8th of September, 1705, (ar) B. Bragg, 1706 (by Daniel Foe), uncredited.
- untitled (“The first of our Society is a Gentleman of Worcestershire”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #2, March 2 1711 (by Richard Steele)
- untitled (“I am one of that sickly Tribe who are commonly known by the Name of Valetudinarians”), (ms) The Spectator #25, March 29 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“The last Method which I proposed in my Saturday’s Paper”), (ar) The Spectator #94, June 18 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“Having often received an Invitation from my Friend Sir Roger De Coverley”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #106, July 2 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“As I was Yesterday Morning walking with Sir Roger before his House”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #108, July 4 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“I was this Morning walking in the Gallery”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #109, July 5 1711 (by Richard Steele)
- untitled (“At a little distance from Sir Roger’s House, among the Ruins of an old Abby”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #110, July 6 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“I am always very well pleased with a Country Sunday”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #112, July 9 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“In my first Description of the Company in which I pass most of my Time”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #113, July 10 1711 (by Richard Steele)
- untitled (“Those who have searched into human Nature observe that nothing so much shews the Nobleness of the Soul”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #116, July 13 1711 (by Eustace Budgell)
- untitled (“A man’s first Care should be to avoid the Reproaches of his own Heart”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #122, July 20 1711 (by Joseph Addison)
- untitled (“Having notified to my good Friend Sir Roger that I should set out for London the next Day”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #132, August 1 1711 (by Richard Steele)
- History of Jack and the Giants, (nv) 1711
- Lives of Highwaymen, Pirates and Robbers: 2: Mary Read, (ms) 1711
- Lives of Highwaymen, Pirates and Robbers: Sawney Beane, (ar) Lives of Notable Highwaymen, 1711
- The Ladies Take Snuff, (lt) The Spectator April 4 1712
- untitled (“We last night received a Piece of ill News at our Club”) [Roger de Coverley], (vi) The Spectator #517, October 23 1712 (by Joseph Addison)
- A Song in the Last Act of the Modern Prophets, (pm) 1719
- Lemuel Gulliver’s Account of the Lawyers [Gulliver], (ex) Benjamin Motte, 1726 (by Jonathan Swift)
- Origin of Evil [Gulliver], (ex) Benjamin Motte, 1726 (by Jonathan Swift)
- A Modest Proposal, (fa) S. Harding, 1729 (by Jonathan Swift), uncredited.
- My Jockey Blyth for What Thou Hast Done, (pm) 1733
- At the Sign of the Cat, (ex) 1736
- The Adventures of Signor Gaudentio di Lucca…, (n.) 1737 (by Simon Berington), uncredited.
- The Adventures of Roderick Random, (n.) 1748 (by Tobias Smollett), uncredited.
- Gil Blas and Dr. Sangrado, (ex) 1748 (by Alain René Le Sage); translated by Tobias Smollett, uncredited.
- The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle…, (n.) 1751 (by Tobias Smollett), uncredited.
- Song (“As t’other day o’er the green meadow I pass’d”), (pm) The Muses Delight, John Sadler, 1754
- The Goldsmith’s Wife, (vi) 1758
- The Mental and Personal Qualifications of a Wife, (ms) Gentleman’s Magazine 1761
- The Reign of George VI: 1900-1925: A Forecast Written in the Year 1763, (n.) W. Niccoll, 1763
- The King of Colchester’s Daughters, (ss) 1764
- The Daemon Lover, (pm) 1765
- The Dervise Alfournan, (nv) Tales of the Genii by James Ridley, London, 1765 (by Charles Morell)
- Hassan Assar; or, The History of the Caliph of Bagdat, (nv) Tales of the Genii by James Ridley, London, 1765 (by Charles Morell)
- The Marriage of Sir Gawaine, (pm) Reliques of Ancient English Poetry ed. Thomas Percy, 1765
- The Wandering Jew, (pm) Reliques of Ancient English Poetry ed. Thomas Percy, 1765
- Captain (of Militia) Sir Dilberry Diddle, (pm) Gentleman’s Magazine May 1766
- On Seeing Garrick Act, (pm) 1768
- Auld Robin Gray, (pm) 1772 (by Anne Lindsay)
- “Female Advice”, (pm) Royal American Magazine April 1774
- The Bishop and the Rook, (ms) The Wit’s Magazine 1784
- The Castle of Costanzo, (ss) Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure v75, 1784
- From Gammer Gurton’s Garland, (pm) 1784 (by Joseph Ritson)
- A Warning to Virgins and Young Men About a Certain Vile Practice, (pm) 1785
- An Arabian Tale, (ex) J. Johnson, 1786 (by William Beckford), uncredited.
- An Arabian Tale, (n.) J. Johnson, 1786 (by William Beckford); translated by Samuel Henley, uncredited.
- A Unique Balloon Ascension, (ex) 1786
- The Jackal, (vi) 1787; translated by Charles Wilkins
- The Parricide Punished, (ss) Gentlemen and Ladies’ Town and Country Magazine July 1789
- The Spectre-Barber, (na) Tales from the German by Johann Karl August Musäus, John Murray, 1791, etc. (by Johann Karl August Musäus)
- The Treasure Seeker, (nv) Tales from the German by Johann Karl August Musäus, John Murray, 1791 (by Johann Karl August Musäus)
- The Friar’s Tale, (ss) The Lady’s Magazine 1792
- The Astrologer of the Nineteenth Century, (ex) Minerva Press, 1794; translated by Peter Teuthold, as by Lawrence Flammenberg
- The Necromancer, (n.) Minerva Press, 1794; translated by Peter Teuthold, as by Lawrence Flammenberg
- Count Roderic’s Castle, or Gothic Times, (n.) 1795
- The Monk of Horror, or The Conclave of Corpses, (ss) The Tales of the Crypt, London, 1796
- What Is a Woman Like?, (pm) 1796 (by Prince Hoare)
- The World of Study: What Is a Salt Box?, (hu) The Universal Magazine 1797
- The Black Spider, (nv) ca. 1798
- Schabraco, a Romance, (nv) The Lady’s Monthly Museum v1, 1798
- Pleasures of Hope, (pm) The Pleasures of Hope by Thomas Campbell, Mundell & Son, 1799, as by Thomas Campbell
- The Voluptuous Night, (ex) 17??
- Albert of Werdendorff; or the Midnight Embrace, (ss) Tales of Terror by Matthew Gregory Lewis, J. Bell, 1801 (by Matthew Gregory Lewis)
- Lorenzo, or the Robber, (ss) 1801 (by August Heinrich Kerndöffer)
- The Ruins of the Abbey of Fitz-Martin, (nv) Romances and Gothic Tales, 1801
- Dick Strype; or The Force of Habit, (pm) The Morning Post January 6 1802 (by Charles Lamb), as by Timothy Bramble
- The Sun and Night—an Allegory, (pm) 1802
- The Twa Corbies, (pm) The Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border by Walter Scott, Kelso, 1802
- The Severed Arm: or, The Wehr-wolf of Limousin, (ss) Tales of Superstition, Tegg and Castleman, 1803
- Una’s Lock, (pm) ca. 1806
- The History of Jack and the Bean-stalk, (ss) 1807; adapted by Mary Jane Godwin
- Jack and the Beanstalk, (ss) 1807
- She Was a Phantom of Delight, (ex) Poems, In Two Volumes by William Wordsworth, Longman, Hurst, Rees & Orme, 1807, as by William Wordsworth
- Rodriguez and Isabella, or The Terrors of Conscience, (ss) The Lady’s Magazine v39, 1808
- The Tale, (nv) Das Märchen, 1808 (by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)
- On Instability in One’s Calling, (ss) The Spy September 15 1810 - September 22 1810 (by James Hogg)
- Bonnie Lady Ann, (pm) The Remains of Nithsdale and Galloway Song ed. R. H. Cromek, T. Cadell and W. Davies, 1810
- The Dance of the Dead, (ss) ca. 1810
- The Life and Horrid Adventures of the Celebrated Dr. Faustus, (nv) ca. 1810
- Hamet, A Tale, (ss) The Portfolio August 1812
- The Crazy Half-Heller, (nv) 1814 (by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué)
- Marianne, (ss) ca. 1814
- The Minstrel, (pm) Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1814, as by William Wordsworth
- It Is the Hour…, (ex) Hebrew Melodies by Lord Byron, John Murray, 1815, as by Lord George Gordon Byron
- Dead Man in a Sack, (ar) The Morning Chronicle October 21 1816
- Legends of Lampidosa, (ss) The European Magazine April 1817
- The Progress of Inconstancy; or, The Scots Tutor: A Moral Tale, (ss) The Edinburgh Monthly Magazine September 1817 (by James M’Diarmid), as by J. M’D.
- How an Upstart Poet Was Put in His Place, (br) Quarterly Review of Literature September 1818 [Ref. John Keats]
- The Creature Lives!, (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- Extracts from Gosschen’s Diary, (ss) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine 1818, etc.
- Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus [Frankenstein], (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus [Frankenstein], (n.) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- Frankenstein’s Monster [Frankenstein], (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- from Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus [Frankenstein], (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- How I Wrote Frankenstein, (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- The Making of a Monster, (n.) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- The Monster Lives!, (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- The Recalcitrant Robot [Frankenstein], (ex) Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor & Jones, 1818 (by Mary W. Shelley), uncredited.
- The Travels of Marco Polo, A Venetian, (ex) Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1818
- Rip Van Winkle, (nv) The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent #1, June 23 1819, as by Geoffrey Crayon
- Address to a Land Tortoise, (pm) 1819 (by Richard Drinker)
- The Bride of the Isles: A Tale Founded on the Popular Legend of the Vampire, (nv) 1820
- The Eve of St. Agnes, (pm) Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems by John Keats, Taylor and Hessey, 1820, as by John Keats
- Jan Schalken’s Three Wishes, (ss) ca. 1820
- Lines on a Skeleton, (pm) The Morning Chronicle 1820
- The Uncle in the Casket, (ss) The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany February 1821 (by Gustavus Schilling)
- Edward Bransfield, (ex) Edinburgh Philosophical Journal April 1821 (by Dr. Young), uncredited.
- The Florida Pirate, (nv) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine August 1821 (by John Howison)
- The Buried Alive, (ss) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine October 1821 (by John Galt)
- The Floating Beacon, (nv) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine October 1821 (by John Howison)
- The Man in the Bell, (ss) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine November 1821 (by William Maginn)
- The Steam-Boat, (vi) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine December 1821
- untitled (“There was an Old Soldier of Bicester”), (pm) Anecdotes and Adventures of Fifteen Gentlemen by Richard Scrafton Sharpe, John Marshall, 1821
- untitled (“There was a Sick Man of Tobago”), (pm) Anecdotes and Adventures of Fifteen Gentlemen by Richard Scrafton Sharpe, John Marshall, 1821
- A Wish-Burst, (pm) The Rainbow 1821 (by Robert Hogg), as by R. H.
- Old Grimes, (sg) Providence Gazette January 16 1822 (by Albert Gorton Greene), uncredited.
- The Water Lady—a Legend, (ss) The Portfolio June 1822
- The Enchanter Faustus and Queen Elizabeth, (ss) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine August 1822
- Legend of Marseilles, (ss) The Edinburgh Magazine and Literary Miscellany August 1822
- The Last Will and Testament, a Tale, (ss) The Port Folio September 1822 (by Thomas De Quincey)
- Account of a Female Duel, 1822, (ar) The Hive v2, 1822
- The Skeleton Dance: A Ballad, (pm) The New Monthly Magazine March 1823
- The Magic Dice, an Awful Narrative, (nv) The London Magazine August 1823 (by Thomas De Quincey)
- The Treasures of the Deep, (pm) The New Monthly Magazine August 1823 (by Felicia Hemans)
- Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas, (pm) Troy Sentinel December 23 1823 (by Clement Clarke Moore), uncredited.
- The Bottle Imp, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 1, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué)
- A Brand Plucked from the Burning, (ss) The Percy Anecdotes. Vol. V. Captivity; Exile by Sholto & Reuben Percy, T. Boys, 1823, as by Reuben & Sholto Percy
- The Collier’s Family, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 2, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué)
- Elfin-Land, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 3, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Johann Ludwig Tieck)
- The Field of Terror, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 3, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué)
- The Magic Dollar, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 2, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué)
- Midnight Horrors; or, The Bandit’s Daughter, (nv) 1823
- Preface, (pr) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 1, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823, etc.
- The Spectre Mother; or, The Haunted Tower, (nv) 1823
- Wake Not the Dead, (nv) Popular Tales and Romances of the Northern Nations, Vol. 1, Simpkin, Marshall, 1823 (by Ernst Raupach)
- The Fruits of Pastry, (pm) The Economist July 31 1824
- The Devil and Tom Walker, (ss) Tales of a Traveller by Geoffrey Crayon & Gent., John Murray, 1824 (by Washington Irving), as by Geoffrey Crayon
- Some Account of Peter Rugg, the Missing Man, Late of Boston, New England in a Letter to Mr. Herman Krauff, (nv) New England Galaxy September 10 1824 (by William Austin), as by Jonathan Dunwell
- Tale of a Chemist, (ss) Knight’s Quarterly Magazine November 1824
- The Adventures of Hajji Baba, of Ispahan, (ex) John Murray, 1824 (by James Morier), uncredited.
- The Barber of Bagdad, (ex) John Murray, 1824 (by James Morier), uncredited.
- The Detectives of Ispahan, (ss) John Murray, 1824 (by James Morier), uncredited.
- Hajii Baba and the Stolen Money, (ss) John Murray, 1824 (by James Morier), uncredited.
- The Humbling of Jovinian, (ss) Gesta Romanorum ed. Charles Swan, C. & J. Rivington, 1824; translated by C. Swan
- Joseph II, (ss) The Soldier’s Companion 1824
- A Night in the Grave, or, The Devil’s Receipt, (ex) Constable, 1824 (by Walter Scott), as by The Author of “Waverley”
- Nourishing a Serpent, (vi) Gesta Romanorum ed. Charles Swan, C. & J. Rivington, 1824
- The Story of the Baked Head, (ss) John Murray, 1824 (by James Morier)
- Tales of the Wisdom of the Ancients, (ex) Gesta Romanorum ed. Charles Swan, C. & J. Rivington, 1824; translated by Wynnard Hooper & Charles Swan
- Der Frieschutz; or, The Fatal Bullet and the Forest Fiend, (ss) Endless Entertainment May 6 1825
- Faustus: His Life, Death, and Descent Into Hell, (ss) Endless Entertainment May 13 1825
- Master and Man; or, The Mock Ambassador. A Ludicrous Tale, (ss) Endless Entertainment May 20 1825
- The Mysterious Bottle of Old Hock. An Ancient Legend, (ss) Endless Entertainment May 27 1825
- Olivia and Ricardos. A Tale of the Crusades, (ss) Endless Entertainment June 3 1825
- The Dwarf; or, The Deformed Transformed, (ss) Endless Entertainment June 10 1825
- The Monster Made by Man; or, The Punishment of Presumption, (ss) Endless Entertainment June 17 1825
- Rinaldo Rinaldini, the Great Bandit Captain, (ss) Endless Entertainment June 24 1825
- The Irish Witch and the Rebel’s Wife, (ss) Endless Entertainment #11, 1825
- The Mysterious Man of the Castle, (ss) Endless Entertainment #12, 1825
- Players and Prisoners, (ss) Endless Entertainment #10, 1825
- The Rob Roy of Wales, (ss) Endless Entertainment #13, 1825
- The Skeleton Witness, (ss) Endless Entertainment #14, 1825
- The Treacherous Servant, (ss) Endless Entertainment #15, 1825
- The Wizard of Scotland, (ss) Endless Entertainment #16, 1825
- “Woman”, (ms) The New-York Mirror, and Ladies’ Literary Gazette September 24 1825
- Bartholomew Fair; or, The Strolling Player, (ss) Endless Entertainment #17, 1825
- The Gnome of the Hartz Mountains, (ss) Endless Entertainment #18, 1825
- My Own Fireside, (pm) Gentleman’s Magazine November 1825, as by Alaric A. Watts
- An Account of a Family Who Were All Afflicted with the Loss of Their Limbs, (ms) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
- Anecdote Concerning the Execution of King Charles the First, (ms) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
- Anne Boleyn, (ms) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
- The Apparition of Lord Tyrone to Lady Beresford, (ss) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
- The Bell of Atri, (vi) The Italian Novelists ed. & tr. Thomas Roscoe, Septimus Prowett, 1825; translated by Thomas Roscoe
- Bringing the Dead Alive!, (ar) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
- The Bunworth Banshee, (ss) Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland by T. Crofton Croker, John Murray, 1825 (by T. Crofton Croker), uncredited.
- Daniel O’Rourke, (ss) Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland by T. Crofton Croker, John Murray, 1825 (by T. Crofton Croker), uncredited.
- Death of the Duchess of Bedford, (ms) The Terrific Register, Sherwood, Jones, and Co., 1825
(continued)
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