The FictionMags Index
Index by Name: Page 424
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[]Browne, W(alter) G(regory) R(obert) (1845-1912) (about) (chron.)
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper August 16 1879
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Chums Nov 9, Nov 16, Nov 23 1892, Jan 18, Feb 15, May 10, May 17 1893, Jul 5 1899
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm April 1899
[]Browne, Walter (1856-1911) (chron.)
- * Behind the Scenes with Sir Arthur Sullivan, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post November 24 1900
- * The Bird in the Gilded Cage, (ss) 10 Story Book January 1905
- * Charles Pays His Tailor, (ss) 10 Story Book April 1914
- * A Clubman’s Tit-bit, (ss) 10 Story Book October 1903
- * The Deception of Gladys, (ss) 10 Story Book January 1904
- * The Modern City of Midas, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post October 21 1899
- * A Novel Suicide Club, (ss) The Black Cat November 1898
- * The Obituary of Flossie’s Friend, (ss) 10 Story Book August 1905
- * Tragedy by Telephone, (ss) Young’s Magazine April 1906
- * “Up in a Balloon”, (ar) Black & White #28, August 15 1891
- * [front cover], (cv) Chums November 9 1898
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Lady’s Realm Aug, Oct 1897, Jun 1898
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Chums November 9 1898
_____, [ref.]
[]Browne, Warne (fl. 1880s-1890s) (chron.)
- * Holiday Rambles:
* ___ “The Land of Lorna Doone”, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 8 1883
- * “The Land of Lorna Doone”, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper September 8 1883
- * A Thames Backwater in Early March, (il) The Boy’s Own Paper March 1 1884
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Boy’s Own Paper Oct 7 1882, Feb 3, Feb 24, Mar 3, Aug 11, Sep 15 1883
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Cassell’s Family Magazine September 1893
- * [illustration(s)] (with Edmund Caldwell), (il) The Strand Magazine April 1894
- * [illustration(s)] (with Edmund Caldwell), (il) The Strand Magazine (US) April 1894
- * [illustration(s)] (with T. W. Lascelles), (il) The Boy’s Own Paper August 4 1888
[]Browne, William (1591?-1643?) (about) (chron.)
- * Cælia Is Gone, (pm) Original Poems by William Browne, Lee Priory, 1815
- * Memory, (pm) Original Poems by William Browne, Lee Priory, 1815, as "Cælia Is Gone"
- * The Siren’s Song, (pm) from The Inner Temple Masque, The Works of William Browne by William Browne, T. Davies, 1772
- * Song, (pm)
- * The Squirrel-Hunt, (pm) 1625, uncredited.
[]Brownell, Agnes Mary (1874-1921) (chron.)
- * Buttermilk, (ss) Reedy’s Mirror December 11 1919
- * Coquette, (ss) McCall’s Magazine May 1920
- * Cure, (ss) The Midland September 1920
- * Dishes, (ss) Pictorial Review April 1919
- * Doc Greer’s Practice, (ss) The Midland January 1921
- * Evergreen, (ss) Good Housekeeping December 1919
- * Fiddlin’ Joe, (pm) National Magazine June 1914
- * The Fifer, (ss) The Youth’s Companion June 28 1917
- * Forty-Love, (ss) McCall’s Magazine July 1920
- * Grampa, (ss) The Delineator April 1920
- * Intentions, (ss) Romance April 1920
- * Love’s Labor, (ss) Pictorial Review May 1919
- * Mr. Binney’s Bed, (ss) Argosy and Railroad Man’s Magazine May 10 1919
- * Oxalis, (ss) The Delineator February 1920
- * Quest, (ss) The Midland September/October 1919
- * The Red Fiddle, (ss) Argosy Allstory Weekly July 31 1920
- * Relation, (ss) Pictorial Review June 1920
- * Sanctuary, (ss) The Midland September/October 1918
- * Secret Chamber, (ss) The Delineator July 1919
- * Wannie—and Her Heart’s Desire, (ss) The American Magazine July 1920
- * [letter from Concordia, KS], (lt) Romance April 1920
_____, [ref.]
[]Brownell, Frederick G. (fl. 1940s-1950s) (chron.)
- * April in November, (ar) The American Magazine November 1947
- * Community Builders, (ar) The American Magazine April 1946
- * Gadget Man, (bg) The American Magazine February 1945
- * Gadgets Galore, (ar) The American Magazine May 1946
- * How Do You Draw a Man?, (ar) The American Magazine March 1947
- * How Safe Is Your State?, (ar) The American Magazine February 1947
- * How Will You Have Your Weather?, (ar) The American Magazine April 1947
- * Is Prohibition Coming Back?, (ar) The American Magazine September 1947
- * It Could Happen to You, (ar) The American Magazine May 1949
- * Magic Menus, (ar) The American Magazine September 1946
- * Millions Coming in Tax Refunds, (ar) Liberty March 17 1945
- * She Solves the Problems of Working Wives, (ar) The American Magazine August 1954
- * Something for Nothing, (ar) The American Magazine February 1949
- * Super Cows and Chickens, (ar) The American Magazine June 1946
- * Television Town, (ar) The American Magazine July 1951
- * Too Many Jobholders, (ar) The American Magazine May 1947
- * When You Need a Lawyer, (ar) The American Magazine January 1947
- * Who Owns Atomic Power?, (ar) The American Magazine February 1946
- * Wizard with a Million Voices, (ar) The American Magazine December 1955
_____, as told to
[]Brownell, Henry Howard (1820-1872) (chron.)
- * Abraham Lincoln, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly October 1865, uncredited.
- * At Sea, (pm) , uncredited.
- * The Bay Fight, (pm) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine December 1864, uncredited.
- * Down!, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly June 1865, uncredited.
- * Old Papers, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly October 1859, uncredited.
- * Spring, (pm) , uncredited.
[]Brownell, L(everett) W. (fl. 1900s-1910s) (chron.)
- * Birds’ Family Affairs, (ar) The Scrap Book February 1911
- * The Birth of a Butterfly, (ar) Everybody’s Magazine August 1901
- * The Bloodthirsty Mosquito, (ar) The Scrap Book May 1911
- * Daily Life of the Wasp, (ar) The Scrap Book November 1910
- * Housekeeping Among the Birds, (ar) The Scrap Book June 1910
- * How Wild Life Spent the Winter, (ar) The Scrap Book May 1910
- * The Infinite Labor of Love, (ar) The Scrap Book July 1908
- * The Marvels of Ant Life, (ar) The Scrap Book March 1911
- * News from the Woods and Fields. The Awakening of Spring, (ar) Everybody’s Magazine April 1901
- * Odd Facts About Bugs, (ar) The Scrap Book April 1911
- * Odd Facts About Spiders, (ar) The Scrap Book October 1910
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Strand Magazine July 1903
- * [illustration(s)], (il) The Strand Magazine (US) August 1903
[]Brownell, W(illiam) C(rary) (1851-1928) (chron.)
- * American Summer Resorts:
* ___ II. Newport, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine August 1894
- * Auguste Rodin, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine January 1901 [Ref. Auguste Rodin]
- * Classical Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine September 1892
- * Contemporary French Sculptors, (ar) The Century Magazine Dec 1886, Jan, Mar 1887
- * French Art:
* ___ I. Classical Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine September 1892
* ___ II. Romantic Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine October 1892
* ___ III. Realistic Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine November 1892
- * French Traits—Intelligence, (??) Scribner’s Magazine January 1888
- * French Traits—Manners, (??) Scribner’s Magazine November 1888
- * French Traits—Sense and Sentiment, (??) Scribner’s Magazine October 1887
- * French Traits—The Art Instinct, (??) Scribner’s Magazine February 1889
- * French Traits—The Social Instinct, (??) Scribner’s Magazine July 1887
- * French Traits—Women, (??) Scribner’s Magazine January 1889
- * George Eliot, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine December 1900
- * Matthew Arnold, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine July 1901 [Ref. Matthew Arnold]
- * Newport, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine August 1894
- * The Paris Exposition—Notes and Impressions, (??) Scribner’s Magazine January 1890
- * Realistic Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine November 1892
- * Recent Work of Elihu Vedder, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine February 1895 [Ref. Elihu Vedder]
- * Romantic Painting, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine October 1892
- * Style III, (ss) Scribner’s Magazine July 1924
- * Thomas Carlyle, (ar) Scribner’s Magazine October 1901 [Ref. Thomas Carlyle]
- * Two French Sculptors, Rodin and Dalou, (??) The Century Magazine November 1890
[]Brownestone, W. E.; pseudonym of William E. Barrett (1900-1986) (chron.)
- * America’s First Ace, (ar) War Aces #26, May 1932
- * Annamite the Mighty, (ss) War Aces #18, September 1931
- * Blue Tail, (ar) War Aces #24, March 1932
- * The Bombless Raid on Berlin, (ss) War Birds #57, October 1932
- * Bullet-Proof, (ss) War Aces #4, July 1930
- * The Checkerboard Ace, (ar) War Aces #19, October 1931 [Ref. Werner Voss]
- * Dates with Danger, (ar) War Aces #25, April 1932
- * Death for Immelman, (ts) War Aces #28, July 1932
- * Explain This One, (ar) War Aces #21, December 1931
- * Germany’s Forgotten Aces, (ar) War Birds #69, December 1933
- * The Hat Trick, (ar) War Birds #60, March 1933
- * Hoodooed, (ss) War Aces #14, May 1931
- * Horse Shoes, (ss) War Aces #11, February 1931
- * King High, (ss) War Aces #6, September 1930
- * A Matter of Honor, (ss) War Aces #1, April 1930
- * Missing in Action, (nv) War Birds #56, July 1932
- * One Hour of War, (ts) War Birds #51, February 1932, as by William E. Barrett
- * One Winger’s Luck, (ts) War Birds #48, November 1931
- * The Proxy Pilot, (ss) War Aces #5, August 1930
- * Quick Wings, (ts) War Aces #27, June 1932
- * The Raiders, (ts) War Aces #16, July 1931
- * Shooting Shamrock, (nv) War Birds #67, October 1933
- * Take ’Em Away, (ss) War Birds #59, February 1933
- * Unfinished Business, (ts) War Birds #52, March 1932
- * War a la Jackson, (ts) War Birds #58, December 1932
- * War Birds Only, (ss) War Aces #3, June 1930
[]Brownfield, Mick (fl. 1970s-2010s) (about) (chron.)
- * [front cover], (cv) Detective Stories from the Strand ed. Jack Adrian, Oxford University Press, 1991
- * [front cover], (cv) Strange Tales from the Strand ed. Jack Adrian, Oxford University Press, 1991
- * [front cover], (cv) Strange Tales from the Strand ed. Jack Adrian, Oxford University Press, 1992
- * [illustration(s)], (il) Mayfair v10 #12, 1975
[]Browning, Craig; pseudonym of Roger Philip Graham (1909-1966) (chron.)
- * Armageddon, (n.) Amazing Stories May 1948
- * Bubastis of Egupt, (nv) Other Worlds Science Stories November 1950
- * The Exteroceptor Deceptor, (ss) Fantastic Adventures January 1950
- * The Form of Hunger, (nv) Fantastic Adventures October 1949
- * The Friendly Wolf, (ss) Fantastic Adventures February 1950
- * Goddess of the Volcano, (nv) Amazing Stories June 1950
- * The Immortal Menace [Lefty Baker], (ss) Amazing Stories February 1949
- * The Insane Robot [Lefty Baker], (nv) Fantastic Adventures November 1949
- * Live in an Orbit and Love It!, (ss) Other Worlds Science Stories March 1950
- * Lorelei Street, (ss) Fantastic Adventures September 1950
- * Rescue Beacon, (ss) Other Worlds Science Stories November 1950
- * The Runaround, (ss) Fantastic Adventures December 1949
- * Seven Come A-Lovin’, (ss) Other Worlds Science Stories November 1949
- * Spawn of Darkness, (nv) Fantastic Adventures May 1950
- * Squeeze Play [Lefty Baker], (ss) Amazing Stories November 1947
- * Tillie, (ss) Amazing Stories December 1948
- * Two Against Venus, (na) Amazing Stories March 1950
- * The Venusian, (na) Amazing Stories August 1948
- * Vial of Immortality, (nv) Amazing Stories January 1950
[]Browning, Dixie (née Burrus) (1930-2024); used pseudonym Bronwyn Williams (about) (chron.)
- * East of Today, (ex) Silhouette, July 1981
- * The Hawk and the Honey, (n.) Silhouette, 1984
- * A Promise Kept (with Mary Williams), (n.) Christmas Stories 1992, Harlequin Historical, 1992, as by Bronwyn Williams
- * A Secret Valentine, (ex) Silhouette, February 1983
- * Sunshine (with Mary Williams), (na) Heart of the Home, Topaz Book, 1997, as by Bronwyn Williams
[]Browning, Elizabeth Barrett; [née Moulton-Barrett] (1806-1861); previously known as Elizabeth Barrett Barrett (about) (chron.)
- * Addressed to Wimpole Street (with Robert Browning), (ar) Woman’s Home Companion Sep, Dec 1935; edited by William Rose Benét
- * “Beloved, my beloved, when I think…”, (pm)
- * Bertha in the Lane, (pm) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine November 1844
- * The Best Thing in the World, (pm)
- * Caterina to Camoens, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine October 1843, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * The Child and the Watcher, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine September 1843, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * A Child Asleep, (pm) Peterson’s Magazine December 1855
- * A Child’s Thought of God, (pm) Prometheus Bound, and Other Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, C.S. Francis & Co., 1851
- * A Court Lady, (pm)
- * Cowper’s Grave, (pm) Peterson’s Magazine December 1855
- * The Cry of the Children, (pm) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine August 1843
- * The Cry of the Human, (pm) Peterson’s Magazine December 1855
- * The Cry of the Toiling Children, (pm)
- * The Day of Small Things, (pm)
- * An Epistle to a Canary, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine June 1914
- * A Forced Recruit at Solferino, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine October 1860
- * The Fragrant Cinnamon, (pm)
- * Grief and Smiles, (pm) Ballou’s Dollar Monthly Magazine August 1858
- * “He Giveth His Beloved Sleep”, (pm)
- * His Reward, (pm)
- * How Do I Love Thee?, (pm) Sonnets from the Portuguese by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * The Lady’s Yes, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine January 1844, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * Letters to Her Sister, from Elizabeth Barrett Browning, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine May, Jun, Jul, Aug 1929; edited by Leonard Huxley
- * Little Mattie, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine June 1861
- * Love, (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * Loved Once, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine March 1844, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * The Maiden’s Death, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine December 1913
- * Mother and Poet, (pm) Last Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1862
- * A Musical Instrument, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine July 1860
- * My Heart and I, (pm) Last Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1862
- * Our Life’s Work, (pm)
- * Portuguese Sonnets, (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * Rest, (pm)
- * The Romance of the Swan’s Nest, (pm)
- * The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim’s Point, (ex) 1850
- * The St. Nicholas Treasure Box of Literature:
* ___ The Cry of the Children, (pm) Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine August 1843
- * A Sea-Side Walk, (ss)
- * Seraph and Poet, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine August 1843, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * Sonnet, (pm)
- * Sonnet 22, (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * A Sonnet (“First time he kissed me…”), (pm)
- * A Sonnet from the Portuguese, (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * A Sonnet from the Portuguese (“How do I love thee?…”), (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * Sonnet (“How do I love thee?…”), (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * Sonnet (“I thought once how Theocritus had sung”), (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * Sonnets from the Portuguese (Nos. 1 and 22), (pm) Poems by Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1850
- * The Soul’s Expression, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine July 1843, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
- * Substitution, (pm) Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine December 1842
- * Sunset in Cadiz Bay, (pm)
- * The Sweetest Lives, (pm)
- * To Robert Lytton, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine May 1914
- * A True Dream, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine July 1914, as by Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
_____, [ref.]
[]Browning, Gerald (fl. 2000s) (chron.)
- * The Dead Don’t Dream, (ss) Hardboiled #37, March 2008
- * The Eye Witness, (ss) Detective Mystery Stories #55, December 2004
- * A Hint of Cinnamon, (ss) Hardboiled #32, November 2004
- * My Sweet Inez, (ss) Necrotic Tissue #2, April 2008
- * Pro Bono, (ss) Detective Mystery Stories #44, January 2004
- * The Throwaway Man, (ss) Detective Mystery Stories #54, November 2004
[]Browning, Jack (fl. 1900s-1910s) (chron.)
- * The Game on the Lonesome Road, (ss) The Black Cat June 1909
- * Hatching Trouble, (ss) The Black Cat November 1910
- * High-Grading, (vi) The Blue Book Magazine October 1908
- * Madame Marelle’s Investment, (vi) The All-Story Magazine August 1907
- * The Message of the Brook, (ss) The Pacific Monthly December 1906
- * Mush, (ss) Sunset March 1907
- * Pearl-Handled Pistols, (ss) People’s February 1908
- * Something of a Poet, (ss) The Black Cat March 1908
- * Thief Horses, (ss) Sunset January 1907
- * The Way of a Girl, (vi) Munsey’s Magazine September 1906
[]Browning, Robert (1812-1889) (about) (chron.)
- * Addressed to Wimpole Street (with Elizabeth Barrett Browning), (ar) Woman’s Home Companion Sep, Dec 1935; edited by William Rose Benét
- * All That I Know of a Certain Star, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855, as "My Star"
- * Appearances, (pm)
- * Ballad to a Beauty, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855, as "A Pretty Woman"
- * Ben Karshook’s Wisdom, (pm)
- * Camp (French), (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- * Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * The Confessional, (pm)
- * Defiance in Death, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly June 1864, as "Prospice", uncredited.
- * Epps, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine October 1913
- * Excerpt from Mr. Sludge, “The Medium”, (pm) Dramatis Personae by Robert Browning, Chapman & Hall, 1864
- * Favorite Poem:
* ___ The Confessional, (pm)
* ___ [unknown poem], (pm)
- * For the Lonely, (pm)
- * Gerousios Oinos, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine April 1914
- * Gold Hair. A Legend of Pornic, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly May 1864, uncredited.
- * Hervé Riel, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine March 1871
- * Home-Thoughts, from Abroad, (pm) Dramatic Romances and Lyrics by Robert Browning, Robert Browning, 1845
- * How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix, (pm) Dramatic Romances and Lyrics by Robert Browning, Robert Browning, 1845
- * “I Love Your Verses with All My Heart”, (lt) [Ref. Elizabeth Barrett Browning]
- * In a Gondola, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- * In a Year, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * Incident of the French Camp, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842, as "Camp (French)"
- * In Three Days, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * Italy, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- The Pocket Mystery Reader ed. Lee Wright, Pocket, 1942, as "My Last Duchess"
- And the Darkness Falls ed. Boris Karloff, World, 1946, as "My Last Duchess"
- Once Against the Law ed. William Tenn & Donald E. Westlake, Macmillan, 1968, as "My Last Duchess"
- Detective Fiction: Crime and Compromise ed. Dick Allen & David Chacko, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1974, as "My Last Duchess"
- * Italy, (ex) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- * The King Is Cold, (pm) Peterson’s Magazine January 1858
- * A King of Long Ago, (pm)
- * The Kiss, (pm)
- * The Laboratory, (pm) Hood’s Magazine and Comic Miscellany June 1844
- * The Last Fight, (pm)
- * Life in a Love, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * The Lost Leader, (pm) Dramatic Romances and Lyrics by Robert Browning, Robert Browning, 1845
- * Love in a Life, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * Love in a Life and Life in a Love, (pm)
- * May and Death, (pm) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine April 1857, uncredited.
- * Meeting at Night, (pm)
- * Memorabilia, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * More and Less, (pm) Peterson’s Magazine March 1889, uncredited.
- * The “Moses” of Michael Angelo, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine September 1914
- * My Last Duchess, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842, as "Italy"
- * My Last Duchess, (ex) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842, as "Italy"
- * My Star, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * On Being Defied to Express in a Hexameter: “You Ought to Sit on the Safety-Valve”, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine September 1914
- * An Optimist’s Philosophy of Life, (pm)
- * Pages from an Album (with , et al.), (??) The Century Magazine November 1882
- * Parting at Morning, (pm)
- * The Pied Piper of Hamelin, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- * The Pied Piper of Hamlin, (pm) Dramatic Lyrics by Robert Browning, Edward Moxon, 1842
- * Pippa Passes, (pm) 1841
- * Pippa’s Song, (ex)
- * Porphyria, (pm) Monthly Repository January 1836
- The World’s Shortest Stories ed. Richard Gibson Hubler, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1961, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- A Chamber of Horrors ed. John Hadfield, Studio Vista, 1965, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- The Picador Book of Crime Writing ed. Michael Dibdin, Picador, 1993, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- The Faber Book of Murder ed. Simon Rae, Faber and Faber, 1994, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- Angels of Darkness ed. Marvin Kaye, SFBC, 1995, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- The Reason Why ed. Ruth Rendell, Crown, 1996, as "Porphyria’s Lover"
- * Porphyria’s Lover, (pm) Monthly Repository January 1836, as "Porphyria"
- The World’s Shortest Stories ed. Richard Gibson Hubler, Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1961
- A Chamber of Horrors ed. John Hadfield, Studio Vista, 1965
- The Picador Book of Crime Writing ed. Michael Dibdin, Picador, 1993
- The Faber Book of Murder ed. Simon Rae, Faber and Faber, 1994
- Angels of Darkness ed. Marvin Kaye, SFBC, 1995
- The Reason Why ed. Ruth Rendell, Crown, 1996
- * A Pretty Woman, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * Prospice, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly June 1864, uncredited.
- * The Ride from Ghent to Aix, (pm) Dramatic Romances and Lyrics by Robert Browning, Robert Browning, 1845, as "How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix"
- * The Ring and the Book, (ex) Smith, Elder, 1869
- * The St. Nicholas Treasure Box of Literature:
* ___ Hervé Riel, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine March 1871
- * Song from “Pippa Passes”, (ex)
- * Song (“Give her but a least excuse to love me!…”), (pm) Harper’s New Monthly Magazine July 1883
- * A Sonnet by Browning, (??) The Century Magazine February 1884
- * Sonnet to the Memory of His Parents, (pm) The Cornhill Magazine February 1914
- * A Toccata of Galuppi’s, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * Under the Cliff, (pm) The Atlantic Monthly June 1864, uncredited.
- * Unfinished Draft of a Poem Which May Be Entitled “Æschylus’ Soliloquy”, (uw) The Cornhill Magazine November 1913
- * A Woman’s Last Word, (pm) Men and Women by Robert Browning, 1855
- * The Year’s at the Spring, (pm) 1841, as "Pippa Passes"
- * [unknown poem], (pm)
_____, [ref.]
- * At Asolo: A Browning Memory by H. D. Rawnsley, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine August 1912
- * An Aurora Leigh by Leigh Hunt, (lt) The Cornhill Magazine December 1897
- * Browning in 1869, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1869, uncredited.
- * Browning in Italy by W. Hall Griffin, (bg) Black & White #45, December 12 1891
- * Browning Out West by F. M. Padelford, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1907
- * Correspondence Between Carlyle and Browning by Alexander Carlyle, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine May 1915
- * Did Browning Whistle or Sing? by F. M. Padelford, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine April 1909
- * The Earliest Poems of Robert Browning by Bertram Dobell, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine January 1914
- * English Men and Women of Letters of the 19th Century. 5. Robert Browning by Edmund Gosse, (ar) Atalanta February 1889
- * John Stuart Mill and Browning’s “Pauline” by M. A. Phillips, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine May 1912
- * Marriage of True Minds by Alice Harwood, (ar) Good Housekeeping (UK) September 1946
- * Michael Field and Robert Browning by Michael Field, (ex) John Murray, 1932
- * Of the Browning MSS by Frederic George Kenyon, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine August 1913
- * On the Poetical Works of Robert Browning by Owen Seaman, (cn) The Cornhill Magazine February 1911
- * Prospice by Mary Bradford Whiting, (ar) Temple Bar May 1903
- * A Recollection of Robert Browning by Laban Rewell, (ar) Horlick’s Magazine and Home Journal for Australia, India and the Colonies January 1904
- * Robert Browning by E. F. Bridell-Fox, (ar) The Argosy (UK) February 1890
- * Robert Browning by Lewis Worthington Smith, (ar) The Optimist November 1900
- * Robert Browning by A. B. Cooper, (ar) The Captain #122, May 1909
- * Robert Browning in Edinburgh by Rosaline Masson, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine February 1909
- * Robert Browning: In Memoriam by Edmund Gosse, (ar) The New Review #8, January 1890
- * Robert Browning’s Answers to Questions Concerning Some of His Poems by A. Allen Brockington, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine March 1914
- * Robert Browning’s Early Friends by S. K. Ratcliffe, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine Summer 1949
- * Some Letters from Matthew Arnold to Robert Browning by John Drinkwater, (ar) The Cornhill Magazine December 1923
- * Three Themes in Browning’s Gothic Satire “Mesmerism” by Kirk H. Beetz, (ar) Gothic v2, 1987
- * A Visit to the Brownings at Casa Guidi by The Editor(s), (ar) The Cornhill Magazine January 1924
[]Brownjohn, Alan (Charles) (1931-2024) (about) (chron.)
- * All We Ought to Ask?, (rc) Ambit #17, 1963
- * The Lost Surprise, (pm) Transatlantic Review #24, Spring 1967
- * Nine Poems, (gp) Ambit #19, 1964
- * Old Company, (pm) Transatlantic Review #30, Autumn 1968
- * Poem on My Birthday, (pm) Transatlantic Review #12, Spring 1963
- * Poems, (gp) Ambit #48, 1971
- * Selves on Sunday, (pm) Ambit #83, 1980
- * Three Poems, (gp) Ambit #15, 1963
- * To See the Rabbit, (pm)
- * Where the Movement Went, (ar) Ambit #27, 1966
- * [letter], (lt) The London Magazine June 1957
- * [poem], (pm) Bananas #22, August 1980
- * [poems], (pm) Ambit #24, 1965
_____, [ref.]
[]Brownjohn, John (chron.)
- * Accordingly Higglety Pigglety Hic Haec Hoc, (ss) Wide Awake September 1880
- * Adventures of Miltiades Peterkin Paul:
* ___ I. In Which Pride Has a Fall, (pm) Wide Awake January 1877
* ___ II. [Missing Page], (pm) Wide Awake February 1877
* ___ III. In Which He Is Unable to Mind His Own Business, (pm) Wide Awake March 1877
* ___ IV. In Which Miltiades Is Overcome by Flattery, (pm) Wide Awake April 1877
* ___ V. In Which Miltiades Is Cured of Vanity, (pm) Wide Awake May 1877
* ___ VI. In Which Miltiades Is Guilty of Disobedience, (pm) Wide Awake June 1877
* ___ VII. Miltiades Celebrates the “Glorious Fourth”, (pm) Wide Awake July 1877
* ___ VIII. Miltiades Boasts of His Courage, (pm) Wide Awake August 1877
* ___ IX. Miltiades Is Guilty of “Picking and Stealing”, (pm) Wide Awake September 1877
* ___ X. Miltiades Is Guilty of Eavesdropping, (pm) Wide Awake October 1877
* ___ XI. Miltiades Declares War Against Turkey, (pm) Wide Awake November 1877
* ___ XII. Miltiades Gets the Best of Santa Claus, (pm) Wide Awake December 1877
- * Don Quixote, Jr.:
* ___ I. What Happened in the Library, (sl) Wide Awake February 1879
* ___ II. “Doughnuts”, (sl) Wide Awake February 1879
* ___ III. Miltiades Teaches Doughnuts a Lesson, and Is Worsted in His First Encounter, (sl) Wide Awake March 1879
* ___ IV. Miltiades Goes to the Rescue of a Captive Maiden, (sl) Wide Awake April 1879
* ___ V. Miltiades Makes the Acquaintance of Miss Blue Boots, (sl) Wide Awake May 1879
* ___ VI. A Modern Bellerophon, (sl) Wide Awake June 1879
* ___ VII. In Which Miltiades Finds That Revenge Is Both Sweet and Bitter, (sl) Wide Awake July 1879
* ___ VIII. Miltiades Pases Through a Fiery Ordeal, (sl) Wide Awake August 1879
* ___ IX. Miltiades’ Courage Is Put to a Severe Test, (sl) Wide Awake September 1879
* ___ X. The Man That Was Scalped, (sl) Wide Awake October 1879
* ___ XI. Sir Miltiades Assumes the Role of Blondel, (sl) Wide Awake November 1879
- * Don Quixote, Jr.—XII. Sir Miltiades Wins His Spurs at Last, (sl) Wide Awake December 1879
- * “Doughnuts”, (sl) Wide Awake February 1879
- * A Fish Story (Mr. Edward Fish Loquitor), (pm) Scribner’s Monthly April 1877
- * In Which He Is Unable to Mind His Own Business, (pm) Wide Awake March 1877
- * In Which Miltiades Finds That Revenge Is Both Sweet and Bitter, (sl) Wide Awake July 1879
- * In Which Miltiades Is Cured of Vanity, (pm) Wide Awake May 1877
- * In Which Miltiades Is Guilty of Disobedience, (pm) Wide Awake June 1877
- * In Which Miltiades Is Overcome by Flattery, (pm) Wide Awake April 1877
- * In Which Miltiades Pays Off an Old Score, (pm) Wide Awake July 1878
- * In Which Pride Has a Fall, (pm) Wide Awake January 1877
- * Little Miss Muslin of Quintillion Square:
* ___ I. She “Receives” on New Year’s Day, (pm) Wide Awake January 1878
* ___ II. Miss Muslin Sends a Valentine, (pm) Wide Awake February 1878
* ___ III. Miss Muslin Borrows an Umbrella, (pm) Wide Awake March 1878
* ___ IV. Miss Muslin April-Fools Fido, (pm) Wide Awake April 1878
* ___ V. Miss Muslin Works Her Father Some Slippers, (pm) Wide Awake May 1878
* ___ VI. Miss Muslin Goes Into the Country, (pm) Wide Awake June 1878
* ___ VII. In Which Miltiades Pays Off an Old Score, (pm) Wide Awake July 1878
* ___ VIII. Miltiades Takes His Cousin Out Fishing, (pm) Wide Awake August 1878
* ___ IX. Miss Muslin Puts on Her Grandmother’s Bonnet, (pm) Wide Awake September 1878
* ___ X. Miltiades Shows His Cousin “A New Kind of Swing”, (pm) Wide Awake October 1878
* ___ XI. Miss Muslin Decides to Spend Thanksgiving at the Farm, (pm) Wide Awake November 1878
* ___ XII. Miss Muslin and Miltiades Get Up Very Eary on Christmas Morning, (pm) Wide Awake December 1878
- * The Man That Was Scalped, (sl) Wide Awake October 1879
- * Miltiades Boasts of His Courage, (pm) Wide Awake August 1877
- * Miltiades Celebrates the “Glorious Fourth”, (pm) Wide Awake July 1877
- * Miltiades’ Courage Is Put to a Severe Test, (sl) Wide Awake September 1879
- * Miltiades Declares War Against Turkey, (pm) Wide Awake November 1877
- * Miltiades Gets the Best of Santa Claus, (pm) Wide Awake December 1877
- * Miltiades Goes to the Rescue of a Captive Maiden, (sl) Wide Awake April 1879
- * Miltiades Is Guilty of Eavesdropping, (pm) Wide Awake October 1877
- * Miltiades Is Guilty of “Picking and Stealing”, (pm) Wide Awake September 1877
- * Miltiades Makes the Acquaintance of Miss Blue Boots, (sl) Wide Awake May 1879
- * Miltiades Pases Through a Fiery Ordeal, (sl) Wide Awake August 1879
- * Miltiades Renounces Forever the Pursuit of Astronomy, (ss) Wide Awake June 1880
- * Miltiades Shows His Cousin “A New Kind of Swing”, (pm) Wide Awake October 1878
- * Miltiades Takes His Cousin Out Fishing, (pm) Wide Awake August 1878
- * Miltiades Teaches Doughnuts a Lesson, and Is Worsted in His First Encounter, (sl) Wide Awake March 1879
- * Miss Marrowphat’s Maltee, (ss) Wide Awake August 1880
- * Miss Muslin and Miltiades Get Up Very Eary on Christmas Morning, (pm) Wide Awake December 1878
- * Miss Muslin April-Fools Fido, (pm) Wide Awake April 1878
- * Miss Muslin Borrows an Umbrella, (pm) Wide Awake March 1878
- * Miss Muslin Decides to Spend Thanksgiving at the Farm, (pm) Wide Awake November 1878
- * Miss Muslin Goes Into the Country, (pm) Wide Awake June 1878
- * Miss Muslin Puts on Her Grandmother’s Bonnet, (pm) Wide Awake September 1878
- * Miss Muslin Sends a Valentine, (pm) Wide Awake February 1878
- * Miss Muslin Works Her Father Some Slippers, (pm) Wide Awake May 1878
- * A Modern Bellerophon, (sl) Wide Awake June 1879
- * The People Who Were Dissatisfied with Their Noses, (pm) Wide Awake September 1889
- * Professor Miltiades Astronomizes on the Piazza, (ss) Wide Awake February 1880
- * Professor Miltiades Looks Out for Capricornus in the Wrong Quarter, (ss) Wide Awake March 1880
- * Professor Miltiades Makes a Constellation of Himself, (ss) Wide Awake April 1880
- * Professor Miltiades Trees a Planet and Resolves to Witness a Conjunction, (ss) Wide Awake May 1880
- * Professor M. P. Paul:
* ___ I. Untitled, (ss) Wide Awake January 1880
* ___ II. Professor Miltiades Astronomizes on the Piazza, (ss) Wide Awake February 1880
* ___ III. Professor Miltiades Looks Out for Capricornus in the Wrong Quarter, (ss) Wide Awake March 1880
* ___ IV. Professor Miltiades Makes a Constellation of Himself, (ss) Wide Awake April 1880
* ___ V. Professor Miltiades Trees a Planet and Resolves to Witness a Conjunction, (ss) Wide Awake May 1880
* ___ VI. Miltiades Renounces Forever the Pursuit of Astronomy, (ss) Wide Awake June 1880
- * The Queerclover Chronicles:
* ___ I. Miss Marrowphat’s Maltee, (ss) Wide Awake August 1880
* ___ II. Accordingly Higglety Pigglety Hic Haec Hoc, (ss) Wide Awake September 1880
- * The Scholar and the Donkey, (pm) Wide Awake October 1889
- * School and Playground Stories:
* ___ III. The Wicked Waterbury Clock, (ss) Wide Awake February 1890
- * She “Receives” on New Year’s Day, (pm) Wide Awake January 1878
- * Sir Miltiades Assumes the Role of Blondel, (sl) Wide Awake November 1879
- * The Tables Turned, (pm) Wide Awake February 1878
- * The True Story of King Marshmellow, (pm) Wide Awake January 1878
- * Untitled, (ss) Wide Awake January 1880
- * What Happened in the Library, (sl) Wide Awake February 1879
- * The Wicked Waterbury Clock, (ss) Wide Awake February 1890
- * [Missing Page], (pm) Wide Awake February 1877
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