I ILLINOIS Production Note Digital Rare Book Collections Rare Book & Manuscript Library University of Illinois Library at Urbana-Champaign 2018 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS 0F DICKENS WILKINS FI RST AND EARLY AMERI CAN ED ITIONS OF THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS BLEAK H©MSE¢; (GEARLIES IDIIQKIENfi ——-—.—.—._ WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY H. K. BROWNE. ———-——-—_ NEW YORK: HARPER &- BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, 329 & 331 PEARL STREET, (FRANKLIN saunas.) [See page 29] First and Early American Editions of the Works of Charles Dickens BY WILLIAM CLYDE. WILKINS PRIVATELY PRINTED CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA NINETEEN HUNDRED TEN Two Hundred Copies Printed THE TORCH PRESS CEDAR RAPIDS IOWA FOREWORD there was printed an article by the writer, having the same title as this little book. The article was incomplete, being based only upon editions in his own collection at the time it was written. He has since then added largely to his possessions, and has received further information on the subject from fellow col- lectors of Dickensiana, Which has enabled him to make the description of Early American Editions reasonably complete, and he hopes that it may be of aid to those admirers of Charles Dickens who may wish to include these early editions in their collections. He has also added some information relating to American parodies and imitations of Dickens’s works, as well as some American anthologieal publications of Dickens which have not been published in England, and has also included a few notes on complete editions which are interesting from the fact that instead of having the original illustrations, they are illustrated by American artists. IN the number for J uly, 1907, of “The Diekensian” ‘_‘F- FIRST AND EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS OF THE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS opinion that the writings of the young author, whose work was just beginning to attract the attention of the English reading public, might also become popular with the American readers, was the 01d Philadelphia firm of Carey, Lea & Blanchard. This firm was the first to publish any of Dickens’s writings in this country, and the success with which the venture met was soon taken advantage of by other publishers in New York, Philadelphia, and Boston, with the re- sult that there was considerable rivalry as to which firm would print the first American edition of the several works of the great writer. In what £0110st the writer has endeavored to describe as fully as possible the various first and other early American editions. THE first American puinShers to conceive the Pickwick Papers. The first of Dickens’s works to be published in America was “Pickwick,” which was reprinted by Carey, Lea & Blanchard in five volumes 121110., with board sides, brown cloth back and paper labels. Each volume included four of the orig- inal parts, without illustrations. 7 i» ~94»: ,«r .-~a .n. . n ~,: . .0 CHARLES DICKENS Preceding the title page of the first volume is a page containing extracts from several English maga- zines and newspapers, headed by the following: ADVERTISEMENT In bringing before the American readers, “The Pickwick Papers,” the publishers cannot introduce them with a better description of their future, than the following from the London Examiner and other periodicals. The author, under the fictitious name of Boz, is Mr. Charles Dickens, whose series of sketches of “Watkins Tottle,” “Tuggs at Ramsgate,” “Life of Mr. Tulrumble,” “Oliver Twist,” etc., has acquired for himself a. high place in the ranks of comic liter- ature. The same firm published a new edition in 1838 which was crown oetavo in size, printed in double columns, having nineteen full page illustrations, en- graved on steel by J. Yeager, reproducing some of the extra illustrations issued in England by “Alfred Crowquill” and “Sam Weller,” seven by the former and twelve by the latter artist, in addition to which the title pages by these two artists were re-engraved on steel. The engraving is excellently done, in fact with a technique equal to that of the original plates. On May 10, 1867, Mr, Henry C. Lea, writing to Mr. Geo. W. Childs with reference to the above publi- cation by his old firm, said: In November, 1836, Carey, Lea & Blanchard ven- tured to reprint the first four numbers of the immortal “Pickwick.” The author was then unknown, and the enterprise a doubtful one; so the edition printed from type was only 1500 copies, and the numbers were issued at the price of 45 cents, in one volume, in thin 8 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS duodeeimo shape, bound in boards, with which all readers of old novels are doubtless familiar. The venture was successful, and by December, 1837, when the fifth and concluding volume was published, the edition had been materially increased, while small quantities of the earlier volumes had been reprinted, and two rival and cheaper editions had been started in New York. The only advantage which the author derived from this publication, beyond the reputation which the name “Boz” acquired in this country, was a remittance of 50 pounds, made to him in 1838 by the house in acknowledgment of the success of his work. That success had led in 1837 to the publication of the collected “ Sketches by Boz,” of Which but 1250 copies were printed. This does not seem to have been a fortunate undertaking, for I find no trace of another edition being called for until many years afterward, when we included it in a collected edition of the works. Mr. Lee’s memory, in looking back thirty years, must have been at fault, for, as will be seen, there were no less than four editions of the “Sketches” pub- lished by his firm, the 12mo., the monthly parts, the cloth bound octave, and the cheap octave edition in boards. J ames Turney of New York, in 1838, published an edition of “Pickwick” in twenty-six parts in green paper covers, the size of page, type, and design of cover being identical with the original English edition. It contained the same number of pages, 609. It was later issued complete, bound in cloth. There were, however, several issues of the bound volume, all bearing the same date, 1838, but there were several variations in the different issues, which make them practically diiferent editions. The writer 9 CHARLES DICKENS has seen three copies which vary from each other. The first has on the title page “With 54 illustrations by Seymour, Phiz and Crowquill.” It contains repro- ductions of all the original Seymour and Phiz plates and also the two by Buss, Which shows that the reprint must have been made from early copies of the original parts. There are in addition reproductions of nine of the extra Crowquill plates. The frontispiece and engraved title pages are reproductions of the ones done by Phiz for the first English edition. A second copy has on the title page “With illustrations by Crowquill,” no reference being made to Seymour and Phiz, although it contains eighteen of the Phiz, three of the Seymour, and only seven of the Crowquill plates. The frontispiece is a reproduction of the title page of the extra plates by “Sam Weller.” A third copy With the same title page has only twelve Phiz, two Seymour, and five Crowquill plates, While the frontispiece is a beautiful steel engraving 0f the Law- rence portrait of the author. It also contains the dedication to Talford and the preface to the first edition, Which are not contained in the other copies. It is printed on much thinner paper, and the writer is inclined to think it is a later issue than the other two, although, as noted above, all bear the same date. “Pickwick” was also issued by W. H. Colyer, New York, in 1839. It was a two volume 12mo., bound in boards With cloth backs and paper labels, and con- tains reproductions of a few of the original illus- trations. It is very similar in form to the Lea & 10 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS Blanchard five volume 121110., but it is printed in much smaller type. Sketches. Carey, Lea & Blanchard published in 1837, in two volumes, the first series of Sketches under the title “Watkins Tottle and other Sketches Illus- trative of Every Day Life and Every Day People,” and also in the same year a reprint in one volume of the second series, under the title “The Tuggs at Ramsgate and Other Sketches, etc.,” the contents being the same as the first English edition, except that they were preceded by “The Tuggs at Rams— gate” reprinted from “The Select Library of Fic- tion.” There had evidently been an earlier issue, as there is an “Advertisement” on the first page, which says: The rapid sale of the volume containing “The Tuggs at Ramsgate” by Boz, and the demand for a second edition of his second series of “ Sketches,” has induced the publishers to combine one with the other in this volume and add thereto “The Pantomime of Life.” These books were all 12mo., With board sides and brown cloth backs with paper labels, were without illustrations, and were the first American editions. In 1838 the same firm published a new edition in ten monthly parts, each number containing two plates from the English edition redrawn by Yeager from the Cruikshank plates which were beautifully done. Like the original edition it was octavo in size but printed in double columns. the covers being blue paper, With the original cover design redrawn by N. J ohnson. 11 ”3"er {Waf- > .. .~ A- : ; CHARLES DICKENS In 1839 a new edition was published, being the month- ly parts with plates, bound in a single volume with black cloth binding, and containing an “Advertise- ment” stating: This American Edition contains “ The Public Life of Mr. Tulrumble” and “The Pantomime of Life” by Boz—Sketches published by the author since the above (English) edition was issued. They also published a cheap edition in the same type but With two plates only, which was bound in brown boards with blue cloth back and paper labels. This was the first publication in book form containing “The Pantomime of Life.” Tales and Sketches. The publication of “Pick- wick” and “Sketches” was evidently so successful, that later in the same year, 1837, Carey, Lea & Blanch- ard published two new volumes uniform in style with their first edition of Pickwick, on the title page of Which they placed the name of “B02,” although each volume contained only one article by Dickens. The full title of the first volume was “Public Life of Mr. Tulrumble, once Mayor of Mudfog, by Boz, with other Tales and Sketches from Bentley’s Miscellaney and The Library of Fiction.” It contained the Tul- rumble artich and six other articles from Bentley’s and three from “The Library of Fiction.” The sec- ond volume bore the title “Oliver TWist—or the Parish Boy’s Progress by Boz, with other tales, etc.” It contained simply the first two chapters of “Oliver Twis ” and twelve other articles from Bentley’s, one 12 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS of which was a single chapter of S. Lover’s “Handy Andy.” Oliver Twist. Probably the first publication of any part of “Oliver Twist” in this country was in the second volume of “ Tales and Sketches” previously re- ferred to, published in 1837 by Lea & Blanchard, but as stated it contained only the first and second chap- ters as published in the English “Bentley’s Maga- zine,” beginning, “Among other public buildings in the town of Mudfog.” What may be called the first American edition of the entire work is that which appeared in the American reprint of Bentley’s, pub- lished in New York by William Welker and Jemima Welker. The first volume of the reprint was really the third volume of the English edition, and the first number, published in J anuary, 1838, began with Chap- ter 20 of Book First of “Oliver Twist.” The previous chapters were, however, issued in June, 1838, as a supplement to Volume One, and the final chapter appeared in the number for April, 1839. As the text was the same as that in the English Bentley’s, which is absolutely the first English edition, so the American reprint must be looked upon as the first American edition, although the complete separate volume edi- tions, referred to below, were probably published shortly after the appearance of the three volume edi- tion, which was published before its completion in the magazine. The original Cruikshank plates which were redrawn by Dick were exceedingly well done, and some Which do not have the Dick signature might almost pass for the original Cruikshank plates. 13 CHARLES DICKENS In 1838 Carey, Lea & Blanchard published the first number of an edition in parts. It consisted of all the chapters that had been printed in Bentley’s Miscellany up to and including Chapter Fifth, Book Second, and contained reproductions of the first twelve Cruikshank plates, Which were not signed by the artist who copied them, although the plates on the remaining numbers have the signature J . Yeager. The remaining numbers up to Chapter Fifth, Book the Third, were reprinted monthly from “Bentley’s,” but the balance of the chapters were reprinted from the first complete three volume edition which was issued in London in November, 1838, some four months previous to its completion in the magazine. This is shown by the fact that the last paragraph of the Fifth Chapter of Book the Third begins “With many adieus and good Wishes, etc,” which paragraph is not found in the text as printed in the magazine, but is in the three volume edition. It also contains the cancelled “Fuende Plate” which is only found in early issues of the three volume edition. The last part appeared early in 1839, but before it appeared the new firm issued the complete work in two 12m0. volumes without illustrations, similar to their first edition of Pickwick. This edition was evidently got- ten out to forestall the Colyer edition published in New York. It is rather amusing to note that even in 1839 a publisher would “fake” in as unblushing a manner as will some of the present day publishers, as the following in V01. One of this edition will show: PUBLISHERS NOTICE—A large portion of 14 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS the last part of Oliver Twist having been sent to the publishers in manuscript, they hasten to place before the public the work in the present form, at the same time, they have to regret that the illustrations by Cruikshank, were not ready to accompany the manu- script from London. On their receipt, no delay Will take place in laying the remainder of the illustrated edition before the public. That this edition was reprinted from the original three volume edition is shown by the fact that Chap- ter I begins “Among other public buildings in a certain town, etc.” and in volume one of the 12mo. edition is the announcement of the “New Work by Boz —~ Barnaby Budge” Which is also in the first volume of the original three volume edition. The illustrated octave edition, bound up from the parts, was issued in 1839 in one volume bound in black cloth, and in 1842 a new edition was issued containing “The Author’s Introduction to the Third Edition.” These illustrated editions contain the plate entitled “Rose Maylie & Oliver” generally known as the “Fire- side” plate, Which appeared only in the first issue of the English three volume edition. The beginning of the first chapter was, however, changed to read the same as the three volume edition. In 1839, Wm. H. Colyer, New York, published an edition in one 12m0. volume, bound in boards similar to the 121110. Philadelphia edition, but containing Four of the Cruikshank illustrations, one being a specially engraved title page containing the Cruikshank draw- ing “Oliver Claimed by His Afieetionate Friends.” 15 CHARLES DICKENS The plates are well done, and although not signed by the artist they look very much like the “Yeager” plates in the Lee & Blanchard editions. The text of this edition was evidently taken from Bentley’s Maga- zine, as it begins with “Among other public buildings in the town of Mudfog,” instead of “In a certain town.” ‘ J as. Turney, J11, of New York, also published an edition in parts, with green paper covers, the design of which was copied from Cruikshank’s engraved title page of the second series of “Sketches by B02,” pub- lished by John Macrone in 1836. The writer has never seen the complete issue in parts, but is enabled to reproduce the cover design through the courtesy of Dr. Dudley Tenny, of New York, who has in his collection one of the covers. There was also an edition published in Boston by Lewis '& Sampson, 8v0. in size, 314 pp., with an engraving after the Lawrence portrait, and also with reproductions of the Cruikshank illustrations. The writer is unable to state the date of the first edition, but the fourth edition is dated 1844. Memoirs of Jos. Gm’maldi. In 1838, Carey, Lea & Blanchard published the “Grimaldi Memoirs” in two 12m0. volumes without illustrations in the same style as their first edition of “Pickwick.” There was an edition published in New York having the same date, but the Philadelphia edition is usually listed in the book—sellers’s catalogue as the first American edi- tion. 16 No. Vll . Pmon 12301... /_.—, . (A , /— v ‘ ‘ 1’“ j. cum 39 (‘5; 1 ",9", 1:9,“ .ic-fs'z-iMfl-“w-ifi‘.iiq "'11" 1”! M Q *1 : qNIP ‘\“\d$ . Q ‘gflLWER TWIST; w . ?‘sé— 1 , aura; . 7 11111 i ‘ V ‘ 'HIimn- '1 37%;;- 'll1.}]]ll.l -‘%H I 1111111111 ., r. ‘ lHlIIHH'" =\"E ' I ‘ .1; gas \V 3* 1| ‘M: 110“" _ '7 NEW—YORK: JAMES TURNEY, JR. 55 GOLD STREET. (HILADELPHIA: ORRIN ROGERS. 67 SOUTH-SECOND STREET [See page 16] q’fi‘lao , VMAWWdr 1. ' « . :4. , -~ EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS Nicholas Nickleby. In 1838, Carey, Lea & Blanch- ard began the issue in parts of Nicholas Nickleby, which was completed in 1839 by Lea & Blanchard, the successors of the old firm. It was published in twenty parts, the last being a double one (19 and 20), the covers being yellow and having the same cover design by Phiz as in the original English edition. Each number contained two Phiz plates redrawn by Yeager, who was equally as successful in the reproduction of the Phiz drawings as he was with those of CruikShank. Jas. Turney, Jr., of New York, in 1838-9, also issued Nicholas Nickleby in parts. Like the Pickwick of the same publisher, the covers were green paper with the same design as the English edition. Each number contained the original Phiz illustrations en- graved on steel with the Phiz signature, but not signed by the artist who made the reproductions. The entire work was issued in 1839 in one volume, having for a frontispieee the Lawrence portrait of “Boz” also used in one of the Turney editions of Pickwick. Another edition was published in New York by Wm. H. Colyer, 104 Beekman Street, in 1839. It was a two volume 12m‘0., bound in boards with cloth back and paper label, similar to the same publisher’s “Pick- wick,” “Oliver Twist,” etc. Each volume contained a, frontispiece after one of the Phiz drawings, and a specially engraved title page, that of volume one being illustrated by the Phiz drawing, “The Internal Econ- omy of Do-the-boys Hall,” and volume two by “A sudden recognition Unexpected on Both Sides.” Old Curiosity Shop. Lea & Blanchard published 17 CHARLES DICKENS the “Old Curiosity Shop,” including all the matter of “Master Hunphrey’s Clock,” in monthly parts in 1841-2. The last number contained the preface and a list of illustrationswwhich were all weed out reproduc— tions of the illustrations in the original edition. It was royal 8vo in size, printed in double columns, as in the illustrated “Pickwick” of the same publishers. There were two title pages, one reading “The Old Curiosity Shop and Other Tales by Charles Dickens,” and the other “Master Humphrey’s Clock by Charles Dickens (Boz),” the date on both being 1841. There was also a frontispieee engraved by J . Yeager, which is a reproduction of the one in the first volume of the English edition. The writer’s copy is bound up from the original parts, and does not contain any of the wrappers, but they were probably the same as for “Barnaby Rudge,” described later. Shortly after the completion of the issue in parts there was issued an edition with the same date7 complete in one volume, bound in black cloth. In addition to the wood cuts there were nine engravings and a. title page by Yeager after the designs of some of the extra illustrations prepared by T. Sibson for the English edition. There were two title pages the same as in the edition in parts, except that the names of the illustrators were given as “Cattermole, Brown & Sibson,” while the former edition said, “With numerous illustrations by George Cattermole and Hablot Brown.” These extra illus- trations were also sold separately with printed cover for insertion in the first edition. There was also a cheap edition of the same date Without the extra 18 EARLY AMERICAN EDITION S plates, bound in boards, with cloth back and paper labels. Another edition bearing the original title of “Master Humphrey’s Clock,” was published in New York by Wm. H. Colyer, in 1843. It consisted of all the matter in the original edition down to the begin- ning of “Barnaby Rudge.” It was a two volume 121110., bound in boards, with cloth backsand paper labels, and contained no illustrations. The writer possesses a curious copy printed from the same plates as the Colyer edition, bound in one volume, bearing the imprint “Richard March, 354 Pearl St, New York,” and illustrated with wood cut reproductions of some of the plates of Dombey & Son. Barnaby Budge. Lea & Blanchard, 0f Philadel- phia, published “Barnaby Rudge” in nineteen (19) parts, some containing the contents of two and some of three of the weekly parts of the original English edition, and With the same design on the white paper wrappers. The size was royal octave, printed in double columns, the printed page being the same size as the other Dickens novels previously published by the same firm. It contained wood cut reproductions of the original Cattermole illustrations, which were fairly well done. rI‘he second page of the wrappers of Nos. 17 and 18 contains the address “To the Readers of Barnaby Rudge,” dated “London, September 1841,” which was printed in Nos. 80, 81, 82 and 83 0f the English edition, and N0. 19 has the same ad- dress and the “Postscript” dated November, 1841, published in Nos. 87 and 88 0f the original edition. 19 CHARLES DICKENS The wrappers all have the date 1841, but the title page issued With the last numbers is dated 1842. On the completion of the work in parts it was issued in a single cloth bound volume, With the addition of six- teen beautifully engraved reproductions of some of the extra plates issued in England by Francis Sibs'on, and a specially engraved title page. In the same year the work was issued by E. Lit- tell & 00., of Philadelphia, as 21 “Supplement to the Museum of Foreign Literature and to the Spirit of Magazines.” It was the same size as the Lea & Blanchard edition, in double columns, Without illus— trations and bound in boards with brown cloth back and paper label. It contained no illustrations. W. H. Colyer, of New York, also published in 1843 an edition similar in form and make-up to “Mas- ter Humphrey’s Clock,” described above. It was in two 12m0, volumes, board sides, cloth back and paper labels, Without illustrations. In 1842 all the Lea & Blanchard 8V0. editions, previously referred to, were issued in twenty weekly parts, price twenty-five cents each. The covers were green paper, With the following title: EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS THE COMPLETE WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS (BOZ) CONTAINING THE PICKWICK PAPERS; NICHOLAS NICKLEBY; OLIVER TWIST; SKETCHES 0F EVERYDAY LIFE; THE CURIOSITY SHOP With wood cuts; AND BARNABY RUDGE, With wood cuts. EMBELLISHED WITH A PORTRAIT OF THE AUTHOR DONE ON STEEL, AND SEVERAL ILLUSTRATIONS ENGRAVED BY YEAGER. PUBLISHED BY G. L. CURRY & 00., 167 BROADWAY, N. Y. SAXTON & PIERCE, 133 WASHINGTON San, BOSTON. N. HICKMAN, 86 BALTIMORE STREET, BALTIMORE. GODEY & MCMICHAEL, 101 CHESTNUT Sax, PHILA. 1842. 21 ‘ mg‘flg ."7, .1 ‘{ CHARLES DICKENS Each number contained one of the Yeager illus- trations mentioned in the foregoing descriptions of the Lea & Blanchard oetavo editions, while the “01d Curiosity Shop” and “Barnaby Budge” contain all the wood cuts in the text of the original editions. While the green covers do not have Lea & Blanchard’s imprint, the title pages of some of the works con- tain their imprint alone. Picnic Papers. In 1841, Lea & Blanchard pub- lished the first two volumes of “The Picnic Papers,” the third volume not being reprinted, the publishers in a note following the preface 0f the English edition saying: The volume alluded to above contains the “Char— coal Sketches.” written by our fellow townsman, Neal, it being a copyright volume, it is of course not re— printed among these papers. Its notice by the author of Pickwick Papers Will no doubt extend in this country, the circulation of Mr. Neal’s Sketches. The two volumes were 12mo, printed and bound in the same style as the first edition of this firm’s ‘ ‘ Pickwick. ” American Notes. The first American edition of “American Notes” was that published by Wilson & Company, New York, as an Extra N umber of “Brother J onathan.” It is a small quarto, 0f forty-six pages, being six and one-half by nine and one-half inches in size. It bears the date November 7th, 1842, and under the title is printed “First American Eedition. ” In connection with this edition, Mr. R. Shelton 22 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS McKenzie says in his “Life of Charles Dickens” that he sent Mr. Dickens copies of two American news- papers “Brother J onathan” and “The New World,” and that Mr. Dickens’s recollections of “Brother J onathan” were not pleasant. In 1842 after the first visit to the United States, the late Mr. Isaac 0. Pray, previously editor of the “Boston Pearl,” was in London, con- ducting a cheap evening paper, so very liberal in its politics that even the chartists thought it went too far. By application of What is figuratively known as “oil of palm” he obtained proof sheets of the “Amer- ican Notes,” from some pressman in Bradbury & Evans’ printing office, and sent them to Boston, in advance of the English book, in two volumes, the sell- ing price of Which was twenty—one shillings. Mr. Dick- ens had made arrangements for the reproduction of a. fae-simile edition for America, but before the leg— itimate advance sheets arrived, the entire book was circulated throughout the United States in a double number of “Brother Jonathan” for six cents. Of course this took the bloom off Mr. Dickens’s peach. The manner in which the publishers of “Brother J onathan” obtained the proof sheets in England makes it certain that their claim of publishing the “First American Edition” is well founded. The last page contained an advertisement which is interesting from the fact that it shows a facsimile of an American $50 note in circulation in 1842. Mr. J . Winchester, publisher of “The New World,” of New York, printed an edition bearing the date, November, 1842, as a supplement to his paper, of which the author has a copy in his collection. It 23 CHARLES DICKENS was also a small quarto, in two parts, the printed page being six by ten inches, in double columns. Harper & Brothers, of New York, also published an edition in November, 1842. It was an octave pamphlet, 92 pages, printed in double columns, with brovm paper covers. Martin Chuzzlewit. In 1844 Harper & Brothers, of New York, published “Martin Chuzzlewit” in seven parts. At the top of the first page of the cover was printed “To be completed in seven parts at 61,41: cents, each part containing three parts of the English Edi- tion with two steel etchings.” The size was the same as the English edition and the covers were blue with a reproduction of the Phiz cover design, The four-- teen reproductions of the Phiz plates were of equal merit with those done by Eager for the Philadelphia editions of other works of Dickens, previously de- scribed. Mr. William H. Demarest, an employe of Har- per’s, says that the sale of the work in numbers was chiefly by newsboys 0n the street, and that on one occasion when the store was crowded with the boys meeting for the delivery of the number, Mr. J ames Harper, a member of the firm, made a speech to them. Lea & Blanchard, of Philadelphia, also published an edition of “Martin Chuzzlewit,” as Mr. H. C. Lea in the letter previously quoted said: We authorized our London Agent to pay for Mar- tin Chuzzlewit double the price that had been paid for Barnaby Rudge and Old Curiosity Shop, but Mr. Dickens refused to supply the advance sheets, or to 24 DEALINGS WITH THE FIRM 0F DOMBEY AN D SON, wholesale, aetail, unit for exportation. 3! CHARLES DICKENS. With. Illustrations, engraved on Wood by J'. W'. Orr. non DESIGNS BY H. x. 3110mm. NUMBER XV. NEW YORK WILEY AND PUTNAM. 1847. Price, Twelve and a Half Cents. W THE ILL USTRA TIONS for this Number will be given with the Next; [See page 25:] EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS permit his publishers to do so. We were therefore obliged to print that work “David Copperfield” and “Dombey & Son” without an arrangement with him. The writer has never seen their edition of “0th- zlewit” in parts but the presumption is that it was similar in form to “David Copperfield,” “Nicholas Niekleby,” and the other works published in parts by that firm. Dombey & Son. In 1846, W'iley & Putnam, of New York, began publishing “Dombey & Son” in parts, seventeen numbers bearing their imprint, while the last two bear the imprint J ohn Wiley, 1848. The size was 12m0, price 121/2 cents per number, the cov- ers being grey in color. At the bottom of the first page of each number was printed “The Illustrations for this number will be given with the next,” the text probably being set in type as soon as the English number was received and printed at once without waiting for the engraving of the plates for that num- ber, so that the plates were always one number behind the text. The Phiz plates were redrawn and engraved on wood by J . W. Orr, and it is remarkable how close- ly the spirit of the original etchings was reproduced in wood engravings. On completion of the monthly parts, the work was issued in two volumes, bound in red cloth, having for a frontispiece a beautiful wood engraved copy of the Lawrence portrait. Lea & Blanchard also published an edition in parts which the writer has never seen, but on the bot- tom of the back cover of their edition of “David Copperfield” is the advertisement: 25 CHARLES DICKENS NOW PUBLISHING DOMBEY AND SON FINE EDITIONS IN TWENTY NUMBERS, PRICE 6 CENTS EACH, WITH TWO ILLUSTRATIONS BY HABLOT K. BROWN IN EACH NUMBER THIS IS THE ONLY EDITION WHICH PRE- SENTS THE PLATES ACCOMPANYING THE TEXT TO WHICH THEY REFER This last line was evidently intended to show the public that it was better then the Wiley 01' Bradbury editions. Another edition was published in parts in Boston by Bradbury and Guild. It is almost a facsimile of the original English edition, the cover being an exact copy, both as to the Phiz design, color, and quality of paper. The letter press is so near that of the orig- inal, that it might almost be taken for advance sheets of the original edition‘ as on most of the pages every line is identical, beginning and ending With the same words as the original. The Phiz illustrations are so faithfully copied that it is almost necessary to use a magnifying glass to detect any variation from the originals. An advertisement on the second page of the cover says “The subscribers Will issue the num- bers With all the LONDON ILLUSTRATIONS AND PLATES COMPLETE. Each number Will be issued IN ONE DAY AFTER IT’S ARRIVAL. Price 121/2 cents.” 26 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS Another edition was published in 1847, by Bur- gess, Stringer & 00., New York. It is in paper covers, 8V0, of 292 pages, printed in double columns, and contains woodcut reproductions of some of the Phiz illustrations, which look very much like those by Orr in the Wiley edition, although the only one Which has a signature is “The Wooden Midshipman on the look- out,” which is signed “Fiz Se.” An edition in parts called “Jones’ Cheap Edi- tion” was published in 1847-8 in Boston at the “Star Spangled Banner Ofliee.” It was printed in double columns 011 very poor paper, each number having two woodcuts, copies from the Phiz illustrations, print- ed from the same blocks as the Burgess edition. The covers were a very poor quality of pink paper, having a woodcut of the “The Dombey Family.” Travelling Letters Written on the Road. In 1846 there was published in “The Daily News,” London, seven letters by Dickens with the following titles: Jan. 21. Travelling sketches written on the Road No. 1, From Paris to Chalons. “ 24. N0. 2, Lyons, the Rhine and the Goblin 0f Avignon. “ 31. N0. 3, Avignon t0 Genoa. Feb. 9. No. 4, A retreat at Albaro. “ 16. N0. 5, First sketch of Genoa; the Streets, Shops and Houses. “ 26. No. 6, In Genoa. Mar. 2. No. 7, In Genoa and Out of It. Early in 1846 Wiley & Putnam, of New York, issued these sketches in two parts, under the title “Travelling Letters Written on the Road,” part one 27 CHARLES DICKENS containing the first three letters and part two the remainder. They were in pamphlet form of the same size as their edition of Dombey & Son, With brown paper covers, and formed part of a series called “Wiley & Putnam’s Library of Choice Reading.” This was probably the only separate issue either in England or America of these letters, exactly as they appeared in “The Daily News.” Pictures From Italy. The letters described above with slight alterations and adaptations from some of Dickens’s letters to Forster was issued in England in 1846 under the title “Pictures from Italy,” and in the “Library of Choice Reading,” with paper covers, price 371/2 cents, which was probably the first Ameri— can edition under this title. David Copperfield. Lea & Blanchard, of Phila- delphia, began publishing “David Copperfield” in parts in 1849, completing it in 1850. The edition consisted of twenty parts royal Svo, parts 19 and 20 being a double number. It was printed in double columns, the same as their illustrated edition of “Pick- wick. ” The covers were yellow paper, and unlike the “Sketches,” “Nicholas Niekleby,” etc., there was no attempt to reproduce the original Phiz cover design of the English edition, the full title of the book being printed in type on the front page of the cover. The price was five cents a copy, and in eight of the parts only there was a single plate rather poorly en- graved on wood by W. F. Gihon, after the Phiz etchings. 28 Jones’s Cheap Edition. No. 7. mzaliugs with the firm of [IDCIDMBEV [MSW §®fl¥lg Wholesale, Retail and for Exportatin. "J w @mmgss @mmmgn B 0 S T 0 N: PUBLISHED AT THE “STAR SPANGLED BANNER." OFFICE. 32 WASHINGTON STREET. H. LONG AND BROTHER, 32 ANN ST., NEW-YORK g m 18 4 7. - t ‘ mm-xm [See page 27] EARLY AMERICAN EDITION S There was also an edition in parts published in New York in twenty numbers, price 121/2 cents, the last number being double (19 and 20), the first eleven numbers bearing the imprint of John Wiley, 1849, the next seven of G. P. Putnam, 1850, and the last double number that of J ohn Wiley, 1850. Each num- ber contained two woodcuts by J. W. Orr after the Phiz illustrations, which were much better drawn and engraved than those in the Philadelphia edition. Harper & Brothers, New York, also published, in 1852, an edition in two volumes 12m0, bound in blue cloth, having the 40 woodcut illustrations by J . W. Orr used in the Wiley & Putnam editions described above. The Irving Ofiem‘ng. Leavitt & 00., of New York, published “The Irving Offering for 1851,” a 12m0 of 276 pages, bound in embossed black leather, the first story in which was entitled.“Lizzie Leigh,” by Charles Dickens (’2). The book generally commands a high price by dealers, but Mr. J. C. Thompson in his “Bibliography of the Writings of Charles Dick- ens” says, “It is however, quite worthless; the story was written by Mrs. Gaskill. The book is merely an ignorant American piracy.” It is interesting to note, however, that the story was also published in the first number of Harper’s Magazine for June, 1850, which also credited the authorship t0 Dickens. Bleak H ouse. Harper & Brothers, of New York, in 1852-3 published an edition in twenty parts of “Bleak House,” in form and size similar to “.Dombey 29 ,4} CHARLES DICKENS & Son” and “David Copperfield,” published by Wiley, with the Phiz illustrations engraved on wood. The last number contained a steel engraving from the Maclise portrait of the author. It was also published in Harper’s Magazine, be- ginning in volume IV., April, 1852, and being com- pleted in volume VIL, October, 1853. The publishers paid £400 for advance sheets of the English edition. Little Dorrit. The first American appearance of “Little Dorrit” was in Harper’s Magazine for Jan- uary, 1855, and was continued through 1856 and fin- ished in July, 1857. The publishers paid £250 for the advance sheets. Tale of Two Cities. Harper & Brothers purchased advance sheets of “A Tale of Two Cities” for £1000 and began its publication in Harper’s Weekly, May 7, 1859, the final chapters being printed in the issue for December 3, 0f the same year. It was illustrated by sixty-four woodcuts from drawings made especially for the serial publication by J . McLenan. This was the first publication of the work in the United States, and by arrangement With Harper & Brothers, from whom they purchased the illustrations, T. B. Peterson & Brothers, of Philadelphia, published the complete work in book form contemporaneous With the last issue in Harper’s Weekly. In the issue of the Weekly for December 10, 1859, the Philadelphia firm adver- tised its appearance in twenty-five different editions, ranging from a paper covered octave Without illustra— 30 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS tions to a two volume octavo with all the illustrations, bound in half calf with gilt backs, so that it is diffi- cult to say which is the first issue in book form. The advertisement referred to says the work is issued “one month prior to its publication in England in book form.” This statement, however, is doubtful, as the last number was issued in England in December, 1859, and the issues in book form of all the novels in parts followed very soon after the issue of the last part. ~ The Peterson edition is the only edition with the MeLenan illustrations. Hunted Down. The story was first published in the New York Ledger, August 20 and 27, 1859, Mr. Robert Bonner the proprietor having paid Dickens £1000 for this short story. It was illustrated with seven woodcuts. The only separate reprint is a little 161110. of 99 pages with green wrappers, published by J ohn Camden Hotten, London. Great Expectations. Harper’s Weekly had the honor of being the first to publish “Great Expecta- tions” in this country, it appearing in the numbers of that journal in 1861, being completed on Auguust 3, 1861. The publishers had original illustrations drawn and engraved on wood by John McLenan. They paid £1250 for advance sheets. It was afterward issued by them in book form, in two volumes 12mo. in size and bound in cloth. There was an edition published by Gardner A. Fuller, Boston, in 1862, 12mo. green cloth, which 31 L vtr‘ 'wJ—‘fi'afip 1‘} CHARLES DICKENS reached thirty thousand copies. It is only remarkable for the horribly drawn illustrations, Which were en- graved on steel. Our Mutual Friend. In June, 1864, the first installment consisting of the first four chapters of “Our Mutual Friend” was published in Harper’s Magazine. It was prefaced by a half length portrait of the author sitting in a chair resting his right hand on his knee and his left hand on a table. This por- trait was engraved on wood after a. photograph taken in 1850. The story was continued monthly until its conclusion in December, 1865. The illustrations were on wood, re-engraved after those by Luke Fildes in the original edition. The complete volume was issued bound in cloth in 1865, with all the illustrations used when published in the Magazine. Harper & Brothers purchased advance proofs of the work paying £1000, so that the issue in the Magazine was probably its first appearance in the United States. Dickens’s Readings. Five of Dickens’s Readings were published in London by Bradbury & Evans in 1858, a “Story of Little Dombey,” “The Chimes,” “Christmas Carol,” “Cricket on the Hearth,” and “The Poor Traveller, Boots at the Holly Tree Inn and Mrs. Gamp.” On the occasion of Dickens’s last visit to the United States in 1868, Messrs. Tieknor & Fields, of Boston, issued his various readings in small 121110 pamphlets. They included several readings which had not been included in the London, 1858, 32 g No. 5. WITH A PLATE. PRICE FIVE CENTS. a THE PERSONAL HISTURY,’ABVENTURES, EXPERIENCE AND OBSERVATION DAVID corrnnrlnw OF BLU NDERSTONE ROOKERY, (Which he never meantTtb ba published, on any account.) BY CHARLES DICKENS. WITH ELUSTMTIONS BY KABLO‘I' K. BROWNE. TO BE COMPLETED IN TWENTY MONTHLY NUMBERS. THE FOURTH VOLUME OF LEA & BLANCHARD’S UNIFORM EDITION 0F DICKENS’ WORKS WILL BE COMPLETED WITH DAVID'COPPERFIELD. xhttauelpma: . LEA AND BLANCHA'RD‘. 1849. YDSO'L‘D 31: ALL BOOKSELLERS.» [See page 28] EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS edition, and are therefore the first edition in this form. Each issue includes two readings with two illus- trations by Sol Eytinge. Some of the readings were duplicated in the different issues, as Will be seen by the following list which includes all that the writer has seen in this form: 1. A Christmas Carol and the Trial from Pick— Wick. 2. David Copperfield and Mr. Bob Sawyer’s Party. 3. Nicholas Niekleby and Boots at the Holly Tree Inn. 4. Little Dombey and The Trial from Pickwick. 5. A Christmas Carol and Boots at the Holly Tree Inn. 6. David Copperfield and Boots at the Holly Tree Inn. 7. Dr. Marrigold and Mr. Bob Sawyer’s Party. 8. David Copperfield and The trial from Pick- Wick. 9. Nicholas Nickleby and Mr. Bob Sawyer’s Party. 10. Dr. Marrigold and The Trial from Pickwick. 11. Dr. Marrigold and Mrs. Cramp. On the back of each title page was printed the following: Gad’s Hill, Higham by Rochester, Kent. Tenth October, 1867. The edition bearing the imprint of Messrs. Tick- nor & Fields is the only correct and authorized ecli- tion of my readings. CHARLES DICKENS 33 AA, 3. ix v- d A_ “in ‘r i“ 5.. CHARLES DICKENS The entire series, including the Sol Eytinge illus- trations, was issued in one green cloth volume, bearing the date 1868. There were other editions of the com— plete work issued later without the illustrations. Geo. Silverman’s Explanation. Dickens wrote this story for the Atlantic Monthly at the special re- quest of Mr. Jas. T. Fields, and it was published in that magazine in J anuary, February, and March, 1868. H oliday Romance. Ticknor & Fields, of Boston, the publishers of “Our Young Folks: An illustrated Magazine for Boys and Girls,” paid Dickens £1000 for the story “A Holiday Romance,” which he wrote specially for that periodical. It was published in the numbers for January, March, April, and May, 1868, and also in Dickens’s own periodical “All the Year Round,” J anuary 25, February 8, March 14, and April 4, 1868. It contained a portrait of Dickens and four illustrations by Mr. (Sir) J ohn Gilbert, and initial letter designs by G. G. White and Sol Eytinge. 0n Mr. Fechter’s Acting. There appeared in the Atlantic Monthly for August, 1869, an article with this title, which was the last casual piece of the author’s writing. It was written just before his visit to America, and has been considered as sort of an “advance puff” for his actor friend. It has been beautifully reprinted in a little pamphlet by the Bewick Press, New York, the edition consisting of fifty copies bearing the date MCMIII. 34 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS Edmund Drood. Harper & Brothers published “Edmund Drood” as a serial in a monthly “Dickens Supplement” to Harper’s Weekly, the first issue bear- ing the date April 23, 1870, and the last October 1, 1870. It was prefaced by a brief sketch of Dickens’s life, with a woodcut portrait of the author, and the original illustrations re-engraved on wood, Which were almost facsimiles, so well were they done. An octave edition in cloth was also published in 1870 by Fields, Osgood & 00., Boston, the story being prefaced by “Some Memoirs of Charles Dickens” by J as. T. Fields, and followed by George Silverman’s “Explanation, Holiday Romance, Sketches of Young Couples, and New Uncommercial Samples.” Is She His Wife, or Something Singular. This comic burletta in one act was written by “Boz” and there is probably not a single copy of the original issue in existence. Mr. Jas. R. Osgood 0f the Boston publishing house of Jas. R. Osgood & 00., in 1876, purchased What was the only copy known, paying £6 for it. It was 32 pages 8vo., without wrapper. This copy was destroyed by fire in 1879, but before the fire occurred Mr. Osgood’s firm had in 1877 published an edition in 32m0. green cloth, Which is the only edition in separate form obtainable by collectors. Mr. Nightingale’s Diary. This play was written by Mark Lemon for the performance in aid of The Guild of Literature and Art, in 1851, and the only known copy is an 8vo. pamphlet 0f 26 pages and title in the South Kensington Museum. Before the play 35 J 1: ’f. may“ ; "m A. met“ £41” 2 ., k CHARLES DICKENS was performed Dickens made so many alterations that it is probably as much his work as that of the original author, and has therefore been deemed by collectors to be properly a part of Dickens’s works. The only edition available to the collector is the little 321110. cloth covered volume published by J . R. Osgood & Co. in 1877, in the same style as “Is She His Wife,” described above, on the title page of which appears Dickens’s name as the author. Mrs. Gamp W 6th the Strolling Players. The first edition ever published separately in book form of this unfinished sketch was printed in New York in 1899 for Mr. Lowell P. Palmer, from the original manu- script owned by him. Only eighty—five copies were printed by The Gillis Press on deckle edged paper, With illustrations consisting of a portrait of Dickens, a specially designed title page, and one full page illustration, the last two being specially drawn for the work by Pailthorpe. CHRISTMAS BOOKS AND STORIES The “Christmas Books” and “Christmas Stories” from Household Words and All the Year Round were reprinted by many American publishers in many forms, and the writer is not able to identify any par- ticular one of the many issues he has seen as the first edition issued in this country, but the ones de- scribed below are mentioned only because they pos— sess some interesting features, such as special illus- trations, or special conditions under which they were printed. 36 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS The Chimes. Lea & Blanchard, Philadelphia, in 1845 published an edition which is almost an exact copy of the original English edition. It was the same size, the covers being pink cloth instead of red, but having the same gilt cover design on sides and back. The original frontispiece and title page were repro- duced by lithography. All the illustrations were re- produced, but many of the full page ones were‘varied somewhat from those in the original edition. That on page one has the lower corner, which was occupied by text in the original, filled with a small illustration of Toby Veek going up the steps in front of the church (1001'. The illustration on page 34 0f the original has the space taken up by the text, filled up by extending the pavement. The one on page 55 has the lower cor- ner filled up by the extension of the floor and the addition of an arm chair Which is not on the original. The illustration on page 88 0f the original With let- ter press on the lower corner has the latter replaced by making the church door a double one, the second door being exactly like the original. The part occu- pied by letter press on page 124 of the original is taken up by extending the wall to the right of the door and adding a window not in the original. The upper corner of the illustration on page 174 of the original is filled up by extending the foliage to take the place of the text. The work of the illustrations is very well done but it is doubtful if the changes have improved them any. The edition is very scarce, the writer never having seen or heard of any other copy than his own. 37 l t... A -¢~‘-?‘ CHARLES DICKENS Harper & Brothers, New York, also published in 1845 an edition Which was an 8vo. pamphlet of thirty- one pages, printed in double columns and without illustrations. A Christmas Carol. A very pretty edition of the “Carol” was published in 1844 by Carey & Hart, of Philadelphia. It is almost an exact reproduction of the original, except that the covers are black instead of brown cloth. The title on the back is a facsimile of the original, and the title page is also printed in red and blue. The beautiful colored pictures by Leech in the original have been faithfully reproduced by lithography, and the entire book compares favor- ably with the original edition. Messrs. Fields, Osgood & 00., of Boston, in 1869 published a very pretty edition, illustrated by twenty- five illustrations from drawings specially made for it by Sol Eytinge and engraved by Anthony. It is a square 121110. bound in cloth, with gilt edge. There was also an edition published in Boston by J oseph Knight 00. (n. d.) with fifteen full page photo- engraved illustrations by I. M. Gaugengigl and T. V. Chominsk. It is a square 8vo. bound in green cloth, With gilt design on the front cover. Mrs. Lirr’iper’s Lodgings. A unique edition of this Christmas story was published during the Civil War, Which bears the following imprint: “Mobile, Ala. I printed at the office of the Advertiser and Reg- ister ] 1864.” It is an octavo pamphlet 0f fifty-nine pages, printed on a very poor quality of paper. While 38 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS the war was in progress white printing paper was a very scarce article with Southern publishers, who were at times compelled to print their newspapers on such poor substitutes as wall paper. If Dickens could have seen this little pamphlet, it would seem as though he would have appreciated the fact, even though it was an unauthorized edition, that notwithstanding the strenuous times the South was passing through, his writings were so popular that there were publishers who would print and people who would read them. The Confessions of an Attorney. This is the title of a book by an anonymous author under the nom de plume of “Gustavus Sharp, Esq., of the late firm of Flint & Sharp, to which are added several Papers on English Law and Lawyers by Charles Dickens.” It is a 121110. cloth bound volume published by Cornish, Lamport & 00., New York, in 1852. Almost one-half the book is composed of papers under the general title “Abuses of English Law by Charles Dickens, from Household Words.” The titles of the papers themselves are as follows: 1. The Martyrs of Chancery. 2. Law at a Low Price. 3. The Law. 4. The Duties of Witnesses and Jurymen. 5 Bank Note Forgeries (2 chapters). The writer submitted his copy of the book to Mr. B. W. Matz, of the firm of Chapman & Hall, who was the editor of the “National” edition of Dickens’s works, and Mr. Matz has kindly given the names of the authors of the various articles, as shown by the ‘ 39 i A_ryr'f’v l e‘aufi-aV -7—rvv "mu 4‘ ,t .- *‘w .u “-7.5 V} .g, : f CHARLES DICKENS office book of “Household Words,” Which also enabled him to identify many hitherto unknown articles by Dickens, which are new first published in the “Na— tional” edition. The last chapter of number five was the only one by Dickens. The first article was written by A. Cole and pub- lished Dec. 7, 1850. Number two was the joint author- ship of W. T. Haley and W. H. Wills, and was pub- lished May 18, 1850. Number three was published October 6, 1850, and was written by Charles Knight. The author of number four was D. M. Hill, and it was published October 26, 1850. The first chapter of the last article was by W. H. Wills, and the second by Chas. Dickens, the date of publication was Sep— tember 21, 1850. ANTHOLOGICAL Dickens’s Little Folks. About 1845 there ap- peared a series of pretty little 12mo. volumes bound in cloth, issued by Redfield, New York, entitled “Dick— ens’s Little Folks,” taken from the original and re- vised in a manner suitable for children by an anony- mous author who said, “We have brought down these famous stories from the library to the nursery, the parlor table to the child’s hands.” Each volume con- tained a frontispiece by F. O. C. Darley. The series as first published consisted of the following: V01. 1, Little Nell. Vol. 2, Oliver and the J ew Fagin. V01. 3, Little Paul. 40 Number! or Plates to Complete Sets may be had 0! the Publisher. W A r Wm With two Engravings. THE PERSONAL HISTORY AND EXPERIENCE MVIB EflPPERFIELB BY CHARLES DICKENS. WW WM TEE ILLUSTRATIONS ENGRAVED 0N WOOD BY J'. W. ORR. T30! DESIGNS BY 8. ‘2. BROWNBa NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM, 155 BROADWAY THE ILLUSTRATIONS FOR THIS N0. WILL BE GIVEN WITH THE NEXT. [See page 29] . E; ., :1..; .n. .. «1.33.1.1: .x ,2}.-. 1:51, _, .5 .. .. (Wu... . ., ix i... .. . . . . _ ahrfumiwfi. .. , lgfiluf . 1. .. , . , P; . r? . Ly . MW. i... \ \.. intuithL . .. . f... (....>\....;... 53...--. \ EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS Vol. 4, Florence Dombey. V01. 5, Smike. V01. 6, The Child Wife. V01. 7, The Two Daughters. There was later published the following volumes: “Dolly Varden,” “Tiny Tim,” “Dot,” “Dame Dur— den,” and “Fairy Cricket.” They were published later in four volumes, by John B. Alden, New York, each volume containing three of the stories. The original editions of these little books are quite scarce and are rarely met With in the auction sales or in dealers’s catalogues. Child Pictures from Dickens. Ticknor & Fields, of Boston, in 1868, published a selection of stories from Dickens’s works bearing the title “Child Pie— tures from Dickens,” containing “Little Nell,” “The Marchines,” “Paul & Florence,” “The Fat Boy,” “Tiny Tim,” “Smike,” and “Oliver Twist.” It was at 121110. volume bound in blue cloth and illustrated With eight of Sol Eytinge’s pictures from the “Dia— mond Edition.” The preface is as follows: These Chapters, as being especially associated With children, have been selected from my various books, for separate publication under the title applied to this volume. Although they necessarily lose inter- est and purpose When detached from their context and removed from their niches in the works of fiction to Which they respectively belong, this compilation is made for American children With my full and free consent. CHARLES DICKENS. Boston, November, 1867. 41 w «71124, m. «wk 2 V‘Wt- n2». 2 ,. CHARLES DICKENS Schools and Schoolmasters from Dickens. This work was published by A. S. Barnes & 00., New York, 1871. It was edited by T. C. Chapman, M. A., and contained “Dotheboy’s Hall,” the “School at Dr. Blimber’s,” the “School at Salem House,” and the “School at Dr. Strong’s.” It was 121110. in size, cloth bound, and contained three illustrations reproduced from the Phiz drawings. Dialogues from Dickens. Lea & Shepard, 0f Bos- ton, in 1870, published a series of forty-five dialogues adapted from Dickens’s works, bearing the title “Dia- logues from Dickens for School and Home Amuse- ment.” They were arranged by W. Eliot Fette, A. M. The book was 121110., bound in green cloth, with illus- trations by S01 Eytinge. In 1871 there was a second series published under the title “Dialogues from Dickens, second Series, Dialogues and Dramas,” also illustrated by Sol Ey’cinge. A Child’s Dream of a Star. This beautiful little story of Dickens was published separately by Fields, Osgood & 00., Boston, 1871, with eleven illustrations by Hammitt Billings engraved on wood by W. J. Linton, square 121110., brown cloth with gilt edges. The Goblins who Stole the Sexton. In 1867 Me- Laughlin Bros, New York, issued a series of illus- trated toy books for children, one of which was Dick- ens’s Christmas story from Pickwick. It was illus- trated by Th. Nast with four full page pictures and twenty-two small ones in the text, all in admirable 42 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS keeping with the spirit of the story. It is quite scarce and has been quoted in English catalogues as high as £2. The Humor and Pathos of Charles Dickens. This is a little 32m0. pamphlet of fifty-six pages, published in New York in 1885 for Geo. C. Rockwood, photo- grapher. It contains brief extracts from most of Dickens’s works and is illustrated with a portrait of Dickens and three wood cuts. Roekwood was the photographer who made the photograph of Dickens in 1868 from which the 1868 portrait in Forster’s Life of Dickens was made, and which is one of the most familiar portraits of the author. In the intro- duction Mr. Rockwood naively couples himself with Dickens as follows: The art which it has been my pride to properly represent in America for the last thirty years, Charles Dickens in another way has made illustrious throughout the English speaking world. While he, with an artist’s touch, has conveyed to paper the charms of Nature, and the characteristics of Human- ity, so that they hang like pictures on the walls of memory, it has been my aim to produce similar beau- ties in a form more tangible, yet equally lovely, true and exact. The little pamphlet is very rare, and but few copies are in existence. The Complete Poems of Charles Dickens. In 1885 there was published by White, Stokes & Allen, New York, a little 12mo. volume of 142 pages, bound in limp white buckram, bearing the title “The Com- 43 .‘ ~.-<~‘w , . _ ‘1" ' ‘h r. t” 111 ‘3“1’1“. CHARLES DICKENS plete Poems of Charles Dickens.” It contained the prologues of “The Light House, ” “The Frozen Deep,” and “The Patrician’s Daughter,” With all the songs from “The Village Coquettes” as published in the first volume, and also the various poems from the second volume of R. H. Shepperd’s “Plays and Poems of Charles Dickens,” published the same year in Lon- don. The preface is a literal transcript of ten pages of the introduction by Mr. Shepperd, and neither on the title page nor any place else in the book is Mr. Shepperd’s name mentioned. Masterpieces of Dickens. This work Which con- sists of one hundred and fifty single page extracts from Dickens’s works, each one illustrated by a repro- duction of an illustration in the original edition, was published by G. W. Dillingham, New York, in 1892. It is a 121110., bound in red cloth, having a frontispiece portrait of the author from a photo taken in 1865. COLLECTED EDITIONS The first uniform collected edition of Dick- ens’s Works to be published in the United States, was that issued by T. B. Peterson & Brothers, of Philadelphia, in 1851, Who purchased the plates from Harper & Brothers, Lea & Blanchard, and others who had published separate editions of some of the works. This firm from time to time published various editions in different styles ranging in price and size from a cheap paper covered one up to royal octave, illustrated With the plates described in many of the foregoing editions. 44 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS In 1860 the firm of W. A. Townsend & 00., of New York, began the publishing of a complete edition in fifty-five volumes, called the “Household Edition” in 12m0. size, bound in green polished cloth, having frontispieces designed principally by F. O. C. Darley. These illustrations were later used in several edi- tions published by Hurd & Houghton, of Boston. The firm of Ticknor & Fields, of Boston, in 1867, published, by special arrangement with the author, the Diamond Edition in fourteen volumes illustrated by Sol Eytinge. The edition has on the back of the title page, the following: Grads Hill Place, Higham by Rochester, Kent. Second April 1867 By a special arrangement made with me and my English publishers (Partners with me in the copy- right of my books), Messrs. Tieknor & Fields of Bos- ton, have become the only authorized representatives in America, of the Whole series of my books. CHARLES DICKENS This letter in connection with another dated April 16, 1867, aroused the ire of some of the American publishers who had already paid Dickens for advance sheets of some of his publications, and there appeared in the “Publishers Circular,” of Philadelphia, a com- munication from T, B. Peterson & Bree, the Phila- delphia. publishers, which was a very severe arraign- ment of Dickens. The article included letters from Harper & Bros., and their London agent, Sampson Low, showing amounts paid to Dickens, and also a long letter from Mr. Henry C. Lea, from which quota- 45 ‘ .l.’ I‘ 7n 3!, g V" . ‘sé ‘ *"h ab“ A V CHARLES DICKENS tions have already been given. This article ShOWS that the amounts which Dickens had already received from various American publishers amounted to a total of about $25,000.00. The article entitled “The Dickens Controversy” is printed in full in some of the edi- tions of “MeKenzie’s Life of Charles Dickens,” pub- lished in 1870 by T. B. Peterson & Bros. In the volume “Uncommercial Traveller and Ad< ditional Christmas Stories” of this edition, there ap- pears the following note by Dickens: In this volume are brought together various short stories of my writing, which have not yet been col- lected in England. Most of them are reprinted from “Christmas Numbers” of Household Words and All the Year Round, and represent the portions of these numbers written by myself as my contributions to- wards the execution of my own general designs. They were originally so constructed that they might express and explain themselves when published alone. Boston, November, 1867. CHARLES DICKENS This note shows that this was the first collected edition of these additional Christmas stories. In 1870 Harper & Brothers, of New York, began publishing a reprint of the English “Household Edi- tion,” but did not use all the illustrations of the Eng- lish edition, several of the volumes being illustrated by American artists, the volumes containing these illus- trations being as follows: “Pickwick Papers,” “Pictures from Italy and American Notes” by Th. Nast; “Uncommercial Trav- eller,” “Hard Times” and “Nicholas Niekleby,” by C. S. Rinehart; “Dombey & Son,” by W. L. Shep- 46 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS pard; “Christmas Stories,” by E. A. Abbey; “ Sketch— es,” by A. B. Frost,” and “Old Curiosity Shop,” by Thomas Worth. Since 1870 the number of editions of Dickens’s collected writings published by American publishers has been so numerous that it is not necessary to men- tion them here, as they do not come under the category of either first or early editions. PLAGIARISTIC, PARODIES, ETC. There were several parodies of some of Dickens’s works published in this country and a brief descrip- tion of some of them is here given, not that they possess any great literary merit, but simply because they may be of interest to the collector of Dickensiana. Pickwick Abroad. In 1838 E. L. Carey and A. Hart began publishing in monthly parts “Pickwick Abroad or the Tour in France, a series of papers com- piled from the Private Correspondence of Samuel Pickwick, Esq.” Whether the entire work was ever completed or not the writer does not know as he has never seen any of the parts except N0. 1 Which is in his collection. It is 12mo. in size with brown paper cover. It contains the first three chapters, title page and two of the Crowquill plates of the original edition. A complete edition was published by T. B. Peter- son & Bros, Philadelphia, (no date). It is an 8V0., bound in brown cloth, printed in double columns, and has five of the original illustrations, rather poorly en- graved on wood, Which the title page mistakenly says are by George Cruikshank. 47 i: 40. fiat: ‘ 1‘1" . a ,4 3.3,...pwx1...” if . l i“ r CHARLES DICKENS Change for the American Notes. This work was published by Harper & Brothers, New York, 1842, in an octave pamphlet with brown paper covers, price “one shilling” (24 cents). It was printed in exactly the same style as their edition of “American Notes.” English Notes for Very General Circulation by Charles Dickens. This was issued as a supplement to the “Yankee Nation, ” a Boston paper printed at “ The Daily Mail Office 1842.” It was small quarto in size having sixteen pages with three columns to a page. It was very coarsely written, in fact, it was almost indecent in its rancour and possesses absolutely no literary merit, being interesting only for its rarity as a scarce item of Dickensiana. My Own Home and Fireside, by Syr. The sub- title is “Illustrative of the Speculations of Martin Chuzzlewit & Co. among the Wenom 0f the Walley of Eden,” which will explain the purpose for which it was written. It was a 12mo. bound in black cloth, and was published by J ohn W. Moore, Philadelphia, 1846. An Epistle to Boz by Zedekia Comitatus, M. P. E. C. It is a thin 12mo. pamphlet of twelve pages, and the imprint is “Skaggaddahunk; Scantelwood, Timberlake & Co. Printers t0 the North River Socie- ty, 1867.” It was a most scurrilous attack on Charles Dickens in alleged verse, as will be seen by the first few lines: 48 1.“...N.“-.....~m»— ~~- EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS All Hail, Charles Dickens dip your pen < In scandal and come back again ' To paint our manners, and surprise The World with fudge and frothy lies: And, whether you write, or sing, or read, In toadying “Tendom” you ’11 succeed: For, these you ’11 find, Who like the abuse Of scribbles for domestic use; And a soft cuffing now and then From foreign fags Who hold a pen, Like your’s that ne’er was known to stickle At any falsehood, small or mickle. The little pamphlet is exceedingly scarce a‘s prob- ably a very small edition was printed. It is not men— tioned in Kitton’s “Dickensiana.” Some Notes of America to be Rewritten. This little work by an anonymous writer was published in Philadelphia by Sherman & 00., 1868. It is a 12m0. pamphlet with brown paper covers twenty pages in length. No Thoroughfare by 0-3 D-S, Belamy Brownjolm and Dunby. An 8V0. pamphlet 15 pages published by A. K. Loring, Boston, 1868, and is a parody on “No Thoroughfare” by Dickens and Wilkie Collins. It is intended to be very humorous as this quotation from the preface of the second edition will show: Not less than ten or more than a hundred and ninety thousand copies of the first edition were cir— culated in a single day, and the author is not a green- back the heavier for it. Dolby and Father by Buz. A thin 121110. bound 49 §Ll..,, CHARLES DICKENS in browu cloth published by P. Wynkook & Son, New York, 1868. It is principally a bitter attack on Dick- ens personally, written on the occasion of his second voyage to America, and partly a parody on “Dombey & Son.” The Cloven Foot. An adaptation of the English novel “The Mystery of Edwin Drood,” to American scenes, characters, customs and nomenclature, by 01'- pheus G. Kerr, published by Carleton, New York, 1870, 12mo, cloth. The Haunted Man. In “Condensed Novels and Other Papers” by F. Bret Harte, published by Carle- ton, New York, 1870, there is a parody on “The Haunted Man,” Part 1, “The First Phantom,” Part II, “The Second Phantom.” The Mystery of Edwin Drood Complete. There was an edition published in Brattleboro, Vermont, in 1873, Which contains a “Second Part” purporting to be “By the spirit-pen of Charles Dickens, through a medium, embracing also that part of the work which was published prior to the termination of the au- thor’s earth-life.” It contains a four-page “Medium’s Preface,” in which the medium says: I am happy to announce that the first chapter of the next work, “The Life and Adventures of Bockley \Vickleheap,” is finished; and opening with all the peculiar characteristics of its author, bids fair to equal anything from his pen on earth. This new work evidently never got beyond the first chapter. If it did it has never appeared in print. 50 EARLY AMERICAN EDITIONS The book is an octave, cloth bound, pages 218 to 488 include the part written by the “Spiritpen.” An Omitted Pickwick Paper. This is supposed to be chapter CCXIV “Showing Mr. Weller’s views relating to Matrimony, With a slight Touch at Widow- hood, omitted from Pickwick and restored by Poz.” It first appeared in “The Token” of 1841, and an edition of twenty—eighm copies was printed at the Bewick Press, Brooklyn, N. Y. I1: is 121110. in size, printed by hand on hand made Ruisdael paper in 1903, and is a beautiful piece of work. 51 “" "an _ _ M ?n: ‘ f 1 ix. : «Ema». «S: