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74

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II

Disallowed Attributions

The following items have been attributed to Thackeray (as author or collaborator), usually on internal evidence; the name of the bibliographer who has made the attribution follows each entry, with a question mark indicating some doubt on his part. Where there is no discussion, it is because the evidence to support the attribution is too scanty for consideration.

  • 1831 February (iii, 95-113) The Novels of the Season. Gulliver?, Van Duzer?
  • August (iv, 8-25) Novels of the Season. Batch the Second. Gulliver?, Van Duzer?
  • October (iv, 308-310) Scenes in the Law Courts. Gulliver?
  • 1832 August (vi, 67-88) Elizabeth Brownrigge: A Tale. Gulliver?, Benjamin?, Elwin?, Shepherd, Anderson, Van Duzer [See discussion above]
  • September (vi, 127-148) Elizabeth Brownrigge: A Tale. (Concl.)
  • December (vi, 653-672) The Annuals. Van Duzer?, Elwin?
  • 1833 January (vii, 65-68) The Contested Election. Thrall?
  • February (vii, 240-250) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • March (vii, 367-376) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • April (vii, 498-506) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • May (vii, 620-632) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • June (vii, 658-667) The Poets of the Day. Thrall?
  • July (viii, 36-44) New Edition of Rejected Addresses. (review) Thrall?
  • July (viii, 118-126) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • September (viii, 360-375) The Poets of the Day. Thrall?
  • September (viii, 376-384) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • October (viii, 499-510) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • November (viii, 536-556) Boaden's Memoirs of Mrs. Inchbald. (review) Thrall?
  • November (viii, 613-621) Lady Morgan's Dramatic Scenes. (review) Thrall?
  • December (viii, 658-670) The Poets of the Day. Thrall?
  • 1834 January (ix, 121-122) A Paraphrase of Anacreon, Benjamin?, Gulliver?
  • February (ix, 224-240) Allan Cunningham's Fifty Years. (review) Thrall?
  • February (ix, 240-252) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • February (ix, 248-249) Si j'étais petit oiseau. Vous veillerez. (poems) Thrall?
  • March (ix, 279-287) Hints for a History of Highwaymen. (review) Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver?, Thrall. [Thrall's argument, pp. 254-256, deserves mention. In addition to

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    much internal evidence, she notes that a long quotation from this review appears in a review of Jack Sheppard (Fraser's, February, 1840), which is probably (Thrall feels surely) by Thackeray. But she is speaking from her erroneous supposition that Thackeray was an active Fraserian in 1834 and a too great readiness to accept an editorial "we" as a personal one. Thackeray gave up The National Standard ("by wh I shall have had the pleasure of losing £200 — It has increased in sale about 20 in the last 2 months —")[23] in February 1834 and "seems to have devoted most of his time to the study of painting."[24] His letters before February 1834 are filled with expressions of annoyance at the time-consuming nature of his work on the Standard, e.g., "The only fault I find with the N. Standard, dear Mother is that the end of the day, I am but ill disposed after writing & reading so much to read another syllable or to write another line."[25] It is, then, possible that Thackeray wrote this review, but it remains an unlikely possibility.]
  • April (ix, 456-487) A Dozen of Novels. Shepherd?, Benjamin?, Van Duzer?, Gulliver?, Elwin?, Thrall? [Thrall, p. 256, argues from internal evidence that part, at least, of this article was by Maginn.]
  • June (ix, 724-738) High-ways and Low-ways; or, Ainsworth's Dictionary, with Notes by Turpin. Johnson?, Benjamin?, Van Duzer?, Gulliver?, Elwin? [Thrall, p. 247, reprints part of a letter from Ainsworth, attributing this review to Churchill.[26]]
  • September (x, 338-364) The Poets of the Day. Thrall?
  • September (x, 365-378) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • October (x, 448-462) Life and Correspondence of Mrs. Hannah More. (review) Thrall?
  • 1835 January (xi, 59-65) France, Social, Literary, Political. (review) Thrall?
  • April (xi, 465-490) A Quintette of Novels. (review) Thrall?
  • May (xi, 586-609) A Decade of Novels and Nouvellettes. (review) Thrall?, Gulliver?, Van Duzer?
  • June (xi, 708-728) The Poets of the Day. Thrall?
  • October (xii, 409-415) Washington Irving's Miscellanies. (review) Thrall?
  • 1836 February (xiii, 209-223) Paris and the Parisians in 1835. (review) Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver?, Thrall?
  • April (xiii, 488-493) Another Caw from the Rookwood.—Turpin Out Again. Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver? [Thrall, pp. 247-248, assigns this review to Maginn. It was printed in his Miscellaneous Writings (N. Y., 1855-57) apparently on the authority of James Fraser's publishing-house list.]
  • June (xiii, 707-715) A Letter from Cambridge to Oliver Yorke,

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    about the Art of Plucking, &c. [Signed "T. G."] Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver?
  • July (xiv, 117-122) A Second Letter from Cambridge to Oliver Yorke, Esq. Pluck Examination Questions. [Signed "T. G."] Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver?
  • August (xiv, 180-182) A Postscript to the Second Letter from Cambridge. Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver? [Signed "T. G." Thrall, pp. 250-252, using internal evidence, assigns these three Cambridge articles to Robert Avis Willmott. "T. G." certainly does have opinions quite different from Thackeray's.]
  • September (xiv, 298-314) The Jew of York. Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver? [The only reason this has been assigned to Thackeray is that its title suggests the author of Rebecca and Rowena. The two pieces are quite unlike each other.]
  • December (xiv, 710-719) Mr. Grant's Great Metropolis. (review) Johnson?, Thrall? [This review was printed in Maginn's Miscellaneous Writings, (N. Y., 1855-57), v. But Thrall, neglecting her convincing argument for the authority of this edition (at least for longer articles) on p. 248, feels that Thackeray may have had a hand in it, and lists it on her appended bibliography as "probably" by both.]
  • 1837 January (xv, 33-48) A Scourging Soliloquy about the Annuals. Gulliver? [This is by the author of the above Cambridge articles of June, July, and August 1836 ("T. G."). Thrall assigns it to Willmott on internal evidence.]
  • April (xv, 498-514) One or Two Words on One or Two Books. Johnson?, Benjamin?, Gulliver? [Thrall, pp. 252-253, using internal evidence, assigns this review to John A. Heraud.]
  • April (xv, 528-553) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • May (xv, 654-679) The Fraser Papers. Thrall?
  • 1838 March (xvii, 338) Sir William Molesworth. [This has been attributed to Thackeray only by Mrs. M. G. Fawcett, Life of Sir William Molesworth (N. Y., 1901), pp. 16-17. Almost all of the Gallery of Illustious Literary Characters — eighty-one brief notices accompanying Maclise drawings — appear to have been written by Maginn (see Thrall, pp. 258-259).]
  • April (xvii, 468-470) The Reverend Sydney Smith. Benjamin? [This attribution is improbable for reasons given above, March 1838].
  • October (xviii, 471-481) Passages from the Diary of the late Dolly Duster; with Elucidations, Notes, etc., By various Eds. Johnson, Benjamin, Van Duzer, Gulliver, Thrall, Elwin. (Reprinted occasionally in collected editions of Thackeray's works.) [This puzzling work has been assigned to Thackeray on the strength of a letter signed "Fitzroy Yellowplush" which appears at the opening of the second part (p. 597) to deny his authorship. The "Passages" is in fact a parody of Lady Charlotte Campbell Bury's Diary Illustrative of the Times of George the Fourth (1838)

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    — called "Lady Carry-the-Candle's Diary" by the parodist (p. 472) and a succès de scandale at the time — and the confusing editorial apparatus of the original is consistently burlesqued. "Yellowplush" had reviewed Lady Bury's gossipy Diary brilliantly in March, 1838 for Fraser's ("Skimmings from the Dairy of George IV"), and it seems improbable that Thackeray would descend to this feeble writing on the same subject a few months later. Although the letter on p. 597 is facetious, and is roughly parallel to the deliberately confusing editorial tricks about authorship, there is every reason to believe that Thackeray intended the letter to mean what it seems to mean — that he did not write this parody and did not want it attributed to him. See my "Thackeray, Dolly Duster, and Lady Charlotte Campbell Bury," RES, n.s., xvi (Feb., 1965), 35-43.]
  • November (xviii, 597-611) Passages from the Diary of the late Dolly Duster; with Elucidation, Notes, etc., By various Eds. (Concl.)
  • 1839 June (xix, 710-716) Paris Pastimes for the Month of May. Johnson, Benjamin, Van Duzer, Gulliver, Thrall. [See below, September, 1839.]
  • August (xx, 181-188) A Handful of Trash. Van Duzer?
  • August (xx, 212-223) The Paris Rebels of the Twelfth of May. Johnson, Benjamin, Gulliver, Thrall. [See below, September, 1839]
  • September (xx, 348-359) The Fêtes of July. Johnson, Benjamin, Van Duzer, Gulliver, Thrall, Elwin. [This article is signed "You Know Who", as are two others of this year: "Paris Pastimes" of June, and "Paris Rebels" of August (listed above). All three have been assigned to Thackeray as the result of an erroneous identification of the Fraser's "The Fêtes of July" with another article of precisely the same title written by Thackeray for the Corsair (U. S. A.), 5 October 1839 and reprinted by him in his Paris Sketch Book (1840). (See, e.g., Benjamin, II, 170). Despite the near unanimity of previous bibliographers, the articles are wholly different, except for title, and so stand as strong evidence against Thackeray's authorship of the three in Fraser's.]
  • 1840 January (xxi, 53-70) Recollections of Germany. Benjamin, Gulliver (listed, but a note adds that "it is not by Thackeray"). [This article is reprinted in part in R. P. Gillies, Memoirs of a Literary Veteran (London, 1851), II, chap. xiii.]
  • August (xxii, 143-149) Epistle to the Literati. (xv, xvi) Van Duzer, Elwin (xv only).
  • 1841 January (xxiii, 101-108) A Batch of Almancks for 1841. Van Duzer?
  • February (xxiii, 169-183) The Tower of London. (review) Van Duzer?, Elwin?
  • 1842 October (xxvi, 466-476) Some of the Picture-Galleries of England. Van Duzer? [This is the second part of an article begun in September (xxvi, 335-347). If Thackeray wrote one half he ought to have written the other. But there is no evidence.]

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  • 1846 January (xxxiii, 85-96) Titmarsh's Tour Through Turkeydom. Benjamin?, Gulliver. [This is a review of Thackeray's Irish Sketch Book. The author shows some familiarity with Thackeray's pseudonyms, in Fraser's and elsewhere, but it seems unlikely that Thackeray himself would be responsible for such effusive and badly-written praise of himself. In addition, a letter to his mother (Letters, II, 229) speaks of the reviews of the book in some detail, without mentioning that he himself (as the attribution supposes) wrote one of them. See also the "Titmarsh" review listed below (Jan., 1847), where Thackeray seems to have asked G. H. Lewes to write about Mrs. Perkins's Ball out of a reluctance to review his own work.]
  • March (xxxiii, 308-316) Milliners' Apprentices. Van Duzer?