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Works by James Hogg at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks) James Hogg (1822) The Three Perils of Man; or, War, Women, and Witchcraft Google eBook; James Hogg (1823) The Three Perils of Woman: or, Love, Leasing, and Jealousy; The James Hogg Society Archived 29 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine by the Department of English Studies, University of ...
Pages in category "Works by James Hogg" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B. The Brownie of ...
Hogg was apparently prompted to suggest a relaunch in the summer of 1828 after an enthusiastic expression of appreciation of the work by Mrs Mary Anne Hughes, and left-over sheets of the first edition were re-issued in Edinburgh as The Suicide's Grave; or, Memoirs and Confessions of a Sinner. Edited by J. Hogg. [8]
A critical edition of The Pilgrims of the Sun is included in James Hogg, Midsummer Night Dreams and Related Poems, edited by the late Jill Rubenstein and completed by Gillian Hughes with Meiko O'Halloran, which appeared in 2008 as Volume 24 in the Stirling/South Carolina Research Edition of The Complete Works of James Hogg published by ...
The Spy was a periodical directed at the Edinburgh market, edited by James Hogg, with himself as principal contributor, which appeared from 1 September 1810 to 24 August 1811. It combined features of two types of periodical established in the 18th century, the essay periodical and the miscellany.
By James Hogg, Author of "The Queen's Wake," &c. &c. In two volumes was published by William Blackwood, Edinburgh, and T[homas] Cadell, London in 1829. A critical edition edited by Douglas Mack appeared in 1995 as the first volume in The Stirling/South Carolina Research Edition of The Collected Works of James Hogg, published by Edinburgh ...
By James Hogg, The Ettrick Shepherd was first published in Edinburgh in February 1807 by Archibald Constable and Co. and in London by John Murray. [1] Hogg had had seven poems printed privately in 1801 as Scottish Pastorals, [2] and several of his poems had been published separately in The Scots Magazine and The Edinburgh Magazine. [3]
Winter Evening Tales is a collection by James Hogg of four novellas, a number of short stories (some of them semi-fictional) and sketches, and three poems, published in two volumes in 1820. Eleven of the items are reprinted, with varying degrees of revision, from Hogg's periodical The Spy (1810‒11).