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 publish his first poems (1817). The book did not succeed, and Keats, attributing the failure to Ollier's inactivity, quarrelled with him, and published his subsequent books with Taylor and Hessey. Shelley was more constant, although he, too, with equal unreasonableness, complained of Ollier for insisting on the alterations which converted ‘Laon and Cythna’ into ‘The Revolt of Islam,’ and without which the sale would soon have been stopped by a prosecution. All the subsequent works of Shelley published in his lifetime, except ‘Swellfoot the Tyrant,’ were nevertheless brought out by Ollier, to whom the unsold copies of ‘Alastor,’ published in 1815 by Baldwin and Cradock, were also transferred. ‘Julian and Maddalo’ was also advertised for publication by Ollier, but did not appear until printed by John Hunt, along with the posthumous poems, in 1824. Shelley's letters to Ollier are published in the ‘Shelley Memorials,’ and are very valuable for the literary history of his works. The most important of Ollier's other publications were the collected works of Charles Lamb and several of Barry Cornwall's early volumes. In 1819 he published ‘The Literary Pocket Book,’ in which Shelley's poem of ‘Marianne's Dream’ was first printed; and in 1820 he brought out the first part of ‘Ollier's Literary Miscellany,’ not continued. Besides a remarkable article on the German drama by Archdeacon Hare, this publication contained Peacock's paradox, ‘The Four Ages of Poetry,’ memorable for having provoked Shelley's ‘Defence of Poetry.’ Shelley gave his essay to Ollier for the second part of the ‘Miscellany,’ but this never appeared; and when Ollier's unsuccessful business was shortly afterwards wound up, the ‘Defence’ came into the possession of John Hunt, who prepared it for publication in ‘The Liberal,’ but that periodical also expired before it could be published. Ollier became, and long continued, a literary adviser to Bentley, and would seem, from a passage in one of Leigh Hunt's letters to him, to have contributed to the ‘Naval and Military Gazette,’ as well as to ‘Ainsworth's Magazine.’ His independent publications were: Several letters from Leigh Hunt, published in the latter's correspondence, cast an agreeable light upon Ollier's latter years, showing that his literary tastes and sympathies remained unimpaired. He died at Old Brompton on 5 June 1859, while the letters which he had contributed to the ‘Shelley Memorials’ were passing through the press. His son Edmund is separately noticed.
 * 1) ‘Altham and his Wife: a domestic Tale,’ 1818. Of this Shelley wrote: ‘It is a natural story, most unaffectedly told in a strain of very pure and powerful English.’
 * 2) ‘Inesilla; or the Tempter: a Romance, with other Tales,’ 1824; also very well written. This had been announced for publication several years before, but the composition was impeded by the author's grief for the loss of a daughter.
 * 3) ‘Ferrers,’ 1842, a romance on the execution of Earl Ferrers in 1760, somewhat in the style of Harrison Ainsworth, but much inferior.
 * 4) ‘Fallacy of Ghosts, Dreams, and Omens, with Stories of Witchcraft, Life-in-Death, and Monomania,’ 1848; reprinted from ‘Ainsworth's Magazine,’ and published by the author himself.



OLLIER, EDMUND (1827–1886), author, son of [q. v.], was born in 1827, and privately educated. He ‘beheld Charles Lamb with infantile eyes, and sat in poor Mary Lamb's lap.’ As a boy he used to listen to Leigh Hunt's and B. R. Haydon's stories. He adopted the profession of literature, and, after some years of miscellaneous work, became connected with the ‘Daily News,’ ‘Athenæum,’ ‘Household Words,’ and ‘All the Year Round.’ In 1867 he republished verses which had originally appeared in the periodicals under the title of ‘Poems from the Greek Mythology, and Miscellaneous Poems.’ In the same year he contributed an edition of the first series of the ‘Essays of Elia,’ with a memoir of the author, to ‘Hotten's Worldwide Library;’ and in 1869 published an edition of Leigh Hunt's ‘Tale for the Chimney Corner.’ Becoming connected with the publishing firm of Cassell, Petter, & Galpin, Ollier wrote a memoir of Doré, &c., for the ‘Doré Gallery,’ 1870; ‘Cassell's Illustrated History of the War between France and Germany,’ 2 vols. 1871–2; ‘Our British Portrait-Painters from Sir Peter Lely to J. Sant,’ 1874; ‘Cassell's Illustrated History of the United States,’ 3 vols. 1874–7; ‘Cassell's Illustrated History of the Russo-Turkish War,’ 2 vols. 1877–1879; ‘A Popular History of Sacred Art,’ 1882; ‘Cassell's Illustrated Universal History,’ 4 vols. 1882–5. At the time of his death he was engaged upon the ‘Life and Times of Queen Victoria.’ The first eleven chapters were by Ollier, and the remainder of the work by Robert Wilson.

Ollier died at his house in Oakley Street, Chelsea, on 19 April 1886. He married a Miss Gattie, who survived him, but left no issue. He was a man of wide biographical