Page:English Caricaturists and Graphic Humourists of the nineteenth century.djvu/533

 "London Magazine, Charivari, and Courrier des Dames" (with Leech and "Gillray, Junr."). 1840.

"Master Humphrey's Clock," "Old Curiosity Shop," and "Barnaby Rudge," designs on wood, with Cattermole. 3 vols. 1840-41.

"Sir Thomas Dick Lauder's Legendary Tales of the Highlands." 3 vols. 1841.

Charles Lever's "Charles O'Malley, the Irish Dragoon," 2 vols. Dublin, 1841.

"Peter Priggins, the College Scout," 3 vols. 1841 (made its first appearance without illustrations in the New Monthly Magazine).

"The Pic-nic Papers," by Various Hands, edited by Charles Dickens, plates by Cruikshank, "Phiz," and Hamerton. 3 vols. 1841.

W. H. Maxwell's "Rambling Recollections of a Soldier of Fortune," woodcuts by "Phiz" and others. Dublin, 1842.

Lever's "Jack Hinton." Dublin, 1842-43.

Carleton's "Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry" (both series), steel plates by "Phiz," Sir J. Gilbert, Franklin, etc., and woodcuts. 2 vols. Dublin, 1843-44.

Charles Dickens's "Martin Chuzzlewit," forty plates. 1844.

Charles Lever's "Tom Burke of Ours." Dublin, 1844.

"Ainsworth's Magazine," from and after 1844.

"The Illuminated Magazine" [with Meadows, Sargent, Gilbert, Harvey, etc.]. 1845.

Charles Lever's "St. Patrick's Eve," woodcuts and fine steel etchings. 1845.

"Tales of the Trains; some Chapters of Railroad Romance," by Tilbury Tramp (i.e. Charles Lever). Orr, 1845.

"Nuts and Nutcrackers." 1845.

Charles Lever's "The O'Donoghue." Dublin, 1845.

"Fiddle-Faddle's Sentimental Tour in Search of the Amusing, Picturesque, and Agreeable." 1845.

"The Union Magazine," vol. i. Three plates. 1846.

"Fanny the Little Milliner; or, the Rich and the Poor" [with Onwhyn]. 1846.

"The Commissioner; or, De Lunatico Inquirendo," twenty-eight steel plates. Dublin, 1846.

"A Medical, Moral, and Christian Dissertion of Teetotalism," by Democritus. 1846.