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Dinah Craik

Dinah Maria Craik (/krk/; born Dinah Maria Mulock, often credited as Miss Mulock or Mrs. Craik; 20 April 1826 – 12 October 1887) was an English novelist and poet. She is best remembered for her novel, John Halifax, Gentleman, which presents the mid-Victorian ideals of English middle-class life.

Dinah Craik
1887 portrait by Hubert von Herkomer
Born
Dinah Maria Mulock

(1826-04-20)20 April 1826
Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England
Died12 October 1887(1887-10-12) (aged 61)
Shortlands, London, England
Other namesMrs. Craik, Miss Mulock
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • poet
Spouse
George Lillie Craik
(m. 1865; died 1887)
Children1 - Dorothy (adopted daughter)

Life edit

Mulock was born at Stoke-upon-Trent to Dinah and Thomas Mulock and raised in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, where her father was minister of a small independent nonconformist congregation.[1] Her childhood and early youth were affected by his unsettled fortunes, but she gained a good education from various quarters and felt called to be a writer.[2]

She arrived in London about 1846, at much the same time as two friends, Alexander Macmillan and Charles Edward Mudie. Introduced by Camilla Toulmin to Westland Marston, she rapidly made friends in London and found great encouragement for her stories for the young. In 1865, she married George Lillie Craik, a partner with Alexander Macmillan in the publishers Macmillan & Company, and nephew of George Lillie Craik. They adopted a foundling baby girl, Dorothy, in 1869.

At Shortlands, near Bromley, Kent, while preparing for Dorothy's wedding, Craik died of heart failure on 12 October 1887, aged 61. Her last words were said to have been: "Oh, if I could live four weeks longer! but no matter, no matter!" Her final book, An Unknown Country, appeared with Macmillan in 1887, the year of her death. Dorothy married Alexander Pilkington in 1887, but they divorced in 1911 and she later married Captain Richards of Macmine Castle. She and Alexander had a son, John Mulock Pilkington. He married Freda Roskelly and had a son and daughter with her.

Works edit

Mulock's early success began with the novel Cola Monti (1849). In the same year she produced her first three-volume novel, The Ogilvies, to great success. It was followed in 1850 by Olive, then by The Head of the Family in 1851 and Agatha's Husband in 1853, in which the author used her recollections of East Dorset. Mulock published the fairy story Alice Learmont in 1852, and collected numerous short stories from periodicals under the title of Avillion and other Tales in 1853. A similar collection appeared in 1857 under the title Nothing New.[2]

Well established in public favour as an author, Mulock took a cottage at Wildwood, North End, Hampstead and joined an extensive social circle. Her personal attractions were at the time were considerable; people kindly ascribed to her simple cordiality, staunch friendliness and thorough goodness of heart. In 1857 she published the work by which she is mainly remembered, John Halifax, Gentleman, a presentation of the ideals of English middle-class life. Mulock's next important work, A Life for a Life (1859), made more money and was perhaps more widely read than John Halifax at the time. It was followed by Mistress and Maid (1863) and Christian's Mistake (1865), and by didactic works such as A Woman's Thoughts about Women and Sermons out of Church. Another collection, The Unkind Word and Other Stories, included a scathing criticism of Benjamin Heath Malkin for overworking his son Thomas, a child prodigy who died at the age of seven. Craik criticizes Malkin for acceding to Thomas's requests to be educated at an early age, believing it contributed to his death, but also admits that Malkin's other sons did well in life. Later Craik returned to more fanciful tales and achieved success with The Little Lame Prince (1874). In 1881 she published a collection of earlier poems entitled Poems of Thirty Years, New and Old; some, such as Philip my King were addressed to her godson Philip Bourke Marston. "Douglas, Douglas, Tender and True" achieved wide popularity.[2]

 
Blue plaque, North Street, Wareham, Dorset where Mrs. Craik wrote John Halifax Gentleman

Reception edit

Richard Garnett holds that "the genuine passion that filled her early works of fiction had not unnaturally faded out of middle life," to be replaced by didacticism and an increase in self-awareness. Garnett judges Craik's poetry as "a woman's poems, tender, domestic, and sometimes enthusiastic, always genuine song, and the product of real feeling."[3]

Bibliography edit

A comprehensive bibliography appears in Dinah Mulock Craik by Sally Mitchell.[4] This is reproduced more concisely in the Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature.[5] Additional contributions to periodicals:

Tales and sketches edit

  • "The Man in Green". 11 January 1846, in The Mirror Vol. 1, pp. 20–23
  • "Beranger and his Poems". 1 August 1846, in The Mirror Vol. 1, pp. 79–80
  • "The Poets of the People. I. Allan Ramsay". 15 August 1846, in The Mirror Vol. 1, pp. 109–11
  • "The Poets of the People. II. Robert Burns". 19 September 1846, in The Mirror Vol. 1, pp. 189–90
  • "The Emigrant's Wives. A Passage from Real Life". 26 September 1846, in The Mirror Vol. 1, pp. 203–08
  • "The Story of Erminia". May 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 26, pp. 284–86
  • "Elspeth Sutherland (A Tale)". June 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 26, pp. 327–32
  • "Great and Little Heroines". September 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 27, pp. 140–44
  • "A Sketch of Domestic Life. (From the German of Heinrich Zebokke.)" 11, 18 and 25 September 1847, in Sharpe's London Magazine Vol. 4, pp. 315–17, 332–34 and 342–44
  • "The Peace-Maker". February 1848, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 28, pp. 66–71
  • "Poets of the People—Robert Bloomfield". March 1848, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 28, pp. 172–73
  • "A Meditation for the Times". February 1855, in Hogg's Instructor Vol. 4, p. 129
  • "Running Away. A Schoolmaster's Story". December 1868, in Our Young Folks Vol. 4, Boston, pp. 734–43
  • "In the Happy Valley". July 1869, in Our Young Folks Vol. 5, Boston, pp. 444–49
  • "Le Boeuf Gras". December 1869, in Our Young Folks Vol. 5, Boston, pp. 825–31
  • "In Bolton Woods". January 1871, in Our Young Folks Vol. 7, Boston, pp. 42–48

The following all first appeared in periodicals before book form:

  • "Little Lizzie and the Fairies"; "Sunny Hair's Dream"; "The Young Ship-Carver"; "Arndt's Night Underground" — in The Playmate. A Pleasant Companion for Spare Hours, 1847–48.
  • "A Family in Love", as "A Family on the Wing", in Chambers's Journal, 3 May 1856
  • "A Garden Party", in Good Cheer, Christmas 1867
  • "His Little Mother", in The Graphic, 5–19 October 1878
  • "Poor Prin. A True Story", in The Graphic, 11 October 1879
  • "An Island of the Blest", in The Sunday Magazine, 1880
  • "My Sister’s Grapes", in Harper’s Young People, New York, 14 December 1880, and in Life and Work, August 1881
  • "A Ruined Palace", in The Sunday Magazine, 1881
  • "How She Told a Lie", in The Sunday Magazine, 1881
  • "A City at Play" and "The First Sunday at Lent" were incorporated in the book Fair France. Impressions of a Traveller, as Chapters 3 and 4 respectively.

In 1871, Hannah was published in two volumes.

Early poems edit

  • "Song of the Hours". October 1841, in The Dublin University Magazine Vol. 18, pp. 442–443
  • "Verses". 1844, in Friendship's Offering of Sentiment and Mirth, pp. 216–217
  • "A March Song". April 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 20, p 245
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. I. "The Mourner's Hope of Immortality (A Funeral Hymn)". April 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 20, p. 245
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. II. "The Shepherd's Wife". May 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 20, p. 275
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. III. "Carolans War-Cry". June 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 20, p. 335
  • "Forgive One Another." June 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 20, p. 346
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. IV. "A Barcarole". July 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 21, p. 32
  • "Good Seed". 5 July 1845, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 4, p. 16
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. V. "Caoinne Over an Irish Chieftain". August 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 21, p. 76
  • "The Country Sabbath". August 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 21, p. 101
  • Songs for Stray Airs No. VI. "A Fire-Side Song". September 1844, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 21, p. 168
  • "The Six Maidens". January 1845, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 22, pp. 26–27
  • "England's Welcome to American Genius". April 1845, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 21, p. 200
  • "The Garden in the Churchyard". 20 September 1845, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 4, p. 192
  • "The Motherless Children". Addressed to the Infants left by Madame Leontine Genoude. (From the French of De Lamartine.) 18 October 1845, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 4, p. 256
  • "The Poet's Mission". 3 January 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 16
  • "Prayers for all Men". (From "Les Feuilles d'Automne" of Victor Hugo.) 31 January 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 80
  • "Hateful Spring!" (From the "Chansons" of Beranger.) 7 February 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 96
  • "The Maiden and the Rose". (From the French of Chateaubriand.) 7 March 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 160
  • "A Greek Allegory". 28 March 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 208
  • "The Troubadour and his Swallow". (From the French.) 11 April 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 240
  • "A Hymn". (From Lamartine's "Harmonies Poètiques.") 30 May 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 5, p. 352
  • "The Water-Lily". 18 July 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 6, p. 48
  • "A Mother's Resignation". 25 July 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 6, p. 64
  • "The Chrysanthemum". 26 December 1846, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 6, p. 416
  • "Happiness". 30 January 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 7, p. 80
  • "Robert Bruce Crowned by the Countess of Buchan". 13 February 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 7, p. 112
  • "The Cry of the Earth". 22 May 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 7, p. 336
  • "On the Portrait of Lady Rachel Russell". July 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 27, frontispiece
  • "An Answer". July 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 27, p. 22
  • "The Golden Rose". 10 July 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 8, p. 32
  • "Growing Old Together". 21 August 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 8, p. 128
  • "Memory". 30 October 1847, in Chambers's Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol. 8, p. 288
  • "The Tax-Gatherers". (From the French of Béranger.) November 1847, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 27, p. 265
  • "The Dream of the Orphan". 1847, in Orphanhood. Free-will offerings to the Fatherless, pp. 81–82
  • "Dante's Meeting with Casello in Purgatory". (From "Il Purgatorio"—Canto II.) January 1848, in The New Monthly Belle Assemblée Vol. 28, pp. 25–26
  • "The African Slave"; "The Greek Mother"; "The Battle of Langsyde"; and three other unknown poems. December 1848, in The Drawing-Room Table-Book. An Annual for Christmas and the New Year, pp. 13, 34 and 76
  • "Militia Volunteers". March 1855, in Hogg's Instructor Vol. 4, p. 240

References edit

  1. ^ Sally Mitchell, "Craik, Dinah Maria (1826–1887)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, OUP, 2004) Retrieved 12 March 2017, pay-walled.
  2. ^ a b c Garnett 1894.
  3. ^ Dinah Craik, The Unkind Word & Other Stories. London: Hurst and Blackett, 1870.
  4. ^ Mitchell, Sally (1983). Dinah Mulock Craik. Boston: Twayne.
  5. ^ Joanne Shattock (1999). The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature: 1800-1900. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0-521-39100-9.
Attribution

External links edit

  • [1] Digital Edition of the Letters of Dinah Craik.
  • Works by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Dinah Craik at Internet Archive
  • Works by Dinah Craik at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • at "Literary Heritage"
  • Dinah Craik at the Literary Encyclopedia
  • Dinah Mulock Craik by Sally Mitchell, a detailed account of her life and works at The Victorian Web.
  • Works of Craik at the Victorian Women Writers Project, Indiana University
  • at the University of Toronto
  • Did George Eliot say this? – On quotations of Craik commonly misattributed to George Eliot
  • Various stories by Miss Mulock (full text)
  • Free scores by Dinah Craik at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Library of Congress, with 186 library catalogue records
  • Poems by Dinah Maria Craik at English Poetry

dinah, craik, dinah, maria, craik, born, dinah, maria, mulock, often, credited, miss, mulock, craik, april, 1826, october, 1887, english, novelist, poet, best, remembered, novel, john, halifax, gentleman, which, presents, victorian, ideals, english, middle, cl. Dinah Maria Craik k r eɪ k born Dinah Maria Mulock often credited as Miss Mulock or Mrs Craik 20 April 1826 12 October 1887 was an English novelist and poet She is best remembered for her novel John Halifax Gentleman which presents the mid Victorian ideals of English middle class life Dinah Craik1887 portrait by Hubert von HerkomerBornDinah Maria Mulock 1826 04 20 20 April 1826Stoke on Trent Staffordshire EnglandDied12 October 1887 1887 10 12 aged 61 Shortlands London EnglandOther namesMrs Craik Miss MulockOccupationsNovelistpoetSpouseGeorge Lillie Craik m 1865 died 1887 wbr Children1 Dorothy adopted daughter Contents 1 Life 2 Works 3 Reception 4 Bibliography 4 1 Tales and sketches 4 2 Early poems 5 References 6 External linksLife editMulock was born at Stoke upon Trent to Dinah and Thomas Mulock and raised in Newcastle under Lyme Staffordshire where her father was minister of a small independent nonconformist congregation 1 Her childhood and early youth were affected by his unsettled fortunes but she gained a good education from various quarters and felt called to be a writer 2 She arrived in London about 1846 at much the same time as two friends Alexander Macmillan and Charles Edward Mudie Introduced by Camilla Toulmin to Westland Marston she rapidly made friends in London and found great encouragement for her stories for the young In 1865 she married George Lillie Craik a partner with Alexander Macmillan in the publishers Macmillan amp Company and nephew of George Lillie Craik They adopted a foundling baby girl Dorothy in 1869 At Shortlands near Bromley Kent while preparing for Dorothy s wedding Craik died of heart failure on 12 October 1887 aged 61 Her last words were said to have been Oh if I could live four weeks longer but no matter no matter Her final book An Unknown Country appeared with Macmillan in 1887 the year of her death Dorothy married Alexander Pilkington in 1887 but they divorced in 1911 and she later married Captain Richards of Macmine Castle She and Alexander had a son John Mulock Pilkington He married Freda Roskelly and had a son and daughter with her Works editMulock s early success began with the novel Cola Monti 1849 In the same year she produced her first three volume novel The Ogilvies to great success It was followed in 1850 by Olive then by The Head of the Family in 1851 and Agatha s Husband in 1853 in which the author used her recollections of East Dorset Mulock published the fairy story Alice Learmont in 1852 and collected numerous short stories from periodicals under the title of Avillion and other Tales in 1853 A similar collection appeared in 1857 under the title Nothing New 2 Well established in public favour as an author Mulock took a cottage at Wildwood North End Hampstead and joined an extensive social circle Her personal attractions were at the time were considerable people kindly ascribed to her simple cordiality staunch friendliness and thorough goodness of heart In 1857 she published the work by which she is mainly remembered John Halifax Gentleman a presentation of the ideals of English middle class life Mulock s next important work A Life for a Life 1859 made more money and was perhaps more widely read than John Halifax at the time It was followed by Mistress and Maid 1863 and Christian s Mistake 1865 and by didactic works such as A Woman s Thoughts about Women and Sermons out of Church Another collection The Unkind Word and Other Stories included a scathing criticism of Benjamin Heath Malkin for overworking his son Thomas a child prodigy who died at the age of seven Craik criticizes Malkin for acceding to Thomas s requests to be educated at an early age believing it contributed to his death but also admits that Malkin s other sons did well in life Later Craik returned to more fanciful tales and achieved success with The Little Lame Prince 1874 In 1881 she published a collection of earlier poems entitled Poems of Thirty Years New and Old some such as Philip my King were addressed to her godson Philip Bourke Marston Douglas Douglas Tender and True achieved wide popularity 2 nbsp Blue plaque North Street Wareham Dorset where Mrs Craik wrote John Halifax GentlemanReception editRichard Garnett holds that the genuine passion that filled her early works of fiction had not unnaturally faded out of middle life to be replaced by didacticism and an increase in self awareness Garnett judges Craik s poetry as a woman s poems tender domestic and sometimes enthusiastic always genuine song and the product of real feeling 3 Bibliography editA comprehensive bibliography appears in Dinah Mulock Craik by Sally Mitchell 4 This is reproduced more concisely in the Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature 5 Additional contributions to periodicals Tales and sketches edit The Man in Green 11 January 1846 in The Mirror Vol 1 pp 20 23 Beranger and his Poems 1 August 1846 in The Mirror Vol 1 pp 79 80 The Poets of the People I Allan Ramsay 15 August 1846 in The Mirror Vol 1 pp 109 11 The Poets of the People II Robert Burns 19 September 1846 in The Mirror Vol 1 pp 189 90 The Emigrant s Wives A Passage from Real Life 26 September 1846 in The Mirror Vol 1 pp 203 08 The Story of Erminia May 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 26 pp 284 86 Elspeth Sutherland A Tale June 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 26 pp 327 32 Great and Little Heroines September 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 27 pp 140 44 A Sketch of Domestic Life From the German of Heinrich Zebokke 11 18 and 25 September 1847 in Sharpe s London Magazine Vol 4 pp 315 17 332 34 and 342 44 The Peace Maker February 1848 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 28 pp 66 71 Poets of the People Robert Bloomfield March 1848 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 28 pp 172 73 A Meditation for the Times February 1855 in Hogg s Instructor Vol 4 p 129 Running Away A Schoolmaster s Story December 1868 in Our Young Folks Vol 4 Boston pp 734 43 In the Happy Valley July 1869 in Our Young Folks Vol 5 Boston pp 444 49 Le Boeuf Gras December 1869 in Our Young Folks Vol 5 Boston pp 825 31 In Bolton Woods January 1871 in Our Young Folks Vol 7 Boston pp 42 48The following all first appeared in periodicals before book form Little Lizzie and the Fairies Sunny Hair s Dream The Young Ship Carver Arndt s Night Underground in The Playmate A Pleasant Companion for Spare Hours 1847 48 A Family in Love as A Family on the Wing in Chambers s Journal 3 May 1856 A Garden Party in Good Cheer Christmas 1867 His Little Mother in The Graphic 5 19 October 1878 Poor Prin A True Story in The Graphic 11 October 1879 An Island of the Blest in The Sunday Magazine 1880 My Sister s Grapes in Harper s Young People New York 14 December 1880 and in Life and Work August 1881 A Ruined Palace in The Sunday Magazine 1881 How She Told a Lie in The Sunday Magazine 1881 A City at Play and The First Sunday at Lent were incorporated in the book Fair France Impressions of a Traveller as Chapters 3 and 4 respectively In 1871 Hannah was published in two volumes Early poems edit Song of the Hours October 1841 in The Dublin University Magazine Vol 18 pp 442 443 Verses 1844 in Friendship s Offering of Sentiment and Mirth pp 216 217 A March Song April 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 20 p 245 Songs for Stray Airs No I The Mourner s Hope of Immortality A Funeral Hymn April 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 20 p 245 Songs for Stray Airs No II The Shepherd s Wife May 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 20 p 275 Songs for Stray Airs No III Carolans War Cry June 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 20 p 335 Forgive One Another June 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 20 p 346 Songs for Stray Airs No IV A Barcarole July 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 21 p 32 Good Seed 5 July 1845 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 4 p 16 Songs for Stray Airs No V Caoinne Over an Irish Chieftain August 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 21 p 76 The Country Sabbath August 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 21 p 101 Songs for Stray Airs No VI A Fire Side Song September 1844 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 21 p 168 The Six Maidens January 1845 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 22 pp 26 27 England s Welcome to American Genius April 1845 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 21 p 200 The Garden in the Churchyard 20 September 1845 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 4 p 192 The Motherless Children Addressed to the Infants left by Madame Leontine Genoude From the French of De Lamartine 18 October 1845 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 4 p 256 The Poet s Mission 3 January 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 16 Prayers for all Men From Les Feuilles d Automne of Victor Hugo 31 January 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 80 Hateful Spring From the Chansons of Beranger 7 February 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 96 The Maiden and the Rose From the French of Chateaubriand 7 March 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 160 A Greek Allegory 28 March 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 208 The Troubadour and his Swallow From the French 11 April 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 240 A Hymn From Lamartine s Harmonies Poetiques 30 May 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 5 p 352 The Water Lily 18 July 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 6 p 48 A Mother s Resignation 25 July 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 6 p 64 The Chrysanthemum 26 December 1846 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 6 p 416 Happiness 30 January 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 7 p 80 Robert Bruce Crowned by the Countess of Buchan 13 February 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 7 p 112 The Cry of the Earth 22 May 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 7 p 336 On the Portrait of Lady Rachel Russell July 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 27 frontispiece An Answer July 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 27 p 22 The Golden Rose 10 July 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 8 p 32 Growing Old Together 21 August 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 8 p 128 Memory 30 October 1847 in Chambers s Edinburgh Journal New Series Vol 8 p 288 The Tax Gatherers From the French of Beranger November 1847 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 27 p 265 The Dream of the Orphan 1847 in Orphanhood Free will offerings to the Fatherless pp 81 82 Dante s Meeting with Casello in Purgatory From Il Purgatorio Canto II January 1848 in The New Monthly Belle Assemblee Vol 28 pp 25 26 The African Slave The Greek Mother The Battle of Langsyde and three other unknown poems December 1848 in The Drawing Room Table Book An Annual for Christmas and the New Year pp 13 34 and 76 Militia Volunteers March 1855 in Hogg s Instructor Vol 4 p 240References edit Sally Mitchell Craik Dinah Maria 1826 1887 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford OUP 2004 Retrieved 12 March 2017 pay walled a b c Garnett 1894 Dinah Craik The Unkind Word amp Other Stories London Hurst and Blackett 1870 Mitchell Sally 1983 Dinah Mulock Craik Boston Twayne Joanne Shattock 1999 The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature 1800 1900 Cambridge University Press pp 1 ISBN 978 0 521 39100 9 Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Garnett Richard 1894 Mulock Dinah Maria In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 39 London Smith Elder amp Co External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Dinah Craik nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Dinah Craik nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Craik Dinah Maria 1 Digital Edition of the Letters of Dinah Craik Works by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Project Gutenberg Works by Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Dinah Craik at Internet Archive Works by Dinah Craik at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Dinah Craik at Literary Heritage Dinah Craik at the Literary Encyclopedia Dinah Mulock Craik by Sally Mitchell a detailed account of her life and works at The Victorian Web Works of Craik at the Victorian Women Writers Project Indiana University Selected poetry at the University of Toronto Did George Eliot say this On quotations of Craik commonly misattributed to George Eliot Various stories by Miss Mulock full text Free scores by Dinah Craik at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Dinah Maria Mulock Craik at Library of Congress with 186 library catalogue records Poems by Dinah Maria Craik at English Poetry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dinah Craik amp oldid 1203246016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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