Old St. Paul's (1847), contains only two plates by "Phiz," but The Spendthrift (1857), Mervyn Clitheroe, and Crichton were wholly illustrated by him.
Some Miscellaneous Works Illustrated by "Phiz."
A Paper: of Tobacco, &c., by Joseph Fume (1839). With six plates by "Phiz." Fiddle Faddle's Sentimental Tour, in search of the Amusing, Picturesque, and Agreeable (1845). The Union Magazine. Vol. I (1846). Containing three plates by "Phiz." The Illuminated Magazine. Conducted by Douglas Jerrold (1843-5), with woodcut illustrations by Leech, "Phiz" (H. K. Browne), and others. Fanny, the little Milliner, or the Rich and the Poor (1846), illustrated by "Phiz" and Onwhyn. Wits and Beaux of Society. Sketches of Cantabs, by John Smith (of Smith Hall), Gent. (1850). The Cambridge Freshman. With woodcut illustrations. Paved with Gold, or Romance and Reality of the London Streets, by Augustus Mayhew (1858). A Medical, Moral, and Christian Dissection of Teetotalism by Democritus (1846). New Sporting Magazine (1839). The Pottleton Legacy, by Albert Smith. Christmas Day, and how it was spent by four persons in the house of Fograss, Fograss, Mowton, and Snorton, bankers, by C. Le Ros (1854). Home Pictures (Durtin & Co., 1856). A series of seven charming and characteristic plates. Dame Perkins and her Grey Mare, or the Mount for Market, by L. Meadows (1866). With coloured illustrations. H. B.'s Schoolboy Days. Illustrations of the Five Senses. Adventures of Sir Guy de Guy, by George Halse. The Baddington Peerage, by G. A. Sala (published in The Illustrated Times). In addition to these may be added an illustrated edition of Byron's works, the "Abbotsford" edition of Sir Walter Scott's Novels, besides numerous cuts in The Sporting Gazette, The Illustrated Times, the early volumes of Once a Week, and the Comic Papers.
(Some Signatures adopted by H. K. Browne.)
BELCARO: being Essays on Sundry Æsthetical Questions.
By Vernon Lee, author of the "Studies of the Eighteenth Century in Italy." 8vo. price 8s.
"There is much in this thoroughly original and delightful book which reminds us of the essays of the eighteenth century.... It is rare indeed to find so much thought conveyed in so easy a style—to find a writer who not only has so much that is fresh to say, but has so fresh a way of saying it.... This way of conveying ideas is very fascinating.... From first to last there is a continuous and delightful stimulation of thought. The book will lead to conversation, dreaming, speculation, and all kinds of pleasant and healthy mental exercise; and it is interspersed with such perfect little sketches of scenery, and passages of so much eloquence, that it is a literary treat to read it."—Academy.
"Clever and expressive, subtle and brilliant.... We could say a good deal more about this book as the product of a remarkably acute critical mind; it would bear to be read a second time, and would be found to repay the trouble."—Athenæum.