Christmas Number of All the Year Round. Somebody's Luggage. To which Dickens contributed four chapters. I. His Leaving it till called for; II. His Boots; III. His Brown-paper Parcel; IV. His Wonderful End. To the chapter of His Umbrella he also contributed a portion. iii. [351]; [370].
1863.
Christmas Number of All the Year Round. Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings. To which Dickens contributed the first and the last chapter. I. How Mrs. Lirriper carried on the Business; II. How the Parlours added a few words. iii. [370], [371].
1864.
Our Mutual Friend. By Charles Dickens. With Illustrations by Marcus Stone. Eight numbers issued monthly between May and December. Chapman & Hall.
Christmas Number of All the Year Round: Mrs. Lirriper's Legacy: to which Dickens contributed the first and the last chapter. I. Mrs. Lirriper relates how she went on, and went over; II. Mrs. Lirriper relates how Jemmy topped up. iii. [371].
1865.
Our Mutual Friend. By Charles Dickens. With Illustrations by Marcus Stone. In Two Volumes. (Two more numbers issued in January and February, when the first volume was published, with dedication to Sir James Emerson Tennent. The remaining ten numbers, the last being a double number, were issued between March and November, when the complete work was published in two volumes.) Chapman & Hall. iii. [271]; [280], [281]; [301].
Christmas Number of All the Year Round. Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions. To this Dickens contributed three portions. I. To be Taken Immediately. II. To be Taken for Life; III. The portion with the title of To be Taken with a Grain of Salt, describing a Trial for Murder, was also his. iii. [379].