Title: The Two Partings
Title Record # 2498218
Author: uncredited
Date: 1856-02-00
Variant Title of: The Two Partings (by William Fulford) [may list more publications, awards, reviews, votes and covers]
Type: SHORTFICTION
Length: short story
Language: English
Current Tags: None
Author: uncredited
Date: 1856-02-00
Variant Title of: The Two Partings (by William Fulford) [may list more publications, awards, reviews, votes and covers]
Type: SHORTFICTION
Length: short story
Language: English
Note: According to PC Fleming, editor of "The Rossetti Archive" (link), this story, which was published uncredited in the February 1856 issue of The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, is by William Fulford. It was attributed to William Morris in H. Buxton Forman's The Books of William Morris Described (about which the William Morris Society says, "Formerly the standard bibliography of Morris's books despite the inclusion of forgeries and piracies perpetrated by [Buxton Forman] and his friend Thomas J. Wise"); the Wellesley Index quotes this attribution. However, the most recent Morris bibliography, by Eugene LeMire, discovered that the two poems in "The Two Partings" had been reprinted in William Fulford's collected poems.
User Rating:
This title has no votes.
VOTE
Current Tags: None
Publications
| Title | Date | Author/Editor | Publisher/Pub. Series | ISBN/Catalog ID | Price | Pages | Format | Type | Cover Artist | Verif |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, February 1856 | 1856-02-00 | ed. Editors of the Oxford and Cambridge Magazine | Bell and Daldy | 1/-?Prior to decimilisation (1968-1971), UK books were priced
in shillings, or shillings and pence, where 20 shillings
equals one pound and 12 old pence equals one shilling.
Shillings were indicated with a variety of suffixes, e.g.
3s, 3', 3", 3/ all mean 3 shillings. Any number after that
is additional pence, usually 6 (half a shilling) but
sometimes 3 or 9 (a quarter of a shilling or three-quarters
of a shilling). |
64 | octavo?5.5" by 8.5" magazine, usually saddle-stapled, instead of side-stapled or glued |
mag |
