Author:George Louis Palmella Busson du Maurier
Appearance
(Redirected from Author:George du Maurier)
Works written and illustrated
[edit]- "Recollections of an English Gold Mine" in Once a Week, Series 1, 5 (1861)
- English Society at Home (1881) (external scan)
- Pictures of English Society (1884) (external scan)
- Peter Ibbetson (1891) (external scan)
- Trilby (1894) (external scan)
- The Martian (1897) (external scan)
- A Legend of Camelot, Pictures and Poems, etc. (1898)
- Social Pictorial Satire: Reminiscences and Appreciations of English Illustrators of the Past Generation (1898) (external scan)
Other works illustrated by Du Maurier
[edit]- "Faristan and Fatima: An Oriental Legend" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 3 (1860)
- "My Adventures with a Passport in Russia" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 3 (1860)
- "Non Satis" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 3 (1860)
- "For Hong Kong, Care of Ah Leen and Co., This Side Up" (author unknown) in Once a Week, Series 1, 3 (1861)
- "The Steady Students" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 3 (1860)
- "Indian Juggling" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "The Black Spot" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "A Life Story" (author unknown) in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "A Night Ride to the Guillotine" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "On Her Death-Bed: A Lullaby" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "A Portuguese Tragedy" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 4 (1861)
- "Monsieur the Governor" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 5 (1861)
- "Of a Man Who Fell Among Thieves" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 5 (1861)
- "Sea-Bathing in France" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 5 (1861)
- "The Poisoned Mind" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 5 (1861)
- "The Admiral's Daughters" by Archibald Stewart Harrison in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1861)
- "The Hotel Garden" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1861)
- "The Change of Heads" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "The Latest Thing in Ghosts" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "Metempsychosis" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "Per l'Amore d'una Donna" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "A Parent by Proxy" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "Three Score and Ten" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 6 (1862)
- "Miss Simms" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 7 (1862)
- "Santa; or, A Woman's Tragedy" by Isa Blagden in Once a Week, Series 1, VII (1862)
- "'Only'" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 7 (1862)
- "The Cannstatt Conspirators" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 7 (1862)
- The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams, serialized in Once a Week, Series 1, 7-8 (1862-1863)
- Eleanor's Victory by Mary Elizabeth Braddon, serialized in Once a Week, Series 1, 8-9 (1863)
- "Out of the Body" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 8 (1863)
- "The Veiled Portrait" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 10 (1864)
- "The Uninvited" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 10 (1864)
- "My Aunt Tricksy" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 10 (1864)
- "The Old Corporal" by in Once a Week, Series 1, 10 (1864)
- "Detur Digniori" by George Stott in Once a Week, Series 1, 10 (1864)
- "Philip Fraser's Fate" by Francis Kingston John Shenton in Once a Week, Series 1, 11 (1864)
- "A History of Croquet" in London Society, 8 (1865) (external scan)
- "Wanted—A Curate" in London Society, 8 (1865) (external scan)
- "What 'Came Off' at Codlingham Regatta" in London Society, 8 (1865) (external scan)
- "Furnished Apartments" in London Society, 8 (1865) (external scan)
- Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell (1866) (external scans (multiple parts): 1, 2)
- "Singing and Dreaming," "A Carpet Dance," and "A Kettledrum" in Pictures of Society, Grave and Gay (London: Sampson Low, 1866) (external scan)
- The Story of a Feather by Douglas William Jerrold (1867) (external scan)
- Lucile by Owen Meredith (1868) (external scan)
- The Hand of Ethelberta by Thomas Hardy (1882) (external scan)
Works about Du Maurier
[edit]- "Du Maurier" a poem by Florence Earle Coates
- "Du Maurier, George Louis Palmella Busson," in Dictionary of National Biography, 1901 supplement, London: Smith, Elder, & Co. (1901) in 3 vols.
Some or all works by this author were published before January 1, 1929, and are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted. Posthumous works may be copyrighted based on how long they have been published in certain countries and areas.
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