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The Library of Congress >Linked Data Service >LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)

Lever, Charles, 1806-1872


  • URI(s)

  • Fuller Name

    • Charles James
  • Variants

    • Lever, Charles James, 1806-1872
    • Lever, Charles J., 1806-1872
    • Lorrequer, Harry, 1806-1872
    • O'Dowd, Cornelius, 1806-1872
    • Tilbury Tramp, 1806-1872
    • Tramp, Tilbury, 1806-1872
  • Identifies LC/NAF RWO

  • Identifies RWO

    • Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

    • Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes

    • Earlier Established Forms

      • Lever, Charles James, 1806-1872
    • Sources

      • found:Lever, Charles. Jack Hinton, the guardsman, 1894, via HathiTrust, Aug. 17, 2015:title page (The novels of Charles Lever ... Jack Hinton, the guardsman)
      • found:Tales of the trains, 1845:t.p. (Tilbury Tramp)
      • found:Lever, Charles. Tom Burke of "Ours," 1844, via Google Books, Aug. 20, 2015title page (Charles Lever) v. 1, page v (dedication signed: Charles J. Lever, Temple-Ogue, November 25, 1843)
      • found:Tilley, E.S. Article in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2004, accessed Aug. 17, 2015(Lever, Charles James (1806-1872), novelist, born 31 August 1806, Dublin; father was English, mother was Anglo-Irish; studied medicine and obtained degree of bachelor of medicine from Trinity College in 1831, but turned to writing for financial reasons in the 1830s; published anonymously The confessions of Harry Lorrequer serially in the Dublin University magazine, 1837-1839; "the identity of the author was soon discovered"; moved to Brussels in 1837 to practice medicine among expatriates there; invited to become editor of the Dublin University magazine, 1841, and in 1842 "gave medicine up for ever and moved to ... a Jacobean mansion called Bridgehouse, at Templeogue, 4 miles south-west of Dublin"; resigned editorship in 1845 and moved back to Brussels; "Further wanderings in Germany and Italy led [Lever's] family to settle eventually in Florence in 1847"; in 1858 he was appointed vice-consul at La Spezia; in 1867, he "took up the consulship at Trieste," where he died on 1 June, 1872. Sources cited include: L. Stevenson, Dr Quicksilver: the life of Charles Lever (1939); E. Downey, Charles Lever: his life in his letters (1906); W.J. Fitzpatrick, The life of Charles Lever, new edition [1884]; T. Bareham, ed., Charles Lever: new evaluations, Ulster Editions and Monographs, 3 (1991); S. Haddelsey, Charles Lever: the lost Victorian (2000))
      • found:Allingham, Philip V. "Charles Lever (1806-1872): Anglo-Irish novelist, physician, and diplomat," article in The Victorian Web, accessed Aug. 17, 2015("the Anglo-Irish novelist Charles Lever") -http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/lever/bio.html
      • found:Meredith, Robert L., and Philip B. Dematteis. "Charles (James) Lever." In Victorian novelists before 1885, 1983, viewed in Literature Resource Center, Aug. 17, 2015(title: Charles (James) Lever; known as Lever, Charles; Lever, Charles James; Irish novelist (1806-1872); "Now little read or critically studied, Charles Lever was for thirty years one of the most popular novelists in England"; lists works)
      • found:Wikipedia, Aug. 17, 2015(article title: "Charles Lever"; Charles James Lever (31 August 1806-1 June 1872), Irish novelist)
      • found:OCLC, Aug. 17, 2015(usage predominantly: Charles Lever; works originally published under pseudonyms "Harry Lorrequer," "Cornelius O'Dowd," "Tilbury Tramp" were subsequently reissued with statement of responsibility "Charles Lever")
    • LC Classification

    • Instance Of

    • Scheme Membership(s)

    • Collection Membership(s)

    • Change Notes

      • 1982-11-09:new
      • 2025-08-05:revised
    • Alternate Formats

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