Page:Cartoon portraits and biographical sketches of men of the day.djvu/104

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CHARLES READE.


Mr. Charles Reade is the youngest son of the late John Reade, Esquire, of Ipsden House, Oxfordshire. Mr. Reade is an Oxford man (he took his B.A. degree in 1835), and is a Doctor of Civil Law, and a fellow of Magdalen College in that university. He was called to the bar by the Honourable Society of Lincoln's Inn in 1843.

Charles Reade' s earliest stories were followed in 1856 by that powerful work of his genius, 'It is Never too Late to Mend.' The book created a great sensation: was read by everybody: and effected its author's purpose—viz, compelled the public to insist that the Model Prisons' system should be looked searchingly into.

From the publication of 'Peg Woffington,' Charles Reade has continued to apply his great talents to the work of writing novels and dramas: with what success, every reader of fiction knows.

The annexed complete list of his writings will give a correct idea of the extent of his productions in the difficult field of the Literature of Imagination, in which he has chosen to exercise his genius.


Stories in order of production.
vols.
Peg Woffington 1
Christie Johnstone 1
Clouds and Sunshine 1
Propria quæ Maribus
Art
It is Never too Late to Mend 3
Love me Little, Love me Long 2
Autobiography of a Thief [1] 1
Jack of all Trades
White Lies 3
Eighth Commandment 1
The Cloister and the Hearth 4
Hard Cash 3
Griffith Gaunt 3
Foul Play[2] 3
Put Yourself in his Place 3
A Terrible Temptation 3
A Simpleton.
Graphic Christmas Supplement.
  1. Under title of 'Cream.'
  2. With Dion Boucicault.