charles clark
(1806-1880)
charles clark
(1806-1880)
Essex
DING 2014: “Born in Heybridge, Ess., he is known as the Bard of Totham. He was an antiquarian, printer and book collector, as well as a farmer. He wrote many ballads about his native countryside, some of them in or including Essex dialect. His extensive correspondence with John Russell Smith is kept at the Essex Record Office. He also used the pseudonym Doggrel Drydog.”
Works
1839. The Heiress-Entrapping Doctor’s Soliloquy. ‘All in My Puss.’ An Imitation of “All Round my Hat.” Great Totham: Printed at Charles Clark’s Private Press. SC.
1839. John Noakes and Mary Styles or “an Essex Calf’s” Visit of Tiptree Races, a Poem Exhibiting some of the Most Striking Lingual Localisms Peculiar to Essex, with a Glossary. London: John Russell Smith. SC. EDD.
1842. The Trip to Tiptree; Or, A Lover’s Triumph. Humbly presented to the Philologist, as a specimen of the dialect of the peasantry of Essex. Great Totham: Printed at Charles Clark’s Private Press. SC.
1842. Tiptree Races. All on the Heath. Great Totham: Printed at Charles Clark’s Private Press. SC.
1844. Chelmsford. The Righteous and the Racegoers. If There are Some Asses Wot will Not Go! A Parody. Tiptree Heath. Printed at Charles Clark’s Private Press. SC.
Not in KingKong Project
For further information about his life and works, see:
http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/search/author/Clark%2C%20Charles%2C%201806-1880
http://charlesclark.wordpress.com/who-was-charles-clark/
Gallery
Clark, Charles (1806-1880)
Copyright © 2014-DING, The Salamanca Corpus, Universidad de Salamanca