Digby, Long Digby, Long i(A52292 works by) (Organisation) assertion (a.k.a. Digby, Long and Co.)
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Works By

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Indian and Colonial Library Digby, Long (publisher), series - publisher
1 y separately published work icon Love and Life D. Fraser Lumsden , London : Digby, Long , 1911 Z1197528 1911 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Doctor Glennie's Daughter B. L. Farjeon , London : Digby, Long , 1908 Z1851804 1889 single work novel
1 1 y separately published work icon Angilin, A Venite King A. L. Hallen , London : Digby, Long , 1907 Z1872668 1907 single work novel science fiction

After being shipwrecked for some six months, Angus Douglas returns home to find his fiancee, Helen, has died. Distraught he delves into the occult hoping to find a way to meet her again. He chances upon some ancient Egyptian texts which show how to project the psyche from the body, while leaving the body in suspended animation, and decides to attempt going to Venus. Douglas tells his brother of his plans, then enters a tomb to begin the process of projecting his body beyond the mortal coil.

In telling his story Douglas recounts that he entered the body of the Venusian king, Angilin, who has lain in a trance for fifty years. Able to speak the Venite tongue but with no memory of Angilin's life, he undergoes a series of adventures among the various races of the planet and falls in love with one of its queens, Hellonee (who turns out to be the reincarnation of Helen).

1 y separately published work icon Australian Shooting Sketches and Other Stories E. A. Henty , London : Digby, Long , 1907 Z1109601 1907 selected work short story
1 y separately published work icon Not in Fellowship Alien , London : Digby, Long , 1902 Z1839316 1902 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Love, the Atonement : A Romance Frances Campbell , London : Digby, Long , 1901 Z804110 1901 single work novel
1 1 y separately published work icon For Three Moons Frances Campbell , London : Digby, Long , 1900 Z804107 1900 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Manoupa : A Tale Rose-Soley , London : Digby, Long , 1897 Z1325221 1897 single work novel adventure 'Adventure story of a hunt for lost treasure, set in Samoa, with scenes in Australia'. Source : Margaret C. Murphy Women Writers and Australia (1988)
1 y separately published work icon From Heatherland Annie Hetherington Coxon , London : Digby, Long , 1896 Z844350 1896 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon Australian Idylls and Bush Rhymes : Poems Ernest G. Henty , E. A. Henty , London : Digby, Long , 1896 Z815589 1896 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon Fragments of Coloured Glass : Poems and Ballads : Historical, Religious, Australian and Miscellaneous Alphonsus W. Webster , London : Digby, Long , 1895 Z1504192 1895 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon In Many Queer Streets and Other Sketches of Life and Character 'Colebrook Rowe' , London : Digby, Long , 1895 Z1417275 1895 selected work short story
1 2 y separately published work icon Recognition : A Mystery of the Coming Colony Sydney H. Wright , London : Digby, Long , 1895 Z964276 1895 single work novel
2 y separately published work icon A Guide to British and American Novels : Being a Comprehensive Manual of All Forms of Popular Fiction in Great Britain, Australasia, and America from Its Commencement down to 1893 Percy Russell , London : Digby, Long , 1894 Z1385755 1894 single work bibliography
2 y separately published work icon A Life for a Love L. T. Meade , London : Digby, Long , 1894 Z1096934 1890 single work novel Gerald Wyndham, only son of a poor English rector and beloved brother of seven sisters, falls in love with rich and beautiful Valentine Paget. Her obsessive and evil father allows Gerald to marry her on condition that he can enjoy a year's full life with her. Gerald's life is heavily insured and he agrees to impersonate death only to save Valentine from dishonour and knowledge of her father's evil. Meanwhile, a former suitor, Adrian Carr, takes Gerald's place as curate, eventually falling for Gerald's sister. Things start to go awry fast, despite Valentine falling in love with Gerald. Mr Paget tries to do a shady deal with Gerald to collect his insurance money (following the latter's fake death) but Gerald leaves for Sydney. Mr Paget prevents Valentine's last ditch effort to meet Gerald at Southampton. Gerald is lost at sea, Valentine has a son and Mr Paget's business remains solvent ... Reunions three years later reveal Gerald working for the poor in East London. Further twists and turns occur before repentance and restitution. (PB)
1 y separately published work icon Keith Kavanagh : A Remittance Man E. Baldwin Hodge , London : Digby, Long , 1894 Z1030784 1894 single work novel

'Keith is the younger son of 'a good family,' but he marries 'beneath him.' His patrician mother and brother — the former 'statuesque' and the latter a prig — are scandalised at this, and determine to ship Keith away to Australia and make him a man with a past and a remittance. There is the usual 'good bye' aboard ship, and a surprise at the last moment in the shape of the deserted wife, who turns up and wants to know her husband's destination. This he gives her as 'New Zealand,' on which information the 'plump little woman' jumps on to the wharf and contentedly waves her adieux with a silk handkerchief. The customary fair passage follows, and Keith arrives at Sydney. Here he paints the town red with his first remittance, and the credit which is begotten by the confidence thereby created. The latter ends as credit usually does, and then Keith goes into the country and gets into the 'best society,' falling immediately in love with the young and only daughter of a squatter. The poor girl returns his affection, and casts a humbler but infinitely honester admirer aside, as young ladies will. A declaration follows, but an unexpected question prompted by gossip impels Keith to own to the existence of a just cause and impedient, in England. Indignation (temporary) on the part of the squatter's daughter, and a two week's 'drunk' on the part of the remittance man follow as a matter of course. The discarded lover, at the instance of the girl, then pulls Keith through a bit of the D. T.'s, and just at the moment of his recovery a convenient letter arrives which tells him of the death of his child, and the likely death of his wife, too, in England. With such information the inventive faculty of Keith is made complete. Interviewing the pale anxious maid, the squatter's daughter, doubtless by her own invitation, the Englishman of 'family' tells her that he is now a widower. And the 'Oh, Keith,' tells him that the news is welcome to innocence as the flowers are to spring. Father and mother are equally easily satisfied, and so the wedding follows; but, as papa, the squatter, says, there is no fortune hunting business in the union — the remittance man must shift for himself, and await his shoes when they have ceased to be useful. The remittance man does shift for himself, and he buys a large station, though how he manages the purchase one can only conjecture; and then he commences to live the life of a grazier who doesn't graze, and a squatter who doesn't squat. This business he leaves to a manager and the result is eventually that he has to mortgage. Then, somehow or other the English wife appears on the scene in Sydney, and meeting the Australian 'Mrs. Kavanagh,' who is on a visit there, gets a reluctant invitation to spend a few weeks on the station. She avails herself of this, and, of course, meets her truant husband. A series of persecutions which no self respecting woman would stand, follows for the colonial wife, who ultimately, hearing the visitor call Kavanagh by his Christian name, rises in the strength of suddenly awakened virtue and tells her to vacate. The English wife replies in the spirit of Betsy Prig. She won't vacate and she says so, and what's more she turns the tables by telling the Australian that she isn't a wife at all, that she (the visitor) is the only hall-marked Mrs. Kavanagh, and that, generally speaking, the squatter's daughter is no better than she ought to be. It is hereabouts that Mrs. Hodge's book is strongest. The recriminations which one would expect are certainly mild, but what there are, are described fairly well. That night the betrayed colonial girl wrestles with her trouble in a room which had been sacred to the momentoes of her innocence, but instead of packing off to her father she determines, as a result of her meditations, to appeal to 'this woman' in the hope of buying her off. With such intention she goes to her guest's room, enters and finds the first wife on her bed, and sees her husband, or the husband of both, standing at the toilet table. The colonial girl's 'I see I am de trop,' might have been expected to give place to something stronger but it doesn't, and a retirement is made with all the grace and dignity which novels make possible. Later on, the betrayed one's former honorable lover, who is another guest in the house, happens to get up and look out of the window, and so he sees Kavanagh with his face 'ghastly in the moonlight' plant 'something' in some bushes. Next morning the first wife is found dead, and, by the honest lover aforesaid, a bottle of poison (nearly used) is discovered in the bushes where Kavanagh made his plant the night before. A coroner's inquest fails to discover any thing wrong, and the honest lover is too honest, having taken possession of the bottle of poison, to betray the 'husband' of the girl he loves to the authorities. She, poor creature knows, however, just as much as he does, but her suspicions of her husband, due to an unguarded remark, do not prevent her approaching Kavanagh, and asking him to re-marry her, when the marriage can be made more binding. He does this, and as his elder brother has conveniently died off in England, and he has succeeded to the family estates, he takes her 'home' by the next Orient liner; and in England, presumably, the murderer and his wife live happily ever after.'

Source:

'Keith Kavanagh', National Advocate, 8 August 1894, p.3.

1 y separately published work icon For Marjory's Sake : a story of South Australian country life Mrs John Immyns Waterhouse , London : Digby, Long , 1893 Z870304 1893 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Dick, or the Doctor? : an Australian story Rex Raynor , London : Digby, Long , 1892 Z1394984 1892 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Round the Camp Fire and Other Australian Poems Edith H. Hirst , London : Digby, Long , 1892 Z1030404 1892 selected work poetry
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