ANNE
AND JOHN
KER
New Soundings
John Gladstone Steele
I
BIOGRAPHY
WITH REFERENCE TO
‘A KER-ISH
TRICK’ AND
‘THE HEIRESS
DI MONTALDE’
As a descendant of Anne Ker, I have researched
her family history including her novel The Heiress
di Montalde (1799) and her husband John Ker’s
poem ‘A Ker-ish Trick’. These, along with other
memorabilia that included Anne’s sampler, were handed
down by her descendants, who emigrated to Australia
in 1825–46. [1]
Rachel Howard has
contributed to this journal a comprehensive article
on Anne Ker and her novels. [2] The article reproduces
‘A Ker-ish Trick’, prefatory material in Anne Ker’s
novel Edric, the Forester (1817, but expected
in December 1804). The interpretation of this poem
requires, firstly, an understanding of John Ker’s
relationship to the Dukes of Roxburgh, who bore
the family name Ker until the Fourth Duke died in
1805. The Fifth Duke, whose surname was Innes rather
than Ker, was confirmed in the title in 1812 and
he adopted the name Innes–Ker. The title page of
Edric, the Forester makes the claim that
John Ker was ‘of His Grace the Duke of Roxburgh’s
family’, and in his poem prefacing that book John
wrote
Fleurs—I envy not that pretty place,
Although I am one of the race;
John considered the family seat of Floors (or Fleurs)
near Kelso in Roxburghshire as part of his heritage.
He knew it well, and identified himself as one of
the Kers, who saw it as their home, but he never
aspired to own it. He felt its beauty, as did Sir
Walter Scott who referred to Floors as ‘altogether
a kingdom for Oberon or Titania to dwell in’. [3]
Furthermore, the
interpretation of ‘A Ker-ish Trick’ requires a knowledge
of the very public dramas concerning the succession
of the Fifth Duke of Roxburgh in 1812 and the subsequent
administration of the estate of the Third Duke.
From the evidence presented here, it will emerge
that John Ker was probably a son of the unmarried
John Ker, Third Duke of Roxburgh (1740–1804), the
famous book collector and close friend and contemporary
of George III. It will be shown that on his deathbed
the Duke provided a secret annuity for a person
residing in London whose name was revealed only
to a lawyer. In his poem, John alluded to his dependence
on income from the Duke’s estate. The administration
of the estate was delayed by protracted litigation.
John lamented that he failed to obtain charity from
the Fifth Duke. The pertinent biographical details
are presented here below in chronological sequence.
Personal names are spelt as they appear in source
documents.
In 1755, the Third
Duke acceded to his title. In 1761, at the age of
twenty-one, he travelled on the Continent and courted
Christiana, eldest daughter of the Duke of Mecklenburgh–Strelitz,
then aged twenty-seven. Soon after, Christiana’s
sister Charlotte became engaged to George III, and
at the royal marriage on 8 September 1761 Duke John’s
two sisters, Lady Essex and Lady Mary Ker, were
bridesmaids. [4]
Duke John and Christiana broke off their engagement,
as etiquette did not allow the elder sister to live
in the realm as subject to the younger. It was said
that the lovers thenceforth devoted themselves to
celibacy. [5]
Given the probability that John was a son of Duke
John, he may have been conceived during the engagement
of John and Christiana. Many children of royalty
and the nobility were conceived or born out of wedlock.
In an era when marriages were ‘arranged’ by parents
or dictated by politics, premarital and extramarital
adventures occurred, and were the stuff of many
plots and subplots in Anne Ker’s novels. George
IV as Prince of Wales is said to have fathered six
illegitimate children by different mothers.
Anne Ker’s sampler
records her birth thus: ‘Anne Phillips Born Novr.
17. 1766 in the Parish of St Luke Chelsea’; the
sampler has as its central motif the chained lion
rampant from the arms of the Phillips family of
London. [6]
She was baptised as Ann Phillips at St Luke’s Chelsea
on 7 December 1766. [7]
Her parents John and Ann Phillips lived at Cheyne
Walk, Chelsea. [8]
On 1 November 1788,
John Kerr, widower, and Anne Phillips were married
in the parish of St Pancras, London. [9] At the
time of her marriage Anne added to her sampler the
date 1788, the initials ‘A. K.’, as well as a royal
crown and a ducal coronet considered to be symbols
of her husband’s ancestry. In proximity to these
symbols are two chevrons, each ‘charged with three
stars or mollets’, from the arms of the Border Kers.
[10] The pair was recorded as having been residents
of the Parish of St Pancras, which was included
in the district of Holborn. John and Anne were to
live at Holborn for much of their life together.
[11] The marriage ceremony took place at the Kentish
Town chapel of ease, by banns rather than licence,
and the Curate officiated. The witnesses who signed
the marriage register were Benjamin Mence (Vicar)
and a Mary Morgan; these functioned as witnesses
at many other weddings recorded in the register.
Since no members of the Ker or Phillips families
signed as witnesses, the marriage was a low-key
affair, perhaps even a clandestine one. Secret marriages
were not uncommon amongst royalty and the nobility;
HRH the Duke of Gloucester married the Dowager Duchess
Maria Waldegrave (née Walpole), a subscriber to
Anne’s novels, secretly in 1766, and the Prince
of Wales married the widow Maria Fitzherbert secretly
in 1785. Clandestine marriages feature in Anne’s
novels, with the marriage of Sebastian and Adelaide
in The Heiress di Montalde (1799) and that
of Henry and Elinor in Adeline St Julian
(1800).
In 1799, Anne dedicated
The Heiress di Montalde to HRH the Princess
Augusta Sophia (the king’s daughter, born 1768),
and subscribers included the Duke of Roxburgh, his
sister Lady Mary Ker and HRH the Duchess of Gloucester
(the king’s sister-in-law). Given the probability
that John Ker was the son of Duke John and Christiana,
this list includes his cousin, father, and aunt,
and a kinswoman by marriage, respectively. Subscribers
to The Mysterious Count (1803) included Lady
Mary Ker, and HRH the Princess of Wales (Caroline,
the ‘official’ wife of the future George IV). HRH
the Duchess of Gloucester and her daughters HRH
the Princess Sophia (surnamed Hanover) of Gloucester
and the Duchess of Grafton (Charlotte Maria Fitzroy,
née Waldegrave)—kinsfolk to the king and presumably
to John Ker—were also subscribers. (Charlotte’s
cousin and brother-in-law Earl Waldegrave had been
a subscriber to John Phillips’s Treatise on Inland
Navigation [London, 1785]).
Duke John died in
1804. On his deathbed at his house at St James’s
Square, London on 18 March, he gave instructions
to Mr James Dundas, an Edinburgh lawyer appointed
to be a trustee for the Duke’s estate. He told Dundas
where he would find a sealed parcel, and desired
Dundas to bring it to him. The Duke explained that
the reason for wishing to have the sealed parcel
was in order to see whether it contained a bond
of annuity in favour of a particular person in London
for whom he intended to provide. The parcel contained
a sealed letter addressed to Dundas, in which was
enclosed a bond of annuity in favour of the person
named by the Duke. [12]
Dundas gave this testimony on 17 February 1812 at
an appeal by Lady Essex and Lady Mary Ker against
the validity of the deathbed deposition that formed
part of the will, and the appeal was dismissed.
The secrecy surrounding this bond and the name of
the beneficiary suggests that the beneficiary was
an illegitimate child. The deathbed deposition dated
19 March 1804 was recognised as part of a much longer
will, and probate was granted on 23 March 1811.
The will stipulated that the trustees were to pay
annuities granted during the Duke’s life or by his
will. Annuities to factors and servants mentioned
specifically in the deposition ranged from £40 to
£300. In order to give evidence, Dundas renounced
his role as executor prior to probate, thereby giving
up a legacy of £1,000. [13]
Louisa Peterson,
widowed daughter of John and Anne Ker, was married
by banns at St James’s Church, Piccadilly on 1 January
1811, near the former home of the late Duke John.
John and Anne signed the register as witnesses to
the marriage. It seems that they lived comfortably
at this time, perhaps enjoying the annuity provided
by the late Third Duke and paid out of his deceased
estate. Anne may have had access to the Duke’s library
which was still at the house in St James’s Square.
[14]
The Fourth Duke had
also died in 1805 and the succession to the title
of Fifth Duke of Roxburgh was finally decided by
the Committee of Privileges of the House of Lords
on 9 May 1812. [15] The title and the property entailed
with it went to the seventy-six-year-old Sir James
Innes (later Innes–Ker, 1736–1823) rather than to
Major-General Walter Ker of Littledean. Litigation
over the succession bankrupted Walter Ker; Littledean
was sold and the Fifth Duke graciously maintained
him. [16] The administration of the estate of the
deceased Third Duke was assigned to John Wauchope,
the remaining executor after the withdrawal of James
Dundas. The famous library was auctioned for £24,341
at the house in St James’s Square in May–July 1812.
The Duke’s will had authorised his trustees to sell
his house and contents to meet his obligations.
The proceeds of the sale are thought to have been
applied to legal costs. [17] Litigation over the
Duke’s will persisted; it was perhaps during this
period that the payment of the annuity to John Ker
came under threat.
A Ker-ish Trick
From internal evidence, the poem was written
after the failure of Major-General Ker’s claim to
the title and the Floors estate, rather than in
1804 when the publication of Edric, the Forester
was mooted. The poem was written between 1812 and
1817, and reveals that John Ker visited ‘Floors’
and obtained a verbal promise of financial support.
There is a man on Scottish ground,
Caus’d me to lose two hundred pound;
Surely, how could such things be?
Why, in promising to provide for me!
The man who made this promise appears from internal
evidence to have been the Fifth Duke, then aged
between seventy-six and eighty-one. The ‘two hundred
pounds’ may represent the secret annuity provided
by the Third Duke; if so, it should have been paid
from the deceased estate of the Third Duke and it
is unlikely that the Fifth Duke had a direct interest
in it, or even knowledge of it. John would have
seen the promise as an attractive alternative to
the trouble and expense of pursuing his own claim
in the courts. The elderly Duke, preoccupied with
his new properties, his new wife of 1807, and his
son and heir born in 1816, might easily have forgotten
the promise.
And though in me there was no pride,
In fine grand coach I once did ride;
And for my fare for four miles round,
It cost me just two hundred pound;
The description of the coach is consistent with
the idea that John’s host was the Fifth Duke rather
than the Duke’s factor or solicitor, or the executor
of the Third Duke’s estate. Roads and drives with
a circumference of four miles encircled the Floors
estate.
Now could I find HIS number
out,
Although my wife has got the gout,
She says, on crutches she would stride,
And travel o’er the country wide,
The mention of Anne’s gout accords with her letters
to the Royal Literary Fund in 1820–21, and confirms
that the illness handicapped her as early as 1817.
[18] Anne was more inclined to litigation than her
husband:
To summons for such imposition,
Or try by way of a petition.
But lawyers say we were not right—
It should have been in black and white,
John and Anne consulted lawyers who lamented the
lack of a written promise from the Fifth Duke. They
may not have been aware of the existence of the
‘bond of annuity’ signed by the Third Duke.
So Ker was left by side the Tweed,
And Sawny drove away with speed.
The gate to the Floors estate on the edge of Kelso
was at the East Lodge, beside the Tweed. [19]
‘Sawny’ was a nickname for a Scotsman. The Fifth
Duke was born and lived in Scotland. Although John
is believed to have stayed frequently at Floors,
he was apparently not invited to remain on this
occasion.
Fleurs—I envy not that pretty place,
Although I am one of the race;
But from my heart I wish I’d seen
A man live there from Little Dean
And why so wish? Because, some say,
He’d not have sent me empty away.
John Ker felt sure that he would have received
some immediate support from Major-General Ker of
Littledean, if the latter had succeeded to the title
of Fifth Duke of Roxburgh and lived at Floors. The
inference is that the ‘man on Scottish ground’,
‘Sawny’, who promised but failed to help, was the
successful claimant to the title.
Now if there’s left a Ker of Linton
Who at these lines should take a hint on,
The village of Linton is six miles south-east of
Floors and three miles east of the ruins of Cessford
Caste, the principal seat of the Kers of Cessford
until 1650. On 11 December 1811, the Court of Sessions
in Scotland affirmed that Major-General Walter Ker
was the undoubted heir-male of the ancient family
of Ker of Cessford. [20]
The Dukes of Roxburgh retain the title Marquess
of Bowmont and Cessford and the unicorn’s head crest
granted c. 1500 to the Cessford Kers by James
IV of Scotland. The phrase ‘a Ker of Linton’ was
chosen to facilitate rhyming, but it was probably
intended to mean a Cessford Ker as distinct from
a Ker of the Ferniehirst line whose ancient seat
Ferniehirst Castle was near Jedburgh. [21]
Or noble Scot that’s fat on taper,
May cure J. Ker with HASE’S
paper.
The poem ends with an appeal for donations in the
form of ‘Hase’s paper’. Henry Hase was Chief
Cashier of the Bank of England in 1807–29. During
those years, his name appeared for legal reasons
in the promissory clause on the Bank’s notes. ‘Fat
on taper’ suggests a plentiful supply of the wax
candles used by nobles to seal documents. John is
believed to have possessed a signet ring with the
Cessford crest and Roxburgh motto, but was thin
on resources. [22] He clung to his hope that the
Fifth Duke would take the hint. The flippant tone
suggests that the writer was mocking himself, and
that (unlike his wife, who was livid) he bore no
grudge against anyone. The fact that Anne Ker published
Edric, the Forester in 1817 at her own expense
shows that she was not yet entirely destitute. Perhaps
she had received a legacy from the estate of her
father who died in 1813 (RLF).
In 1818, Lady Essex
Ker, after persistent litigation, obtained the residue
of her brother’s estate, then amounting to about
£200,000 pounds. This would have involved the overturning
of the clause in the Duke’s deathbed deposition
requiring his sisters to receive only the income
from the residue of his estate during their lifetime,
after which the residue itself was to be paid to
three other specified beneficiaries. [23]
Lady Essex Ker had expended £35,000 in legal fees,
and John Ker could hardly have contested the will
in such an environment. The only winners were the
lawyers, and the Mostyn family who inherited the
estate of Lady Essex Ker in 1819. [24]
The Heiress di Montalde
(1799)
Anne Ker’s autobiographical references
in The Heiress di Montalde are of uneven
credibility, but the incorrect data are nonetheless
revealing, and may shed light on her marriage and
the birth of her child Louisa.
On the one hand,
she reveals herself as ‘Miss P——’, the narrator
of the story. [25] In a footnote (I,
2), she identifies her father as the canal writer
John Phillips, the author of A General History
of Inland Navigation (1792). She claims that
she went with her father to France in the spring
1787 (I, 9), when he was
studying canals including the Canal of Languedoc
(the Canal du Midi). At one stage in the novel,
Miss P—— is in a library; asked if she likes to
read she replies ‘I am exceedingly fond of that
amusement, my Lord’ (I, 217).
Miss P—— is addressed as ‘My dear Anne’ (I,
219). This much is credible. On the other hand,
she falsifies her age, the date of her return from
the Continent, and possibly the reason for her going
there. She gives her age as eighteen in the spring
of 1787, but she was actually twenty then (I,
14). She claims to have spent two-and-a-half years
on the Continent, not returning to England until
about October 1789 (II, 189),
but she was actually married near London on 1 November
1788. She states that she had been to the Continent
partly for the recovery of her health (I,
1), but the main reason may have been to obscure
the relationship between the birthdate of her child
Louisa (presently unproven) and the date of her
marriage.
A Louisa, daughter
of John and Ann Carr, was born on 6 December 1786
and baptised in the parish of St Pancras on 4 March
1787. [26] This was the same venue as the apparently
secret marriage of John Kerr and Anne Phillips on
1 November 1788, when John was described as a widower.
‘John Carr’ and ‘John Kerr’ may have been different
people, but it is plausible that they were one and
the same person, and that Louisa Carr was a child
of John’s first marriage to another Ann. Another
scenario might be that John was in a relationship
with Anne Phillips when Louisa was born. Anne may
have gone to the Continent with her father soon
after Louisa was baptised, and returned to London
prior to her marriage in November 1788, by which
time she was aged almost twenty-two and could marry
without her father’s consent. (Her father may have
remained abroad.) It may be coincidence, but in
The Heiress di Montalde Anne receives a note
addressed to ‘Miss Anne Elinor P——’ (I,
222), while in Adeline St Julian a heroine
named Elinor has a clandestine marriage. This Louisa
is considered to be the daughter who married at
St James’s, Piccadilly in 1811. John and Anne were
in attendance and signed their names in the same
handwriting as at their own marriage but spelt their
surname as ‘Ker’ instead of ‘Kerr’.
Postscript to Part I
Anne and John were in reduced circumstances
when Anne applied for help from the Royal Literary
Fund in 1820–21, saying that she was ‘destitute
of friends’. At that time, their daughter Louisa
was living on the Continent; Louisa’s son Cornelius
William Uhr was born in Bremen in May 1819 and baptised
in London in September 1821. [27]
Anne died at Southwark leaving an estate of under
£200; administration was granted to her husband
John Ker on 5 December 1823. [28]
Louisa’s married daughter Mary Louisa Jones emigrated
to Australia in December 1824, taking with her a
copy of The Heiress di Montalde. This copy
contains Anne Ker’s signature as well as a printed
portrait of Anne, presumably the frontispiece cut
and pasted from a copy of Modern Faults (1804).
An album that belonged to Mary Louisa Jones contains
a portrait that could be a likeness of Anne Ker,
and a lithograph of ‘Lord Waldegrave’s in Rockingham’,
Northamptonshire. A manuscript copy of ‘A Ker-ish
Trick’ handed down since early days in Australia
may indicate that a copy of Edric, the Forester
found its way to Australia. Seven children of
Louisa’s two marriages migrated to Australia, taking
with them heirlooms associated with Anne and John
Ker, including Anne’s sampler and a signet ring
engraved with a unicorn’s head and the motto of
the Dukes of Roxburgh.
II
J. KER:
PUBLISHER AND BOOKSELLER
OF THE GOTHIC
J. Ker of 4 Greek Street, Soho Square, has been
mentioned as a well-known publisher of bluebooks—slim
inexpensive books of Gothic fiction with blue paper
covers that proliferated in the early 1800s. [29]
This was the period when Anne Ker flourished as
a Gothic novelist. Her fifth novel Modern Faults
(1804) was published by ‘J. Ker, 34 Great Surrey
Street, Black Friars Road’. It is tempting to float
the hypothesis that J. Ker, the publisher, should
be identified with John Ker, the husband of Anne
Ker, the novelist.
John Ker intriguingly
referred to himself as ‘J. Ker’ in the text of his
poem ‘A Ker-ish Trick’, and in his signature at
the end of the poem. This was published in the prefatory
material of Anne Ker’s novel Edric the Forester
(1817). [30] The title page declared the Kers’ family
relationship to the aristocracy, a connection that
may have been kept hidden from the book trade. It
seems that John and Anne Ker were ready to unveil
the fact that the publisher J. Ker was none other
than the son of a deceased duke—a revelation like
the denouement of a Gothic mystery. In Edric
the Forester, Edric and his army attempt to
take St Egbert’s Castle. The story ends with
the revelation that Edric, separated at birth from
his family, is actually the heir to Castle St Egbert.
For those who read between the lines, Edric was
John Ker, and Castle St Egbert was Floors Castle
in Roxburghshire.
Apart from his poem
and his novelist wife, John Ker had other associations
with books and the book trade, and these tend to
support the hypothesis. His probable father, John
Ker, Third Duke of Roxburgh (1740–1804) was a noted
collector of rare books and kept an extensive library
in London. His father-in-law, John Phillips, was
an author of non-fiction, including the best-selling
A General History of Inland Navigation (1792)
which ran to five editions; the fifth, in 1805,
was published by B. Crosby & Co., of Stationers’
Court, Paternoster Row (next to Stationers’ Hall
between Ludgate Street and Amen Corner), London.
Phillips was editor of an annual publication, Crosby’s
Builder’s New Price Book, until his death in
1813. Crosby and Co. were also the sole sellers
of Anne Ker’s self-published novel The Mysterious
Count (1803).
The hypothesis can
now be regarded as proven thanks to Angela Koch’s
research concerning the bluebooks published by J.
Ker, c.1800–04. Koch has opened an extensive
window on the bluebooks in her checklist published
previously in Cardiff Corvey. [31]
Details in the checklist reveal additional links
between J. Ker and Anne Ker, in respect of business
and private addresses, choice of printers, and the
publishing by J. Ker of bluebooks that were probably
written by Anne Ker. It emerges that the identification
of J. Ker—publisher and bookseller—with John Ker,
husband of Anne Ker, is now irresistible. As a result,
the biography of John and Anne Ker is more fully
known.
Of the 217 bluebook
titles catalogued by Koch, 14 were associated with
J. Ker as publisher and/or seller. The 14 titles
are listed in the appendix to this paper; each title
is headed by its number in the Koch checklist and
followed by data abridged from the checklist. Ten
of these bluebooks were published with J. Ker as
the principal publisher, at one or other of his
various addresses in the suburbs of London. Five
distinct addresses are specified, ranging from Soho
and Holborn north of the Thames to Blackfriars Road
and the Elephant & Castle on the south side.
In Table I (below), these
ten bluebooks are grouped by their locations without
implying any chronological sequence, and Anne Ker’s
novel Modern Faults is also included.
| J.
Ker’s Address |
Koch
# |
Title &
Earliest Known/Inferred Date |
Printer |
Booksellers |
| 4
Greek Street, Soho Square |
37 |
The
Castle of St Gerald, or the Fatal Vow |
|
Most
booksellers |
| 90
High Holborn |
43 |
Clairville
Castle, or the History of Albert and Emma
[…] |
Kemmish,
17 King-Street [now Newcomen Street], Borough |
Kemmish,
Wilmott & Hill, Perks, Elliot, Barfoot,
Dixon, Evans, Howard & Evans, Neil, Champante
& Whitrow. |
| 90
High Holborn |
63 |
Duncan,
or the Shade of Gertrude […]. |
Neil,
Chalton-Street, Sommers Town |
Neil,
Hughes, Muggeridge, Wilmot & Hill, Perks,
Elliot, Barfoot, Dixon, Evans, Howard &
Evans. |
| 40
London Road, near the Elephant & Castle,
Southwark |
47 |
Cronstadt
Castle, or the Mysterious Visitor [1803] |
Kemmish |
Kemmish,
Hughes, Muggeridge, Perks, Elliot, Barfoot,
Dixon, Wilmot & Hill, Hodgson, Evans. |
| 40
London Road, near the Elephant & Castle,
Southwark |
140 |
The
Prophetic Warning, or the Castle of Lindendorff
[…] by a young gentleman of note. 1800 |
Kemmish |
Kemmish,
Hughes, Wilmot & Hill, Barfoot, Perks,
Dixon, Hodgson, Evans. |
| 2
Green-Walk, Bear-Lane, Christ-Church, Surrey |
196 |
Lilly
of Navarre, or Banditti of the Forest
By Sarah Wilkinson
[1804] |
Cranwell,
Long-Lane [now named West Smithfield], West
Smithfield |
Hughes,
Muggeridge, Elliot |
| 2
Green-Walk, Bear-Lane, Christ-Church, Surrey |
167 |
The
Three Ghosts of the Forest […] 1803 |
Shury,
Berwick-Street, Soho |
Hughes,
Muggeridge, Elliot |
| 20
Green-Walk, Bear-Lane, Christ-Church, Surrey |
7 |
Alphonso
& Elinor, or the Mysterious Discovery
(1802) |
Tibson,
Bridge-Road, Lambeth |
Tibson,
Elliott |
| 34
Great Surrey Street, [portion of] Black Friars
Road |
112 |
The
Midnight Bell, or the Abbey of St Francis
[…] by the authoress of Alphonso and
Elinor, Three Ghosts of the Forest, etc.
[1802] |
Kemmish |
Kemmish,
Hughes, Muggeridge, Elliot, Wilmot & Hill,
Dixon, Barfoot, |
| 34
Great Surrey Street, [portion of] Black Friars
Road |
|
Modern
Faults, a Novel, Founded upon Facts. By
Mrs Ker. 1804 |
M’Gowen,
Church Street [now Burrell St], Blackfriars
Road |
Badcock |
| 34
Great Surrey Street, [portion of] Black Friars
Road |
207 |
The
Spectre, or the Ruins of Belfont Priory. By
Sarah Wilkinson [1806]34 |
Kemmish |
Kemmish,
Hughes, Muggeridge, Elliot |
Table
I: Ten Bluebooks and a Novel,
Published by J. Ker
Since the known or
inferred dates of publication fall between 1800
and 1806, it is likely that most of the five addresses
were occupied concurrently. Other publishers, printers
or sellers of bluebooks had only one address, or
rarely, two concurrent ones, throughout the period.
With outlets in four suburbs concurrently J. Ker
had what might now be described as a chain of bookstores.
His address at 90 High Holborn was on the north
side of that important thoroughfare about midway
between the present Procter Street and Red Lion
Street. Directly opposite his shop was Red Lion
Yard at 254 High Holborn. A little to the south
were Lincoln’s Inn Fields. [32]
Publishers and booksellers in this area profited
from the sale of law books and stationery, and J.
Ker at this address was described as ‘publisher
and stationer’ (Koch, Item 63). John and Anne Ker
lived at Holborn from the time of their marriage
in 1788 until they took up residence near the Elephant
& Castle during the 1810s. [33]
J. Ker’s address
at 4 Greek Street, Soho Square, was on the east
side of Greek Street, four doors from the square
(Horwood). Nearby at 7 Berwick Street was the printery
of D. N. Shury who printed for J. Ker the bluebook
The Three Ghosts of the Forest (1803) and
for Anne Ker the novels The Mysterious Count
(1803) and Edric the Forester (1817)
(Horwood). Later discussion will suggest that Anne
Ker was the author of The Three Ghosts of the
Forest.
South of the Thames,
40 London Road was a few doors from the Elephant
& Castle, and on the north side of the road.
Around 1800, this area was semi-rural, with ribbon
development along main roads, and open fields at
the back of the development (Horwood). Subdivision
of rural land near Newington Road would create the
plot of land where John and Anne resided by 1820.
2 Green Walk, Bear
Lane, Christ-Church was in the Parish of Christ-Church,
the parish church of which was on Blackfriars Road.
This section of Blackfriars Road was then known
as Great Surrey Street. Bear Lane is one block east
of the church, and Green Walk (now Hopton Street)
was at the end of Bear Lane north of the Church
Street (now Burrell Street) intersection. 34 Great
Surrey Street, Blackfriars Road, was on the east
side of Blackfriars Road twelve doors south of Church
Street. J. Ker’s two addresses near Christ Church
are associated with six of his publications including
Anne Ker’s Modern Faults (1804), printed
at 15 Church Street by John MacGovern. Another printer
of significance to J. Ker was Ann Kemmish, 17 King
Street (now Newcomen Street), off High Street, Borough
(Horwood). Kemmish printed five bluebooks for J.
Ker, sold them at her premises, and republished
one of them, Clairville Castle, herself (Koch,
Item 43).
Among the sellers
of J. Ker’s bluebooks the most frequently-named
were S. Elliott of High Street, Shadwell (300 metres
from St George’s in the East); T. Hughes of 1 Stationers’
Court, Ludgate Street and 15 Paternoster Row (opposite
Canon Alley); and N. & J. Muggeridge of Borough.
These were strategically located in the City, and
in suburbs where J. Ker seems not to have had a
shop of his own. By 1809, John and Anne Ker’s daughter
Louisa Peterson and her family lived in Cannon Street
adjactent to the church of St George in the East,
then patronised by wealthy merchants, near Shadwell.
[35]
Just as the topographical
details lend support to the identification of J.
Ker with Anne’s husband John Ker, the internal evidence
of the publications gives further support. Before
examining this evidence, it is well to be aware
of certain aspects of the literary phenomenon known
as the Gothic, particularly in the bluebook form:
-
In nearly all bluebooks the author was anonymous.
-
Some authors of bluebooks condensed their own
longer works, but some plagiarised the works of
others.
-
Attempts to prove connexions between titles,
dramatis personae, and topics are hazardous.
The literary critics of the day found this difficult
to grasp. A modern commentator writes ‘Gothic
thrives so much on convention that to cite direct
sources is often impossible when so many works
share the same stock episodes, characters, and
even phrases’. [ 36]
-
With this caveat, the trend of Gothic was strongly
influenced by Matthew Lewis’s novel The Monk
(1796) and Francis Lathom’s The Midnight
Bell (1798). In 1799–1804, when J. Ker and
Anne Ker flourished, these models had an influence
both on their writings and on the titles they
chose for their works.
-
For both novels and bluebooks, the title was
a key element in the marketing strategy; even
if a work was original, the title was chosen to
attract readers aroused by the horror, mystery,
and salacious doings found in the works of Lewis
and Lathom.
Bearing in mind these cautions, I would propose
that Anne Ker is the ‘authoress’ of three of J.
Ker’s bluebooks: The Midnight Bell, or the Abbey
of St Francis (1802) claimed on its title page
to be ‘by the authoress of Alphonso and Elinor,
The Three Ghosts of the Forest, etc.’. Was Anne
Ker the real authoress? The following facts establish
that this might very likely be the case:
-
All three titles were published by J. Ker about
1802–03, although the exact chronological sequence
is uncertain.
-
The Three Ghosts of the Forest was printed
at the same printery and in the same year as Anne
Ker’s The Mysterious Count (1803).
-
While forests were a stock subject in bluebooks,
it may be relevant to note that a spirit in the
Forest of Amans featured in Anne Ker’s Adeline
St Julian, that the Forest of Amiens featured
in both Emmeline; or, the Happy Discovery
(1801) and Modern Faults, and that the
hero of Edric, the Forester was raised
in a forest.
-
The title Alphonso and Elinor reflects the
names of two personae in Anne Ker’s Adeline
St Julian (1800).
-
The name Elinor is not widely used in Gothic
literature (but compare the use of ‘Ellinor’ in
Arthur and Ellinor—Koch, Item 183), yet
it occurs in Anne Ker’s part-autobiographical
novel The Heiress di Montalde (1799),
where the narrator is revealed as Anne Elinor
Phillips.
-
J. Ker might well have encouraged Anne Ker
to turn an episode from Adeline St Julian
into a bluebook. He was unlikely to publish a
plagiarised version of her novel, for fear of
the potentially acid rebuke of which she was capable.
-
The Midnight Bell, or the Abbey of St Francis
is suggestive of Anne’s title Adeline St Julian,
or the Midnight Hour.
With respect to (d),
it is admitted here that the choice of the name
Alphonso was characteristic of the Gothic. The name
was known also from Lewis’s popular drama Alfonso,
King of Castile, first performed at Covent
Garden on 15 January 1802. Points (d) and (e) should
be taken together. With regard to (g), this observation
is not without interest. Lathom’s Midnight Bell
is indicative of the Gothic motif of bells ringing
at midnight, while Lewis used similar phrases such
as ‘the Castle-Bell announced the hour of midnight’
in The Monk. Montague Summers is no doubt
correct in asserting that the bluebook The Midnight
Bell was derived from Lathom’s work of the
same name. [37]
But it is possible that only the title was derived
from Lathom (and the notorious Lewis) as a deliberate
marketing ploy, and that the text of the bluebook
was derived from one of Anne Ker’s own works. All
in all, the idea that Anne Ker was the ‘authoress’
of these three bluebooks is attractive. 
Another bluebook
title of interest is The Prophetic Warning,
or the Castle of Lindendorff (1800) with the
extension ‘An Original Romance. By a Young Gentleman
of Note’. The title suggests an affinity with Lewis’s
The Monk, which features a Castle of Lindenberg.
Indeed a bluebook entitled The Castle of Lindenberg
(1799), printed and sold by Simon Fisher, consists
of the Raymond and Agnes episode from The Monk,
and later editions attributed the original authorship
to ‘the late G. M. [sic] Lewis, Esq.’ (Koch
184; Lewis died in 1818). The most notable young
gentleman and Gothic author in the year 1800 certainly
was Matthew Lewis, then aged twenty-five. Whoever
the real author of The Prophetic Warning
might have been, J. Ker certainly used clever marketing
on its title page.
Among the 150 or
so bluebooks in Koch’s checklist that can be dated,
only 11 were initially published before 1801; The
Prophetic Warning stands among the earliest
seven per cent of the bluebooks of known date. During
1799–1801 only 18 bluebooks of known date were issued,
the majority published by Ann Lemoine of White Rose
Court, Coleman Street, and S. Fisher, printer of
10 St John’s Lane, Clerkenwell. Did not Ann Lemoine,
of Huguenot descent, have the peculiar advantage
of a surname that evoked the French-language title
of The Monk (Le Moine)? J. Ker
needed inspired salesmanship for the next heady
phase of his career, and the spectre of Anne Ker
was arguably prompting him in the wings.
Interestingly, the
bluebook Edmund and Albina (1801—Koch,
Item 65) was published by both J. Ker and Ann Lemoine
in the same year. In 1799, Lemoine had published
Kilverstone Castle (Koch, Item 91) with
a three-page teaser at the end entitled ‘Edmund
and Albina. A Fragment’, presumably a preview of
the bluebook.
What else may we
surmise concerning J. Ker? We may speculate that
the ‘young gentleman’ was J. Ker himself, a man
not lacking in literary ability. If he cheekily
described himself as a ‘young gentleman of note’
(he was then aged about 38) the phrase would have
been recognizable to his close friends; the same
self-mocking humour is evident in his later poem
‘A Ker-ish Trick’.
Conclusion to Part II
Although the identification of J. Ker with John
Ker, husband of Anne Ker, has not been proved absolutely,
there is abundant evidence supportive of such a
contention—through shared family connections
and interests, publishing history, and the proximity
of business and residential addresses. Many are
likely to agree that the identification has been
proved beyond reasonable doubt. Moreover, further
light has been shed on the dark and misty world
of the Gothic and the obfuscations of its authors
and publishers.

NOTES
1. John
Gladstone Steele, The Petersons and the Uhrs:
An Australian Family since 1825 (Brisbane, 2003).
2. R.
A. Howard, ‘Anne Ker: A Biographical and Bibliographical
Study’, Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic
Text 11 (Dec 2003). Online: Internet (June 2004):
http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc11_04.html
3. John
Talbot White, The Scottish Border and Northumberland
(London: Eyre Methuen, 1973), p. 124.
4. Sidney
Lee, ‘John Ker’, DNB; George
Edward Cokayne (ed.), The Complete Peerage of
England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, and the
United Kingdom, 13 vols (1887–98;
revised edn, Gloucester: A. Sutton, 1982), V,
225
5. Gentleman’s
Magazine 74 (1804), 383
6. Sampler,
in private collection.
7. Register
of Baptisms, St Luke’s.
8. Rate
Books, 1767–69; W. H. Godfrey, Survey of
London: The Parish of Chelsea, edd. M. H. Cox
and P. Norman (London: Batsford for the London City
Council, 1909), II, 83.
9. Register
of Marriages, St Pancras.
10.
Walter Riddell Carre, Border
Memories, ed. J. Tait (Edinburgh and London:
J. Thin, 1876), p. 97.
11.
Prerogative Court of the Archbishop
of Canterbury, Letters of Administration, Public
Record Office, London PROB 6/199, f. 137 (5 Dec
1823).
12.
Thomas S. Paton, et al., Reports of Cases
Decided in the House of Lords upon Appeal from Scotland,
6 vols (Edinburgh and London: T. & T. Clark,
1849–56), V, 553.
13. Will
of John Duke of Roxburghe, PRO, PROB 11/1520, ff.
309–19; Carre, p. 110.
14. Register
of Marriages, St James’s Church; Arthur Irwin
Dasent, The History of St James’s Square
(London: Macmillan and Co., 1895), pp. 135–37,
255; Complete Peerage, V,
224
15. Sir
James Balfour Paul (ed.), The Scots Peerage Founded
on Wood’s Edition of Sir Robert Douglas’s
Peerage of Scotland, 9 vols (Edinburgh: Douglas,
1904–14), VII, 353.
16. Carre,
pp. 111–12.
17. Anon.,
Floors Castle (Derby: Pilgrim Press Ltd,
1979), p. 16.
18.
Archives of the Royal Literary
Fund, 1790–1918 (RLF), 145 reels (London:
World Microfilms Publications, 1982), Reel 12 (Case
424). Original letters held at the British Museum
Library, Department of Manuscripts.
19. Mathew
Stobie, Plan of Fleurs, the Seat of His Grace
John Duke of Roxburgh (1798).
20.
Scots Peerage, VII,
354. 
21. Carre,
pp. 95 and 101.
22. A
copy of the ring impression is held by the author.
23.
Will of John Duke of Roxburghe,
PRO, PROB 11/1520, ff. 309–19.
24.
Gentleman’s Magazine
89 (1819), 286.
25.
See Anne Ker, The Heiress
di Montalde; or, the Castle of Bezanto, 2 vols
(London: For the Author, 1799), I,
1. Subsequent references are from this edn,
and are given in the text.
26.
Register of Baptisms, St Pancras.
27.
RLF; Baptism Register, St
George’s in the East
28.
Prerogative Court of the Archbishop
of Canterbury, Letters of Administration, PRO, PROB
6/199, f. 137.
29.
Montague Summers, The Gothic
Quest. A history of the Gothic Novel (1938;
New York: Russell & Russell, 1964), p. 83.
30.
See Howard, Section IV, Item
4.
31.
Angela Koch, ‘ “The
Absolute Horror of Horrors” Revised. A Bibliographical
Checklist of Early-Nineteenth-Century Gothic Bluebooks’,
Cardiff Corvey: Reading the Romantic Text 9
(Dec 2002). Online: Internet (July 2004): http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc09_n03.html.
32.
Details taken from Richard
Horwood, Map of London, Westminster & Southwark
Shewing every House, 1792–9. Subsequent
references to this map will be given parenthetically
in the text as Horwood.
33.
Register of Marriages, Parish
of St Pancras; Prerogative Court of the Archbishop
of Canterbury, Letters of Administration, PRO, PROB6/199,
f. 137 (5 Dec 1823); RLF, Reel 12 (Case 424).
34.
The dating of this item is
taken from Franz Potter, ‘Writing for the
Spectre of Poverty: Exhuming Sarah Wilkinson’s
Bluebooks and Novels’, Cardiff Corvey:
Reading the Romantic Text 11 (Dec 2003). Online:
Internet (July 2004): http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc11_n02.html.
35.
Land Tax Books for St George’s
in the East, Guildhall Library.
36.
Howard Anderson, ‘Introduction’
to M. G. Lewis, The Monk (1796; Oxford: OUP,
1973, rptd 1998), p. xiii.
37.
Summers, p. 84.
APPENDIX
14 BLUEBOOKS
WITH J. KER AS PUBLISHER
AND/OR SELLER, ABRIDGED
FROM THE KOCH CHECKLIST
Koch 7
ALPHONSO AND ELINOR, OR THE MYSTERIOUS DISCOVERY.
London: Printed [by Tibson, Lambeth] for & Sold
by J. Ker, No. 20, Green-Walk, Bear-Lane, Christ
Church, Surry; and to Be Had of S. Tibson, at the
Surry Printing-Office, Bridge-Road, Lambeth; and
S. Elliott, No. 9, High Street, Shadwell, n.d.
42p. 12mo. Frontispiece bears legend: ‘Is it possible
that thou art Alphonso exclaimed a voice which seemed
familiar to his ears’. 6d.
Koch 37
THE CASTLE OF ST. GERALD, OR THE FATAL
VOW.
London: Published and Sold by J. Ker, No. 4, Greek-Street,
Soho Square; and to Be Had of most Booksellers in
Town and Country, n.d.
34p; pp. 33–34: ‘The Value of Time’.
12mo. Frontispiece. 6d.
Koch 43
CLAIRVILLE CASTLE; OR, THE HISTORY OF ALBERT &
EMMA. WITH THE DEATH OF THE USURPER MORENZI.
London: Printed [by A. Kemmish, King-Street, Borough]
for, and Sold by J. Ker, No. 90, High Holborn. Sold
also by Wilmott and Hill, 50, Borough; Perks, Stationer,
21, St. Martin’s Lane; T. Elliot, High-Street, Shadwell;
Barfoot, Norton-Falgate; Dixon, Rochester; T. Evans,
79, Long-Lane; Howard and Evans, 42, Long-Lane,
West-Smithfield; Kemmish, 17, King-Street, Borough;
Neil, 448, Strand; and Champante and Whitrow, Jury
Street, Aldgate, n.d.
38p; pp. [34]–38: ‘Ogus & Cara Khan, or the
Force of Love. 8vo. Frontispiece bears legend: ‘Bernard
and Emma taking farewell of their Cottage to escape
the snares of Morenzi. 6d.
*Further edn: London: A. Kemmish, n.d.
Koch 47
CRONSTADT CASTLE; OR, THE MYSTERIOUS VISITOR. AN
ORIGINAL ROMANCE.
Surry: Printed by A. Kemmish, 17, King-Street, Borough—for
and Published by J. Ker, 40, London Road, near the
Elephant and Castle, Southwark—Sold also by Hughes,
Stationer’s Court—N. and J. Muggeridge, Borough;
Wilmott and Hill, 50, Borough; A. Kemmish, King-Street,
Borough; Perks, Stationer, 12. St. Martin’s Lane;
Elliott, High-Street, Shadwell; Barfoot, Norton-Falgate;
Dixon, Rochester; Hodgson, 20, Strand; T. Evans,
79, Long-Lane, West-Smithfield, &c., [1803].
38p; pp. [34]–38: The Unfortunate Victim. 12mo.
6d.
Koch 60
DOMESTIC MISERY, OR THE VICTIM OF SEDUCTION, A PATHETIC
TALE; ADDRESSED TO THE UNPRINCIPLED LIBERTINE.
London: Printed [by T. Plummer, Seething-Lane, Tower-Street]
for Tegg and Castleman, No. 122, St. John’s-Street,
West Smithfield; T. Hurst, Paternoster-Row; T. Brown,
Edinburgh; and B. Dugdale, Dublin. And Sold by Champante
& Whitrow, Aldgate; Wilmot and Hill, Borough;
T. Hughes, Queen’s-Head-Passage, London; J. Belcher,
Birmingham; T. Troughton, Liverpool; I. Mitchell,
Newcastle upon Tyne; B. Sellick, Bristol; E. Peck,
York; M. Swindells, Clarke, and Co., Manchester;
T. Binns, Leeds; J. Dingle, Bury St. Edmund’s, and
All Other Booksellers in the United Kingdom, [1803].
36p. 12mo. Frontispiece. Quotation from Virgil.
36p. 12mo. [1s].
*Bound to this without title page: Highland Heroism;
or the Castles of Glencoe and Balloch. A Scottish
Legend of the Sixteenth Century (London: Tegg
& Castleman, 1803]). 36p. 12mo.
Further edns: London: Dean & Munday, n.d.; London:
J. Ker, n.d.; On single edition of Highland Heroism,
see Item 62 of the main Koch checklist.
Koch 63
DUNCAN; OR, THE SHADE OF GERTRUDE. A CALEDONIAN
TALE.
London: Printed [by Neil, Chalton-Street, Sommers
Town, and No. 448, Strand] for and Sold by J. Ker,
Publisher and Stationer, No. 90, High Holborn; Sold
also by A. Neil, 448, Strand; T. Hughes, Stationers’-Court;
M. &. J. Muggeridge, and Wilmott & Hill,
Borough; Perks, 21, St. Martin’s Lane; S. Elliott,
High-Street, Shadwell; Barfoot, Norton Falgate;
Dixon, Rochester; T. Evans, 79, and Howard &
Evans, Long-Lane, West Smithfield, n.d.
40p. 12mo. Frontispiece bears legend: ‘Lord Pevensey
sacrificing the Thane of Fife in his jealous rage’.
6d.
Koch 65
EDMUND AND ALBINA; OR, GOTHIC TIMES. A ROMANCE.
London: Printed by T. Maiden, Sherbourne-Lane, for
Ann Lemoine, White-Rose Court, Coleman-Street, and
Sold by T. Hurst, Paternoster-Row, 1801.
48p. 12mo. Frontispiece bears legend: ‘Albina rescued
from the Ruffians’. Quotation from Shakespeare.
9d.
*Further edn: London: J. Ker, 1801.
Koch 112
THE MIDNIGHT BELL, OR THE ABBEY OF ST. FRANCIS.
AN ORIGINAL ROMANCE. BY THE AUTHORESS OF ALPHONSO
AND ELINOR; THREE GHOSTS OF THE FOREST, &C.
London: Printed [by A. Kemmish, King-Street, Borough]
for, & Sold by J. Ker, 34, Great Surrey-Street,
Blackfriars Road; Hughes, Stationer’s Court; N.
& J. Muggeridge, Borough; S. Elliot, Shadwell;
Willmot and Hill, Borough; Dixon, Bookseller and
Stationer, Rochester; J. Barfoot, 27, Norton-Falgate;
and A. Kemmish, Printer, 17, King-Street, Borough,
[1802].
40p. 12mo. Coloured frontispiece bears legend: ‘Just
as she approached the Tomb, the same mysterious
form issued form thence and slowly glided by her’.
6d.
Koch 140
THE PROPHETIC WARNING; OR, THE CASTLE OF LINDENDORFF.
AN ORIGINAL ROMANCE. BY A YOUNG GENTLEMAN OF NOTE.
Southwark: Printed by Ann Kemmish, 17, King-Street,
Borough, for and Sold by J. Ker, 40, London-Road,
near the Elephant and Castle, Southwark. Sold also
by T. Hughes, Stationers’ Court; Wilmott and Hill,
Borough; Kemmish, King-Street Borough; Barfoot,
Norton-Falgate; Perks, 12, St. Matin’s Lane; Dixon,
Rochester; Hodgson, 20, Strand; T. Evans, Long-Lane,
Smithfield, &c., &c., n.d.
38p; pp. 35–38: ‘Rinaldo and Adeline; or the Ghost
of St. Cyril’. 12mo. Frontispiece bears legend:
‘The spirit of the Marchioness warning Edwin, and
Mathilda of her Brother Alfreds [sic] treachery.
6d.
*Further edn: London: J. Ker, 1800.
Koch 159
SIR MALCOLM THE BRAVE, OR, ISABELLA’S GHOST. A SCOTTISH
LEGEND.
London: Printed, by C. and W. Galabin, Ingram-Court,
for M. Tuck, Circulating Library, near the Adam
and Eve, Peckham; and Sold by Champante and Whitrow,
Aldgate; J. Cleverly, No. 6, Barbican; Kerr, No.
36, Blackfriers [sic]-Road; T. Evans, Long-Lane,
Smithfield; and All Other Booksellers in Town and
Country, n.d.
44p. 12mo. Frontispiece. 6d.
Koch 163
A TALE OF MYSTERY; OR THE CASTLE OF SOLITUDE. CONTAINING
THE DREADFUL IMPRISONMENT OF COUNT L. AND THE COUNTESS
HARMINA, HIS LADY.
London: Printed [by T. Plummer, Seething-Lane, Tower-Street]
for Thomas Tegg and Co. No. 122, St. John’s-Street,
West Smithfield; T. Hurst, Paternoster-Row; T. Brown,
Edinburgh; and B. Dugdale, Dublin. And Sold by Champante
& Whitrow, Aldgate; Wilmot and Hill, Borough;
T. Hughes, Queen’s-Head-Passage, London; J. Dingle,
Bury; T. Gibbons, Bath; T. Lamb, T. Matthews, and
Messrs Cowley and Richardson; Bristol; Messrs. Clarke
& Co. M. Swindale, and J. Reddish, Manchester;
N. Rollaston, Coventry; T. Richards and W. Gray,
Plymouth; Harrod and Turner, Nottingham; T. Binns,
Leeds; T. Newling and M. Wood, Shrewsbury; W. Troughton
and W. Jones, Liverpool; J. Legg, Gosport; T. Crooks,
Rotherham; J. Belsher, Birmingham; and Every Other
Bookseller in England, Scotland and Ireland, [1803].
72p. 12mo. Frontispiece. Quotation from Hamlet.
[1s].
*Further edns: London: J. Ker, n.d.; London: Tegg
& Co., 1802.
Koch 167
THE THREE GHOSTS OF THE FOREST, A TALE OF HORROR.
AN ORIGINAL ROMANCE.
London: Printed by D. N. Shury, Berwick Street,
Soho; for, and Sold by J. Ker, No. 2, Green Walk,
Bear Lane, Christ Church, Surry; also Sold by T.
Hughes, Paternoster Row; N. and J. Muggeridge, Borough;
and S. Elliot, High Street, Shadwell, 1803.
36p; pp. 34–36: ‘The Miraculous Preservation of
Androcles’. 12mo. Frontispiece.
Koch 196
WILKINSON, Sarah [Scudgell].
THE LILLY OF NAVARRE, OR, BANDITTI OF THE FOREST.
AN ORIGINAL ROMANCE. BY SARAH WILKINSON AUTHORESS
OF “THE CHATEAU DE MONTVILLE,” “JOHN BULL,” “GOTHIC
CELL,” “MONKCLIFFE ABBEY” &C.
London: Printed [by J. Cranwell, Long-Lane] for
J. Ker, No. 2, Green-Walk, Bear-Lane, Christ-Church,
Surry. Sold also by T. Hughes, Stationers [sic]-Court,
Ludgate-Street; N. and J. Muggeridge, Borough; and
S. Elliott, High-Street, Shadwell, [1804].
38p. 12mo. Frontispiece. 6d.
Koch 207
[WILKINSON, Sarah Scudgell].
THE SPECTRE; OR, THE RUINS OF BELFONT PRIORY.
London: Printed by A. Kemmish, 17, King-Street,
Borough—for and Sold by J. Ker, 34, Great Surrey-Street,
Blackfriars Road. Also Sold by T. Hughes, Stationer’s
Court; N. and J. Muggeridge, Borough; A. Kemmish,
King-Street, Borough; and S. Elliot, High-Street,
Shadwell, n.d.
40p; pp. 31–35: ‘Eugenia; or, the Carnival of Venice’;
pp. 36–40: ‘The Treacherous Lover; or, the Fatal
Effects of Deception’. 8vo. Frontispiece. Quotation
from Blaine. 6d.

COPYRIGHT
INFORMATION
This article is copyright © 2004 Centre
for Editorial and Intertextual Research, and is the result
of the independent labour of the scholar or scholars credited
with authorship. The material contained in this document
may be freely distributed, as long as the origin of information
used has been properly credited in the appropriate manner
(e.g. through bibliographic citation, etc.).
John Steele thanks other Australian
descendants of Anne Ker who collaborated in his research
since 1980, especially Frank Uhr and the late Ruth Smith.
The late Iris Bancroft and the late Rex King made heirlooms
available. Rachel Howard kindly provided encouragement
and made available a facsimile of ‘A Ker-ish Trick’.
REFERRING
TO THIS ARTICLE
J. G. STEELE. ‘Anne and John Ker:
New Soundings’, Cardiff Corvey: Reading the
Romantic Text 12 (Summer 2004). Online: Internet
(date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/corvey/articles/cc12_n03.html>.
CONTRIBUTOR
DETAILS
The Revd Canon John Gladstone Steele
AM (BSc, PhD University of Queensland, ThL Australian
College of Theology) is a retired Anglican priest and
physicist who writes on Australian history and art.
The matter contained within this
article provides bibliographical information based on
independent personal research by the contributor, and
as such has not been subject to the peer-review process.

Last modified
27 August, 2004
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