Foggerty's Fairy And Other Tales
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Foggerty's Fairy and Other Tales'' is an 1890 book by
W. S. Gilbert Sir William Schwenck Gilbert (18 November 1836 – 29 May 1911) was an English dramatist, librettist, poet and illustrator best known for his collaboration with composer Arthur Sullivan, which produced fourteen comic operas. The most fam ...
, collecting several of the short stories and essays he wrote in his early career as a magazine writer (before 1874). A number of them were later adapted as plays or opera librettos. Copyright problems dogged the book. It was pulled from market shortly after its publication, and is long out of print. Some of the stories were reprinted in the 1985 compilation, ''The Lost Stories of W. S. Gilbert''. Some of the stories also served as the basis for a BBC Radio 4 series, "Gilbert without Sullivan."


Contents and plot summaries

Foggerty's Fairy — First published as "The Story of a Twelfth Cake" in ''Graphic'', Christmas Number, 1874 (retitled "Foggerty's Fairy" for the 1890 collection). A series of alternate histories of a somewhat roguish fellow, Freddy Foggerty, who is attempting to escape the consequences of having deserted the army some years previously. After meeting up with his former sergeant, he obtains the help of the titular fairy who allows him to undo events in his past. Unfortunately, though in the main timeline he has overcome his chequered past and become a respectable shop owner, in the alternate histories he turns out to have become a slave ship captain, a banker about to be arrested for fraud, and so on. Eventually, he returns to the original timeline: it turns out the sergeant hadn't recognised him, and everything ends happily. The play ''
Foggerty's Fairy ''Foggerty's Fairy'', subtitled "An Entirely Original Fairy Farce", is a three-act farce by W. S. Gilbert based loosely on Gilbert's short story, "The Story of a Twelfth Cake", which was published in the Christmas Number of ''The Graphic'' in ...
'' uses the same device of changing the past timeline with a completely different plot that doesn't require so many changes of scenery. An Elixir of Love — First published in ''Graphic'', Christmas Number, 1876. This story is the basis for ''
The Sorcerer ''The Sorcerer'' is a two-act comic opera, with a libretto by W. S. Gilbert and music by Arthur Sullivan. It was the British duo's third operatic Gilbert and Sullivan, collaboration. The plot of ''The Sorcerer'' is based on a Christmas stor ...
'', and roughly similar in plot until the end. In the opera, the ''status quo'' is restored; in the story, Jenny (Aline in the opera) going off with the equivalent of Dr. Daly, and Stanley (Alexis) must live alone. Johnny Pounce — First published as "The Key of the Strong Room" in book collection, ''A Bunch of Keys, Where They Were Found and What They Might Have Unlocked''.
Tom Hood Thomas Hood (19 January 183520 November 1874) was an English humorist, playwright and author. He was the son of the poet and author Thomas Hood. ''Pen and Pencil Pictures'' (1857) was the first of his illustrated books. His most successful no ...
's Christmas Book, 1865. (retitled "Johnny Pounce" for this collection). Little Mim — First published in ''Graphic'', Christmas Number, 1876 The Triumph of Vice — First published in book collection ''Savage Club Papers'', 1867. A parody of fairy tales, with a penniless baron who works as a
scrivener A scrivener (or scribe) was a person who, before the advent of compulsory education, could literacy, read and write or who wrote letters as well as court and legal documents. Scriveners were people who made their living by writing or copying w ...
, his beautiful (but vain) daughter, an ugly (and almost as penniless) count staying with them who the baron's daughter detests, and an even uglier (but rich) gnome searching for a wife. The gnome has the power to turn temporarily into a handsome man three times, but rapidly returns to his ugliness. He has used up two times already courting other women, but turned so ugly between the time of engagement and the wedding that the women cried off. He engages the count to prepare the baron's daughter to be married to him immediately, on the day after the baron's daughter rejected the count, and motivated by revenge, he agrees. However, the gnome fails to pay him, and so he arranges to break his power over Bertha and (having got it in writing beforehand) marries her himself afterwards. My Maiden Brief — First published in ''Cornhill'' magazine, 1863. A tale of a barrister who plans out his defence of a woman accused of stealing a purse with his roommate, and then has all his work end up for naught when his roommate is called to prosecute her. Creatures of Impulse — First published as "A Strange Old Lady" in ''Graphic'', Christmas Number 1870. It was retitled "Creatures of Impulse" for this collection and adapted as the 1871 play '' Creatures of Impulse'' (with music by
Alberto Randegger Alberto Randegger (13 April 1832 – 18 December 1911) was an Italian-born composer, conductor and singing teacher, best known for promoting opera and new works of British music in England during the Victorian era and for his widely used textbook ...
). An ill-tempered old fairy refuses to leave her rooms at an inn where she is not wanted. She casts spells on a series of people to make them behave contrary to their usual natures, with comic consequences. Maxwell and I — First published as "The Income Tax: Maxwell and I" in book collection ''Rates and Taxes'' (1866). Retitled "Maxwell and I" for this collection. Actors, Authors, and Audiences — First published in ''Holly Leaves'' (Christmas number of the ''
Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News The ''Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News'' was a British weekly magazine founded in 1874 and published in London. In 1945 it changed its name to the ''Sport and Country'', and in 1957 to the ''Farm and Country'', before closing in 1970. His ...
''), Christmas 1880. Angela: An Inverted Love Story — First published in ''The Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News'', Christmas Number 1887. Wide Awake — First published in ''Mirth: a miscellany of wit and humour'', no.1, 1878. Adapted as the play ''
Tom Cobb ''Tom Cobb or, Fortune's Toy'' is a farce in three-acts (styled "An Entirely Original Farcical Comedy") by W. S. Gilbert. The story concerns Tom, a young debtor who pretends to be a recently deceased man to avoid his debts. A family claims to i ...
'' (1875). A Stage Play — First published in ''Hood's Comic Annual'', 1873, pp. 98–103. This is popular among biographers of Gilbert, as it sets out his directorial style in detail. The Wicked World — First published as "The Wicked World: an allegory", ''Hood's Comic Annual'', 1871, pp. 82–90. Adapted as the play ''
The Wicked World ''The Wicked World'' is a blank verse play by W. S. Gilbert in three acts. It opened at the Haymarket Theatre on 1873 and ran for a successful 145 performances, closing on 1873. The play is an allegory loosely based on a short illustrated sto ...
'' (1873), and later as the opera ''
Fallen Fairies ''Fallen Fairies''; ''or, The Wicked World'', is a two-act comic opera, with a libretto by W. S. Gilbert and music by Edward German. The story is an operatic adaptation of Gilbert's 1873 blank-verse fairy comedy, '' The Wicked World''. In Fair ...
'' (1909). The plot of the story is roughly similar to that of the play, although told in a stream-of-consciousness style, with Gilbert wondering what to write, describing how he named characters, and so on. Unlike the play, love is allowed to triumph to some extent, instead of being thrown permanently out of fairyland. The Finger of Fate — First published in ''Hood's Comic Annual'', 1872, pp. 82–87. A Tale of a Dry Plate — First published in ''The Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News'', Christmas Number, 1885. A short, somewhat melodramatic story of a photographer whose fiancée is lost at sea, leaving him with only an undeveloped photographic plate of her. The Burglar's Story — First published in ''Holly Leaves'' (Christmas number of ''The Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News''), 8 December 1883. A burglar's apprentice is caught by a house-owner, who tries out his experimental plan for dealing with criminals: He forces the burglar to hand over his clothes, then tells him—indeed, insists—that he may leave. Unappreciated Shakespeare — First published in the ''Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News'', Christmas Number, 1882)."Unappreciated Shakespeare"
/ref> Comedy and Tragedy — First published in ''The Stage Door'' (''Routledge's Christmas Annual''), 1879. Adapted as the play ''
Comedy and Tragedy ''Comedy and Tragedy'' is a one-act play by W. S. Gilbert, first presented at the Lyceum Theatre, London on 26 January 1884. Based on an earlier short story of the same title by Gilbert it was a vehicle for the actress Mary Anderson, calling on h ...
'' (1884). Rosencrantz and Guildenstern — First published in ''Fun'' magazine in 1874. Adapted as the play ''
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are characters in William Shakespeare's tragedy ''Hamlet''. They are childhood friends of Hamlet, summoned by King Claudius to distract the prince from his apparent madness and if possible to ascertain the cause of ...
'' (1891).


See also

* Bibliography of W.S. Gilbert * List of W. S. Gilbert dramatic works


Notes


References

* *{{cite book, last=Gilbert, first=W. S., editor=Peter Haining, editor-link=Peter Haining (author), year=1985, origyear=1982 , title=The Lost Stories of W. S. Gilbert, location=London; New York, publisher=Robson (UK); Parkwest (US), id={{ISBN, 0-86051-337-8 (UK); {{ISBN, 0-88186-725-X (US)
List of Gilbert's non-dramatic works, compiled by Andrew Crowther
;Publications that include one or more of Gilbert's short stories from the collection:
''A Bunch of Keys…''
(1865; story by Gilbert, “The Key to the Strong Room,” pp. 91–144)
''Cornhill''
vol. 8 no. 48 (December 1863) (Gilbert story "My Maiden Brief" pp. 725–732)
''Rates and Taxes, and How They Were Collected''
(London: Goombridge and Sons, 1866) (story by Gilbert, “Maxwell and I,” pp. 187–230)
''The Savage Club Papers''
(1867; story by Gilbert, “Triumph of Vice,” pp 174–195)
''XX Stories by XX Tellers''
(1895) (“Angela, an Inverted Love Story,” pp. 165–172)


External links



at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. This is the version that appeared earlier in ''Hood's Comic Annual'', 1873.

at The Gilbert and Sullivan Archive. Works by W. S. Gilbert 1890 short story collections British short story collections