• Source: John Hartley (poet)
    • John Hartley (1839–1915) was an English poet who worked in the Yorkshire dialect. He wrote a great deal of prose and poetry – often of a sentimental nature – dealing with the poverty of the district. He was born in Halifax, West Riding of Yorkshire.
      Hartley wrote and edited the Original Illuminated Clock Almanack from 1866 to his death.
      Most of Hartley's works are written in dialect.
      Hartley wrote a number of books featuring the character "Sammywell Grimes", who has a number of adventures and suffers unfortunate mishaps.


      Works


      Yorkshire Ditties, First Series
      Yorkshire Ditties, Second Series
      Yorkshire Tales, First Series
      Yorkshire Tales, Second Series
      Yorkshire Tales, Third Series
      Yorkshire Lyrics (1898)
      Pensive Poems and Startling Stories
      A Rolling Stone. A Tale of Wrongs and Revenge
      Mally An' Me : A selection of Humorous and Pathetic Incidents from the Life of Sammywell Grimes and His Wife Mally (1902)
      Yorksher Puddin (1876)
      A Sheaf from the Moorland - A Collection of Original Poems
      Grimes' Visit To Th' Queen. A Royal Time Amang Royalties
      Seets I'Lundun: A Yorkshireman's Ten Days' Trip
      Seets i' Yorkshire and Lancashire or Grimes' Comical Trip from Leeds to Liverpool by Canal
      Seets i' Blackpool - Grimes at the Seaside
      Seets i' Paris - Sammywell Grimes’s trip with his old chum Billy Baccus; his opinion o’th' French, and th' French opinion o’th' exhibition he made ov hissen.
      Grimes' Trip to America - Ten letters from Sammywell to John Jones Smith
      Sammywell Grimes An' his Wife Mally Laikin I' Lakeland: A Humorous Account of their Visit to the Home of Famous Poets, &c., &c.


      External links


      Works by John Hartley at Project Gutenberg
      Works by or about John Hartley at the Internet Archive
      Works by John Hartley at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
      Yorkshire Ditties by John Hartley - Link fails 25 October 2008 - permissions
      John Hartley at Old Poetry

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