Alice Corkran


Alice Abigail Corkran was an Irish author of children's fiction and an editor of children's magazines. Born in France to Irish parents, she grew up in the stimulating environment of her mother's literary salon. She was a playmate of Robert Browning's ageing father, and still had his workbooks in her possession when she died. She wrote several well-received novels, particularly Bessie Lang and Down the Snow Stairs. She also edited first the Bairn's Annual and then The Girl's Realm, being the founder of that magazine's Guild of Service and Good Fellowship, which maintained a cot at the Ormond Street Hospital for Sick Children, among other charitable works.

Early life

Alice Corkran was born in Paris, France, to John Frazer Corkran and Louisa Walsh. She was the second oldest of five children: three girls, and two boys. Her father began life as a dramatist and had a play, The Painter of Italy, well received at the Theatre Royal, Dublin on 9 March 1840, but by that time he was already in Paris. He was the Paris correspondent of the Morning Herald and the Evening Standard.
John was in Paris for all the excitement of the 1848 revolution and he wrote a book: History of the National Constituent Assembly from May, 1848 that was said to be still the standard text on the constituent assembly more than 30 years later.
Louisa Corkran married her husband in Dublin in June or July 1839. They were soon in Paris where their five children were born; the first, Henrietta in 1841.
Louisa's salon in Paris was frequented by M. Vigny, and by the whole literary group that acknowledged him as the leader. The poet Robert Browning was a friend, and his wife travelled twice a year to Paris to visit Louisa.
Thackeray, then writing Vanity Fair, was also a friend of the family and almost acted as a fairy godfather to the children. When the family returned to London, her house in Bloomsbury became a rendezvous for many eminent men and women of letters.
Alice Corkran grew up in a stimulating environment. She was the playmate of Robert Browning's father, and she used to accompany the old man on his rambles along the quays in search of subjects to sketch. She was the old man's favourite. She published some of his sketches to illustrate an article about the Brownings in The Girl's Realm in 1905. She still had his old notebooks with their sketches when she died.
Corkran was educated at home and studied art in Paris until the family had to leave Paris following some reverses of fortune. They moved to Bloomsbury in London.

Works

Longer works

Corkran's fame rested in particular on her first novel Bessie Lang as well as her other novel Down the Snow Stairs. These works were cited occasionally to reference the author. Both attracted very positive critical attention on first publication. Of Bessie Lang reviewers said:
  • "so sweet, so simple, and at the same time so strongly descriptive is the style in which this tale is told that it seems to have caught some feature of merit from each part in the telling."The Examiner
  • "If Miss Corkran is a novice in fiction, as her title-page would seem to indicate, she is a writer who may well have a future before her, for the pretty and touching tale she here gives us is told with a simplicity and absence of straining after effect which bespeak a true feeling for her art, whilst the beauty and pathos of many touches in it are unquestionable."The Graphic
  • "Indeed, so many the principal elements of a high-class work are undoubtedly to be found in " Bessie Lang," that the authoress may claim to have stepped at once into foremost place amongst contemporary writers of fiction. The reader will probably not have perused many pages without being agreeably reminded of such writings as those of Mrs. Gaskell, Mrs. Oliphant, Mrs. Craik, Miss Thackeray, whose works edify and interest by their purity and power rather than any perceptible straining after effect."Birmingham Daily Gazette
Down the Snow Stairs also attracted a favourable critical response:
  • "It is quite as enthralling as "Alice in Wonderland," but much more human and real. At the same time, every page is bathed in the golden and undying light of romance, without which a child's story-book is as uninteresting to little folks as an auctioneer's catalogue."Sheffield Independent
  • "We have rarely read anything better of its kind than "Down the Snow Stairs"."The Scotsman
  • "one of the most charming children’s stories imaginable, and will assuredly be very popular"John Bull
  • "We have to place this book alongside of Carrol's Alice in Wonderland...A better and brighter book we have not read for a long time."Aberdeen Press and Journal
After 1890, all of Corkran's longer works were non-fiction. Her non-fiction works were also well received by critics, and one of her obituaries referred to her book on Leighton as an excellent critical biography.
The source for the following data is the British Library Catalogue, supplemented and cross-checked against Kirk, Sutherland, Watson, Library Hub Discover, and the Circulating Library database, supplemented by searches of the used book trade. The year of publication has been corrected from the nominal year, where necessary, by checking for reviews of the books in newspaper archives.
NoYearTitleIllustrationsPagesPublisherCat.BLIAHT
11876Bessie Lang295London: William Blackwood & Sons
21879Latheby Towers. A novel1,833 London : Richard Bentley & Son
31882The Adventures of Mrs. Wishing-to-be and other stories192London : Blackie & Son
41883The Wings of Courage and the Cloud Spinner 257London : Blackie & Son
61887Margery Merton's GirlhoodGordon Browne 286London : Blackie & Son
71888Meg's FriendRobert Fowler 288London : Blackie & Son
81888Joan's Adventures at the North Pole and elsewhereb/w f.piece by Horace Petherick160London : Blackie & Son
91889The Fatal HouseNo143London : Ward & Downey
101892The Poets' Corner, or Haunts and homes of the poetsAllan Barraud66London: Ernest Nister
111903Miniatures 52 b/w plates206London : Methuen & Co.
121904Frederic Leighton 3 b/w plates221London : Methuen & Co.
131905The Romance of Woman's InfluenceIllustrated: f.piece and portraits377London : Blackie & Son
141908The National Gallery16 b/w plates234London : Wells Gardner, Darton & Co.
151910The Dawn of British HistoryM. Lavars Harry 246London : George G. Harrap & Co.
161910The Life of Queen Victoria for boys and girlsAlan Wright 150London: T. C. & E. C. Jack

Legend for the column headings:
  • Cat.: Found in the Catalogue of the British Library
  • BL: Digital copy online at the British Library
  • IA: Digital copy online at the Internet Archive
  • HT: Digital copy online at Hathi Trust
Margery Merton's Girlhood is available online at Google Books, and Meg's Friend as a Gutenberg eText.

One work stands out on the list as being very dissimilar from the others, The Fatal House. This is a cheaply-priced melodrama completely unlike Corkran's other output, and there are no references on the title page to her other works. As noted in the table above, it is available as an online text at the British Library. The Morning Post said of the book: "Miss Alice Corkran has written a tale sufficiently full of mystery and horror to satisfy the most voracious appetite. "The Fatal House" exercises a baneful influence on all who reside under its roof. The history of its owners is one of crime, vice, and debauchery ; nothing but evil survives within its sin-tainted walls. Such ample evidence of this is adduced, that the unhappy wife of the last owner, in a state bordering on delirium, burns the house and its contents to the ground, thus lifting the curse which she feels has been laid upon it. It is an un- canny story from beginning to end, and its tone is morbid and unpleasant."

Anthologies

Corkran published three anthologies of her stories:
  • The Adventures of Mrs. Wishing-To-Be and Other Stories contained the title story, plus "Willie and Mary in Search of Fairy Land" and "Wish-Day".
  • Mischievous Jack and Other Stories contained "Mischievous Jack and the Old Fisherman" and "A Little King" which had both appeared in the first volume of The Bairn's Annual in 1885; and "Boppy's Repentance".
  • The Young Philistine, and Other Stories contained the title story, previously published as "A Young Philistine" in Merry England in 1885; "Pere Perrault's Legacy", which had first appeared as "How Pere Perrault Spent his Legacy" in Belgravia in July 1882; "A Village Genius" first published as "Mademoiselle Angele" in The Gentleman's Annual for 1881; and the lead story of the collection "The English Teacher at the Convent", which Sutherland said was notable among the short stories of Corkran, which "have some charm". The story is a version of "Miss Martha's Bag", which appeared in the first number of Merry England. The Athenaeum said of this collection that: "We find in Miss Corkran’s work a delicacy of touch, a fine humour, and a pathos which give to these little stories something of the charm and finish of a miniature."
NoYearTitlePagesPublisherBL Cat.
11886The Young Philistine: and other stories232London: Burns & Oates
21888Mischievous Jack, and other stories64London: Blackie & Son

The Young Philistine and other stories is available online at Google Books. Other anthologies that Corkran contributed to were:
  • The story "Pea Blossom" in Stories Jolly: Stories New: Stories Strange & Stories True. A Series of New and Original Tales For Boys and Girls, From Six to Fourteen Years Old, edited by H. C. Adams, and published in London by Skeffington & Son
  • "The Adventures of a Would-Be King of the Giants" in The Children's Hour. A collection of stories & poems,, edited by May Bateman and published in London by Simpkin & Marshall. This publication was sold in aid of the Princess May's Invalid Children's Aid Association.
  • An unnamed story in the anthology 52 Stories for the Little Ones, published in London by Hutchinson & Co. as part of their "52" series