English editor, born in London on the 3rd of November 1823. From an early age he adopted literature as a profession, and produced a number of volumes of poems, essays, and stories. He was for twenty-five years editor of The Sun, and for seven years (1874–81) editor of the Roman Catholic publication, The Weekly Register. He edited the works of Lamb, Burns and Moore, and the first Lord Lytton, and published a number of articles, essays, pamphlets, etc., under various assumed names, besides some theological works, of which Corona Catholica is the best known. Among his works are Dark Ages, by An Oscotian (1847); The Gladstone Government, by a Templar (1869); and The Humour and Pathos of Charles Dickens (1884). (See authored article: Henry Lytton Bulwer, Baron Dalling and Bulwer.)