
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume III: ‘Alas! the love of women,’ 1813–1814
Edited by Leslie A. Marchand
Harvard University Press books are not shipped directly to India due to regional distribution arrangements. Buy from your local bookstore, Amazon.co.in, or Flipkart.com.
This book is not shipped directly to country due to regional distribution arrangements.
Pre-order for this book isn't available yet on our website.
This book is currently out of stock.
Dropdown items
ISBN 9780674089426
Publication date: 01/01/1974
George Gordon Byron was a superb letter-writer: almost all his letters, whatever the subject or whoever the recipient, are enlivened by his wit, his irony, his honesty, and the sharpness of his observation of people. They provide a vivid self-portrait of the man who, of all his contemporaries, seems to express attitudes and feelings most in tune with the twentieth century. In addition, they offer a mirror of his own time. This first collected edition of all Byron’s known letters supersedes Prothero’s incomplete edition at the turn of the century. It includes a considerable number of hitherto unpublished letters and the complete text of many that were bowdlerized by former editors for a variety of reasons. Prothero’s edition included 1,198 letters. This edition has more than 3,000, over 80 percent of them transcribed entirely from the original manuscripts.
The third volume starts with Byron at the first crest of his fame following the publication of Childe Harold. It includes his literary letters to Tom Moore, frank and intimate ones to Hobhouse, pungent ones to Hanson and Murray, and his lively and amusing missives to Lady Melbourne, his confidante through all his love affairs. To her he describes the backwash of his tempestuous affair with Caroline Lamb, his emotional crises with Lady Oxford, the beginning of his liaison with his half-sister, Augusta Leigh, and his flirtation with Lady Frances Webster. The volume contains the letters of 1813 and the journal of 1813–1814, the first of his five incomparable journals.
The letters display, as Martin Fagg puts it, a “bewitching amalgam of the picturesque and the earthy, of arrogance and modesty, of vituperation and tenderness, of soulfulness and sheer irresistible high spirits.” They confirm Max Beerbohm’s opinion, “Byron’s letters are, I think, the best ever written—the fullest and most spontaneous.”
Author
- The late Leslie A. Marchand was Professor of English, Emeritus, Rutgers University. For his lifelong work on Byron, he was given the National Book Critics Circle's Ivan Sandrof Award.
Book Details
- 304 pages
- 5-1/2 x 8-1/4 inches
- Belknap Press
From this author
-
-
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume XI: ‘For freedom’s battle,’ 1823–1824
George Gordon Byron, Leslie A. Marchand -
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume X: ‘A heart for every fate,’ 1822–1823
George Gordon Byron, Leslie A. Marchand -
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume IX: ‘In the wind’s eye,’ 1821–1822
George Gordon Byron, Leslie A. Marchand -
Byron's Letters and Journals, Volume VIII: ‘Born for opposition,’ 1821
George Gordon Byron, Leslie A. Marchand
Recommendations
-
The Island
Nicholas Jenkins -
The Critical Writings of Oscar Wilde
Oscar Wilde, Nicholas Frankel -
On Not Being Someone Else
Andrew H. Miller -
When Novels Were Books
Jordan Alexander Stein -
Spenserian Moments
Gordon Teskey