The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 705 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6.

The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 705 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6.

[This is from Patmore’s My Friends and Acquaintances, 1854; but I have no confidence in Patmore’s transcription.  After “picking pockets” should come, for example, according to other editors, the sentence, “Moxon has fallen in love with Emma, our nut-brown maid.”  This is the first we hear of the circumstance and quite probably Lamb was then exaggerating.  As it happened, however, Moxon and Miss Isola, as we shall see, were married in 1833.

We do not know the name of the widow; but her husband was Lamb’s cousin, the bookbinder.

The doubt about the Hazlitts refers chiefly to William Hazlitt’s divorce from his first wife in 1822, and his remarriage in 1824 with a Mrs. Bridgewater.

“Your book.”  Patmore, in My Friends and Acquaintances, writes:—­

This refers to a series of tales that I was writing, (since published under the title of Chatsworth, or the Romance of a Week.) for the subject of one of which he had recommended me to take “The Old Law.”  As Lamb’s critical faculties (as displayed in the celebrated “specimens” which created an era in the dramatic taste of England) were not surpassed by those of any writer of his day, the reader may like to see a few “specimens” of some notes which Lamb took the pains to make on two of the tales that were shown to him.  I give these the rather that there is occasionally blended with their critical nicety of tact, a drollery that is very characteristic of the writer.  I shall leave these notes and verbal criticisms to speak for themselves, after merely explaining that they are written on separate bits of paper, each note having a numerical reference to that page of the MS. in which occurs the passage commented on.

“Besides the words ‘riant’ and ‘Euphrosyne,’ the sentence is senseless.  ‘A sweet sadness’ capable of inspiring ’a more grave joy’—­than what?—­than demonstrations of mirth?  Odd if it had not been.  I had once a wry aunt, which may make me dislike the phrase.

“’Pleasurable:’—­no word is good that is awkward to spell. (Query.) Welcome or Joyous.

“‘Steady self-possession rather than undaunted courage,’ etc.  The two things are not opposed enough.  You mean, rather than rash fire of valour in action.

“‘Looking like a heifer,’ I fear wont do in prose. (Qy.) ’Like to some spotless heifer,’—­or,’that you might have compared her to some spotless heifer,’ etc.—­or ‘Like to some sacrificial heifer of old.’  I should prefer, ’garlanded with flowers as for a sacrifice ’—­and cut the cow altogether.

“(Say) ’Like the muttering of some strange spell,’—­omitting the demon,—­they are subject to spells, they don’t use them.

“‘Feud’ here (and before and after) is wrong. (Say) old malice, or, difference. Feud is of clans.  It might be applied to family quarrels, but is quite improper to individuals falling out.

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The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.