The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 713 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 2.

The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 713 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 2.

Ten years passed before Lamb collected his essays again, and then in 1833 was published The Last Essays of Elia, with Edward Moxon’s imprint.  The mass of minor essays in the London Magazine and elsewhere, which Lamb disregarded when he compiled his two collections, will be found in Vol.  I. of the present edition. The Last Essays of Elia had little, if any, better reception than the first; and Lamb had the mortification of being asked by the Norris family to suppress the exquisite and kindly little memoir of Randal Norris, entitled “A Death-Bed” (see page 279), which was held to be too personal.  When, in 1835, after Lamb’s death, a new edition of Elia and The Last Essays of Elia was issued, the “Confessions of a Drunkard” took its place (see Vol.  I.).

Meanwhile a Philadelphian firm had been beforehand with Lamb, and had issued in 1828 a second series of Elia.  The American edition of Elia had been the same as the English except for a slightly different arrangement of the essays.  But when in 1828 the American second series was issued, it was found to contain three pieces not by Lamb at all.  A trick of writing superficially like Lamb had been growing in the London Magazine ever since the beginning; hence the confusion of the American editor.  The three articles not by Lamb, as he pointed out to N.P.  Willis (see Pencillings by the Way), are “Twelfth Night,” “The Nuns and Ale of Caverswell,” and “Valentine’s Day.”  Of these Allan Cunningham wrote the second, and B.W.  Procter (Barry Cornwall) the other two.  The volume contained only eleven essays which Lamb himself selected for The Last Essays of Elia:  it was eked out with the three spurious pieces above referred to, with several pieces never collected by Lamb, and with four of the humorous articles in the Works, 1818.  Bernard Barton’s sonnet “To Elia” stood as introduction.  Altogether it was a very interesting book, as books lacking authority often are.

In the notes that follow reference is often made to Lamb’s Key.  This is a paper explaining certain initials and blanks in Elia, which Lamb drew up for R.B.  Pitman, a fellow clerk at the East India House.  I give it here in full, merely remarking that the first numerals refer to the pages of the original edition of Elia and those in brackets to the present volume:—­

  M. . . .  Page 13 [7] Maynard, hang’d himself.

  G.D. . . " 21 [11] George Dyer, Poet.

  H. . . . " 32 [16] Hodges.

  W. . . . " 45 [23]

  Dr. T——­e . " 46 [24] Dr. Trollope.

  Th. . . " 47 [24] Thornton.

  S. . . " 47 [24] Scott, died in Bedlam.

  M. . . " 47 [24] Maunde, dismiss’d school.

  C.V. le G. . " 48 [25] Chs.  Valentine le Grice.

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The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.