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Life of Charles Lamb by E.V. Lucas, G.P. Putman & Sons, Charles Lamb and His Contemporaries, by Edmund.
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Charles Lamb Facts

Selected Prose Charles Lamb This selection brings together the best prose writings of the great early nineteenth-century essayist Charles Lamb, whose shrewd wit and convivial style have endeared him to generations of readers. Buy from. Puffin Classics 73 Books. Sign up to the Penguin Newsletter For the latest books, recommendations, offers and more. Please enter an email. When he graduated in , he had already been writing poetry for some time--in the first of these were published in Coleridge's collection Poems On Various Subjects.

Lamb also continued to write epigrams, plays, poetry, and essays, many printed in such publications as the The Albion , The Morning Chronicle , and The Morning Post. Now earning a steady income, Charles was living at home again, helping Mary look after their parents when a pall of misfortune spread over the household; John's employer died so he lost his income; Charles was hospitalised for a period of insanity; and then his mother died.


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At the age of twenty-one Charles became the head of the family, caring for his aging father and his sister Sarah Lamb, "Aunt Hetty". After they both died in , Charles and Mary moved a number of times before settling again at living quarters at the Temple. Charles delighted in living in London and often extolled the virtues of his beloved city and her people, the crowds, cafes, shops, the Strand and Fleet Street.


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  • While he enjoyed being solitary and often went on walks at night, Lamb had numerous friends and acquaintances, as his letters attest. He and his sister had frequent visitors, their salon evenings consisting of playing cards, eating, drinking, smoking, and discussing various topics from all things literary to the everyday. Guests included fellow poets Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley , and William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy who the Lambs had met while on summer holiday in the Lake District and who for a time lived just around the corner from the Lambs.

    Charles Lamb

    Unlike his companions, Charles was not one to revel in the rural surroundings of England; he made a few trips to the country and once to Paris, but he found his inspiration and solace in the bustle and hectic life of the city. Lamb tried his hand unsuccessfully at theatre, writing a number of dramatic works including John Wodvil and Mr.

    H a farce in verse, In the Lambs moved to Russell Street, Covent Garden, where Charles would embark on his most successful period of writing, penning works under his pseudonym "Elia" for London Magazine. Also around this time the Lambs adopted an eleven year old orphan named Emma Isola who brought much joy and youth to their home.

    Charles Lamb

    Charles would go for long walks with her and Mary especially doted on her. In Charles moved to the first house he ever lived in, a white cottage in Islington. Two years later he retired with a pension after thirty-three years with the East India Company; he now had time to spend in his garden, " After another episode of illness, Mary went to live at Walden House in Edmonton where Charles would soon join her.

    In a letter to Wordsworth dated May he tells him of how it is best that he just live with her there where she can get the care she needs from the Waldens and not have all the upset of moving back and forth from home to hospital. Her illness was certainly wearying on him too; he often took to drinking when going through the emotional upheavals of loneliness and worrying about her.

    But Lamb was much cheered when Emma married his friend and publisher Edward Moxon in Charles took on her care as well as serving as sole support for a dying aunt and a prematurely senile father.


    • Further Reading on Charles Lamb;
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    • To Your Scattered Bodies Go (Riverworld Book 1).
    • Nonetheless, Lamb and his sister were devoted to one another and lived long and productive lives, publishing together the wildly popular "Tales from Shakespeare" and "Mrs. Leicester's School" , both of which are included here.

      Ebooks by Charles Lamb - online reading and free download

      Though unsigned, the bindings are extremely attractive and fittingly luxurious for the limited edition contents--the thick gilt tooling, luxurious doublures, and red silk endpapers housing tactilely pleasing Japanese vellum make this set a delight both to have and to hold. PJP Catalog: Ask a Question. Add to Wish List.