125- ) English Literature
Charles
Lamb (10 February 1775 – 27 December 1834) was an English essayist, critic ,poet ,
playwright and antiquarian, best known for his Essays of Elia and for the
children's book Tales from Shakespeare, co-authored with his sister, Mary Lamb
(1764–1847). Charles Lamb achieved lasting fame as a writer during the years
1820-1825, when he captivated the discerning English reading public with his
personal essays in the London Magazine, collected as Essays of Elia (1823) and
The Last Essays of Elia (1833). Known for their charm, humor, and perception,
and laced with idiosyncrasies, these essays appear to be modest in scope, but
their soundings are deep, and their ripples extend to embrace much of human
life—particularly the life of the imagination. In the 20th century, Lamb was
also recognized for his critical writings; Lamb as Critic (1980) gathers his
criticism from all sources, including letters.
Friends
with such literary luminaries as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey,
William Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth and William Hazlitt, Lamb was at the
centre of a major literary circle in England. He has been referred to by E. V.
Lucas, his principal biographer, as "the most lovable figure in English
literature".
Youth
and schooling Lamb was born in London, the son of John Lamb
(c. 1725–1799) and Elizabeth (died 1796), née Field.The son of John and
Elizabeth Field Lamb, Charles Lamb, a Londoner who loved and celebrated that
city, was born in the Temple, the abode of London lawyers, where his father was
factotum for one of these, Samuel Salt . Lamb had an elder brother, also John,
and sister, Mary; four other siblings did not survive infancy. John Lamb
(Lamb's father) was a lawyer's clerk and spent most of his professional life as
the assistant to barrister Samuel Salt, who lived in the Inner Temple in the
legal district of London; it was there, in Crown Office Row, that Charles Lamb
was born and spent his youth. Lamb created a portrait of his father in his
"Elia on the Old Benchers" under the name Lovel. Lamb's older brother
was too much his senior to be a youthful companion to the boy but his sister
Mary, being born eleven years before him, was probably his closest
playmate.[citation needed] Lamb was also cared for by his paternal aunt Hetty,
who seems to have had a particular fondness for him. A number of writings by
both Charles and Mary suggest that the conflict between Aunt Hetty and her
sister-in-law created a certain degree of tension in the Lamb household. However,
Charles speaks fondly of her and her presence in the house seems to have
brought a great deal of comfort to him.
Some
of Lamb's fondest childhood memories were of time spent with Mrs Field, his
maternal grandmother, who was for many years a servant to the Plumer family,
who owned a large country house called Blakesware, near Widford, Hertfordshire.
After the death of Mrs Plumer, Lamb's grandmother was in sole charge of the
large home and, as William Plumer was often absent, Charles had free rein of the
place during his visits. A picture of these visits can be glimpsed in the Elia
essay Blakesmoor in H—shire.
Why,
every plank and panel of that house for me had magic in it. The tapestried
bed-rooms – tapestry so much better than painting – not adorning merely, but
peopling the wainscots – at which childhood ever and anon would steal a look,
shifting its coverlid (replaced as quickly) to exercise its tender courage in a
momentary eye-encounter with those stern bright visages, staring reciprocally –
all Ovid on the walls, in colours vivider than his descriptions.
Little
is known about Charles's life before he was seven other than that Mary taught
him to read at a very early age and he read voraciously. It is believed that he
had smallpox during his early years, which forced him into a long period of
convalescence. After this period of recovery Lamb began to take lessons from
Mrs Reynolds, a woman who lived in the Temple and is believed to have been the
former wife of a lawyer. Mrs Reynolds must have been a sympathetic
schoolmistress because Lamb maintained a relationship with her throughout his
life and she is known to have attended dinner parties held by Mary and Charles
in the 1820s. E. V. Lucas suggests that sometime in 1781 Charles left Mrs
Reynolds and began to study at the Academy of William Bird.
His
time with William Bird did not last long, however, because by October 1782 Lamb
was enrolled in Christ's Hospital, a charity boarding school chartered by King
Edward VI in 1553. A thorough record of Christ's Hospital is to be found in
several essays by Lamb as well as The Autobiography of Leigh Hunt and the
Biographia Literaria of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, with whom Charles developed a
friendship that would last for their entire lives. Despite the school's brutality,
Lamb got along well there, due in part, perhaps, to the fact that his home was
not far distant, thus enabling him, unlike many other boys, to return often to
its safety. Years later, in his essay "Christ's Hospital Five and Thirty
Years Ago", Lamb described these events, speaking of himself in the third
person as "L".
"I
remember L. at school; and can well recollect that he had some peculiar
advantages, which I and other of his schoolfellows had not. His friends lived
in town, and were near at hand; and he had the privilege of going to see them,
almost as often as he wished, through some invidious distinction, which was
denied to us."
Christ's
Hospital was a typical English boarding school and many students later wrote of
the terrible violence they suffered there. The upper master (i.e. principal or
headteacher) of the school from 1778 to 1799 was Reverend James Boyer, a man
renowned for his unpredictable and capricious temper. In one famous story Boyer
was said to have knocked one of Leigh Hunt's teeth out by throwing a copy of
Homer at him from across the room. Lamb seemed to have escaped much of this
brutality, in part because of his amiable personality and in part because
Samuel Salt, his father's employer and Lamb's sponsor at the school, was one of
the institute's governors.
Charles
Lamb had a stutter and this "inconquerable impediment" in his speech
deprived him of Grecian status at Christ's Hospital, thus disqualifying him for
a clerical career. While Coleridge and other scholarly boys were able to go on
to Cambridge, Lamb left school at fourteen and was forced to find a more
prosaic career. For a short time he worked in the office of Joseph Paice, a
London merchant, and then, for 23 weeks, until 8 February 1792, held a small
post in the Examiner's Office of the South Sea House. Its subsequent downfall
in a pyramid scheme after Lamb left would be contrasted to the company's
prosperity in the first Elia essay. On 5 April 1792 he went to work in the
Accountant's Office for the British East India Company, the death of his
father's employer having ruined the family's fortunes. Charles would continue
to work there for 25 years, until his retirement with pension (the
"superannuation" he refers to in the title of one essay).
In
1792 while tending to his grandmother, Mary Field, in Hertfordshire, Charles
Lamb fell in love with a young woman named Ann Simmons. Although no epistolary
record exists of the relationship between the two, Lamb seems to have spent
years wooing her. The record of the love exists in several accounts of Lamb's
writing. "Rosamund Gray" is a story of a young man named Allen Clare
who loves Rosamund Gray but their relationship comes to nothing because of her
sudden death. Miss Simmons also appears in several Elia essays under the name
"Alice M". The essays "Dream Children", "New Year's
Eve", and several others, speak of the many years that Lamb spent pursuing
his love that ultimately failed. Miss Simmons eventually went on to marry a
silversmith and Lamb called the failure of the affair his "great
disappointment".
Family tragedy
Both Charles and his sister Mary had a period of
mental illness. As he himself confessed in a letter, Charles spent six weeks in
a mental facility during 1795:
Coleridge,
I know not what suffering scenes you have gone through at Bristol. My life has
been somewhat diversified of late. The six weeks that finished last year and
began this your very humble servant spent very agreeably in a mad house at
Hoxton—I am got somewhat rational now, and don't bite any one. But mad I
was—and many a vagary my imagination played with me, enough to make a volume if
all told. My Sonnets I have extended to the number of nine since I saw you, and
will some day communicate to you.
— Lamb to Coleridge; 27 May 1796.
Mary
Lamb's illness was more severe than her brother's, and it led her to become
aggressive on a fatal occasion. On 22 September 1796, while preparing dinner,
Mary became angry with her apprentice, roughly shoving the little girl out of
her way and pushing her into another room. Her mother, Elizabeth, began
admonishing her for this, and Mary had a mental breakdown. She took the kitchen
knife she had been holding, unsheathed it, and approached her mother, who was
sitting down. Mary, "worn down to a state of extreme nervous misery by
attention to needlework by day and to her mother at night", was seized
with acute mania and stabbed her mother in the heart with a table knife.
Charles ran into the house soon after the murder and took the knife out of
Mary's hand.:
Later
in the evening, Charles found a local place for Mary in a private mental
facility called Fisher House, which had been found with the help of a doctor
friend of his. While reports were published by the media, Charles wrote a
letter to Samuel Taylor Coleridge in connection to the matricide:
MY
dearest friend – White or some of my friends or the public papers by this time
may have informed you of the terrible calamities that have fallen on our
family. I will only give you the outlines. My poor dear dearest sister in a fit
of insanity has been the death of her own mother. I was at hand only time
enough to snatch the knife out of her grasp. She is at present in a mad house,
from whence I fear she must be moved to an hospital. God has preserved to me my
senses , – I eat and drink and sleep, and have my judgment I believe very
sound. My poor father was slightly wounded, and I am left to take care of him
and my aunt. Mr Norris of the Bluecoat school has been very very kind to us,
and we have no other friend, but thank God I am very calm and composed, and
able to do the best that remains to do. Write, —as religious a letter as
possible— but no mention of what is gone and done with. —With me "the
former things are passed away," and I have something more to do that
[than] to feel. God almighty have us all in his keeping.
— Lamb
to Coleridge. 27 September 1796
Charles
took over responsibility for Mary after refusing his brother John's suggestion
that they have her committed to a public lunatic asylum.: Lamb used a large
part of his relatively meagre income to keep his beloved sister in the private
"madhouse" in Islington. With the help of friends, Lamb succeeded in
obtaining his sister's release from what would otherwise have been lifelong
imprisonment. Although there was no legal status of "insanity" at the
time, the jury returned the verdict of "lunacy" which was how she was
freed from guilt of willful murder, on the condition that Charles take personal
responsibility for her safekeeping.
The
1799 death of John Lamb was something of a relief to Charles because his father
had been mentally incapacitated for a number of years since having a stroke.
The death of his father also meant that Mary could come to live again with him
in Pentonville, and in 1800 they set up a shared home at Mitre Court Buildings
in the Temple, where they would live until 1809.
In
1800, Mary's illness came back and Charles had to take her back again to the
asylum. In those days, Charles sent a letter to Coleridge, in which he admitted
he felt melancholic and lonely, adding "I almost wish that Mary were
dead."
Later
she would come back, and both he and his sister would enjoy an active and rich
social life. Their London quarters became a kind of weekly salon for many of
the most outstanding theatrical and literary figures of the day. In 1869, a
club, The Lambs, was formed in London to carry on their salon tradition. The
actor Henry James Montague founded the club's New York counterpart in 1874.
Charles
Lamb, having been to school with Samuel Coleridge, counted Coleridge as perhaps
his closest, and certainly his oldest, friend. On his deathbed, Coleridge had a
mourning ring sent to Lamb and his sister. Fortuitously, Lamb's first
publication was in 1796, when four sonnets by "Mr Charles Lamb of the
India House" appeared in Coleridge's Poems on Various Subjects. In 1797 he
contributed additional blank verse to the second edition, and met the
Wordsworths, William and Dorothy, on his short summer holiday with Coleridge at
Nether Stowey, thereby also striking up a lifelong friendship with William. In
London, Lamb became familiar with a group of young writers who favoured
political reform, including Percy Bysshe Shelley, William Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt
and William Hone.
Lamb
continued to clerk for the East India Company and doubled as a writer in
various genres, his tragedy, John Woodvil, being published in 1802. His farce,
Mr H, was performed at Drury Lane in 1807, where it was roundly booed. In the
same year, Tales from Shakespeare (Charles handled the tragedies; his sister
Mary, the comedies) was published, and became a best seller for William
Godwin's "Children's Library".
On
20 July 1819, at age 44, Lamb, who, because of family commitments, had never
married, fell in love with an actress, Fanny Kelly, of Covent Garden, and
besides writing her a sonnet he also proposed marriage. She refused him, and he
died a bachelor.
His collected essays, under the title Essays of Elia,
were published in 1823 ("Elia" being the pen name Lamb used as a
contributor to The London Magazine).
The
Essays of Elia would be criticised in the Quarterly Review (January 1823) by
Robert Southey, who thought its author to be irreligious. When Charles read the
review, entitled "The Progress of Infidelity", he was filled with
indignation, and wrote a letter to his friend Bernard Barton, where Lamb
declared he hated the review, and emphasised that his words "meant no harm
to religion". First, Lamb did not want to retort, since he actually
admired Southey; but later he felt the need to write a letter "Elia to
Southey", in which he complained and expressed that the fact that he was a
dissenter of the Church, did not make him an irreligious man. The letter would
be published in The London Magazine, in October 1823:
Rightly
taken, Sir , that Paper was not against Graces, but Want of Grace; not against
the ceremony, but the carelessness and slovenliness so often observed in the
performance of it. . . You have never ridiculed, I believe, what you thought to
be religion, but you are always girding at what some pious, but perhaps
mistaken folks, think to be so.
— Charles
Lamb, "Letter of Elia to Robert Southey, Esquire"
A
further collection called The Last Essays of Elia was published in 1833,
shortly before Lamb's death. Also, in 1834, Samuel Coleridge died. The funeral
was confined only to the family of the writer, so Lamb was prevented from
attending and only wrote a letter to Rev. James Gilman, Coleridge’s physician
and close friend, expressing his condolences.
On
27 December 1834, Lamb died of a streptococcal infection, erysipelas,
contracted from a minor graze on his face sustained after slipping in the
street; he was 59. From 1833 until their deaths, Charles and Mary lived at Bay
Cottage, Church Street, Edmonton, north of London (now part of the London
Borough of Enfield). Lamb is buried in All Saints' Churchyard, Edmonton. His
sister, who was ten years his senior, survived him by more than a dozen years.
She is buried beside him.
No comments:
Post a Comment