Works of Charles and Mary Lamb. VI-VII. Letters
Charles Lamb to Walter Wilson, [15 November 1829]
Enfield, 15th November, 1829.
MY dear Wilson,—I have not opened a packet of unknown contents for many
years, that gave me so much pleasure as when I disclosed your three volumes. I have given
them a careful perusal, and they have taken their degree of classical books
upon my shelves. De Foe was always my
darling; but what darkness was I in as to far the larger part of his writings!
I have now an epitome of them all. I think the way in which you have done the
“Life “the most judicious you could have pitched upon. You have
made him tell his own story, and your comments are in keeping with the tale.
Why, I never heard of such a work as “the Review.” Strange that in my
stall-hunting days I never so much as lit upon an odd volume of it. This
circumstance looks as if they were never of any great circulation. But I may
have met with ’em,
1829 | DANIEL DEFOE AGAIN | 819 |
and not
knowing the prize, overpast ’em. I was almost a stranger to the whole
history of Dissenters in those reigns, and picked my way through that strange
book the “Consolidator” at random. How affecting are some of his
personal appeals! what a machine of projects he set on foot! and following
writers have picked his pocket of the patents. I do not understand whereabouts
in Roxana he himself left off. I always thought the
complete-tourist-sort of description of the town she passes through on her last
embarkation miserably unseasonable and out of place. I knew not they were
spurious. Enlighten me as to where the apocryphal matter commences. I, by
accident, can correct one A. D. “Family Instructor,” vol. ii. 1718;
you say his first volume had then reached the fourth edition; now I have a
fifth, printed for Eman. Matthews, 1717.
So have I plucked one rotten date, or rather picked it up where it had
inadvertently fallen, from your flourishing date tree, the Palm of Engaddi. I
may take it for my pains. I think yours a book which every public library must
have, and every English scholar should have. I am sure it has enriched my
meagre stock of the author’s works. I seem to be twice as opulent.
Mary is by my side just finishing the
second volume. It must have interest to divert her away so long from her modern
novels. Colburn will be quite jealous. I
was a little disappointed at my “Ode to the Treadmill” not finding a
place; but it came out of time. The two papers of mine will puzzle the reader,
being so akin. Odd that, never keeping a scrap of my own letters, with some
fifteen years’ interval I should nearly have said the same things. But I
shall always feel happy in having my name go down any how with De
Foe’s, and that of his historiographer. I promise myself,
if not immortality, yet diuternity of being read in consequence. We have both
had much illness this year; and feeling infirmities and fretfulness grow upon
us, we have cast off the cares of housekeeping, sold off our goods, and
commenced boarding and lodging with a very comfortable old couple next door to
where you found us. We use a sort of common table. Nevertheless, we have
reserved a private one for an old friend; and when Mrs.
Wilson and you revisit Babylon, we shall pray you to make it
yours for a season. Our very kindest remembrances to you both.
From your old friend and fellow-journalist, now in two instances,
Hazlitt is going to make your book a
basis for a review of De Foe’s
Novels in the “Edinbro’.” I wish I had health and spirits to do
it. Hone I have not seen, but I doubt
not he will be much pleased with your performance. I very much hope you
will give us an account of Dunton,
&c. But what I should more like to
820 | LETTERS OF C. AND M. LAMB | Nov. |
see
would be a Life and Times of Bunyan.
Wishing health to you and long life to your healthy book, again I subscribe
me,
John Bunyan (1628-1688)
Dissenting preacher and autobiographer; he published
Grace Abounding to
the Chief of Sinners (1666) and
Pilgrim's Progress
(1678).
Henry Colburn (1785-1855)
English publisher who began business about 1806; he co-founded the
New
Monthly Magazine in 1814 and was publisher of the
Literary
Gazette from 1817.
Daniel Defoe (1660-1731)
English novelist and miscellaneous writer; author of
Robinson
Crusoe (1719),
Moll Flanders (1722) and
Roxanna (1724).
John Dunton (1659-1732)
English bookseller who published the
Athenian Gazette (1690-96)
and
Life and Errors of John Dunton (1705).
William Hazlitt (1778-1830)
English essayist and literary critic; author of
Characters of
Shakespeare's Plays (1817),
Lectures on the English Poets
(1818), and
The Spirit of the Age (1825).
William Hone (1780-1842)
English bookseller, radical, and antiquary; he was an associate of Bentham, Mill, and
John Cam Hobhouse.
Mary Anne Lamb (1764-1847)
Sister of Charles Lamb with whom she wrote Tales from Shakespeare (1807). She lived with
her brother, having killed their mother in a temporary fit of insanity.
Walter Wilson (1781-1847)
The illegitimate son of John Walter, founder of the
Times; he was
a London bookseller and collector who published a three-volume life of Defoe (1830).