Matthew Arnold. Matthew Arnold.

Matthew Arnold‪.‬

Victorian Poetry 2003, Fall, 41, 3

    • 79,00 Kč
    • 79,00 Kč

Publisher Description

When I mentioned in last year's essay that this year I would discuss the sixth and final volume of Cecil Y. Lang's edition of Matthew Arnold's letters (University Press of Virginia), which had appeared in late 2001, I did not suspect that it would also be my solemn duty at this time to call attention to the passing of Lang himself--on February 15, 2003. Although an obituary appeared in the last issue of Victorian Poetry, it is appropriate to remind readers here that Lang's monumental edition of The Letters of Matthew Arnold can be seen as the capstone to his life's work, which included, as Victorian scholars well know, editions of correspondence by Swinburne and Tennyson. In the introduction to his first Arnold volume (1996), Lang expressed his opinion that Arnold's correspondence as a whole "may well be the finest portrait of an age and of a person, representing the main movements of mind and of events of nearly half a century and at the same time revealing the actual intimate life of the participant-observer, in any collection of English letters in the nineteenth century, possibly in existence." It is fitting that the final major project in the career of this important scholar and editor was one which he deeply believed to be of great significance, and I know that this opinion is widely shared among his surviving colleagues. Volume six covers the years 1885-88. (Arnold himself died on April 15, 1888.) One of the most notable features of this volume is the 173-page cumulative index which helps guide readers through the entire collection. Throughout his adult life, as even casual readers of the Letters will notice, Arnold maintained a remarkable commitment to family correspondence, and letters to his mother, to his siblings, to his wife when they were apart, and, finally, to his grown children constitute important series within the collection that chronicle Arnold's personal, professional, and artistic development. By the early 1850s, he had established a routine of writing his widowed mother nearly every week, and he continued to do so until her death in 1873. As discussed earlier in these pages, Arnold's frequent letters to his sister Jane (always addressed as "K") are of particular value in providing insights into Arnold's ambitions and self-doubts as a writer, especially during the early stages of his development as a poet. His sister Frances ("Fan") is also an important correspondent, especially after the death of their mother in 1873, when Frances continued to live at Fox How, the Arnold family home, as the resident matriarch. Numerous letters to Frances, and some to Jane, as well, continue to be of interest in the sixth volume, but most prominent are those addressed to Arnold's daughter Lucy, who had married Frederick Whitridge, a young New York lawyer, after meeting him while accompanying her father on his American tour of 1883-84.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2003
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
21
Pages
PUBLISHER
West Virginia University Press, University of West Virginia
SIZE
176.9
KB

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