Memoirs, Miscellanies and Letters of the Late Lucy Aikin
Including Those Addressed to the Rev. Dr Channing from 1826 to 1842
Lucy Aikin author P H Le Breton editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:17th Jul '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An 1864 memoir of the writer Lucy Aikin (1781–1864), with a miscellany of her entertaining essays and letters.
This 1864 work, edited by her niece's husband, contains a memoir of the writer Lucy Aikin (1781–1864), a collection of her essays and 'dialogues', and letters to family and friends in which she expresses frequently humorous and often trenchant opinions on the literary and social topics of the day.The writer Lucy Aikin (1781–1864) was the daughter of the physician and author John Aikin and the niece of Anna Laetitia Barbauld, whose works she edited after Barbauld's death in 1825. Given this literary background, it is not surprising that Lucy should have begun to write: her early works were poems, but she is best known for her two-volume Memoirs of the Court of Queen Elizabeth (1818), also reissued in this series. This 1864 work, edited by her niece's husband, contains a memoir of Aikin, a collection of her essays, and letters in which she expresses frequently humorous and often trenchant opinions on the literary and social topics of the day, such as the influence of wider knowledge of the German language on English writing, or the morally elevating effect of the British Museum. It will be appreciated by those interested in early nineteenth-century literature and women's writing.
ISBN: 9781108074704
Dimensions: 215mm x 138mm x 29mm
Weight: 500g
474 pages