The Ridpath library of universal literature : a biographical and bibliographical summary of the world's most eminent authors, including the choicest extracts and masterpieces from their writings ... . and three years later he received anappointment in the accountants office of the EastIndia Company, a position which he held for morethan thirty years, until 1825, when he was sufferedto retire with a life annuity of £450. His sister, Mary Ann Lamb (born in 1765; diedin 1847), was most intimately connected with theentire life of her brother. In 1796, in a suddenparoxysm of insanity, she stabbed h


The Ridpath library of universal literature : a biographical and bibliographical summary of the world's most eminent authors, including the choicest extracts and masterpieces from their writings ... . and three years later he received anappointment in the accountants office of the EastIndia Company, a position which he held for morethan thirty years, until 1825, when he was sufferedto retire with a life annuity of £450. His sister, Mary Ann Lamb (born in 1765; diedin 1847), was most intimately connected with theentire life of her brother. In 1796, in a suddenparoxysm of insanity, she stabbed her mother tothe heart, killing her instantly, and for the remain-ing half-century of her life she underwent not un-frequent attacks of her mental malady. CharlesLamb, then barely one-and-twenty, devoted him-self to the care of his afflicted sister; and in theintervals of her mental malady she shared in hisliterary tastes and labors. She wrote Mrs. Leices-ter s School, a collection of juvenile tales, and wasjoint author with him of Tales from Shakespeare,and of a small volume of Poetry for Children. Charles Lamb commenced his literary careerby putting forth, in conjunction with Coleridge(206). Vn/ cZa>77vO-~ CHARLES LAMB iol and Lloyd, a volume of poems (1797); the nextyear he wrote Rosamond Gray, a prose tale, andstill later John Woodville, a drama. In 1808 hepublished Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, whoflourished nearly contemporary with by far the most notable of his writings arethe Essays of E/ia, begun in 1820, and continueduntil 1833. His sister survived him for thirteenyears, and the annuity which the East India Com-pany had settled upon him was continued to herduring the remainder of her life, which was passedin retirement. MODERN GALLANTRY. In comparing modern with ancient manners, we arepleased to compliment ourselves upon the point ofgallantry : a certain obsequiousness, or deferential re-spect, which we are supposed to pay to females asfemale


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Keywords: ., bookautho, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectliterature