Книга: Charles Lamb, Mary Lamb «Tales from Shakespeare»

Tales from Shakespeare

Tales from Shakespeare by Charles and Mary Lamb was written to be an "introduction to the study of Shakespeare", but are much more entertaining than that. All of Shakespeare's best-loved plays, comic and tragic, are retold in a clear and robust style, and their literary quality has made them popular and sought-after ever since their first publication in 1807. This edition contains the delightful pen-and-ink drawings of Arthur Rackham.

Издательство: "Wordsworth Editions Limited" (1994)

Формат: 125x195, 288 стр.

ISBN: 978-1-85326-140-4, 1853261408

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Tales from ShakespeareTales from Shakespeare by Charles and Mary Lamb was written to be an `introduction to the study of Shakespeare`, but are much more entertaining than that. All of Shakespeare`s best-loved plays, comic… — Wordsworth Editions Limited, (формат: 125x195, 288 стр.) Classics Подробнее...1994272бумажная книга

Charles Lamb

Adversidad
Lleva tu cruz cantando y no suspirando. En todo mercado vale más una sonrisa que mil lamentos.
Libros
La literatura es una pésima muleta, pero un excelente bastón de paseo.
Me gusta extraviarme a mí mismo a través de otras mentes. Cuando no estoy paseando, estoy leyendo. Soy incapaz de sentarme y ponerme a pensar. Los libros piensan por mí.

Источник: Charles Lamb

Mary Lamb

Mary Lamb

With her brother Charles - painting by Francis Stephen Cary
Born 3 December 1764(1764-12-03)
England.
Died 20 May 1847(1847-05-20) (aged 82)
England.
Known for Tales from Shakespeare
Relatives Charles Lamb (brother)

Mary Ann Lamb (3 December 1764 – 20 May 1847), was an English writer, the sister and collaborator of Charles Lamb.

Contents

Biography

She was born on 3 December 1764. In 1796, Mary, who had suffered a breakdown from the strain of caring for her family, killed her mother with a kitchen knife, and from then on had to be kept under constant supervision. When their senile father died, her younger brother became her official guardian. They lived together and in 1823 they met and adopted an orphan, Emma Isola, who later married Charles's publisher Edward Moxon.[1]

In 1807, Mary collaborated with Charles on a children's book, Tales from Shakespeare, and they produced other popular works for children in later years. On her own, Mary Lamb published an epistolary work, Mrs Leicester's School, which the poet Samuel Coleridge believed would and should be "acknowledged as a rich jewel in the treasury of our permanent English literature." It is with this book, concerning the tales of a variety of motherless and orphaned girls, that Mary Lamb seemed to deal with the personal themes of grief and guilt. Though her solo turn, critically acclaimed at the time, has not outlived its era, Tales from Shakespeare continues to be in print. It was first published by William Godwin (Mary Wollstonecraft's widower) and his second wife Mary Jane Godwin (mother of Claire Clairmont).

Mary continued to suffer bouts of mental illness throughout her life. Notwithstanding these dramatic interruptions, Mary, along with her brother, was at the center of an ongoing artist's salon in London, entertaining many theatrical and literary luminaries of the day. Among other notables, Coleridge praised her for the sensibility and empathy that characterized extended periods in which she was free of the symptoms of the bipolar disorder that she battled, often valiantly. Although contemporaries had predicted that Mary would be the first to die, it was Charles who succumbed to complications of an infected wound in 1834. Biographers have noted the irony of her brother's relatively greater dependence on her and her seeming instinct for survival, but after his death, she grew increasingly frail, cared for at times by a family and at others in an asylum.

She died on 20 May 1847, and was buried next to her brother in the Edmonton Churchyard in Middlesex.[2]

Legacy

Subsequently, Mary has been depicted as the central character in The Lambs of London (2004), a novel by Peter Ackroyd. She is also the subject of a recent biographical study by British writer Kathy Watson, The Devil Kissed Her. Ms. Watson credits Mary Lamb with the "better half" of the writing in Tales in terms of its vibrancy and skill.

References

  1. ^ Edward Moxon at ODNB
  2. ^ Francis, J. C. Notes by the way (1909) [Page:Notes by the Way.djvu/72 p.2]. Retrieved 3 January 2009.

External links

Источник: Mary Lamb

См. также в других словарях:

  • Tales from Shakespeare — was an English children s book written by Charles Lamb with his sister Mary Lamb in 1807. It was illustrated by Arthur Rackham in 1899 and 1909.The book reduced the archaic English and complicated storyline of Shakespeare to a simple level that… …   Wikipedia

  • Tales from Shakespeare — n. children s book written in 1807 by Charles Lamb together with his sister Mary Lamb …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Tales from Ovid — is a poetical work written by the English poet Ted Hughes. Published in 1997 by Faber and Faber, it is a retelling of twenty four tales from Ovid s Metamorphoses . It won the Whitbread Book Of The Year Award for 1997 and has been translated into… …   Wikipedia

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  • Tales from the Public Domain — Infobox Simpsons episode episode name = Tales from the Public Domain episode no = 283 prod code = DABF08 airdate = March 17, 2002 show runner = Al Jean writer = Andrew Kreisberg Josh Lieb Matt Warburton director = Mike B. Anderson blackboard =… …   Wikipedia

  • Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare — infobox Book | name = Beautiful Stories from Shakespeare title orig = translator = image caption = author = Edith Nesbit cover artist = country = United Kingdom language = English genre = Children s novel publisher = T. Fisher Unwin release date …   Wikipedia

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