Книга: Thomas De Quincey «On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts»
On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts
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Книга | Описание | Год | Цена | Тип книги |
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On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts | People begin to see that something more goes to the composition of a fine murder than two blockheads to kill and be killed - a knife - a purse - and a dark lane... In this provocative and blackly… — Penguin Group, Little Black Classics Подробнее... | бумажная книга | ||
On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts | People begin to see that something more goes to the composition of a fine murder than two blockheads to kill and be killed - a knife - a purse - and a dark lane... In this provocative and blackly… — Penguin Group, Little Black Classics Подробнее... | бумажная книга |
Thomas de Quincey
Thomas de Quincey (15 August 1785 – 8 December 1859) was an English author and intellectual, best known for his "
Life and work
Child and student
He was born in 86 Cross Street,
Thomas was a weak and sickly child. His youth was spent in solitude, and when his elder brother, William, came home, he wreaked havoc in the quiet surroundings. De Quincey's mother (who counted
In 1800, De Quincey, aged fifteen, was ready for the
His first plan had been to reach
This period of privation left a profound mark upon De Quincey's psychology, and upon the writing he would later do; it forms a major and crucial part of the first section of the "Confessions", and re-appears in various forms throughout the vast body of his lifetime literary work.
Discovered by chance by his friends, De Quincey was brought home and finally allowed to go to
(His wife Margaret bore him eight children before her death in 1837. Five, however, predeceased their father; three of De Quincey's daughters survived him.)
Translator and essayist
In 1821 he went to London to dispose of some translations from German authors, but was persuaded first to write and publish an account of his
From this time on De Quincey maintained himself by contributing to various magazines. He soon exchanged London and the Lakes for
Financial pressures
De Quincey was oppressed by debt for most of his adult life; along with his opium addiction, debt was one of the primary constraints of his existence. [Lindop, pp. 246, 255, 257, 269, 271 and ff., especially 319-39.] He pursued journalism as the one way available to him to pay his bills; and without financial need it is an open question how much writing he would ever have done.
De Quincey came into his patrimony at the age of 21, when he received ₤2000 from his late father's estate. He was unwisely generous with his funds, making loans that could not or would not be repaid, including a ₤300 loan to Coleridge in 1807. After leaving Oxford without a degree, he made an attempt to study law, but desultorily and unsuccessfully; he had no steady income and spent large sums on books (he was a lifelong collector). By the 1820s he was constantly in financial difficulties. More than once in his later years, De Quincey was forced to seek protection from arrest in the debtors' sanctuary of Holyrood in Edinburgh. [Lindop, pp. 310-11; Eaton, pp. 342-3.] (At the time,
His financial situation improved only later in his life. His mother's death in 1846 brought him an income of ₤200 per year. When his daughters matured, they managed his budget more responsibly than he ever had himself. [Eaton, pp. 429-30.]
Medical issues
A number of medical practitioners have speculated on the physical ailments that inspired and underlay De Quincey's resort to opium, and searched the corpus of his autobiographical works for evidence. One possibility is "a mild...case of infantile paralysis" that he may have contracted from Wordsworth's children. [C. H. Hendricks, cited in: Judson S. Lyon, "Thomas De Quincey", New York, Twayne Publishers, 1969; p. 57.] De Quincey certainly had intestinal problems, and problems with his vision — which could have been related: "uncorrected myopic astigmatism...manifests itself as digestive problems in men." [George M. Gould, cited in Lyon, p. 55.] De Quincey also suffered neuralgic facial pain, "trigeminal neuralgia" — "attacks of piercing pain in the face, of such severity that they sometimes drive the victim to suicide." [Philip Sandblom, "Creativity and Disease", Seventh Edition, New York, Marion Boyars, 1992; p. 49.]
As with many addicts, De Quincey's opium addiction may have had a "self-medication" aspect for real physical illnesses, as well as a psychological aspect. [Lyon, pp. 57-8.] Psychologically, he had what Alethea Hayter has called the "pariah temperament" typical of drug addicts.
By his own testimony, De Quincey first used opium in 1804 to relieve his neuralgia; he used it for pleasure, but no more than weekly, through 1812. It was in 1813 that he first commenced daily usage, in response to illness and his grief over the death of Wordsworth's young daughter Catherine. In the periods of 1813–16 and 1817–19 his daily dose was very high, and resulted in the sufferings recounted in the final sections of his "Confessions". For the rest of his life his opium use fluctuated between extremes; he took "enormous doses" in 1843, but late in 1848 he went for 61 days with none at all. Notably, his periods of low usage were literarily unproductive. [Alethea Hayter, "Opium and the Romantic Imagination", revised edition, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, Crucible, 1988; pp. 229-31.]
Collected works
During the final decade of his life, De Quincey labored on a collected edition of his works. [Eaton, pp. 469-82.] The idea originally came from the American publisher
The existence of the American edition provoked and prompted a corresponding British edition. Since the Spring of 1850 De Quincey had been a regular contributor to an Edinburgh periodical called "Hogg's Weekly Instructor;" publisher James Hogg undertook to publish a collected edition of De Quincey's work, under the cumbersome title "Selections Grave and Gay from Writings Published and Unpublished by Thomas De Quincey". De Quincey edited and sometimes re-wrote his works for the Hogg edition; the 1856 second edition of the "Confessions" was prepared for inclusion in "Selections Grave and Gay". The first volume of that edition appeared in May 1853, and the fourteenth and last in January 1860, a month after the author's death.
Both of these were multi-volume collections, but made no pretense to be "complete" editions. Scholar and editor David Masson attempted a more definitive collection: "The Works of Thomas De Quincey" appeared in fourteen volumes in 1889 and 1890. Yet De Quincey's writings were so voluminous and widely-dispersed that further collections followed: two volumes of "The Uncollected Writings" (1890), and two volumes of "Posthumous Works" (1891–93). De Quincey's 1803 diary was published in 1927. [Eaton, p. 525.] Yet another volume, "New Essays by De Quincey", appeared in 1966.
Influence
His immediate influence extended to
Online texts
*
*
* [http://supervert.com/elibrary/thomas_de_quincey Thomas De Quincey elibrary] PDFs of Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts, and The Literature of Knowledge and the Literature of Power
* [http://ebrocken.blogspot.com Thomas De Quincey in Spanish]
Bibliography
Selected works:
* "
* "
* "Walladmor", 1825
* "
* "Klosterheim, or The Masque", 1832
* "Lake Reminscences", 1834-40
* "The Logic of the Political Economy", 1844
* "
* "
* "Autobiographical Sketches", 1853
* "Selections Grave and Gay, from the Writings, Published and Unpublished, by Thomas De Quincey", 1853-1860 (14 vols.)
* "Romances and Extravaganzas", 1877
* "Collected Writings", 1889
* "Uncollected Writings", 1890
* "The Posthumous Works", 1891-93
* "Memorials", 1891
* "Literary Criticism", 1909
* "The Diary", 1927
* "Selected Writings", 1937
* "New Essays", 1966
* "Literarische Portraits. Schiller, Herder, Lessing, Goethe", German Translation by Thomas Klandt. revonnah Verlag Hannover. ISBN 3-927715-95-6
* "The Works of Thomas De Quincey", 21 vols (London: Pickering and Chatto, 2000-2003) [This is the most up to date and scholarly edition]
References
External links
*Thomas De Quincey [http://www.queensu.ca/english/tdq/index.html Homepage] : Maintained by Dr Robert Morrison
* [http://supervert.com/elibrary/thomas_de_quincey Thomas De Quincey elibrary] PDFs of "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater", "On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts", and "The Literature of Knowledge and the Literature of Power"
*A highly original [http://wsrv.clas.virginia.edu/~bpn2f/opium.htm website] featuring hyperlinked excerpts from De Quincey.
*gutenberg author|id=Thomas_de_Quincey|name=Thomas de Quincey
* [http://essays.quotidiana.org/dequincey/ Essays by Thomas de Quincey at Quotidiana.org]
Источник: Thomas de Quincey
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