An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Center
Creator:
Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834
Title:
Charles Lamb Collection
Dates:
1801-1834
Extent:
5 boxes, 1 oversize folder (osf) (1.97 linear feet)
Abstract:
The Charles Lamb Collection consists
primarily of handwritten manuscripts, Lamb's fair copies of works by others, and
outgoing correspondence from Lamb and his sister Mary.
Call Number:
Manuscript Collection MS-02366
Language:
English
Access:
Open for research
Administrative Information
Acquisition:
Gift (Stark Collection, 1925) and purchase (Hanley Collection, 1964)
Charles Lamb was born in London on February 10, 1775, to John and Elizabeth Field
Lamb. In October 1787, he began his education at Christ's Hospital where he met
his
life-long friend, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Christ's Hospital was intended to prepare
boys for a university education followed by taking orders in the Church of England.
However, Lamb's stammer caused him to leave school early and find work first as
a
secretary to the businessman Joseph Paice, then as a clerk at the East India Company
where he would remain for thirty-three years. After Lamb left school, he met Ann
Simmons, the inspiration for some of his earliest poetry, which was first published
in the 1796 edition of Coleridge's Poems.
In September 1796, tragedy struck the Lamb family when Mary, Lamb's elder sister who
had a history of mental instability, killed their mother. She was judged temporarily
insane and sent to Hoxton Asylum. To prevent her permanent confinement in a mental
institution, Charles made the decision to devote his life to his sister's care.
While her illness did necessitate occasional periods of confinement, Mary was
able
to lead a somewhat normal life under the care of her brother, with whom she lived
and even helped to write children's literature.
For a time, Lamb took a break from writing to focus on caring for his sister, but
he
soon took it up again, and in June 1797 contributed fifteen poems to Samuel Taylor
Coleridge's Poems, Second Edition. Lamb continued to
write poetry throughout his life, but he also began to try his hand at theater,
novel writing, children's literature, and journalistic writing. He wrote plays,
including John Woodvil, a tragedy in Shakespearean
blank verse, but he turned increasingly to prose, the earliest example of which
is
his novel A Tale of Rosamund Gray (1798).
In 1820, Lamb began writing essays under the pseudonym Elia for London Magazine. These essays, for which Lamb is best
known, were published as Elia (1823) and The Last Essays of Elia (1833). In 1823, Charles and
Mary moved to Colebrooke Row in Islington where they adopted Emma Isola, whom
they
had met in Cambridge when she was nine. In the following years, Lamb was able
to
retire from the East India Company, but despite his new freedom, Lamb wrote less
in
the last decade of his life. He died on December 27, 1834.
Sources:
Courtney, Winifred F. "Charles Lamb." Dictionary of Literary Biography,
http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/GLD/ (accessed 29 October 2010).
Swaab, Peter."Lamb, Charles (1775-1834),
Essayist." Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004,
http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15912 (accessed 29 October 2010).
Scope and Contents
The Charles Lamb Collection consists primarily of handwritten manuscripts, Lamb's
fair copies of works by others, and outgoing correspondence from Lamb and his
sister
Mary. The collection is arranged in two series, I. Works, 1804-1825, undated,
and
II. Outgoing Correspondence, 1801-1834. Part of this collection was previously
accessible through a card catalog but has been recataloged as part of a
retrospective conversion project.
The Works Series is subdivided into Lamb's works, Lamb's fair copies, and other
papers. Lamb's works consist of an acrostic, a biblical question game, a lesson
in
English grammar, and numerous poems and essays. Also included is a commonplace
book
with poems, epitaphs, excerpts, and acrostics. Lamb's fair copies consist of Lamb's
handwritten copies of the poetry of authors such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Charles
Valentine Le Grice, Andrew Marvell, Thomas Overbury, Matthew Prior, William Strode,
Thomas Tickell, Edmund Waller, and George Withers. The final item in the series
is a
photostat regarding Lamb by an unidentified author.
The Outgoing Correspondence Series consists of letters sent by Lamb and his sister,
Mary. The letters are subdivided by author and then arranged by recipient and
date.
The bulk of the letters are written to William Wordsworth. Other recipients include
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Sarah Hazlitt, Charles Ollier, John Howard Payne, John
Rickman, Dorothy Wordsworth, and Mary Wordsworth. Included with each letter is
a
typewritten transcript.
Related Material
Additional manuscript material regarding Lamb is located in several other collections
at the Ransom Center. One undated letter to Lamb from Samuel Taylor Coleridge
is
located in Coleridge's papers. Other collections containing Lamb-related materials
are Harry Smith Bache, Edmund C. Blunden, E. V. Lucas, Joanna Richardson, and
the
Robert Spradlin Collection of Charles Lamb Research Papers. Some editions of Charles
Lamb's works are located in the Library; the Performing Arts Prints Collection
contains an image of Lamb; and the Vertical File contains information about Lamb
in
the Edmund Blunden and Christopher Morley files.
There are significant collections of Lamb manuscripts in the Henry E. Huntington
Library, the New York Public Library, the Pierpont Morgan Library, the British
Library, and libraries at Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University,
and the University of Kentucky. The Charles Lamb Society Library, which holds
some
autograph items, is now housed in the Guildhall Library, London.