Reading Experience Database
1450-1945

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Record 20659

Reading Experience:

Evidence:
'His [Byron's] "Farewell" is miserable poetry, and the allusions to the intimacy of marriage are not only ungentlemanly, but unmanly. "The Domestick Sketch" is powerfully written. I have seen in the reports on mendicity that there are persons who teach the arts of abuse - His Lordship seems to have studied in this school, with great success'.
Century: 1800-1849
Date: Until: 25 Apr 1816
Country: Ireland
Time: n/a
Place: city: Edgeworth's Town
   
Type of Experience (Reader):
silent aloud unknown
solitary in company unknown
single serial unknown
Type of Experience (Listener):
solitary in company unknown
single serial unknown

Reader/Listener/Reading Group:

Reader:Richard Lovell Edgeworth
Age Adult (18-100+)
Gender Male
Date of Birth 31 May 1744
Socio-economic group: Gentry
Occupation: n/a
Religion: n/a
Country of origin: Ireland
Country of experience: Ireland
Listeners present if any:
(e.g. family, servants, friends, workmates)
n/a
Additional comments: n/a

 

Text Being Read:

Author: George Gordon, Lord Byron
Title: Fare thee well
Genre: Poetry
Form of Text: Print: Unknown, either in newspaper or version circulated in society
Publication details: n/a
Provenance: owned
sent by Anne Romilly

 

Source Information:

Record ID: 20659  
Source - Print  
  Author: Anne Romilly
  Editor: Samuel Henry Romilly
  Title: Romilly-Edgeworth Letters 1813-1818
  Place of Publication: London
  Date of Publication: 1936
  Vol: n/a
  Page: 137
  Additional comments: n/a

Citation: Anne Romilly, Samuel Henry Romilly (ed.), Romilly-Edgeworth Letters 1813-1818 (London, 1936), p. 137, http://can-red-lec.library.dal.ca/Arts/reading/recorddetails2.php?id=20659, accessed: 19 April 2024

Additional comments:

 

 

Reading Experience Database version 2.0.  Page updated: 27th Apr 2016  3:15pm (GMT)