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Journal of Washington Irving, 1823-1824
Washington Irving
Harvard University Press
An exact reproduction of a manuscript Journal kept by Washington Irving during about thirteen months of his life in Germany, Holland, France, and England. Forty and forty-one years old, Irving is seen through his own detailed record in the society of Paris, with English men of letters such as Samuel Rogers and Thomas Moore. He describes his literary projects in the period just following the successes of The Sketch Book and Bracebridge Hally and reveals his sources methods in writing his next book, Tales of a Traveller. The Journal is of peculiar value to the student of American literature in that it gives a minute account of Irving’s life during this important period.
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Washington Irving and the Storrows
Letters from England and the Continent, 1821-1828
Washington Irving
Harvard University Press
In the decade prior to Washington Irving’s return to America in 1832 to receive his public welcome as his country’s first man of letters, he travelled widely in England, France, Germany, Austria, and Spain. During these wanderings he regarded the Paris fireside of the Storrow family, next to his sister’s house in Birmingham, as his European home. To the Storrow children he wrote of the legends of Germany; to Mrs Storrow, of his travels; to Thomas Wentworth Storrow, his capable and cultivated friend, of his disappointments and of his literary projects, notably The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. This group of personal letters, no one of which has previously been published, gives a singularly illuminating record of Irving's discouragements as he attempted to sustain his fame as the author of The Sketch Book.
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