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Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men

 

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Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men



 
 
The Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men were five volumes of Dionysius Lardner’s
Dionysius Lardner

Dionysius Lardner , was an Ireland scientific writer who popularised science and technology, and edited the, 133-volume, Cabinet Cyclopedia....
 133-volume Cabinet Cyclopaedia (1829–46). Aimed at the self-educating middle class, this encyclopedia was written during the nineteenth-century literary revolution in Britain that encouraged more people to read.

The Lives formed part of the Cabinet of Biography in the Cabinet Cyclopaedia.






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Encyclopedia


The Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men were five volumes of Dionysius Lardner’s
Dionysius Lardner

Dionysius Lardner , was an Ireland scientific writer who popularised science and technology, and edited the, 133-volume, Cabinet Cyclopedia....
 133-volume Cabinet Cyclopaedia (1829–46). Aimed at the self-educating middle class, this encyclopedia was written during the nineteenth-century literary revolution in Britain that encouraged more people to read.

The Lives formed part of the Cabinet of Biography in the Cabinet Cyclopaedia. The three-volume Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal (1835–37) and the two-volume Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of France (1838–39) consist of biographies of important writers and thinkers of the fourteenth to eighteenth centuries. Most of them were authored by the Romantic
Romanticism

Romanticism is a complex artistic, literary, and intellectual movement that originated in the second half of the 18th century in Western Europe, and gained strength during the Industrial Revolution....
 writer Mary Shelley
Mary Shelley

Mary Shelley was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel literature, best known for her Gothic fiction Frankenstein ....
. Shelley's biographies reveal her as a professional woman of letters, contracted to produce several volumes of works and paid well to do so. Her extensive knowledge of history and languages, her ability to tell a gripping biographical narrative, and her interest in the burgeoning field of feminist historiography
Historiography

Historiography is the aspect of semiotics that is the study of how knowledge of the past, recent or distant, is obtained and transmitted. Broadly speaking, historiography examines the writing of history and the use of historical methods, drawing upon such elements such as authorship, sourcing, interpretation, style, bias, and audience....
 are reflected in these works.

At times Shelley had trouble finding sufficient research materials and had to make do with fewer resources than she would have liked, particularly for the Spanish and Portuguese Lives. She wrote in a style that combined secondary sources, memoir
Memoir

As a literature genre, a memoir , or a reminiscence, forms a subclass of autobiography ? although the terms 'memoir' and 'autobiography' are today almost interchangeable....
, anecdote, and her own opinions. Her political views are most obvious in the Italian Lives, where she supports the Italian independence movement
Italian unification

Italian Unification was the political and social movement that annexed different states of the Italian peninsula into the single state of Italy in the 19th century....
 and promotes republicanism
Republicanism

Republicanism is the ideology of governing a nation as a republic, where the head of state is appointed by other means than hereditary, often elections....
. In the French Lives she portrays women sympathetically, explaining their political and social restrictions and arguing that women can be productive members of society if given the proper educational and social opportunities.

The Lives did not attract enough critical attention to become a bestseller. A fair number were printed and sold, however, and far more copies of the Lives circulated than of Shelley's novels. Some of the volumes were pirated in the United States, where they were praised by the poet and critic Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe was an American poet, Short story writer, Editing and Literary criticism, and is considered part of the American Romanticism. Best known for his tales of Mystery and the macabre, Poe was one of the earliest American practitioners of the short story and is considered the inventor of the Detective fiction genre....
. Not reprinted until 2002, Mary Shelley's biographies have only recently been appreciated.

Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia


During the first quarter of the nineteenth century, self-improvement literature became an important portion of the book market: "it was the age of the 'Family Library' edition". In his article on the Cabinet Cyclopaedia, Morse Peckham writes that this "revolution in literacy, [was] partly the result of the spread of liberal ideas by the French Revolution, [and] partly of the desire to combat those ideas by teaching the poor to read the Bible and religious tracts [... It] was to have an effect on modern society almost as profound as the industrial and agricultural revolutions". Dionysius Lardner's
Dionysius Lardner

Dionysius Lardner , was an Ireland scientific writer who popularised science and technology, and edited the, 133-volume, Cabinet Cyclopedia....
 Cabinet Cyclopaedia, published between 1829 and 1846, was one of the most successful of these enterprises, which also included John Murray’s Family Library and the publications of the Society for the Propagation of Useful Knowledge. Although intended for the "general reader", the series was aimed specifically at the middle class rather than the masses: each volume cost six shilling
Shilling

The shilling is a unit of currency used in current and former Commonwealth of Nations countries, and continued to be used in countries that left the commonwealth, such as Republic of Ireland and Tanzania....
s, prohibiting purchase by the poor. The advertisements for the Cyclopaedia describe the expected audience as "merchants, captains, families, [and] new-married couples". The prospectus assured its readers that "nothing will be admitted into the pages of the 'CABINET CYCLOPAEDIA' which can have the most remote tendency to offend public or private morals. To enforce the cultivation of religion and the practice of virtue should be a principal object with all who undertake to inform the public mind."

The series was divided into five "Cabinets": Arts and Manufactures, Biography, History, Natural History, and Natural Philosophy. The advertisement claimed these covered "all the usual divisions of knowledge that are not of a technical and professional kind". Unlike other encyclopedias of the time, Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia arranged its articles topically rather than alphabetically. The series eventually contained 61 titles in 133 volumes and customers could purchase a single volume, a single cabinet, or the entire set. The first volume was published in December 1829 by Longman
Longman

Longman was a publisher founded in London, England in 1724. It is now an imprint of Pearson Education....
, Reese, Orme, Browne, Greene, and John Taylor
John Taylor (1781-1864)

John Taylor was a publisher, essayist, and writer born in East Retford, Nottinghamshire, the son of James Taylor and Sarah Drury. Although in pyramidical circles, he may be remembered for his contributions to Pyramidology and his use of that subject in the fight against adopting the metric system of measurements, his real fame is as the publ...
. Thirty-eight identified authors contributed (others are unidentified); Mary Shelley
Mary Shelley

Mary Shelley was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel literature, best known for her Gothic fiction Frankenstein ....
 was the only female contributor and the eighth most productive.

Reverend Dr. Dionysius Lardner, a science lecturer at University College London
University College London

University College London is a university institution and constituent college of the University of London based primarily in London, England, United Kingdom....
, started the Cabinet Cyclopaedia in 1827 or 1828. The authors who contributed to the volumes spanned the political spectrum and included many luminaries of the day. James Mackintosh
James Mackintosh

Sir James Mackintosh was a Scotland jurist, politician and historian. He is said to have been one of the most cultured and catholic-minded men of his time ....
, Walter Scott
Walter Scott

Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet, was a prolific Scotland historical novelist and poet popular throughout Europe during his time.In some ways Scott was the first English-language author to have a truly international career in his lifetime, with many contemporary readers all over Europe, Australia, and North America....
, Thomas Moore
Thomas Moore

Thomas Moore was an Irishman poet, singer, songwriter, and entertainer, now best remembered for the lyrics of The Minstrel Boy and the The Last Rose of Summer....
, and Connop Thirlwall
Connop Thirlwall

Connop Thirlwall was an England bishop and historian.Thirlwall was born at Stepney, London, of a Northumbrian family. He was a prodigy, learning Latin at three, Greek language at four, and writing sermons at seven....
 wrote histories; Robert Southey
Robert Southey

Robert Southey was an English poet of the Romantic poetry school, one of the so-called "Lake Poets", and Poet Laureate for 30 years from 1813 to his death in 1843....
 wrote naval biographies; Henry Roscoe wrote legal biographies; John Herschel
John Herschel

Sir John Frederick William Herschel, 1st Baronet Royal Guelphic Order, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England mathematician, astronomer, chemist, and experimental photographer/inventor, who in some years also did valuable botanical work....
 wrote on astronomy and the philosophy of science; August de Morgan wrote on mathematics; David Brewster
David Brewster

Sir David Brewster, Fellow of the Royal Society was a Scotland scientist, inventor and writer.He was born at Jedburgh, where his father, a teacher of high reputation, was rector of the grammar school....
 wrote on optics; and Lardner himself wrote on mathematics and physics. Authors were usually paid about £200 for each volume, though some contracts were much higher or lower. For example, Irish poet Thomas Moore was contracted to write a two-volume History of Ireland for £1,500. One of the reasons the overall project ran into difficulty may have been that it overpaid well-known writers. Peckham speculates that the reason many of the famous writers listed on the prospectus never participated was because of the project's financial problems. The 19 substitute contributors were, he writes, "at the time and subsequently a far less distinguished group than Lardner had originally announced".

The books were relatively expensive to print, due to the Corbould and Finden
William Finden

William Finden was an England line engraver.He served his apprenticeship to one James Mitan, but appears to have owed far more to the influence of James Heath , whose works he privately and earnestly studied....
 illustrations, images for the scientific volumes, and the use of Spottiswoode's printing house. In order to cut costs, the publishers decided to use small print and narrow margins. An estimated 4,000 copies of the first edition of the early volumes were printed, but the print run would probably have fallen to 2,500 since the sales did not pick up after 1835. As it became clear that the series was not going to take off, fewer review copies were sent out and advertisements became smaller. Lardner's interest in the project may also have waned, as he paid less attention to its business dealings. However, some volumes of the Cabinet Cyclopaedia remained in print until 1890.

Because of the popularity of encyclopedias at the beginning of the nineteenth century, the Cabinet Cyclopaedia did not receive enough critical notice to make it a bestseller. Often the reviews were "perfunctory". However, some individual writers received attention. Moore, for example, was given a front-page spread in the Literary Gazette for his history of Ireland. Shelley’s volumes received 12 reviews in total—a good number—but "her name was never fully exploited" in the project; whether by her choice or Lardner’s, it is unclear. Nevertheless, Peckham writes that "the Cyclopaedia on the whole was a distinguished and valuable work", and some of the individual volumes became famous.

Mary Shelley’s contributions


Written during the last productive decade of Mary Shelley's
Mary Shelley

Mary Shelley was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel literature, best known for her Gothic fiction Frankenstein ....
 career, her contributions fill about three-quarters of these five volumes and reveal her to be a professional woman of letters. They demonstrate her knowledge of several languages and historical research covering several centuries, her ability to tell a gripping biographical narrative, and her interest in the burgeoning field of feminist historiography
Historiography

Historiography is the aspect of semiotics that is the study of how knowledge of the past, recent or distant, is obtained and transmitted. Broadly speaking, historiography examines the writing of history and the use of historical methods, drawing upon such elements such as authorship, sourcing, interpretation, style, bias, and audience....
. She "wrote with many books to hand – reading (or rereading) some, consulting others, cross-referring, interweaving abridged and paraphrased source material with her own comment". Shelley combined secondary sources with memoir
Memoir

As a literature genre, a memoir , or a reminiscence, forms a subclass of autobiography ? although the terms 'memoir' and 'autobiography' are today almost interchangeable....
 and anecdote and included her own judgments, a biographical style made popular by the eighteenth-century critic Samuel Johnson
Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson was an English author. Beginning as a Grub Street journalist, he made lasting contributions to English literature as a poet, essayist, moralist, novelist, literary critic, biographer, editor and lexicographer....
 in his Lives of the Poets (1779–81). She describes this technique in her "Life of Metastasio": William Godwin's
William Godwin

William Godwin was an English journalist, political philosophy and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism, and one of the first modern proponents of philosophical anarchism....
 theories of biographical writing significantly influenced Shelley's style. Her father believed that biography could tell the history of a culture as well as serve a pedagogical function. Shelley felt that her nonfiction works were better than her fiction, writing in 1843 to publisher Edward Moxon
Edward Moxon

Edward Moxon was a United Kingdom poet and publisher.Moxon was born at Wakefield in Yorkshire his father Michael worked in the wool trade. In 1817 he left for London, joining Longman in 1821....
: "I should prefer quieter work, to be gathered from other works—such as my lives for the Cyclopedia—& which I think I do much better than romancing."

The eighteenth century had seen a new kind of history emerge, with works such as David Hume's
David Hume

David Hume was a Scotland philosopher, economist, historian and a key figure in the history of Western philosophy and the Scottish Enlightenment....
 History of England (1754–63). Frustrated with traditional histories that highlighted only military and monarchical history, Hume and others emphasised commerce, the arts, and society. Combined with the rise of sensibility
Sensibility

Sensibility refers to an acute perception of or responsiveness toward something, such as the emotions of another. This concept emerged in eighteenth-century Britain, and was closely associated with studies of sense perception as the means through which knowledge is gathered....
 at the end of the eighteenth century, this "produced an unprecedented historical interest in the social, the inward, and particularly the realm of affect". These topics and this style explicitly invited women into the discussion of history as both readers and writers. However, since this new history often subordinated the private sphere to the public, women writers took it upon themselves to bring "sentimental and private elements" to the centre of historical study. In this way, they argued for the political relevance of women, claiming, for example, that women's sympathy for those who suffered enabled them to speak for marginalised groups, such as slaves or the poor.

Shelley practised this early form of feminist historiography. Biographical writing was, in her words, supposed to "form as it were a school in which to study the philosophy of history" and to teach "lessons". These "lessons" consisted, most frequently and importantly, of criticisms of male-dominated institutions, such as primogeniture
Primogeniture

Primogeniture is the common law right of the firstborn son to inherit the entire Estate , to the exclusion of younger siblings. It is the tradition brought by the Normans to England in 1066....
. She also praises societies that are progressive with regard to gender relations—she wrote, for example, "No slur was cast by the [Renaissance era] Italians on feminine accomplishments ... Where abstruse learning was a fashion among men, they were glad to find in their friends of the other sex, minds educated to share their pursuits".

Shelley was particularly interested in tying private, domestic history to public, political history. She emphasises romance, the family, sympathy, and compassion in the lives of the people she writes about. This is particularly true in her essays on Petrarch
Petrarch

Francesco Petrarca , known in English language as Petrarch, was an Italy scholar, poet and one of the earliest Renaissance humanism. Petrarch is often popularly called the "Father of Humanism"....
 and Vincenzo Monti
Vincenzo Monti

Vincenzo Monti was an Italy poet and scholar....
. Her belief that these domestic influences would improve society, and that women could be at the forefront of them, ties her approach to that of other early feminist historians such as Mary Hays
Mary Hays

Mary Hays was an English novelist and feminist....
 and Anna Jameson. Shelley argues that women possess a "distinctive virtue" in their ability to sympathise with others and should use this ability to improve society. She castigates Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean Jacques Rousseau was a major philosopher, writer, and composer of the eighteenth century The Age of Enlightenment, whose political philosophy influenced the French Revolution and the development of modern political and educational thought....
, for example, for abandoning his children at a foundling hospital
Foundling Hospital

The Foundling Hospital in London, England was founded in 1739 by the philanthropy Captain Thomas Coram. It was a children's home established for the "education and maintenance of exposed and deserted young children." The word "hospital" was used in a more general sense than it is today, simply indicating the institution's "hospitality" to...
, decrying the "masculine egotism" associated with his philosophy—a criticism similar to the one she makes of Victor Frankenstein in Frankenstein
Frankenstein

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, generally known as Frankenstein, is a novel written by the British author Mary Shelley. Shelley started writing Frankenstein when she was 18 and finished when she was 19....
 (1818).

Unlike most of her novels, which had a print run of only several hundred copies, the Livess print run of about 4,000 for each volume became, in the words of one scholar, "one of her most influential political interventions". However, Shelley's biographies have not been fully appreciated until recently. The Lives were not reprinted until 2002, and little study has been made of them because of a critical tradition that "dismiss[es] the Lives as hack work churned out rapidly in order to pay off debts".

Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal

The three-volume Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal contains numerous biographies of writers and thinkers of the fourteenth to eighteenth centuries. The first volume was published on 1 February 1835, the second on 1 October 1835, and the third on 1 November 1837. A pirated edition of the first two volumes was published in the United States by Lea and Blanchard in 1841.

Italian Lives

The Italian Lives constitute the first two volumes of Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal. The poet, journalist, and literary historian James Montgomery
James Montgomery

James Montgomery was a United Kingdom editing and poet.Montgomery, poet, son of a pastor and missionary of the Moravian Church, was born at Irvine, North Ayrshire in Ayrshire, and educated at the Moravian School at Fulneck school, near Pudsey in Leeds....
 contributed the biographies of Dante
DANTE

DANTE is a not-for-profit organisation that plans, builds and operates the international networks that interconnect the various National Research and Education Networks in Europe and surrounding regions....
, Ariosto, and Tasso
Torquato Tasso

Torquato Tasso was an Italy poet of the 16th century, best known for his poem La Gerusalemme liberata , in which he depicts a highly imaginative version of the combats between Christians and Muslims at the end of the First Crusade, during the siege of Jerusalem ....
. Historian of science Sir David Brewster contributed that of Galileo. Mary Shelley contributed the rest: Petrarch
Petrarch

Francesco Petrarca , known in English language as Petrarch, was an Italy scholar, poet and one of the earliest Renaissance humanism. Petrarch is often popularly called the "Father of Humanism"....
, Boccaccio, Lorenzo de'Medici, Marsiglio Ficino, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola

Count Giovanni Pico della Mirandola was an Italian Renaissance philosopher. He is famed for the events of 1486, when at the age of 23, he proposed to defend 900 theses on religion, philosophy, natural philosophy and magic against all comers, for which he wrote the famous Oration on the Dignity of Man which has been called the "Manifest...
, Angelo Poliziano, Bernardo Pulci, Luca Pulci, Luigi Pulci
Luigi Pulci

Luigi Pulci was an Italy poet best known for his Morgante, an epic story of a giant who is converted to Christianity and follows the knight Roland....
, Cieco Da Ferrara, Burchiello, Bojardo, Berni
Francesco Berni

Francesco Berni was an Italy poet. He is credited for beginning what is now known as "Bernesque poetry", a serio-comedic type of poetry with elements of satire....
, Machiavelli, Guicciardini, Vittoria Colonna
Vittoria Colonna

Vittoria Colonna , marchioness of Pescara, was an Italy noblewoman and poet....
, Guarini
Giovanni Battista Guarini

Giovanni Battista Guarini was an Italy poet, dramatist, and diplomat....
, Chiabrera
Gabriello Chiabrera

Gabriello Chiabrera was an Italy poet, sometimes called the Italian Pindar.He was of patrician descent, and was born at Savona, a little town in the domain of the Genoa republic, twenty-eight years after the...
, Tassoni, Marini, Filicaja, Metastasio
Metastasio

Pietro Antonio Domenico Trapassi, better known by his pseudonym of Metastasio, was an Italy poet and librettist, considered the most important writer of opera seria libretti....
, Goldoni, Alfieri, Monti, and Ugo Foscolo
Ugo Foscolo

Ugo Foscolo was a Greece-born Italy writer, revolutionary and poet. On the death of his father, a physician in Split /Spalato, today Croatia , the family removed to Venice, and at the University of Padua Foscolo completed the studies begun at the Dalmatian grammar school....
. Although there has been some confusion regarding the attribution of these biographies, the
Lives
s recent editor, Tilar Mazzeo, notes that Shelley claimed authorship of all of these and granted Montgomery and Brewster’s authorship of the others in her letters.

Shelley began the Italian Lives on 23 November 1833 and by December was working methodically: she wrote the Lives in the morning and read novels and memoirs in the evening. She added the revision of her novel Lodore
Lodore

Lodore, also published under the title The Beautiful Widow, is the penultimate novel by Romanticism novelist Mary Shelley, completed in 1833 and published in 1835....
 (1835) and the checking of its proofs
Galley proof

In printing and publication, proofs are preliminary versions of publications. They may be uncut and Bookbinding, or in some cases electronic publishing....
 to this already busy schedule. She worked on the Italian Lives for two years and was probably paid £140 for each volume. By the time she began working on the Lives, Shelley had spent 20 years studying Italian authors and had lived in Italy for five years. Her major sources for the biographies were first-person memoirs and literature by the authors, aided by scholarly works. Shelley had gained much of her knowledge of these authors in Italy when she was researching her historical novel
Historical novel

A historical novel is a novel in which the story is set among historical events, or more generally, in which the time of the action predates the lifetime of the author....
 Valperga
Valperga (novel)

Valperga, or the Life and Adventures of Castruccio, Prince of Lucca is an 1823 historical fiction by the Romanticism novelist Mary Shelley....
 (1823); the rest she obtained from her own books or those of her father, the philosopher William Godwin
William Godwin

William Godwin was an English journalist, political philosophy and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism, and one of the first modern proponents of philosophical anarchism....
. She had limited access to books at this time and was thus restricted to those she owned or could borrow from friends. Shelley copied sections from some of these works in a manner that would today be termed plagiarism
Plagiarism

Plagiarism is the use or close imitation of the language and ideas of another author and representation of them as one's own original work.Within academia, plagiarism by students, professors, or researchers is considered academic dishonesty or academic fraud and offenders are subject to academic censure....
, but, as Mazzeo explains, because the standards of intellectual property and copyright
Copyright

Copyright is a form of intellectual property which gives the creator of an original work exclusive rights for a certain time period in relation to that work, including its publication, distribution and adaptation; after which time the work is said to enter the public domain....
 were so different in the early nineteenth century, Shelley's practice was common and not considered unethical. She writes, "Mary Shelley's objectives in the Italian Lives were to gather what had been said by these authors and about them and to infuse the work with her own judgements on their interest and credibility."

To supplement her printed sources, Shelley interviewed Gabriele Rossetti
Gabriele Rossetti

File:GabrieleRossetti.jpgGabriele Pasquale Giuseppe Rossetti was an Italian poet and scholar who emigrated to England.Born in Vasto in the Two Sicilies, his support for Italian revolutionary nationalism forced him into political exile in 1821....
 and other Italian expatriates in London for the modern biographies. Mazzeo writes that "her lives of the contemporary Italian poets – Alfieri, Monti and Foscolo – are unquestionably the most personal and most inspired of the two volumes". Of all of the volumes Shelley contributed to the Cabinet Cyclopaedia, Italian Lives is, according to editor Nora Crook, the "most overtly political". Shelley was a friend to the Italian exiles and a proponent of the Risorgimento; she reveals her republicanism
Republicanism

Republicanism is the ideology of governing a nation as a republic, where the head of state is appointed by other means than hereditary, often elections....
 by depicting Machiavelli as a patriot. She continually praises writers who resist tyranny by "cultivat[ing] private virtue and inner peace". In the first volume of the Italian Lives her primary goal was to introduce lesser-known Italian writers to English readers and build up the reputation of those who were already known, reflecting the view she expressed in her travel narrative
Travel literature

Travel literature is travel writing of literature value. Travel literature typically records the experiences of an author tourism a place for the pleasure of travel....
 Rambles in Germany and Italy
Rambles in Germany and Italy

Rambles in Germany and Italy, in 1840, 1842, and 1843 is a travel literature by the British Romanticism author Mary Shelley. Issued in 1844, it is her last published work....
 (1844): "Italian literature claims, at present, a very high rank in Europe. If the writers are less numerous, yet in genius they equal, and in moral taste they surpass France and England".
James Montgomery
Shelley specifically addressed gender politics in her biography of the sixteenth-century poet Vittoria Colonna
Vittoria Colonna

Vittoria Colonna , marchioness of Pescara, was an Italy noblewoman and poet....
, highlighting her literary achievements, her "virtues, talents, and beauty", and her interest in politics. However, Shelley was careful to describe feminine virtues in their historical context throughout the Italian Lives. For example, her analysis of the cavalier servente
Cicisbeo

In 18th- and 19th-century Venice, the cicisbeo , or Cavalier Servente, was the professed gallant and lover of a married woman, who attended her at public entertainments, to church and other occasions and had privileged access to his mistress....
 system in Italy, which allowed married women to take lovers, was rooted in an understanding that many marriages at the time were made not for love, but for profit. She refused to indict any particular woman for what she saw as the faults of a larger system.

Little has been written on the contributions by Montgomery or Brewster. According to Mazzeo, Montgomery’s biographies, which draw a picture of the subject's character and incorporate autobiographical material, are written in a "digressive though not unengaging manner". He is less concerned with factual accuracy, although he identifies his sources, and more interested in developing "extended parallels between Italian and English literature". Brewster includes descriptions of sixteenth-century scientific experiments in his formally written biography of Galileo, as well as information on other Renaissance natural philosophers. According to Mazzeo, "Brewster’s pious religiosity infuses the work and his opinions".

Ninety-eight review copies of the first two volumes were distributed, eliciting five reviews. Some of these were simply short advertisements for the Cabinet Cyclopaedia. Mazzeo writes that the "commentary on both volumes was mixed and often contradictory, but on balance positive; prose style, organisation and use of source materials were the three most often identified points of discussion". The first volume was declared to be unorganised, the second volume less so. Reviewers did not agree on the value of frequently using primary sources nor on the elegance of the writing style. The Monthly Review
Monthly Review (London)

The Monthly Review was an English periodical founded by Ralph Griffiths, a Nonconformist bookseller. It featured the novelist and poet Oliver Goldsmith as an early contributor....
 dedicated the most substantial review and extracts to the volumes, writing that "we by no means think highly of the volume as a whole", complaining that it presented facts and dates without context. However, the reviewer praised two of Mary Shelley’s biographies: Petrarch and Machiavelli. According to Mazzeo, the reviewer "notes, in particular, her efforts to question conventional assumptions about Machiavelli by returning to autobiographical materials and credits her with originality on this point". Graham's Magazine
Graham's Magazine

'Graham's Magazine' was a nineteenth century periodical based in Philadelphia established by George Rex Graham. It was alternatively referred to as Graham's Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine , Graham's Magazine of Literature and Art , Graham's American Monthly Magazine of Literature and Art , and Graham's Illustrated Magazine o...
, in a piece probably by its co-editor, Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe was an American poet, Short story writer, Editing and Literary criticism, and is considered part of the American Romanticism. Best known for his tales of Mystery and the macabre, Poe was one of the earliest American practitioners of the short story and is considered the inventor of the Detective fiction genre....
, positively reviewed the pirated American edition.

Spanish and Portuguese Lives

The Spanish and Portuguese Lives constitute the third volume of the Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Spain and Portugal. Except for the biography of Ercilla, whose author is unknown, Mary Shelley wrote all of the entries in this volume: Boscan, Garcilaso de la Vega
Garcilaso de la Vega

Garcilaso de la Vega , was a Spain soldier and poet. The prototypical "Renaissance man," he was the most influential poet to introduce Italian Renaissance verse forms, poetic techniques and themes to Spain....
, Diego Hurtado de Mendoza
Diego Hurtado de Mendoza

Diego Hurtado de Mendoza , Spain novelist, poetry, diplomat and historian, a younger son of the count of Tendillas, governor of Granada, was born in that city in 1503....
, Luis de Leon, Herrera
Fernando de Herrera

Fernando de Herrera called "El Divino" was a 16th-century Spanish poetry and man of letters. He was born in Seville. Much of what is known about him comes from the book Libro de descripci?n de verdaderos retratos de illustres y memorables varones , which was written in 1599 by Francisco Pacheco....
, Saa de Miranda
Francisco de Sá de Miranda

Francisco de S? de Miranda , pronunciation. , was a Portugal poet of the Renaissance....
, Jorge de Montemayor, Castillejo
Cristóbal de Castillejo

Crist?bal de Castillejo was a Spanish poet, contemporary of Garcilaso de la Vega and Juan Bosc?n, who championed the use of traditional forms of Spain poetry and criticized the use of Italy forms such as the sonnet....
, Cervantes
Cervantes

Cervantes refers to:...
, Lope de Vega
Lope de Vega

Lope de Vega was a Spain Spanish Baroque literature playwright and poet. His reputation in the world of Spanish language letters is second only to that of Miguel de Cervantes, while the sheer volume of his literary output is unequalled:...
, Vicente Espinel
Vicente Espinel

Vicente G?mez Mart?nez-Espinel was a Spain writer and musician of the Siglo de Oro.He is credited with the addition of the 5th string to the guitar and the creation of the modern poetic form of the d?cima, composed of ten octameters, named espinella in Spanish after him....
, Estaban de Villegas
Esteban Manuel de Villegas

Esteban Manuel de Villegas was a 17th century Spain poet....
, Góngora
Luis de Góngora

Luis de G?ngora y Argote was a Spanish Baroque literature lyric poet. G?ngora and his lifelong rival, Francisco de Quevedo, were the most prominent Spanish poets of their age....
, Quevedo
Francisco de Quevedo

Francisco G?mez de Quevedo y Santib??ez Villegas was a nobleman, politician and writer of the Siglo de Oro. Along with his lifelong rival, Luis de G?ngora, Quevedo was one of the most prominent Spanish poets of the age....
, Calderón
Pedro Calderón de la Barca

Pedro Calder?n de la Barca y Henao , was a dramatist of the Spain Spanish Golden Age....
, Ribeyro, Gil Vicente
Gil Vicente

Gil Vicente , called the Trobadour, was a Portuguese people playwright and poet who Actor in and Theatre director his own plays....
, Ferreira
António Ferreira

Ant?nio Ferreira was a Portugal poet and the foremost representative of the classical school, founded by Francisco de S? de Miranda. His most considerable work, #Castro, is the first tragedy in Portugal, and the second in modern European literature....
, and Camoens.

During the two or three years that Mary Shelley spent writing the Spanish and Portuguese Lives from 1834 or 1835 to 1837, she also wrote a novel, Falkner
Falkner (novel)

Falkner is the last novel published by the Romanticism writer Mary Shelley.Like Shelley's novel Lodore , Falkner charts a young woman's education under a tyrannical father figure....
 (1837), experienced the death of her father, William Godwin
William Godwin

William Godwin was an English journalist, political philosophy and novelist. He is considered one of the first exponents of utilitarianism, and one of the first modern proponents of philosophical anarchism....
, started a biography of him, and moved to London after her son, Percy Florence Shelley
Percy Florence Shelley

Sir Percy Florence Shelley, 3rd Baronet was the son of Percy Bysshe Shelley and Frankenstein author, Mary Shelley. His middle name, Florence, came because he was born in Florence in Italy....
, entered Trinity College, Cambridge
Trinity College, Cambridge

Trinity College is one of the 31 Colleges of the University of Cambridge of the University of Cambridge. Trinity has more members than any other college in Cambridge or University of Oxford, with around 700 undergraduates, 430 graduate students, and over 160 Fellows; however, counting only the student body it has somewhat fewer than Homert...
. She had more difficulty with these Lives than with the other volumes' biographies, writing to her friend Maria Gisborne: "I am now about to write a Volume of Spanish & Portugeeze [sic] Lives – This is an arduous task, from my own ignorance, & the difficulty of getting books & information". According to Lisa Vargo, a recent editor of the Spanish and Portuguese Lives, Spanish books were hard to come by in England and not much was known regarding Shelley’s subjects. However, Shelly ended one plaintive letter to another friend: "The best is that the very thing which occasions the difficulty makes it interesting – namely – the treading in unknown paths & dragging out unknown things – I wish I could go to Spain." While living in Harrow
London Borough of Harrow

The London Borough of Harrow is a London borough of outer north-west London. It borders Hertfordshire to the north and other London boroughs: London Borough of Hillingdon to the west, London Borough of Ealing to the south, London Borough of Brent to...
, she refused to go to the British Library
British Library

The British Library is the national library of the United Kingdom. It is based in London and is one of the world's largest List of Research libraries, holding over 150 million items in all known languages and formats; books, journals, newspapers, magazines, Sound recording, patents, databases, maps, stamps, Printmaking, drawings and much mor...
 in London, writing: "I would not if I could – I do not like finding myself a stray bird among strange men in a character assimililating [sic] to their own". At this time, the British Library had special tables for women in the reading room. While some scholars see her refusal to work there as a mark of "feminist protest" others see it as "matter of comfort and practicality", since the reading rooms were "noisy, badly lit, and poorly ventilated". Shelley’s continual problems with finding sources mean that her biographies are based on relatively few works. However, Vargo writes that "there is always a sense of an engaged and intelligent mind at work weighing what should be included, what seems accurate". Shelley tended to focus on obtaining accounts written by people who knew the authors, and when translations of the authors' works were unavailable or poor, she provided her own.

Shelley's biographies begin by describing the author, offering examples of their writings in the original language and in translation, and end by summarising their "beauties and defects". She also discusses the problems of writing biography itself, engaging in a written dialogue with the theories of her now-dead father. In "Of History and Romance" Godwin had written that for the genius, "I am not contented to observe such a man upon the public stage, I would follow him into his closet. I would see the friend and the father of a family, as well as the patriot". Shelley and Godwin had seen the negative effects of this approach when Godwin published Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

Memoirs of the Author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman is William Godwin biography of his wife Mary Wollstonecraft, the author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman ....
 (1798), his biography of Shelley's mother, Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Wollstonecraft

Mary Wollstonecraft was an eighteenth-century Kingdom of Great Britain writer, philosopher, and feminist. During her brief career, she wrote novels, treatises, a travel literature, a history of the French Revolution, a conduct book, and a children's book....
. Its frank description of Wollstonecraft's affairs and suicide attempts shocked the public and sullied her reputation. Shelley criticises this technique in her biographies, concerned that such works perpetuate "follies". She is even more concerned that often an absence of information regarding a particular writer is interpreted as evidence that the writer was insignificant.

Overall, the Spanish Lives, according to Vargo, "tells a story of the survival of genius and moral independence in spite of oppression by public institutions, both individually and nationally". Shelley argues that Spain's literature is directly related to its politics and seeks to inspire her readers by outlining a national literature stretching back to Lucan
Marcus Annaeus Lucanus

Marcus Annaeus Lucanus , better known in English language as Lucan, was a Roman Empire poet, born in Corduba , in the Hispania Baetica. Despite his short life, he is regarded as one of the outstanding figures of the Classical Latin#Silver_Age_Latin period....
 which represents the best characteristics of Spanish identity: "originality", "independence", "enthusiasm", and "earnestness".

Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of France

"[Madame Roland's] fame rests even on higher and nobler grounds than that of those who toil with the brain for the instruction of their fellow creatures. She acted. ... The composition of her memoirs was the last deed of her life, save the leaving of it—and it was a noble one—disclosing the nature of the soil that gave birth to so much virtue; teaching women how to be great, without foregoing either the duties or charms of their sex; and exhibiting to men an example of feminine excellence, from which they may gather confidence, that if they dedicate themselves to useful and heroic tasks, they will find helpmates in the other sex to sustain them in their labours and share their fate."
Mary Shelley
Mary Shelley

Mary Shelley was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel literature, best known for her Gothic fiction Frankenstein ....
, "Madame Roland", French Lives


The two-volume Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of France includes the following works by Mary Shelley: Montaigne, Corneille
Pierre Corneille

File:Pierre Corneille 3.jpgPierre Corneille was a French tragedy who was one of the three great seventeenth Century French dramatists, along with Moli?re and Jean Racine....
, Rochefoucauld
François de La Rochefoucauld (writer)

Fran?ois VI, duc de La Rochefoucauld, prince de Marcillac , was a noted France author of maxim and memoirs, as well as an example of the accomplished 17th-century nobleman....
, Molière
Molière

Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, also known by his stage name Moli?re, was a French playwright and actor who is considered one of the greatest masters of comedy in Western literature....
, Pascal
Blaise Pascal

Blaise Pascal , was a France mathematician, physicist, and religion philosopher. He was a child prodigy who was educated by his father, a civil servant....
, Madame de Sévigné, Boileau
Boileau

Boileau can refer to the following:Persons:*Boileau-Narcejac, pen name of Pierre Boileau and Pierre Ayraud, also known as Thomas Narcejac, French writers of police stories...
, Racine
Jean Racine

Jean Racine was a France dramatist, one of the "big three" of 17th century France , and one of the most important literary figures in the Western tradition....
, Fénelon
François Fénelon

Fran?ois de Salignac de la Mothe-F?nelon, more commonly known as Fran?ois F?nelon , was a France Roman Catholic theology, poet and writer....
, Voltaire
Voltaire

Fran?ois-Marie Arouet , better known by the pen name Voltaire, was a French Age of Enlightenment writer, essayist, and philosophy known for his wit, philosophical sport, and defense of civil liberty, including freedom of religion and free trade....
, Rousseau, Condorcet, Mirabeau
Victor de Riqueti, marquis de Mirabeau

Victor de Riquetti, marquis de Mirabeau was a French economist of the Physiocratic school. He was the father of great Honor? Gabriel Riqueti, comte de Mirabeau and is, in distinction, often referred to as the elder Mirabeau....
, Madame Roland
Madame Roland

Marie-Jeanne Roland de la Platiere, better known simply as Madame Roland and born Marie-Jeanne Phlipon was, together with her husband Jean Marie Roland, a supporter of the French Revolution and influential member of the Girondist faction, but fell out of favor during the Reign of Terror and died by the guillotine....
, and Madame de Staël. Rabelais and La Fontaine are by an as yet unidentified author. Shelley was the only contributor to Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia to give such pride of place to female biographical subjects. In these volumes, "she stretched the definition of 'Eminent Literary Men' not just by including two more women but by her choice of a quartet of French revolutionary personalities who were political actors more than, or as much as writers: Condorcet and Mirabeau, Mme Roland and Mme de Staël". As Clarissa Campbell Orr, a recent editor of the French Lives, explains, this choice "represents a concerted attempt to disassociate the early ideals of the French Revolution from its subsequent extremism and state-authored bloodshed".

Mary Shelley worked on the French Lives from the end of 1837 until the middle of 1839 and she was paid £200 upon their completion. No other substantial projects occupied her during this time and research materials were easily accessible; she even subscribed to a specialist circulating library to acquire books. She wrote to her friend Leigh Hunt
Leigh Hunt

James Henry Leigh Hunt was an England critic, essayist, poet and writer....
 of the project, "I am now writing French Lives. The Spanish ones interested me — these do not so much – yet, it is pleasant writing enough – sparing one imagination yet occupying one & supplying in some small degree the needful which is so very needful."

Mary Shelley spoke French fluently and was knowledgeable about seventeenth- and eighteenth-century French literature. Although she was distilling other works, the biographies are still deeply personal works and have autobiographical elements. Orr writes that they "are the culmination of her work for Lardner, and represent the final stage of a sustained overview of four literatures. Few British women of letters in the 1830s could command this extensive range and write so confidently about four national cultures." Orr compares Shelley to the nineteenth-century historical writers Lady Morgan
Lady Morgan

Sydney, Lady Morgan , was an Irish people novelist....
, Frances Trollope
Frances Trollope

Frances Trollope was an English novelist and miscellaneous writer who published as Mrs. Trollope or Mrs. Frances Trollope. Her detractors diminished her reputation by making the common name used for her the overly familiar and slightly vulgar diminutive Fanny Trollope....
, Anna Jameson, and Agnes
Agnes Strickland

Agnes Strickland was an England historical writer and poet.The daughter of Thomas Strickland of Reydon Hall, Suffolk, Agnes was educated by her father, and began her literary career with a poem, Worcester Field, followed by The Seven Ages of Woman and Demetrius....
 and Eliza Strickland. Shelley’s assessment of French literature was not as generous as her evaluation of Italian literature. She criticized its artificiality, for example. However, the biographies are "written with a sprightly narrative thrust and an agreeable tone". She also often provided her own translations and focused on themes that resonated with her own life.

The French Lives provided Shelley with a way to celebrate literary women, particularly salonniéres
Salon (gathering)

A salon is a gathering of stimulating people of quality under the roof of an inspiring hostess or host, partly to amuse one another and partly to refine their taste and increase their knowledge through conversation and readings, often consciously following Horace definition of the aims of poetry, "either to please or to educate" ....
. In her life of Madame de Sévigné, Shelley celebrates "her chaste widowhood; her loyalty as a friend; [and] her maternal devotion". However, Orr writes that it is difficult to see a pattern in the way Shelley addresses gender issues in these volumes. She argues that "the most consistent 'feminism' displayed throughout [the second volume of French Lives] lies in her examination of French attitudes toward love, marriage, and sexuality". Shelley sympathetically portrays customs such as taking lovers, explaining the custom in the context of France's arranged marriages. Overall, Orr explains, Shelley's "historical sympathy for the varied circumstances of women's relationships mirrors her personal practice of understanding and assisting those of her women friends who transgressed moral norms". The biographies of Roland and Staël focus on their abilities and the social forces that both helped and hindered them from succeeding. Shelley argues that women are as intellectually capable as men, but lack a sufficient education and are trapped by social systems such as marriage that restrict their rights. The emphasis that Shelley places on education and reading reflect the influence of her mother's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

A Vindication of the Rights of Woman: with Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects , written by the eighteenth-century British feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, is one of the earliest works of feminist philosophy....
 (1792). In these two biographies, Shelley reinforces contemporary gender roles while at the same time celebrating the achievements of these women. She describes Roland through traditionally feminine roles: Shelley also defends Roland's "unwomanly" actions, however, by arguing that they were "beneficial" to French society. Shelley's most overt feminist statement in the French Lives comes when she criticises Jean-Jacques Rousseau's
Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean Jacques Rousseau was a major philosopher, writer, and composer of the eighteenth century The Age of Enlightenment, whose political philosophy influenced the French Revolution and the development of modern political and educational thought....
 novel Julie, or the New Heloise (1761), writing "his ideas ... of a perfect life are singularly faulty. It includes no instruction, no endeavours to acquire knowledge and refine the soul by study; but is contracted to mere domestic avocations".

Sixty review copies of each volume were sent out, but only one short notice of the first volume of French Lives has been located, in the Sunday Times. The volumes were pirated in the United States by Lea and Blanchard of Philadelphia and reviewed by Edgar Allan Poe
Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe was an American poet, Short story writer, Editing and Literary criticism, and is considered part of the American Romanticism. Best known for his tales of Mystery and the macabre, Poe was one of the earliest American practitioners of the short story and is considered the inventor of the Detective fiction genre....
 in Graham’s Lady’s and Gentleman’s Magazine
Graham's Magazine

'Graham's Magazine' was a nineteenth century periodical based in Philadelphia established by George Rex Graham. It was alternatively referred to as Graham's Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine , Graham's Magazine of Literature and Art , Graham's American Monthly Magazine of Literature and Art , and Graham's Illustrated Magazine o...
 in 1841. He wrote, "a more valuable work, when considered solely as an introduction to French literature, has not, for some time, been issued from the American press".

See also

  • List of works by Mary Shelley
    List of works by Mary Shelley

    This is a list of works by Mary Shelley.The following list is drawn from W. H. Lyles's Mary Shelley: An Annotated Bibliography and Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings....


Bibliography

  • Crook, Nora. "General Editor’s Introduction". Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings. Vol. 1. Ed. Tilar J. Mazzeo. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002. ISBN 1851967168.
  • Guerra, Lia. "Mary Shelley's Contributions to Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia: Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy". British Romanticism and Italian Literature: Translating, Reviewing, Rewriting. Eds. Laura Bandiera and Diego Saglia. New York: Rodopi, 2005. ISBN 9042018577.
  • Kucich, Greg. "Mary Shelley’s Lives and the Reengendering of History". Mary Shelley in Her Times. Eds. Betty T. Bennett and Stuart Curran. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. ISBN 0801863341.
  • Kucich, Greg. "Biographer". The Cambridge Companion to Mary Shelley. Ed. Esther Schor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. ISBN 0521007704.
  • Mazzeo, Tilar J. "Introduction by the Editor of Italian Lives". Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings. Vol. 1. Ed. Tilar J. Mazzeo. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002. ISBN 1851967168.
  • Morrison, Lucy. "Writing the Self in Others' Lives: Mary Shelley's Biographies of Madame Roland and Madame de Staël". Keats-Shelley Journal 53 (2004): 127–51.
  • Orr, Clarissa Campbell. "Editor’s Introduction French Lives". Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings. Vol. 2. Eds Lisa Vargo and Clarissa Campbell Orr. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002. ISBN 1851967162.
  • Orr, Clarissa Campbell. "Notes on French Lives". Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings. Vol. 3. Ed. Clarissa Campbell Orr. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002. ISBN 1851967162.
  • Peckham, Morse. "Dr. Lardner’s Cabinet Cyclopaedia". The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America 45 (1951): 37–58.
  • Shelley, Mary
    Mary Shelley

    Mary Shelley was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel literature, best known for her Gothic fiction Frankenstein ....
    , James Montgomery
    James Montgomery

    James Montgomery was a United Kingdom editing and poet.Montgomery, poet, son of a pastor and missionary of the Moravian Church, was born at Irvine, North Ayrshire in Ayrshire, and educated at the Moravian School at Fulneck school, near Pudsey in Leeds....
    , and David Brewster. Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of Italy, Span and Portugal. 3 vols. The Cabinet of Biography, Conducted by the Rev. Dionysius Lardner. London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman; and John Taylor, 1835–37.
  • Shelley, Mary and others. Lives of the Most Eminent Literary and Scientific Men of France. 2 vols. The Cabinet of Biography, Conducted by the Rev. Dionysius Lardner. London: Printed for Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman; and John Taylor, 1838–39.
  • Smith, Johanna. Mary Shelley. New York: Twayne, 1996. ISBN 0805770453.
  • Vargo, Lisa. "Editor’s Introduction Spanish and Portuguese Lives". Mary Shelley's Literary Lives and Other Writings. Vol. 2. Eds Lisa Vargo and Clarissa Campbell Orr. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2002. ISBN 1851967162.
  • Walling, William. Mary Shelley. New York: Twayne, 1972.


External links

  • at the Internet Archive
    Internet Archive

    The Internet Archive is a nonprofit organization dedicated to building and maintaining a free and openly accessible online digital library, including an archive site of the World Wide Web....
  • at the Internet Archive
  • at the Internet Archive
  • at the Internet Archive
  • at the Internet Archive