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Biographies Of Byron Rendered Obsolete

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  • Biographies Of Byron Rendered Obsolete

    BIOGRAPHIES OF BYRON RENDERED OBSOLETE

    Daily Telegraph/UK
    09/08/2007

    Jonathan Bate reviews The Letters of John Murray to Lord Byron ed by
    Andrew Nicholson

    A writer's most important relationship is with his publisher - or
    at least it used to be, until publishing houses became impersonal
    conglomerates and the tradition of a long-term dialogue between
    author and editor went into decline. Literary history knows nothing
    more glorious than a close collaboration between poet of genius and
    publisher of commitment. The greatest of all such collaborations was
    that between Lord Byron and John Murray.

    Byron's early works gained some notice, but did not make a particular
    splash. Murray was not an especially distinguished figure in the
    publishing world until he took on Byron. They came together for
    Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. Byron awoke and found himself famous, in
    large measure because of Murray's skilful editorship, publishing and
    marketing of a poem that seemed to encapsulate and came to shape the
    febrile spirit of the age. Never before had a poetry launch created
    such instant celebrity.

    advertisementThe partnership lasted for exactly 11 years. Its every
    twist was recorded in writing. As neighbours in St James's, poet
    and publisher exchanged notes and letters by hand or by messenger,
    sometimes two or three times a day. When Byron fled the country after
    the scandalous collapse of his marriage, Murray was his lifeline back
    to England, providing literary and society gossip from London, books,
    sales figures and suggestions for poetic revisions. Byron in turn
    sent news from Europe, contacts, suggested reading and sexual banter.

    Byron's dazzling letters have been in print for years, but the other
    side of the correspondence has languished in the John Murray archive,
    consulted only by a handful of scholars. Andrew Nicholson begins his
    editorial introduction with a simple statement that is little short
    of astonishing: 'This edition collects together for the first time
    all John Murray's letters to Byron.

    Apart from one or two, printed not always very accurately by Smiles
    in his Memoir of John Murray, none of these letters has been published
    before.'

    Here they are, then, 171 letters with scarcely a dull
    paragraph. Byron's brio rubs off on Murray, but he is not averse to
    offering fatherly advice: 'It is not well to let the world know -
    as a quoteable [sic] thing - your having had both those Ladies. Pray
    absorb all your faculties in the tragedy & you will do the greatest
    thing you have effected yet and again confound the world.'

    An appendix describes in detail the key moment when Murray became
    Byron's publisher in 1811. 'For the circumstances as to how Murray came
    to be the publisher of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage,' Nicholson reports,
    'biographers and editors from Tom Moore to the present day have been
    obliged to rely upon R. C. Dallas's account.' But the self-serving
    Dallas greatly exaggerated his role as broker of the literary marriage.

    On the basis of Murray's letters, Nicholson shows that there is hardly
    a word of truth in the Dallas version. This endlessly rewarding volume
    is peppered with such discoveries, large and small, whether revealing
    that certain letters in the standard edition of Byron are forgeries
    or untangling the complex web of allegiances in the cut-and-thrust
    world of Regency publishing.

    The book is beautifully produced, with handsome colour pictures not
    only of the main players but also of original manuscripts and even
    souvenirs that Byron sent to Murray - spoils from the battlefield of
    Waterloo, a watercolour of his infamous drinking cup fashioned from
    a human skull.

    The scrupulous transcriptions of the letters themselves are replete
    with underlinings and crossings out that make you feel as if you are
    looking over Murray's shoulder as he sits by the fire in Albemarle
    Street and sends dispatches to Byron in his Italian exile. Each
    letter is cross-referenced to Byron's replies and annotated with
    detail concerning every subject from Napoleon to tooth-powder to
    Armenian grammar.

    The notes also include a host of ancillary materials. So, for
    example, when Byron writes: 'Croker's letter to you is a very great
    compliment - I shall return it to you in my next,' we discover that
    his Lordship was as good as his word: he duly returned the letter from
    J. W. Croker, which compared the art of Byron's tragedy Manfred to
    that of Shakespeare. It is safe in the Murray archive and published
    here for the first time.

    At a stroke, Nicholson's towering act of scholarship has rendered
    all existing biographies of Byron obsolete.
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