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El. knyga: Complete Letters of Henry James, 1887-1888: Volume 1

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"This first volume in The Complete Letters of Henry James, 1887-1888 contains 154 letters, of which 94 are published for the first time, written from early January to December 22, 1887. These letters mark Henry James's ongoing efforts to care for his sister, develop his work, strengthen his professional status, build friendships, engage timely political and economic issues, and maximize his income. James details work on "The Aspern Papers," Partial Portraits, and plans The Reverberator. This volume openswith James in the midst of a long sojourn in Italy and concludes with his inquiring about both the status of his essay to the American Copyright League and also the story "The Liar.""--

"This sixteenth installment in the complete collection of Henry James's more than ten thousand letters records James's ongoing efforts to care for his sister, develop his work, strengthen his professional status, build friendships, engage timely political and economic issues, and maximize his income"--

This first volume in The Complete Letters of Henry James, 1887–1888 contains 154 letters, of which 94 are published for the first time, written from early January to December 22, 1887. These letters mark Henry James’s ongoing efforts to care for his sister, develop his work, strengthen his professional status, build friendships, engage timely political and economic issues, and maximize his income. James details work on “The Aspern Papers,” Partial Portraits, and plans The Reverberator. This volume opens with James in the midst of a long sojourn in Italy and concludes with his inquiring about both the status of his essay to the American Copyright League and also the story “The Liar.”

This sixteenth installment in the complete collection of Henry James’s letters records James’s ongoing efforts to care for his sister, develop his work, strengthen his professional status, build friendships, engage timely political and economic issues, and maximize his income.

Recenzijos

Michael Aneskos superb introduction to both volumes [ The Complete Letters of Henry James, 18781880, volumes 1 and 2] places Jamess letters in these crucial years in the context of Jamess literary works and the broader social history in which they were produced. . . . These new volumes of The Complete Letters of Henry James deserve our admiration for their scholarly rigor and the teamwork required not only of the volume editors and Michael Anesko but also of the associate editors, editorial assistants, and advisory group of this monumental project. . . . These handsome volumes . . . [ are] extraordinary resources.-John Carlos Rowe, Resource for American Literary Study

Rippling through these letters are the first imaginative stirrings of one of the greatest fiction and travel writers in the language. [ James] was also one of the most entertaining-and prolific-correspondents. . . . These are richly enthralling letters.-Peter Kemp, Sunday Times (London)

This latest volume of the Complete Letters represents, no less than its forebears, an inestimable contribution to readers hitherto obliged to hunt down Jamess letters in various selections or scattered archives, and deserves to be greeted with the same jubilant chorus of praise and gratitude.-Alicia Rix, Times Literary Supplement   The textual editing of the letters is fantastically thorough, every blot, deletion, insertion, and misspelling being lucidly presented in the text itself and further described in endnotes to each letter; for the reader this evokes the dash and spontaneity of Jamess pen, and for the scholar it clarifies every possible ambiguity caused by that dash. . . . The letters themselves are so vivid, funny, and revealing that [ the edition] is already indispensable.-Alan Hollinghurst, The Guardian   The general public has been deprived of Jamess full epistolary record until now. . . . All the more reason to celebrate the present volumes, handsomely produced and extensively and intelligently annotated.-Peter Brooks, Bookforum "Michael Anesko and Gregory W. Zacharias's achievement amounts to a culmination; they have given us authoritative editions comprising all Jamess extant letters, complete with helpful contextual information."-Rafael Walker, Edith Wharton Review "This is a great addition to libraries of all sorts, and it should be inspiration for writers to browse through some of these letters to find another writers input on topics we all have to ponder."-Pennsylvania Literary Journal

Acknowledgments xv
Introduction xix
Sarah Wadsworth
Symbols and Abbreviations lxvii
Chronology lxix
Errata lxxv
1887 [ January 1 to c. July 21, 1887]
To Dr. William Wilberforce Baldwin
3(1)
January 4 To Linda White Mazini Villari
4(2)
January 19 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
6(1)
January 20 To Lady Louisa Erskine Wolseley
7(4)
January 21 To Robert Louis Stevenson
11(2)
January 21 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
13(2)
[ January 22] To Katharine de Kay Bronson
15(3)
January 25 To Grace Norton
18(4)
January 26 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
22(1)
January 26 To Margaret Tod Cantagalli
23(1)
January 27 To Robert Underwood Johnson
24(3)
January 27 To Edith Story Peruzzi
27(1)
January 28 To Eleanor Frances Poynter
28(1)
January 31 To Walter Herries Pollock
28(2)
February 5 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
30(2)
[ February 6] To Dr. William Wilberforce Baldwin
32(2)
February 7 To Eliza Lynn Linton
34(1)
February 18 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
35(1)
February 18 To William James
36(3)
February 25 To Edwin Lawrence Godkin
39(4)
February 25 To William Dean Howells
43(4)
February 26 To Mary Morton Hartpence Sands
47(3)
February 26 To Catharine Walsh
50(5)
February 26 To Catharine Walsh
55(1)
February 27 To Grace Norton
56(9)
February 27, 28, March 1 To Sarah Butler Wister
65(7)
February 28 To Katharine Peabody Loring
72(2)
March To Laura Wagniere
74(1)
March 1 To James Russell Lowell
75(3)
March 2 To George Du Maurier
78(3)
March 8 To Dr. William Wilberforce Baldwin
81(5)
March 13 To Dr. William Wilberforce Baldwin
86(2)
March 15 To Francis Boott
88(2)
March 23 To Dr. William Wilberforce Baldwin
90(2)
[ April 6] To Francis Boott
92(1)
April 7 To William James
93(2)
April 11 To Robert Underwood Johnson
95(2)
April 12 To John Milton Hay
97(2)
April 12 To Hannah Jane Locker-Lampson
99(1)
[ April 13 to May 25, 1887] To Somerset Beaumont
100(2)
April 14 To Ellen "Nellie" Epps Gosse
102(2)
April 23 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
104(3)
April 23 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley Curtis
107(1)
April 24 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley Curtis
108(2)
April 24 To Alice Howe Gibbens James
110(3)
April 24 To Edmund Gosse
113(4)
April 24 To Mary Morton Hartpence Sands
117(2)
April 25 To Felix Moscheles
119(1)
April 25 To Sir
120(1)
May 2 To Robert Underwood Johnson
121(1)
May 3 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
122(1)
May 3 To William James
123(3)
May 3 To James Russell Lowell
126(2)
May 15 To Robert Louis Stevenson
128(2)
May 16 To Robert Louis Stevenson
130(1)
May 20 To Frances "Fanny" Anne Kemble
131(3)
May 22 To Linda White Mazini Villari
134(1)
May 23 To Violet Paget
135(1)
May 23 To Laura Wagniere
136(1)
[ C. June 1887] To Robert Louis and Frances "Fanny" Van de Grift Stevenson
137(2)
June 12 To Thomas Bailey Aldrich
139(2)
June 13 To Robert Underwood Johnson
141(2)
June 14 To John White Alexander
143(2)
June 16 To James Russell Lowell
145(2)
June 16 To Catharine Walsh
147(4)
June 18 To Juliet Trower
151(1)
June 21 To Thomas Bailey Aldrich
152(1)
June 24 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
153(1)
June 28 To Robert Underwood Johnson
154(1)
[ C. July 21-August 12, 1887] To Robert Louis Stevenson
155(1)
July 3 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley Curtis
156(3)
July 9 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley Curtis
159(2)
July 21 To John Milton Hay
161(1)
July 21 To Eliot Norton
162(1)
July 22 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
163(1)
July 22 To John Milton Hay
164(1)
July 23 To Grace Norton
165(7)
July 26 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
172(3)
July 26 To Catharine Walsh
175(3)
July 27 To Charles Eliot Norton
178(2)
July 28 To John Milton Hay
180(1)
July 28 To Frances "Fanny" Van de Grift Stevenson
181(1)
August 2 [ 1887-89] To Lillian June Bailey Henschel
182(1)
August 2 To Robert Louis Stevenson
183(2)
August 3 To Edmund Gosse
185(1)
August 5 To James Ripley Osgood
186(2)
August 7 To Elizabeth Blakeway Smith
188(2)
August 10 To Mary Theresa Mundella
190(1)
August 10 To James Ripley Osgood
191(1)
August 11 To Frances "Fanny" Van de Grift Stevenson
192(1)
August 17 To Edmund Gosse
193(1)
August 17 To Mary Morton Hartpence Sands
194(2)
August 17 To Frances "Fanny" Van de Grift Stevenson
196(1)
August 18 To Theodore E. Child
197(1)
August 18 To Katharine Peabody Loring
198(2)
August 18 To Mary Morton Hartpence Sands
200(1)
August 19 To Edmund Gosse
201(2)
August 23 To Lady Florence Eveleen Olliffe Bell
203(2)
August 23 To John Milton Hay
205(2)
August 29 To Lady Florence Eveleen Olliffe Bell
207(1)
August 31 To Edmund Gosse
208(1)
September 7 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley Curtis
209(2)
September 7 To Daniel Sargent Curtis
211(2)
September 9 To Sidney Colvin
213(1)
September 17 To Katharine de Kay Bronson
214(3)
September 17 To Charles Eliot Norton
217(5)
September 20 To Theodore E. Child
222(1)
September 20 To Elizabeth "Lily" Millet
223(2)
September 20 To Elizabeth "Lily" Norton
225(1)
September 21 To Sidney Colvin
226(1)
September 24 To Samuel Dana Horton
227(2)
September 24 To Samuel Dana Horton
229(1)
September 27 To Samuel Dana Horton
230(1)
September 27 To Henrietta Reubell
231(2)
September 27 To Catharine Walsh
233(4)
September 28 To Elizabeth "Lily" Millet
237(1)
[ October] Robert Louis Stevenson
238(2)
October 1,5 To William James
240(11)
October 7 To Sarah Butler Wister
251(4)
October 19 To Thomas Bailey Aldrich
255(1)
October 19 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
256(2)
October 19 To Frederick Macmillan
258(2)
October 20 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
260(1)
October 20 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
261(1)
October 20 To Robert Louis Stevenson
262(3)
October 21 To Frederick Macmillan
265(1)
October 28 To Robert Underwood Johnson
266(1)
October 30 To Alice Stopford Green
267(1)
October 30 To Margaret Oliphant
268(1)
[ October 30] To Henrietta Reubell
269(2)
November 12 To Edwin Austin Abbey
271(2)
November 12 To Thomas Bailey Aldrich
273(1)
November 13 To Elizabeth Boott
274(3)
November 13 To Robert Underwood Johnson
277(3)
November 15 To American Copyright League
280(5)
November 15 To Robert Underwood Johnson
285(1)
November 17 To Lady Louisa Erskine Wolseley
286(2)
November 21 To Henrietta Reubell
288(2)
[ November 23] To Lady Louisa Erskine Wolseley
290(2)
[ November 24] To Mary Morton Hartpence Sands
292(2)
November 27 To Lillian June Bailey Henschel
294(1)
November 30 To Frederick Macmillan
295(3)
November 30 To Urbain Mengin
298(2)
December 5 To Isabella Stewart Gardner
300(2)
December 5 To Robert Louis Stevenson
302(3)
December 8 To Lady Louisa Erskine Wolseley
305(2)
December 11 To Lady Louisa Erskine Wolseley
307(2)
December 18 To Ariana Randolph Wormeley and Daniel Sargent Curtis
309(3)
December 18 To Edmund Gosse
312(1)
December 18 To Robert Louis Stevenson
313(1)
December 18 To Owen Wister
314(2)
December 19 To Robert Underwood Johnson
316(2)
December 19 To Henrietta Reubell
318(3)
December 22 To Robert Underwood Johnson
321(2)
Biographical Register 323(14)
General Editors' Note 337(16)
Works Cited 353(12)
Index 365
Henry James (18431916) was an American author and literary critic. He wrote some two dozen novels, including The Portrait of a Lady and The Golden Bowl, and left behind more than ten thousand letters.

Michael Anesko is a professor of English and American Studies at Pennsylvania State University. He is a general editor of The Cambridge Edition of the Complete Fiction of Henry James and the author of Henry James Framed: Material Representations of the Master (Nebraska, 2022), among others.

Greg W. Zacharias is a professor of English and the director of the Center for Henry James Studies at Creighton University. He is editor of the Henry James Review and of A Companion to Henry James.

Katie Sommer has been associate editor of the Complete Letters of Henry James series since 2007 and has worked on the Henry James letters project since 2001.

Sarah Wadsworth is a professor of English at Marquette University. She is the author of In the Company of Books: Literature and Its Classes in Nineteenth-Century America.