In February 1822 the writer & adventurer Edward John Trelawny arrived in Pisa to make the acquaintance of his heroes Shelley & Byron, leaving a broken marriage & an exotic seafaring career behind him. He became a close companion to them & their circle, & this collection of his reminiscences is one of the most fresh & intriguing documents of the Romantic age. It records his initial meeting with a cynical & flippant Byron, his impressions of a youthful, otherworldly Shelley &, most memorably, the poet`s death at sea & the subsequent burning of his body on the s&. Trelawny`s Records combine vigorous prose, vivid description & mythmaking to create one of the most memorable portraits of an age. Rosemary Hill`s new introduction explores the mysterious life & quixotic character of Trelawny, & this edition
Includes:: all the author`s later revisions. Edward John Trelawny (1792-1881) was one of the most curious figures of the English Romantic Movement, & spent his long life travelling extensively as a naval officer, biographer & adventurer. After a brief education, Trelawny was assigned as a volunteer in the Royal Navy by the age of thirteen, & led an unaccomplished naval career until his resignation at nineteen. He met Shelley & Byron in Italy in 1822, where he became fascinated, almost hypnotized, by the two poets. His Records of Shelley, Byron & the Author, written after both their deaths, is the end-product of this strange obsession. An incorrigible romancer, Trelawny had three marriages
- the second of which was to Tersitza, sister of the Greek warlord Odysseus Androutsos, whose cause he had joined & whose mountain fortress he looked after when Odysseus was arrested. He died after a fall at the age of eighty-eight, in Engl&, & his ashes were buried in Rome in a plot adjacent to Shelley`s grave. Rosemary Ashton was educated at the universities of Aberdeen, Heidelberg & Cambridge. She taught English literature at University College London from 1974 to 2012, & is Emeritus Quain Professor of English Language & Literature & an Honorary Fellow of UCL. She has published critical biographies of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Thomas & Jane Carlyle, George Eliot, & George Henry Lewes, two books on Anglo-German literary & cultural relations in the nineteenth century, The German Idea: Four English Writers & the Reception of German Thought 1800-1860 (1980) & Little Germany: Exile & Asylum in Victorian England (1986), & two books about Victorian radicalism, 142 Strand: A Radical Address in Victorian London (2006) & Victorian Bloomsbury (2012).