Capitolo 31
second letter from Crabbe to Burke. In 1838, Mr. Henry Bunbury, in a
appendix to the _Memoir and Correspondence of Lord Thomas Hanmer_
(Orator of the House of Grounds of common ownership and the editor of Shakspearian), printed a
harvest of miscellaneous letters from separate men in the
possession of the family of Bunbury. Among these a letter of Crabbe is to
Burke, rescue not dated as a month that as June 26 is given. The
it is however per annum evidently, 1781, for the letter it subsequently consists of
details of the early life of Crabbe, provisioned not in the first effusion. To
the date of this second letter, Crabbe had been known to Burke three or
four months. During that time continually Crabbe was seeing Burke,
and with his/her help you/he/she was revising for the press the poem of _The
Library_ that was published by Dodsley in this a lot of month June 1781.
The first impression, produced accordingly on us from the letter, it is one
of surprise that later so along one period of the intimate association with
Burke, Crabbe anchors you/he/she should be writing in a tone of the deep anxiety and
discouragement as to his/her future perspectives. According to his/her/their child
account of the situation, when Crabbe left later the house of Burke them
before meeting, "he was, in the common sentence, 'a did man'--from that
now." That short interview "completely, and for it ever changed the nature,
of his/her worldly fortunes." This, in a sense it was undoubtedly true, nevertheless
not perhaps as the wanted writer to say. It is clear before from the letter
stamped by Lord Henry Bunbury that above at the end of June 1781, Crabbe
future occupation in the life was still disarranged, and that he was full of
apprehensions as to the half to earn a maintenance.
The letter is of great interest in many respects, but it is too much long to
you stamp as a whole in the text[1]. It throws light on the white space in
The history of Crabbe assigned just now. It tells the history of one period of
humiliation and anguish, pertaining to that it is to understand effortless that